Another “Those Were The Good Old Days” E-dition

TODAY IS
WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 2020
Trump’s 1272nd Day In Office
JAN 20 THOSE WERE THE GOOD OLD DAYS

image004NEARLY TWENTY-NINE YEARS AGO TODAY…Edition #59 (published on July 16, 1991) of the original printed edition of The Whistleblower (not the Newswire) was delivered to Persons of Consequence all over town.

It was our “Translated For Our Politically Impaired” Issue, and our Really Big Story was all Hamilton Prosecutor Art Ney’s request to Judge Crush to release transcripts of the grand jury proceedings on the Great Golf Caper; Our Top Ten List listed the top ten reasons lessons we learned from that same so-called crime. Plus Mayor David Mann and Sheriff Si Leis took part in a Point-Counterpoint debate over jail overcrowding.image006

Page Two with Real Editorials by Publisher Charles Foster Kane about how whenever one of the local TV stations changes one of its newsreaders, they try to make you believe that one of their anchor people has been elevated to the level of a deity. Real Facts reported the reason the Fairfield City Council rejected that proposal to proclaim July 21 First Amendment Day. Hamilton County Commissioner Steve Chabot was chastised in the Weekly Whistleblower Limerick Contest. There was a promo for Whistleblower Publisher Charles Foster Kane’s appearance on a 55 WKRC Radio program. Plus Whistleblower Wisdom explained Judge Crush’s decision not to release secret grand jury testimony following its failure to indict those Hamilton County Building Inspectors.image008

Page Three featured Cheap Shots at Kentucky Post Editor Judy Clabes, Shirley Bernstein, Jim Knippenberg, and Hamilton County Commissioner John Dowlin, There was also another Real Guest Editorial by Bunky Tadwell (this one was about the nerve of President George Herbert Walker Bush to nominate a Black man for the Supreme Court).image010

Page Four was for our regular weekly Real Letters From Real Readers column, and Another Exclusive Whistleblower Report featured a story how the Hamilton County Courthouse was becoming a media circus.image012

Page Five featured Ken Camboo’s Bluegrass Holler saying first we should kill all the lawyers, and then start in on the politicians. Northern Kentucky Bureau Chief J.R. Hatfield was talking about guys who liked looking a woman’s naked breasts in dimly lit bar rooms. There was also an ad for Jeff Ruby’s School for Elegant, Exciting Egress. We can hardly wait to hear all the details of that.

And Page Six included Hotline Hang-ups (some of the anonymous calls received on the Whistleblower Hotline, and in Real Gossip by Linda Libel, we heard more about Stan Solomon, Ken Broo, Dave Rager, Jay Andress. Bobbi Sterne, John Mirlisena, Andy Furman, Ahron Leichtman, Dusty Rhodes, Debra Richardson, and Ray Combs. We also saw an award-winning ad for CG&E.image016

It’s really hard to believe how good The Whistleblower was in those days.
You can download that entire edition HERE.image007image008