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2024 Media Award: Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer

Freddie Bourne - Fiddle Championships

The local arts organizations in Owensboro and Daviess County have long relied on the Messenger-Inquirer to be a partner in not only promoting their events, but also sharing how the arts enhance the lives of citizens through education and preservation of culture.  The Messenger-Inquirer has served as the primary news source for Owensboro-Daviess County and the surrounding region for 147 years, with its roots dating back to 1875. 

The paper is published seven days a week, with print versions Tuesday-Saturday, and online electronic newspapers on Sunday and Monday. The organization circulates the print edition in five western Kentucky counties —Daviess, Hancock, McLean, Muhlenberg, and Ohio—and the website receives more than 350,000 visits per month on average. Coverage and promotion of the local arts community has long been a priority of the Messenger-Inquirer, and they continue to maintain a reporter dedicated to the coverage of the arts.  They have two sections per week committed to local arts/entertainment, which appear in the Tuesday and Friday editions, but they also devote additional space daily throughout the paper, including many arts-related articles that appear on the front page.

A wide range of arts are covered by the publication. Some of that includes: activities/collections at local museums; theatrical performances, both touring Broadway shows as well as local community theater;  the local music scene, from regular weekly performances, to large scale festivals, to the symphony’s annual season; performances from two local dance studios; individual profiles on local musicians, artists, filmmakers, dancers, etc.; and the role that local government plays in supporting the arts, through funding priorities and efforts such as working to make Owensboro the “Bluegrass Music Capital of the World.” 

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