I feel a bit humbled.

Yes, I do believe in tooting my own horn, but I also feel a bit humbled.

You see, in the past week, I have won two awards from my peers.

Last Sunday, I was at the Ohio Associated Press Broadcasters annual awards luncheon in Columbus. I walked away with second place for best large market radio news anchor in the state (Amanda Rabinowitz of WKSU at Kent State took first place).

 


Last night, I attended the Press Club of Cleveland’s Excellence in Journalism awards. I was honored there as having the best radio newscast in Ohio (in this case, WKSU came in second place).



Both of these awards were to honor work I did in 2010, before the surgery I had earlier this year to remove a benign tumor from the inner ear area, surgery that disconnected some facial muscles from the nerves that sent them signals. I had surgery a month later to connect the muscles to new nerves, but it takes at least six months or more for those muscles and nerves to send signals back and forth.

Ever since I have had those surgeries, I have been trying to get back the vocal delivery that I had before the surgery.

It’s kind of funny, but people I spoke with at both awards ceremonies told me that I don’t sound that different. Maybe I don’t to them, but I know that I do indeed sound different. That’s why I underwent four weekly sessions of speech therapy. That’s why I’ve been moved to an evening shift.

I am very thankful, both to the people who gave me both awards (the judges are out-of-state broadcasters) and to those who say I sound great, despite my slight – hopefully temporary – handicap.

Here’s what the judges said in each case.

AP: “Tom has a very nice pace and delivery. His newscast has a lot to offer.”

Press Club: “A quick, crisp delivery with a good fast-paced mix of local, regional, national and world news.”

An interesting point was brought up by the Press Club judges. In WKSU’s comments, they said, “This was the most subjective radio category to judge – in-depth versus ‘news on the go.’”

That’s a very good point. While stations like WKSU and WCPN have in-depth news programming, WTAM 1100’s strength is what Bill Wills calls “Info to Go.” That’s exactly our hallmark, not just during Wills and Snyder, but during the rest of the day. Listen to WTAM 1100 at the top and bottom of the hour, while we do local news from 5:00 a.m. to midnight (starting at 6:00 a.m. Saturday and 8:00 a.m. Sunday) and you’ll get news to go. A quick encapsulation of local, state, national and world news.

It’s something that we do very well, and I’m proud to be part of this news team.