Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Kansas City Star reporter nominated for "Master of the Obvious" award

KC Star reporter Tony Rizzo has been nominated for a unique award. (Apparently most people in Kansas City already know crime is rampant in zip code 64130 -- but that is the subject of Rizzo's 3-part series.) Click here for the story.

Hat tip: Bottom Line Communications
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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

It was a great series, and the guy who nominated it for tht dubious award is a punk.

Anonymous said...

Not so fast Anon 9:43,

That same story has been written about every big city in the USA for thirty years. There is probably a boilerplate template somewhere. Blacks are killing blacks in ever increasing numbers. Where is, ‘The Messiah will fix this for you’ story? They voted for him, now they should be demanding an immediate fix. That would be a story, not more of the same-o, more welfare money will fix this, propaganda. They wait, Obama flicks lint from his designer jacket. Fools.

Anonymous said...

It was a great series, and the guy who nominated it for tht dubious award is a punk.
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There wasn't anything great, new or interesting about it. It has been done over and over again. Go to prison, meet wardens favorite criminals and listen to how they've changed.
Giving voice to murders and rapists should be as criminal as the offenses that they commit.

Anonymous said...

All these criminals need is Rev. Wright, he can teach them how to hate 'Whitey' properly. These crimes on each other is stuff for a good sermon. The Rev. has a 9:00 tee time in his all white golfing community, but hey, he is worth it.

Anonymous said...

This series was a waste of time. Just like the Guantanamo prison story. I think it won a phony award also. Predictable, liberal sneer and smear journalism. Wake up, no one wants this junk. No one wants to pay for this junk. What will it take to make these biased liberals see the light? Wearing blinders while you sit in the dark is dumb. Man, it is really dumb.

Anonymous said...

I thought the award was humorous, and for the most part true.