Who Had the Worst Week – 2025 Year in Review

Recessions and economic booms may come and go, but we were reminded again in 2025 that crisis communications is – and always will be – a growth industry. Below is a stroll down memory lane as we remember some of the disasters that defined 2025.

JANUARY 2025

  • The L.A.-area wildfires in Palisades and Eaton caused an estimated $164 billion in damage.
  • An understaffed air control tower at Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C. contributed to an American Airlines flight colliding with a military helicopter, killing 67 people.
  • A spectator was killed at a high school track and field meet on the University of Colorado’s Colorado Springs campus when a competitor lost control of a hammer in the hammer throw event and hurled it into the stands.
  • Two Oregon men who set out in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest to find conclusive proof that Sasquatch exists died of exposure
  • Southwest Airlines pilot was removed from a plane and arrested for being inebriated as he was seated in the cockpit performing preflight checks.
  • A former CBI DNA scientist who worked on thousands of cases, was charged with 102 felonies alleging that she manipulated evidence. Prosecutors identified more than 1,000 convictions that could have relied on her evidence, and an unknown number of cases may not have been prosecuted due to her faulty findings.

FEBRUARY 2025

  • The Girl Scouts of Colorado warned that a King Soopers employee strike put millions of dollars of cookie sales at risk.
  • Waffle House started charging a $0.50 surcharge per egg due to a shortage caused by an aggressive strain of the avian flu.
  • The Trump administration banned AP reporters from the White House for reusing to use the term “Gulf of America.”
  • President Donald Trump ordered the iconic Resolute Desk removed from the Oval Office for a deep cleaning after Elon Musk‘s son wiped a booger on it during a reporter Q&A event.
  • Hyde Park Jewelers in the Cherry Creek Shopping Center was the victim of a slow-motion robbery that saw thieves steal $12.3 million in jewelry and watches over eight hours.
  • Skype, the pre-pandemic king of video chat services, shut down amid competition from ZoomTeamsFaceTime, Webex and Google Meet.

MARCH 2025

APRIL 2025

MAY 2025

  • The NFL fined the Atlanta Falcons $250,000 and Jeff Ulbrich, the team’s defensive coordinator, an additional $100,000 after Ulbrich’s son made a cruel prank phone call to University of Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders during the NFL’s draft. Ulbrich’s son took Sanders’ confidential phone number from a team-issued iPad that his father left unlocked.
  • A climber had to be rescued a second time while attempting to summit Mt. Fuji after he went back up to retrieve the cell phone he dropped during the first rescue.
  • Two years after taking lighter fluid and a match to billions of dollars in brand equity by dropping the name HBO from its Max streaming service, executives at Warner Bros. Discovery announced that it would rebrand back to HBO Max.
  • Colorado Rockies fan sued the team after he was hit in the eye with a foul ball. In his suit, he alleged that the team is so bad that it encourages fans not to pay attention to what is happening on the field.

JUNE 2025

  • Gov. Jared Polis unveiled his “Bridge to Nowhere” concept that did the seemingly impossible: it united the political left, center and right in opposition.
  • Boulder found itself again in the wrong kind of national spotlight after a hate crime targeting the city’s Jewish community killed one person and injured seven others.
  • The former Dominion Voting Systems executive who sued MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell for defamation won a $2.3 million judgement, but it was Lindell who claimed victory after the jury only awarded the plaintiff just 3.5% of what was asked.
  • A postal carrier who stole, filled out and submitted 19 mail ballots as part of a rogue plan to test the security of Colorado‘s signature verification process was sentenced to five years in jail

JULY 2025

  • CBS parent company Paramount agreed to pay $16 million to President Donald Trump to settle his lawsuit against “60 Minutes.” Experts were certain Paramount would prevail in the suit, but noted that Paramount needed governmental approval for its plan to sell itself to Hollywood studio Skydance, which it eventually did.
  • Sean “Diddy” Combs was convicted of transporting prostitutes. Combs was found not guilty on more serious charges, but he also faces more than 50 civil lawsuits.
  • Chris Martin of Coldplay inadvertently outed a couple who apparently were having an affair.
  • Jared Leonard, the Denver restaurateur known for the Michelin-recommended AJ’s Pit Bar-B-Qwas indicted on fraud charges for allegedly receiving more than $1 million in pandemic relief loans under false pretenses.
  • Malcolm-Jamal Warner, best known for playing the lovable and charismatic son Theo on “The Cosby Show,” drowned while on vacation in Costa Rica at the age of 54.

AUGUST 2025

SEPTEMBER 2025

OCTOBER 2025

NOVEMBER 2025

  • Fourteen people died after UPS cargo plane crashed on takeoff at the Louisville, Kentucky, airport. 
  • The FAA cut 10% of flights at the 40 busiest airports in an attempt to “alleviate the pressure” on over-worked air-traffic controllers during the government shutdown.
  • The clear winners of election night in Colorado were progressives, tax increases and teachers union-endorsed candidates. The biggest loser? That would likely be Aurora City Councilwoman Danielle Jurinsky, who spent the past year parroting President Donald Trump‘s exaggerated claims of “gang-takeovers” of her city.
  • Investigators determined that the password for the Louvre’s video surveillance system was “Louvre” when thieves stole jewels worth $100 million from the museum.
  • Some guests were given only 10-15 minutes to vacate hotel rooms when the Marriott-backed chain Sonder unexpectedly declared bankruptcy. 
  • The Wall Street Journal reported that the Colorado Rockies‘ GM position is actually the most coveted in Major League Baseball because it “is viewed as the sport’s ultimate sadistic challenge.”
  • Russian K9 police dog selected to perform the ceremonial pre-game puck drop at a KHL league hockey game successfully dropped the puck from its mouth and then promptly bit two players.
  • Martin Bally, a senior executive at Campbell’s Soup, is no longer with the company after a lawsuit accused him of calling the company’s soups “highly processed food” for “poor people,” complaining that “f–king Indian” colleagues are “idiots,” and that the company’s soups use “bioengineered meat.”

DECEMBER 2025

  • The University of Michigan head football coach was abruptly fired and then taken into police custody several hours later as part of an assault investigation.
  • The Trump administration is abandoning the “woke” font Calibri in favor of Times New Roman. Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a directive that blamed “radical” diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility programs for what he said was a misguided switch to Calibri during the Biden administration.
  • Disgraced journalist Olivia Nuzzi’s new book “American Canto” sold only 1,165 hardcover copies in its first week on the shelves.
  • Rocky the Raccoon broke into a Virginia liquor store, broke several bottles of whiskey, apparently drank some that spilled on the floor, and then passed out in the store’s bathroom
  • Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office SWAT sergeant resigned before he could be fired after being found to have responded to the Evergreen High School shooting incident while intoxicated.
  • Pantone released its “Color of the Year” for 2026, and it was basically white. But because it’s Pantone, it had to give it a clever name, so technically “Cloud Dancer” is the color of the year.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • How do you celebrate an acquisition that makes you the largest marketing holding company in the world? If you are Omnicom, you lay off 4,000 employees. And champagne, probably. There’s usually champagne. Those layoffs are in addition to about 19,000 others that Omnicom and the holding company it acquired, Interpublic, made earlier in 2025.
  • If you subscribe to Netflix, expect your monthly fee to increase soon. Netflix outbid Paramount and Comcast to acquire Warner Bros. and its extensive library of content. Netflix agreed to pay $82.7 billion, including debt, which amounts to about $276 for each of its subscribers. Interestingly, the acquisition would also include Warner Bros.’ HBO Max streaming service.
  • The Denver Post has now missed five straight monthly rent payments to the City and County of Denver for space in its eponymous downtown building that it sold to the city in 2024.
  • Rocky the Raccoon broke into a Virginia liquor store, broke several bottles of whiskey, apparently drank some that spilled on the floor, and then passed out in the store’s bathroom. Local animal protection authorities took custody of Rocky, dried him out and released him back into the wild.
  • Penn State is the gift that keeps on giving to college coaches. The school was one of the first to fire its head football coach this season when it let James Franklin go in September, and its efforts to sign a new coach have done nothing but secure lucrative contract extensions for the candidates it was considering. The school was rumored to be interested in Indiana‘s Curt Cignetti, who received a new eight-year, $93 million contract four days after Franklin was fired. Then Penn State turned its attention to Nebraska‘s Matt Rhule, who shortly thereafter received a two-year, $25 million extension. Penn State next turned to BYU‘s Kalani Sitake, who just received a new contract whose terms have yet to be disclosed but reportedly make him the highest-paid coach in the Big 12 Conference. Meanwhile, Penn State still has no new head coach.
  • Zillow has removed scores rating homes’ vulnerability to extreme weather following complaints from real estate agents who apparently fear it will lower sales prices and their resulting commissions.
  • Private employers in the U.S. shed 32,000 jobs in November rather than add the 40,000 new jobs analysts expected, according to data from payroll processor ADP. That data is especially significant given that the Bureau of Labor Statistics still hasn’t issued a new jobs report since the government shutdown.
  • A Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office SWAT sergeant resigned before he could be fired after being found to have responded to the recent Evergreen High School shooting incident while intoxicated.
  • If you have been waiting for the Colorado Rockies to finally win something, good news! Their seven-year, $182 million contract with oft-injured outfielder Kris Bryant was rated the No. 1 worst contract in Major League Baseball.
  • Pantone released its “Color of the Year” for 2026, and it was basically white. But because it’s Pantone, it had to give it a clever name, so technically “Cloud Dancer” is the color of the year.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • More than 125 people are dead and 200 are unaccounted for in Hong Kong after a group of high-rise apartment buildings caught fire. The buildings were undergoing renovations, and bamboo scaffolding that is common in China and mesh netting that protected passersby appear to have quickly spread the fire.
  • Martin Bally, a senior executive at Campbell’s Soup, is no longer with the company after a lawsuit accused him of calling the company’s soups “highly processed food” for “poor people,” complaining that “f–king Indian” colleagues are “idiots,” and that the company’s soups use “bioengineered meat.”
  • Colorado State Sen. Faith Winter was killed in a multi-car accident on I-25 the day before Thanksgiving. Winter made headlines over the past several years for sharing allegations of sexual harassment against a fellow legislator that resulted in his expulsion, suffering a head injury in a bicycle accident and taking a leave of absence last year to seek medical treatment for alcoholism. Police are still investigating the cause of the accident.
  • Twitter/X introduced a new feature that identifies the country of origin for its accounts, and it quickly made clear that “many of the most influential personalities in the ‘Make America Great Again‘ (MAGA) movement on X are based outside of the U.S., including Russia, Nigeria and India.”
  • Some of the gray wolves released in western Colorado as part of the voter-approved reintroduction plan have now made their way to the metro Denver area, according to data released by Colorado Parks and Wildlife. If you hear a cackling sound, that is just western-slope ranchers, and it is hard to blame them.
  • Xcel Energy has asked the Colorado PUC for permission to raise rates by $356 million – a 9% increase that would translate to a $10/month increase for the average consumer customer.
  • The fight to free former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters intensified this week, with the Trump administration demanding Colorado turn her over into federal custody and a bipartisan group of Colorado county election clerks demanding she remain in a state prison. Curiously, Gov. Jared Polis‘ decision to remain quiet on the subject created a vacuum that caused both sides to ratchet up the intensity.
  • A website glitch caused the European electronics retailer MediaWorld to accidentally sell $1,000 iPads for about $17. Customers who ordered them received them a week later, and then, about two weeks after that, the company contacted them saying the advertised price had been incorrect and that they could either return the iPads or pay the difference minus a $150 discount.
  • Secretary of Defense War Pete Hegseth has turned his sights on an unlikely target: the Boy Scouts. Part of Hegseth’s problem: the woke Boy Scouts changed their name to Scouting America and now allow girls to participate.
  • Colorado State University suspended two players – QB Darius Curry and offensive lineman Liam Wortmann – for the team’s final game this season after they were captured on video spitting on opposing players during last week’s game against Boise State.
  • President Donald Trump has used the power of his office to extract a personal favor from global media conglomerate Paramount: a “Rush Hour 4” movie. Paramount is fighting Netflix and Comcast for the right to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, which would require FCC approval.
  • How is 90-year-old ESPN “College Gameday” legend Lee Corso enjoying his retirement? “It sucks,” he says.

Who won the week?

  • Denver Post sports editor Matt Schubert left the paper for an as-yet undisclosed new opportunity.
  • Denver Broncos linebacker Alex Singleton will return to the field this weekend, just weeks after surgery to remove a cancerous testicular tumor.
  • Colorado State University hired Jim Mora, Jr. as its new head football coach. Mora joins CSU from the University of Connecticut, and he previously served as head coach of UCLA and the NFL‘s Atlanta Falcons and Seattle Seahawks.
  • Ole Miss head football coach Lane Kiffin – described by The Wall Street Journal as “college football’s most hated man” – has become the prize in a bidding war by three blue-blood programs: Ole Miss, the University of Florida and LSU. Sometime this weekend, he almost certainly will become the highest-paid head coach in college football history. The only question is by which university.
  • Robert Irwin, son of the late “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin, won this season’s “Dancing with the Stars.”

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Denver may be left of the political center, but its TV news stations soon may not reflect that. Sinclair‘s interest in acquiring Scripps – owner of Denver7 – means that three of our city’s four main TV news stations could be owned by the right-wing media companies Nexstar (Fox31, 9News) and Sinclair (Denver7).
  • CBS4 reporter Kelly Werthmann and photojournalist Kevin Hartfield were forced to take refuge in their news vehicle when “a clearly unstable man” interrupted their live shot at the state capitol. No one was injured.
  • A warm, dry fall has forced the ski resorts Purgatory and Powderhorn to delay their openings.
  • The U.S. Coast Guard has downgraded swastikas and nooses from prohibited “hate symbols” to items that are merely “potentially divisive.”
  • The former British Prince Andrew, now just Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor after his brother stripped him of his royal title, just can’t catch a break. The Daily Mail reported this week that Osborne Partners, the PR firm that convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein hired in 2008 to help him rehabilitate his image, recommended to Epstein that he avoid associating with Andrew because Andrew’s reputation was too toxic.
  • The U.S. may be headed for a brutal flu season. Scientists have found that this year’s virus causes more severe symptoms than last year’s and seems to be spreading more rapidly and earlier than usual. Enjoy those Thanksgiving visitors!
  • Republicans in Texas have ousted Kate Rogers, a fellow Republican who was tasked with overseeing the renovation of the Alamo, because her 2023 Ph.D. dissertation included a “woke” statement – “Personally, I would love to see the Alamo become a beacon for historical reconciliation and a place that brings people together versus tearing them apart, but politically that may not be possible at this time.”
  • Colorado fined BetMGM $50,000 for illegally accepting “prop” bets on individual college athletes’ performances during games.
  • If you are addicted to buying lottery tickets but are broke, good news! The Colorado Lottery Commission will now allow you to use credit cards to buy tickets. What could go wrong?
  • A Missouri judge whose Elvis fixation caused him to wear an Elvis wig during proceedings and play his songs and recite his lyrics in court has agreed to resign.
  • A Russian K9 police dog selected to perform the ceremonial pre-game puck drop at a KHL league hockey game successfully dropped the puck from its mouth and then promptly bit two players.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The U.S. Mint pressed its last pennies this week as the Trump administration has ordered the end to the little-used and little-loved coin. That’s especially bad news for Denver and Philadelphia, the only two cities where pennies were minted.
  • A generation of kids who have never seen anything other than “A”s on their report cards are freaking out because Harvard has determined it is awarding too many of the superlative grades and is evaluating steps to raise the bar to earn one. One student told the student newspaper she cried “the whole entire day” when she learned the school may adjust its grading strategy.
  • Fox31 meteorologist Kylie Bearse‘s recent PR campaign to bring attention to an alleged stalker that the Denver District Attorney’s office was treating with kid gloves has worked. Just weeks after a high-profile Denver Post article, the D.A.’s office announced it would upgrade the charge against the 70-year-old man from a misdemeanor to a felony.
  • If you know a Comcast executive, give them a hug. Fifteen years ago, 90% of U.S. homes subscribed to cable TV. Today, it is 50%.
  • Denver Mayor Mike Johnston isn’t the most collaborative person, and members of the Denver City Council have recently taken some symbolic actions to express their frustration with his go-it-alone approach. This week, however, they started taking steps that are more than just symbolic, and one of the mayor’s signature projects that is being held hostage is the proposed professional women’s soccer stadium.
  • Some guests were given only 10-15 minutes to vacate hotel rooms when the Marriott-backed chain Sonder unexpectedly declared bankruptcy. Blame from guests fell largely on Marriott rather than Sonder, and Marriott has been scrambling to find alternative arrangements for the guests.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported that the Colorado Rockies‘ GM position is actually the most coveted in Major League Baseball because it “is viewed as the sport’s ultimate sadistic challenge.” Said the WSJ: “Their major-league roster is a disaster. The farm system is in shambles. They are notoriously slow to evolve and sit years behind their rivals. Oh, and they also happen to play their home games in an environment that is fundamentally incompatible with playing the sport of baseball.” Rockies fever – catch it!
  • Ball Corp. is paying the CEO it just fired $6.5 million to go away. That may seem like a lot, but the head football coaches at LSU and Penn State are walking away with a collective $103 million after being fired.
  • The Trump administration has finally recognized the causal relationship between tariffs and increased costs of living, and it is frantically trying to implement new trade agreements with countries to lower the costs of staples such as coffee, bananas and beef.
  • Colorado Supreme Court Justice Melissa Hart is into her second month on a personal leave with no explanation why and no planned return date.
  • CBS4 reporter Shaun Boyd conducted a lengthy interview with the individual behind the controversial social media account DO BETTER DNVR this week, and Boyd allowed that individual to make a number of politically charged allegations while remaining anonymous for no journalistic reason. In Boyd’s 43-paragraph article, the phrase “she said” or “she says” is used in 25 of them. My anonymous sources say that Boyd has long been criticized by some for her approach to reporting that lacks what they consider journalistic integrity.
  • Japan is a country trying to overcome its reputation for karoshi – “death from overwork” – so many were stunned when new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi scheduled a 3 a.m. meeting with aides to prepare for an appearance before Parliament that morning.
  • The Denver Public School board censured member John Younguist after an investigation found he more likely than not mistreated some staff of color, although “not deliberately.” He said he plans to take legal action.
  • Here’s a marketing campaign custom built for passive-aggressive people with frenemies: Oral‘s TheraBreath brand has a contest that allows you to nominate someone who has bad breath and the five winners will receive “a personalized video featuring a pep talk” delivered by TikTok star Jake Shane and a promo code to claim a sample of TheraBreath Toothpaste.

Who won the week?

  • Denver was treated to a spectacular “Northern Lights” show this week. The aurora borealis made a surprise appearance when a a severe geomagnetic storm pushed the lights farther in our direction than expected on a clear evening.
  • I flew to San Francisco and back over the weekend during the government shutdown and FAA-mandated flight reductions, and both of my flights arrived early. A shout out to Stacey Stegman and all her colleagues at DIA for managing the behind-the-scenes chaos well.
  • If you think three chords is exactly the right number any song should have – good news! AC/DC announced it will play Mile High Stadium next summer.
  • University of Colorado Athletic Director Rick George announced he will retire next year, which begs the question: will head football coach Deion Sanders join him?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • More changes are coming to KOA NewsRadio. A few weeks ago, the station let “Colorado Morning News” co-anchor Marty Lenz go as part of a broader round of iHeartRadio layoffs, and now it is moving conservative talk-show host Ross Kaminsky to fill the 6-9 am weekday slot. “Colorado Morning News,” which previously aired from 5-9 am, will now air only from 5-6 am.
  • Fewer PR firms expect to see profits in 2025, an industry report published by Davis+Gilbert found. Only 44% of PR firms expect profit gains, and just half project revenue rising — both lows not seen since 2021.
  • At least 13 people died and more are still missing after a UPS cargo plane crashed on takeoff at the Louisville, Kentucky, airport. The crash forced UPS to close its Worldport hub facility that processes millions of packages for roughly 360 incoming and outbound aircraft each day.
  • The Trump administration is cutting 10% of flights at the 40 busiest airports starting today. The administration said the reductions were an attempt to “alleviate the pressure” on over-worked air-traffic controllers, but critics said the move would cause more problems than it would solve. As of this morning, surgical cuts by airlines have resulted in few disruptions.
  • History Colorado is being accused of censorship by a coalition of First Amendment-rights organizations for rejecting a painting that is critical of Gov. Jared Polis and Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper. Sens. Bennet and Hickenlooper are currently candidates for governor and senate, respectively, and the museum’s chief creative officer says exhibiting the painting “could constitute a violation of the Fair Campaign Practices Act, which prohibits government institutions like History Colorado Center from making contributions to a candidate running for office.” The ACLU and others say it wouldn’t. Regardless, Gov. Polis and Sens. Bennet and Hickenlooper can’t be happy with the resulting Streisand Effect.
  • The Houston Independent School District has sued Texas Attorney General Ken Paxson after his office ruled the school district must turn over emails to and from the district’s public relations firm to media outlets who have requested them because they do not qualify for attorney-client confidentiality.
  • The Pentagon‘s draconian press policy may have caused mainstream media outlets like Fox News, The New York Times, The Washington Post, NBC, ABC and CBS to walk away, but it has replaced them with new media outlets such as Mike Lindell‘s LindellTV and the influential pro-Trump activist Laura Loomer.
  • Dallas Cowboys defensive end Marshawn Kneeland died of an apparent suicide. He was 24.
  • The clear winners of election night in Colorado were progressives, tax increases and teachers union-endorsed candidates. The biggest loser? That would likely be Aurora City Councilwoman Danielle Jurinsky, who spent the past year parroting President Donald Trump‘s exaggerated claims of “gang-takeovers” of her city. As Westword noted, “We named the controversial Aurora City Council rep a Person to Watch in 2025, and now you can watch her leave her seat.”
  • A Thai businessman who co-owns the Miss Universe Organization has apologized for publicly berating Miss Mexico, causing her to walk out and several other contestants to join her in solidarity.
  • Following a months-long search, former NFL star Antonio Brown was apprehended in Dubai by U.S. Marshals on an attempted murder charge. He will be extradited to Miami.
  • Yale researchers have done the math and calculated that Elon Musk’s “politically partisan and culturally warlike personae” have cost Tesla the sale of 1 million to 1.26 million cars from October 2022 to April 2025. Meanwhile, Tesla shareholders just approved an unprecedented $1 trillion pay package for Musk, so …
  • The owners of MSNBC will spend $20 million on marketing to promote its rebrand to MS NOW.
  • Hail, uninsured motorists and car thefts have driven Colorado car insurance costs to be the fifth-highest in the nation.
  • U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert “attended a Halloween event in a costume meant to depict a Mexican woman, wearing a sombrero and carrying a sign that read ‘Mexican Word of the Day: JUICY.’ The sign went on to mock Spanish accents with the line, ‘Tell Me If Juicy ICE coming.’ Her companion was dressed as an ICE agent.”
  • Ryan Seacrest and Anderson Cooper can breathe a sigh of relief. NBC has cancelled its upcoming “Snoop Dogg’s New Year’s Eve” special.
  • If you are looking for a winter home, a Palm Beach, Fla. house considered a tear-down is available for a mere $185 million.
  • Investigators determined that the password for the Louvre’s video surveillance system was “Louvre” when thieves stole jewels worth $100 million from the museum last month.

Who won the week?

  • Pax8 communications VP Barry Hawkins has retired. Fun fact: Barry’s daughter, Amanda Hawkins, regularly sings the National Anthem at Colorado Avalanche home games.
  • Denver-based creative agency Karsh Hagan has partnered with Arizona-based Madden Media to deliver expanded integrated services in the tourism, hospitality, outdoor recreation, healthcare, higher education and retail industries.
  • I’m not sure which list to put this on, but the Denver Broncos are the least confidence-inspiring 8-2 NFL team in decades.
  • The Colorado Rockies are poised to make what could be their first good decision in years as the team finalizes a contract for Paul DePodesta to run baseball operations. DePodesta was a key figure in the “Moneyball“-era Oakland A’s and later ran the Los Angeles Dodgers.
  • The man charged with throwing a sub sandwich at a federal agent in protest of Trump administration policies was acquitted of misdemeanor assault by a Washington, D.C., jury. The jury found that throwing the 12-inch deli sandwich from what prosecutors described as “point-blank range” was not an attempt to cause injury.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Tulane University has banned Colorado Academy students from being considered for early admission this upcoming year because a single CA student reneged on an acceptance offer last year.
  • WPP, parent company of PR firms such as Burson and Ogilvy, saw revenue fall nearly 6% in Q3, an ominous sign that sent its stock reeling 18% to set a new 27-year low.
  • Denver Mayor Michael Johnston‘s penchant for “secrecy and spin” is causing him to lose trust with some voters. In just the last week, he has faced mounting criticism for unilaterally renewing the city’s contract for the Flock surveillance system, a secret deal with developers that increased the amount of DIA-adjacent land they received in exchange for the former Park Hill Golf Course, and an ugly fight with the parent company of The Denver Post over $2 million in unpaid rent. And this is happening at the same time he is asking voters to green light $950 million in bonds.
  • After seemingly free-falling for years, Prince Andrew finally hit rock-bottom this week when King Charles punished him in the only way that remained – stripping him of his royal titles and booting him from his royal residence. He is now known simply as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor. Andrew has been a key player in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
  • Denver was the biggest loser on this season’s “Love is Blind” reality dating show. John Frank at Axios noted, “It’s widely acknowledged that the city has a horrible dating scene, and the show somehow made us look even worse.”
  • The governor of Louisiana announced that LSU athletic director Scott Woodward would have no say in who the team’s next head football coach is. Why? The last two coaches Woodward hired – Brian Kelly at LSU and Jimbo Fisher at Texas A&M – were owed a combined $130 million in buyouts after they were fired before their contracts expired. Not surprisingly, Woodward was fired a day after the governor’s comments.
  • In some parts of the country, seeing the first robin is considered the unofficial start of spring. In Colorado, we know winter is upon us when we have our first skier-triggered avalanche of the season.
  • Speaking of skiers, The Denver Post had an incredibly unflattering profile of Telluride ski resort owner Chuck Horning. Among the allegations: he was booed out of an upscale restaurant, he engaged in fist fights with his son and the resort’s CEO, and he sexually harassed and/or assaulted multiple women.
  • Ten million YouTube TV subscribers have lost access to Disney-owned channels such as ABC, ESPN and FX due to a financial dispute..
  • Perth, Australia, beat out Denver as host for the 2030 Gay Games, an event that would have brought 12,000 athletes and $110 million in economic activity to our city. Denverite‘s Kyle Harris reported that the U.S.‘s “recent turn toward anti-transgender federal policy” and “the Trump administration’s mass deportation of immigrants” left many global leaders concerned whether Denver would be a safe destination for the event.
  • Karine Jean-Pierre, the former press secretary to President Joe Biden, is having the kind of book tour that authors have nightmares about.
  • An independent investigation into Denver Public Schools board member John Youngquist found he more likely than not engaged in “belittling, dismissive and condescending behavior” toward some district staff members and exhibited bias in interactions with some district leaders of color.
  • Layoffs abound: UPS is cutting 48,000 jobs, Amazon is laying off 14,000, GM 3,300 employees, Paramount 2,000 employees and Capital One is cutting another 400.
  • Don’t screw with a Long Island wine importer. That’s a lesson the Times of London learned the hard way. The paper wanted to get former NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio‘s take on Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic candidate seeking to be the city’s newest mayor, so a reporter apparently Googled de Blasio’s name and sent an email to the first email address it returned. Unfortunately, that address actually belonged to wine importer Bill DeBlasio who offered his expansive thoughts on the candidate. The paper printed the responses, and politician Bill de Blasio immediately disputed the quotes. The paper then claimed the wine importer “falsely claimed” to be the former mayor, but DeBlasio released the emails showing that, “I never once said I was the mayor. He never addressed me as the mayor. So I just gave him my opinion.”
  • Somehow, former Colorado State University head football coach Jim McElwain received some of the stiffest penalties in the University of Michigan‘s “sign stealing” scandal. McElwain was the head coach at Central Michigan University when one of his assistant coaches allowed a UM spy on the team’s sideline in a game against Michigan State to decipher the Spartans’ signals. The now-retired McElwain apparently was not aware of the plot, and yet he received a two-year “show-cause” penalty that is essentially a two-year ban. Sherrone Moore, the UM offensive coordinator at the time who has since been promoted to UM head coach, received a three-game suspension.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Colorado basketball legend Chauncey Billups – he is an NBA champion, NBA Finals MVP and Hall of Famer who played at the University of Colorado and for the Denver Nuggets – was arrested as part of an FBI investigation into gambling and “sports rigging” operations linked to multiple mafia crime families.
  • A woman in South Korea killed one person and injured eight others when she set her apartment building on fire trying to kill a cockroach. She used a homemade “blowtorch” that combined a pain relief spray can and a lighter.
  • The security team members responsible for protecting the priceless artifacts at the Louvre in Paris are #OpentoWork.
  • Casa Bonita has a surprise critic: actress Brooke Shields. She is the president of the Actors’ Equity Association, the union that represents the costumed characters that roam the restaurant, and her complaint is about a lack of a contract between the restaurant and the union.
  • Tesla’s net income dropped 37% in Q3 despite increasing vehicle sales, undermining an otherwise record-setting quarter ahead of an upcoming vote on a new pay package for CEO Elon Musk that could be worth as much as $1 trillion.
  • The Denver Post has stopped paying rent it legally owes to the City and County of Denver for space in, ironically, The Denver Post building that the city acquired in 2024. The Post hasn’t occupied its space in the building in more than seven years, and it appears that the Post parent company is trying to force the city into a buy-out of its lease.
  • A jury awarded nearly $20 million to six bystanders who were injured when a Denver Police officer fired into a crowd while trying to shoot an armed man in LoDo.
  • Target is eliminating about 1,800 corporate positions, Meta is laying off 660 people, and Rivian is laying off another 600.
  • Denver Broncos linebacker Dre Greenlaw spent the first six weeks of the season trying to get healthy enough to play, finally played in Week 7, and then summarily got suspended for Week 8 for threatening an official. The suspension will cost Greenlaw about $273,000 in salary.
  • Old people + racquet sports = eye injuries.
  • With unrest in the Middle East, war in Ukraine, and rising tensions with Russia and China, the Pentagon has ordered a Navy aircraft carrier to the … Caribbean?
  • Current Denver Broncos head coach Sean Payton and former Denver Broncos QB Russell Wilson are in the dumbest feud possible.
  • Baseball may be known as the “American Pastime,” but a small town outside Toronto claims the game was invented in Canada.

Who won the week?

The Results of the ‘PR Disaster Bracket Battle’

Yesterday, a panel of journalists and communications experts – 9News’ Kyle Clark, Westword‘s Patty Calhoun, Children’s Hospital Colorado‘s Patrick O’Rourke and Liberty Global‘s Bill Myersbroke down 16 of the past year’s most talked-about crises that were pitted head-to-head in a March Madness-style bracket, and more than 100 members of the audience voted – round by round – to determine a single PR disaster champion. The “winner” – United Healthcare.

Thanks to the panelists and everyone who attended the event.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Fame usually comes with the kind of financial resources that allow you to deal with some of its challenges – gated homes, private security, etc. That’s not true of most local television news personalities who are highly visible but don’t command the same salaries. Fox31 meteorologist Kylie Bearse shared harrowing details about a 69-year-old man who has been stalking her for more than two years, and her frustrations about not being able to get the Denver D.A.’s Office to file more serious charges.
  • Denver hosted the 8th edition of the International Taco Bell 50k Ultramarathon that requires runners eat a menu item from nine of the 10 Taco Bells along the course – no Pepto, Alka Seltzer, Pepcid A/C, Mylanta, etc., allowed. If you throw up, you’re disqualified.
  • Opposition to the proposed Nexstar acquisition of Tegna, which would wreak havoc on the Denver television news market, is coming from an unexpected place: the conservative news outlet Newsmax. “This isn’t just about politics,” Newsmax’s CEO said. “It’s about whether communities will still have independent voices covering school boards, local corruption, and small-town issues that the national networks ignore.”
  • University athletic departments claim poverty when it comes to their ability to pay players, but you wouldn’t know from the amount they are spending on coaches … well, technically, ex-coaches. We are only half way through the 2025 college football season, and already we have seen a number of coaches fired – Stanford (Troy Taylor), UCLA (DeShaun Foster), Virginia Tech (Brent Pry), Oklahoma State (Mike Gundy), Arkansas (Sam Pittman), Oregon State (Trent Bray) and now Penn State (James Franklin). Some experts predict that this year’s firings alone could total more than $200 million in buyouts, money that schools are paying to coaches to not coach.
  • Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs is having a record year, but it told employees to expect layoffs in the coming weeks as it integrates AI to handle tasks currently managed by humans.
  • Meanwhile, NBC News let 150 staffers go this week as its parent company plans to spin off MSNBC and CNBC.
  • The triple threat of declining student enrollment, combined with budget cuts at both the state and federal levels, could create a financial “catastrophe” that forces Denver Public Schools to close more schools.
  • U.S. Department of Defense War Secretary Pete Hegseth has united our fractious nation. Unfortunately for him, it is in opposition to his plan to allow Qatar to build a military facility in Idaho.
  • Speaking of Secretary Hegseth, media outlets including The Washington Post, ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox News, The New York Times, Newsmax, The Wall Street Journal, the Associated Press, The Daily Caller, Reuters, Bloomberg News and the Atlantic refused to sign on to new press regulations required by the Department of Defense. The briefing room won’t be completely empty: OANN agreed to abide by the restrictive policy.
  • Indianapolis Colts back-up QB Anthony Richardson was ruled out of last week’s game less than an hour before kickoff after he suffered an orbital fracture in his eye while warming up with a stretching band.
  • A Colorado man has been charged with bigamy. The twist? He is a Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) agent. Or he was, until he quickly resigned to avoid being fired.
  • Meanwhile, the head of Colorado’s COVID-19 response resigned two days after the state put him on leave while it investigated an apparent sexual harassment allegation.
  • R&B singer/songwriter D’Angelo, who died this week at the age of 51, is being remembered by everyone from former President Barack Obama to Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea.
  • President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social: “The Biden FBI placed 274 agents into the crowd on January 6. If this is so, which it is, a lot of very good people will be owed big apologies.” He apparently forgot he was president on Jan.6, and that President Joe Biden would not be sworn in until Jan. 22.
  • I mentioned last week that KOA NewsRadio morning host Marty Lenz had been let go during the most-recent round of iHeartRadio mass layoffs. This week, we learned that Jerry Schemmel, the longtime radio voice for the Colorado Rockies on KOA NewsRadio, was also axed.

Who won the week?

  • Publicis Groupe reported a 3.6% increase in Q3 growth in North America.
  • A new report finds that Denver diners tip the highest in the U.S., averaging 21.18%, followed by Austin and Seattle.
  • A record number of former Denver Broncos are expected to be at this weekend’s game as the team inducts former Broncos receiver Demaryius Thomas into the Ring of Fame. The beloved Thomas passed away four years ago at the age of 33 due to complications from a seizure disorder.
  • Meanwhile, Denver Broncos QB Bo Nix and his wife Izzy are expecting their first child.
  • Apple reached a five-year agreement to be the new home of Formula 1 racing starting next season.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

You’re Invited: A PR Disaster Bracket Battle

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Big 12 publicly reprimanded and fined the University of Colorado $50,000 for a derogatory chant – “F— the Mormons” – from Buffaloes fans that targeted BYU during last weekend’s football game. Colorado coach Deion Sanders also apologized on behalf of the athletic department.
  • How badly behaved were the American fans at this year’s Ryder Cup golf tournament? Legendary golfer and two-time U.S. Ryder Cup captain Tom Watson apologized to the winning European team, saying, “As a former player, Captain and as an American, I am ashamed of what happened” when drunken fans lobbed profanities and insults – and a few beers – at the European competitors.
    • The PGA, which hosted the tournament, had helped incite the fan behavior and then denied that it was excessive. After Tom Watson‘s apology, PGA officials finally realized they couldn’t gaslight the public any longer, and PGA President Don Rea Jr. issued his own apology to the European golfers.
  • The Colorado Bureau of Investigation announced it is reopening the investigation into the 2005 death of gonzo journalist and author Hunter Thompson at his Aspen-area home, 20 years after local authorities originally ruled it a suicide. CBI investigators acknowledge there is no new evidence.
  • WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert appears to have the support of no one at the moment – not fans, not players and not owners – and reports are that she has already agreed to resign once a new collective bargaining agreement is reached with players. We’ll see if she lasts that long.
  • A tow truck driver who stole nearly 50 cars across the Denver area and sold them to salvage yards was sentenced to 16 years in prison.
  • Netflix is facing calls for a boycott from Elon Musk, who is not happy it offers the animated show “Dead End: Paranormal Park” that features two transgender characters.
  • The internecine battle between the Brinkerhoffs, owners of La Loma restaurants, seemed to come to an end several weeks ago, only to flare up again after yet another lawsuit has been filed.
  • Members of the Trump administration lost their minds when the NFL announced that Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny would perform at the halftime of the Super Bowl. Corey Lewandowski, chief adviser to Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, announced that ICE would have a presence at the Super Bowl, because we all know that Home Depot parking lots, restaurant kitchens and Super Bowls are where people here without authorization often congregate.
  • Disability advocates are blasting RTD board members for their decision to begin charging for its “Access-on-Demand” service that covered the cost of ride-share services for disabled passengers. The program costs RTD $17 million annually, which is approximately 1.42% of the transit system’s budget.
  • Congratulations to FIFA for finding innovative new ways to price gouge. Most sports leagues would be content to just jack up the face value of tickets to events like the soccer World Cup, but FIFA has introduced a new wrinkle: in addition to jacking up the face value of tickets, it will charge both sellers and buyers a 15% fee for tickets on its official ticket resale platform. Tickets are already listed for tens of thousands of dollars, and some are more than 10 times higher than their face value.
  • ESPN had an awkward moment this week when two of its playoff baseball announcers promoted the NHL’s season opening slate of games that will be carried by ESPN. After the first announcer shared the NHL games that will be shown, the second announcer, not a hockey fan, dryly shared, “There is zero chance I’ll be watching; I’m just gonna be honest with you.”
  • A Gallup poll finds that the advertising and PR community is viewed favorably by only 29% of the public, ahead of only the pharmaceutical industry and the federal government. Perhaps even worse, the airline industry is viewed more favorable than us.

Who won the week?

  • Pax8 named Tom Gavin as Chief Marketing & Communications Officer. He formerly was with Salesforce, Coupa, Workato and the ONE Campaign.
  • The addition of Chef Hosea Rosenberg’s Santo restaurant at DIA makes it the only airport in the world with three Michelin-listed restaurants under one roof, joining Mister Oso and Mercantile Dining & Provision. Katie Shapiro has the details.
  • Reporters normally hate to be part of a story, but the Clear Creek Sheriff’s Office is crediting reporters with CBS4 and Fox31 for recognizing and reporting an armed burglary suspect who was in the background of their live morning shots from Clear Creek County.
  • Denver Nuggets superstar Nikola Jokić didn’t agree to a contract extension this summer, which caused some concern about his long-term future. But Jokić told reporters this week that his “plan is to be a Nugget forever.”

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Tylenol is facing a crisis the likes of which it has not seen since the 1982 deaths of seven people who consumed Tylenol capsules that had been laced with cyanide. This week, President Donald Trump defied decades of scientific research to declare a clear link between acetaminophen – the active ingredient in Tylenol – and autism.
  • Xcel Energy has agreed to pay $640 million to settle claims that its transmission lines were partly responsible for the devastating Marshall Fire in Boulder County that caused an estimated $1.7 billion in damages.
  • President Donald Trump urged DOJ prosecutors to target former FBI Director James Comey, and this week he got what he wanted. Experts say the prosecution won’t be easy. Previous career DOJ prosecutors had declined to bring the charges because they considered the case too weak and even Attorney General Pam Bondi expressed concerns about pursuing charges before she capitulated to President Trump.
  • Amazon has agreed to pay $2.5 billion “to settle claims that it tricked tens of millions of people into signing up for its Prime membership program, and then made it hard for customers to cancel when they wanted out.”
  • Real life events have caused Apple to delay the premiere of its miniseries, “The Savant,” starring Jessica Chastain. The story arc focused on Chastain’s character trying to prevent extremist attacks that include a sniper and the bombing of a government building.
  • NJ PBS, New Jersey’s only dedicated public television station, will cease operations next summer. The station blamed federal and state funding cuts for the decision.
  • It’s been a schizophrenic week for DoBetterDNVR, the controversial organization that either (depending on your political persuasion) held Denver accountable for its public safety failures or that posted sensational images of people experiencing homelessness and using drugs. The group’s Twitter/X and Instagram accounts were deactivated Monday, with the anonymous leader of the organization saying they “no longer want to be involved in the public, political arena.” Then, Thursday, the accounts were restored, with a message that DoBetterDNVR would “re-engage,” but with a stronger focus on being “accurate and constructive.”
  • Do you have an elementary school student whom you’d like attend an Ivy League college? Good news! Over the next 16 years, the number of high school seniors in the U.S. will decline by 13%, a trend caused by lower birth rates. Experts say that will result in even elite universities becoming slightly less selective, but could also put hundreds of small liberal arts schools at risk of closing.
  • Cleveland Guardians pinch hitter David Fry was hospitalized after being struck in the face by a 99 mph fastball.
  • Virginia Culver, a reporter who spent 44 years at The Denver Post mostly covering religion, passed away died. She was 84.

Who won the week?

  • Vail Resorts promoted Sara Olson to VP of Resort Marketing & Global Communications.
  • Hogan Lovells promoted Cari Bayens to Senior Marketing & Business Development Manager of Energy & Environment.
  • The City of Colorado Springs named Jason Strickland as its Chief Communications Officer. Strickland, a retired Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army, formerly was the Chief Communications Officer for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Rocky Mountain Network.
  • Zero Motorcycles, the maker of electric bikes, selected Carbondale-based Backbone as its PR agency of record.
  • The Colorado Rockies eked out enough wins this season to barely avoid setting the MLB record for most losses in a season.
  • In what had to have been one of the most difficult moments of her life, Erika Kirk, the widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, reminded the country what grace and compassion look like when she delivered his eulogy.
  • Jimmy Kimmel‘s return to ABC following his suspension attracted 6.26 million viewers, more than four times his usual audience. Another 21 million viewers watched his monologue on his show’s YouTube channel.
  • The five-year stock return of such market stars as Nvidia, Palantir, Microsoft and Oracle trail a decidedly less-flashy company – Build-a-Bear Workshop. The stuffed animal company’s stock is up 2,000 percent over the past five years, in part due to adult collectors.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • We are eight months into the new administration, and we have entered uncharted territory, at least for modern times. President Donald Trump coerced ABC and its affiliate stations into suspending the late-night show “Jimmy Kimmel Live! after he and his followers objected to a joke Kimmel told related to the assassination of MAGA activist Charlie Kirk. Nexstar, which owns 32 ABC affiliates as well as the Fox affiliate in Denver, applied pressure to ABC by saying it would not air Kimmel’ show on its stations, a fairly transparent effort to curry favor with the Trump administration as it seeks federal regulatory approval of its acquisition of Tegna (owner of 9News).
  • If you drive in Denver, you should be aware that part of Mayor Mike Johnston‘s plan to solve the city’s budget crisis is to issue more photo radar tickets.
  • The record label for recording artist D4vd is refusing to promote his new album after the body of a 15-year-old girl was found in the trunk of a Tesla registered to him that had been towed. Police are continuing to investigate the situation, and no arrests have been made.
  • Axios Denver disclosed it has only 600 paying members, and it has launched a campaign to grow that to 1,000. For context, The Colorado Sun has more than 15,000 members. You can become a member of Axios Denver here, and a member of The Colorado Sun here.
  • Country music singer Zach Bryan didn’t appreciate that fellow country musician Gavin Adcock called him not “that great of a person,” so much so that Bryan scaled a security fence at a festival where they were both performing in an attempt to confront Adcock while screaming, “If they open up this f***ing gate, I’ll f***ing kill you.” I’m thinking Adcock may have won this debate.
  • Winners of Publishers Clearing House sweepstakes are learning the hard way that nothing is forever, not even “Forever” prizes that guaranteed $5,000 per week for life. The company filed for bankruptcy, and winners are no longer receiving their prize money, forcing many who stopped working decades ago to scramble to find jobs to pay their bills.
  • A poorly designed cooling fan is causing some $100,000+ Corvettes to burst into flames while their owners are refueling them at gas stations. GM went straight to the “Cliche Messaging” section of its crisis response manual, telling The Wall Street Journal, “The safety of our customers is the highest priority for the entire GM team…”.
  • Corey Hutchins‘ “Inside the News in Colorado” newsletter uncovered perhaps the most apt comparison for the murder of conservative activist Charlie Kirk and it has a local connection – the 1984 murder of Denver talk radio host Alan Berg by white supremacists.
  • Los Angeles Clippers owner and former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer says he and his team were “duped” into investing more than a $100 million into a now-bankrupt company that allegedly offered a no-show endorsement deal to Clippers star Kawhi Leonard. Critics argue that the Clippers knowingly were channeling additional salary that would otherwise be subject to an NBA tax to Leonard through the endorsement scheme.
  • Casa Bonita employees represented by the Actors’ Equity Association – namely costumed characters such as “Black Bart” and “the Sheriff” who roam the restaurant – have filed an unfair labor practice charge against the restaurant because of its plans to sit them down for the month of October to let patrons dress up to celebrate Halloween.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Evergreen High School is the latest Colorado school to experience gun violence. There have been 13 school shootings in our state since Columbine in 1999.
  • Conservative political activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed at a college event in Utah. The assassination follows the politically motivated murder of Minnesota State House Speaker Melissa Hortman (D) three months ago, and has sparked fears on both sides of the aisle that political violence will continue to escalate.
  • Variety, CNBC, the Associated Press and other news outlets fell victim to Howard Stern when they reported that radio personality and TV host Andy Cohen was replacing Stern at SiriusXM. Stern had been in lengthy and contentious negotiations with SiriusXM, and Cohen opened what would normally be the Stern show by announcing that he was replacing Stern with his new show, “Andy 100.”
  • Fall temperatures in Denver have risen 3.7 degrees over the past 50 years, impacting everything from demands on the electrical grid to.seasonal allergies.
  • CBS, pathologically afraid of the Trump administration, has named Kenneth R. Weinstein as ombudsman to review complaints about CBS News. Weinstein formerly was head of a right-leaning think tank and has no experience overseeing news coverage.
  • Britain removed its ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, after the release of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein‘s “birthday book” showed the depth of the relationship between the two.
  • Nepal has lifted a social-media ban after at least 19 people were killed in clashes between protesters and police.
  • Two Cornell University students killed a 120-pound black bear and brought the carcass back to their dorm where they skinned and butchered the remains. The two students had valid hunting licenses and did not break any laws, but still … worst dorm neighbors ever.
  • Texas A&M fired an English literature professor over course content related to gender identity. A student protested that the lecture was “illegal” due to an executive order issued by the Trump administration. The university also removed the head of the university’s English department and a dean from their posts due to the incident.
  • The parent company of KUNC, the NPR affiliate for Northern Colorado, cut more than one-quarter of its employees – 10 total – following Congress‘ decision to defund public media.

Who won the week?

  • Former Cory Gardner staffer and GBSM alumnus Sam Stookesberry has launched his own agency, Highline Strategic Communications.
  • The Denver Voice is co-hosting a panel discussion on the state of nonprofit journalism tomorrow. It will feature Laura Frank, executive director of the Colorado News Collaborative; Tim Regan-Porter, CEO of the Colorado Press Association; Dana Coffield, co-founder and editor of the The Colorado Sun; and Mark Horvath, the founder of Invisible People.
  • The Denver Broncos selected the Burnham Yard area of Denver – about a mile southeast of Empower Field – as the home of a new stadium for the team.
  • Oracle announced stunningly positive financial results that sent it stock up 36% in a single day. That increase propelled founder Larry Ellison‘s net worth past Elon Musk to make him the richest person in the world.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • It’s official: Nexstar, the owner of Denver‘s Fox31 and CW2, is acquiring Tegna, the owner of 9News. So will Nexstar relegate 9News to the same second-tier role as CW2? It makes my head hurt, but that is one potential outcome suggested by Inside the News in Colorado‘s Corey Hutchins. By the way, Corey’s newsletter is a must-read for anyone in Colorado‘s journalism and public relations industries. You can subscribe for free.
  • Watchmaker Swatch issued an apology and pulled an ad campaign that featured images of a male Asian model pulling the corners of his eyes up and backwards in what critics called a derogatory “slanted eye” pose.
  • President Donald Trump has threatened Colorado with unnamed “harsh measures!!!” – using three exclamation points, so you know he means it – if Gov. Jared Polis doesn’t immediately pardon election conspiracist and felon Tina Peters. President Trump posted online: “Let Tina Peters out of jail, RIGHT NOW. She did nothing wrong, except catching the Democrats cheat in the Election. She is an old woman, and very sick. If she is not released, I am going to take harsh measures!!!”
  • Walmart has recalled frozen shrimp in 13 states due to radioactive contamination.
  • A few years ago, ESPN was trumpeting its business relationship with former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick‘s production company. This week, it withdrew from a collaboration with Kaepernick and filmmaker Spike Lee on a docuseries about Kaepernick’s banishment from the NFL for speaking out on social justice issues. I wonder what changed over the past couple of years?
  • Cracker Barrel enthusiasts are accusing the company’s new logo of being “woke” and the always-helpful Donald Trump, Jr. used his X account to suggest that the company’s new brand is linked to its inclusive hiring practices. Meanwhile, Steak ‘n Shake, lays hanging around the brink of bankruptcy, has decided that this is another opportunity to try to ingratiate itself into MAGA culture by trolling Cracker Barrel.
  •  A volunteer adviser to Democratic New York Mayor Eric Adams “has been suspended from his reelection campaign after she handed a journalist an envelope of cash stuffed inside a bag of potato chips.” Now questions are being raised about whether this is a standard Adams practice with Chinese-language media.
  • With temperatures in the high 90s this week, Denver Public Schools was forced to close 13 of its schools due to extreme heat. The first week of June typically is in the high 70s to low 80s. Maybe time to think about pushing the school year back a few weeks into June?
  • MSNBC is rebranding as MS NOW following NBCUniversal’s decision to spin off its cable assets.
  • Newsmax has agreed to settle a defamation lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems for $67 million. That is a lot, but not nearly as much as the $788 million Fox agreed to pay for making similar false election-rigging claims.
  • James Dobson, the founder of Colorado Springs-based Focus on the Family that helped position the city as the cultural center of far-right religious politics, died at the age of 89.
  • Fun fact: “The White Lotus,” “The Wire,” “The Walking Dead” and “Game of Thrones” are among the televisions shows banned in Russia. Homosexual relationships and poking fun at Vladimir Putin appear to be two gig reasons shows get banned.
  • Ari Shapiro, host of NPR‘s “All Things Considered” who will be honored as the Denver Press Club‘s annual Damon Runyon Award winner in October, will depart the network in late September. He is the latest highly visible NPR employee to leave since Congress stripped federal funding from public broadcasters.

Who won the week?

  • Adams State softball player Emily Sauvageau auctioned the Shohei Ohtani home run ball she caught – the 300th of his career – for $44,322.
  • Note: “Who Had the Worst Week?” will be taking the next couple of weeks off for vacation. See you in September.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Former Colorado Public Radio host and reporter Vic Vela announced he has been diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. The diagnosis is the latest challenge for Vela, who has been open about his struggles with drug addiction and living with HIV.
  • The post-COVID hangover, ongoing rider safety concerns and an ill-advised attempt to be all things to all commuting people has caused RTD‘s ridership numbers to continue to drop. The first half of this year saw a 6% ridership decline over the first half of last year.
  • When fighting a losing battle, some participants will invoke the “Aiken Formula” by simply declaring victory and going home. The Salvation Army appears to have done just that when it announced it had informed the City and County of Denver that it would no longer manage three city homeless shelters next year. The rub: Denver had already notified the Salvation Army that its proposal to run the three shelters had been rejected in favor of other candidates.
  • Here’s a headline that wouldn’t have seemed plausible 20 years ago but today makes you think, “Yeah, that checks out…” – “Man charged with felony assault for throwing a sandwich at an immigration agent was a DOJ employee.
  • It was a tough week in the sports world:
  • Denver City Council members are not impressed with DIA‘s proposed feasibility study of small nuclear reactors to power the airport.
  • There are about 1.5 million reasons that this is not “The Official PR Blog of the Denver Broncos.
  • Neighbors of an abandoned landmark home on Denver‘s historic 7th Avenue Parkway are staging a “poop protest” by throwing their dogs’ used poop bags onto the front steps.
  • President Donald Trump‘s jealousy of former President Barack Obama‘s Nobel Peace Prize is well known, and President Trump dropped a not-so-subtle quid pro quo request for one during a tariff conversation with Norway‘s finance minister.
  • New financial penalties levied against the University of Michigan by the NCAA for the school’s sign-stealing scandal could cost it as much as $30 million.
  • No new details have emerged following The Wall Street Journal‘s report last week that Nexstar, the owner of Fox31 and CW2, is negotiating to acquire Tegna, the owner of 9News. FCC media ownership rules prevent a single company from owning two of the “Big Four” networks (NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox) in any single market, but analysts suspect that the current FCC would change that rule if it were challenged. If Nexstar owned Fox31, CW2 and 9News, it is likely that a number of positions would be eliminated, including news directors, assignment editors, digital producers, engineering staff, marketing staff, creative services and back-up reporters and meteorologists, among others.
  • Bad news, Luddites. AOL announced it will discontinue its dial-up internet service effective Sept. 30. Maybe put on some acid-washed jeans and take a moment to pour out a Zima in honor of the OG of the internet.
  • I shared the results of the recent PRSA Colorado Gold Pick awards last week, but it turns out that the information provided to me was incomplete. Using the highly scientific Denver PR Blog formula (3 points for the Grand Gold Pick, 2 points for Gold Picks, 1 point for Silver Picks), the following were the agency winners:
    • Schroderhaus – 10 points
    • Sidecar PR – 8 points
    • Linhart PR – 7 points
    • Barefoot PR – 3 points
    • CIG – 3 points
    • Jumel PR – 2 points
    • Philosophy Communications – 2 points
    • ETPR – 1 point
    • Prim – 1 point
    • Root Marketing & PR – 1 point
    • Metropolitan State University was the big overall winner of the night, including winning the PRSA Colorado Grand Gold Pick award for its campaign, “Simulating the Future of Healthcare.” It also won four additional Gold Picks, and barely edged Schroderhaus with 11 points.
    • My apologies to Schroderhaus, Linhart and Metro State for shortchanging their scores on the first version.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • IPG, the parent company of mega-agencies Weber Shandwick, Golin and others, has reduced its headcount by 2,400 positions, or about 4.5%, in the first half of the year, according to regulatory filings.
  • Meanwhile, WPP reported a 10.2 percent drop in revenues for the first half of 2025, and a 47.8 percent drop in operating profit. WPP owns Hill+Knowlton, BCW and Ogilvy, among other large agencies.
  • WNBA players are enduring a new trend of sex toys being thrown from the stands onto the court. It has happened in three games over the past two weeks, and is threatening to become a regular occurrence. Now questions are being raised as to whether crypto bros are behind it.
  • Former Kansas City Chief and Minnesota Viking Jared Allen split his pants performing his signature calf-roping sack dance during his Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremony.
  • Colleagues are distancing themselves from San Francisco KOB-TV reporter Griffin Rushton after he got a little … amorous? … with a dinosaur statue during a live shot.
  • The NFL sold a host of its media assets – the NFL Network, linear distribution rights to RedZone and NFL Fantasy, among others – to ESPN in exchange for a 10% equity stake in the sports network. Bottom line – I wouldn’t count on ESPN and its journalists or analysts being particularly critical of the NFL going forward.
  • A retired Aurora police detective kept “30 boxes of investigative material in his home under his floorboards,” and Aurora’s police chief says it may not constitute a crime. He did acknowledge that the records breach was “unacceptable” and raises “legitimate concerns.”
  • Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is fighting back after President Donald Trump called for his resignation due to alleged “investments and ties to semiconductor firms that are reportedly linked to the Chinese Communist Party and the People’s Liberation Army.”

Who won the week?

  • CORRECTED RESULTS: PRSA Colorado announced its annual Gold Picks awards this week, and using the proprietary Denver PR Blog formula (3 points for the Grand Gold Pick, 2 points for Gold Picks, 1 point for Silver Picks), the following were the agency winners:
    • Schroderhaus – 10 points
    • Sidecar PR – 8 points
    • Linhart PR – 7 points
    • Barefoot PR – 3 points
    • CIG – 3 points
    • Jumel PR – 2 points
    • Philosophy Communications – 2 points
    • ETPR – 1 point
    • Prim – 1 point
    • Root Marketing & PR – 1 point
  • Metropolitan State University was the big winner of the night, including winning the PRSA Colorado Grand Gold Pick award for its campaign, “Simulating the Future of Healthcare.” It also won four additional Gold Picks, and barely edged Schroderhaus with 11 points.
  • Elise Bishop has joined the PR firm Jack Taylor as a VP.
  • Real estate news service CoStar Group hired Elisabeth Slay to cover residential real estate in Denver. Slay has been with Colorado Community Media for the past two years as a reporter. 
  • Kendrick Castillo, the teen who died trying to protect his fellow students during the STEM School Highlands Ranch shooting in 2019, has been nominated for sainthood.
  • Denver-based Palantir Technologies was awarded a $10 billion U.S. Army contract, yet another win in a string of them that has helped push its stock price up 600% over the past year. Great news for the company but not such great news for privacy advocates.

Who Had theWorst Week?

  • ESPN has officially cut ties with media analyst and former Denver Bronco Shannon Sharpe two weeks after he settled a lawsuit accusing him of rape. ESPN had previously suspended Sharpe when the lawsuit was filed.
  • If your favorite DUI defense or class-action attorney seemed a little giddy this week, its because a packaging mix-up caused highly alcoholic High Noon vodka seltzers to be distributed in decidedly non-alcoholic Celsius Astro Vibe energy drink cans.
  • An undetermined number of Denver city employees will begin receiving layoff notices on Aug. 18 as the city tries to close a $250 million budget gap.
  • The City and County of Denver, which has thrown some pretty sharp elbows in the past to retain the annual National Western Stock Show, has green-lighted a $3 million campaign encouraging city residents to eat less meat. That sound you just heard was the marketing team at the Aurora-based Gaylord Hotel sketching out details for an on-site arena.
  • Some bad news for local home-sellers. Denver led the nation in price cuts on for-sale listings in June, indicating that sellers are getting nervous and that buyers may hold the upper hand.
  • U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Museum officials may be approaching the facility’s fifth anniversary, but lower-than-expected attendance figures and declining year-over-year revenue are putting a damper on the celebration.
  • Fox31 had a weird non-story about the executive chef at Guard and Grace leaving on amicable terms.
  • The state of Colorado sued PetSmart, accusing the national pet store chain of tricking employees into enrolling in a “free” dog grooming school that locked them into a form of indentured servitude.
  • The annual Dragon Boat Festival may need to leave Denver due to “dead fish, increasingly warm and shallow water, blue algae blooms, and a lack of filtration from untreated runoff” pouring into Sloan’s Lake.
  • A 50% drop in ratings, the rising cost of materials needed for home renovations and DIY TikTokers have forced HGTV to cut costs and dump at least seven of its shows.
  • After days of rumors swirling online, The Denver Post outed three of the contributors to the DoBetterDENVR social media account, and they couldn’t back-pedal fast enough from its content that many have described as cruel to people experiencing drug addiction and homelessness. Two of the three don’t even live in Colorado.
    • (Speaking of rumors, when will the highly anticipated Colorado Public Radio story on the staff turnover and work culture at the Denver Metro Chamber finally appear?)

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Gov. Jared Polis has done the impossible. He united all of Colorado – rural, urban, suburban, Democrats, Republicans and independents. When his $28 million legacy bridge proposal faced massive public criticism, he put it to a public vote, and a staggering 94% of voters were against it.
  • On the campaign trail and once in office, Colorado Congressman Gabe Evans has used what he said was his grandfather’s lawful entry in the United States as justification for deporting those here illegally. Chase Woodruff at Colorado Newsline dug into the paperwork, though, and discovered Evans’ story is not true – records show his grandfather entered the country illegally at age 5 and was arrested for burglary at age 16.
  • The 76 Group‘s Jeff Small is wracking up a string of embarrassing media coverage for his firm ranging from trying to convince county clerks to do the same thing that got Tina Peters nine years in jail (none agreed) to conducting a “shakedown” of county commissioners trying to get off President Donald Trump‘s “sanctuary jurisdictions” list.
  • Speaking of President Donald Trump, he reverting to his habit of elevating cultural issues when he is threatened by challenges such as his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, and is now threatening to sabotage a stadium deal for the NFL‘s Washington Commanders if they do not restore the team’s old name, the Redskins.
  • Former Colorado state Sen. Sonya Jaquez Lewis is facing felony charges for allegedly forging letters of support that were submitted to investigators looking into allegations she mistreated legislative aides.
  • Employees at The Dallas Morning News are anxiously awaiting to see if Alden Global Capital, the hedge fund owners who are destroying The Denver Post, will acquire the paper.
  • Eleven of King Charles‘ 12 gardeners at his Highgrove estate quit over because of what they say is a toxic workplace environment. I bet King Henry VIII never had that problem.
  • A Little Leaguer who was suspended from the New Jersey state final after a bat-flip celebration that an umpire thought was excessive won a court order allowing him to play. Who says youth sports don’t teach kids life skills?
  • If you have a Gen-Xer in your life, give them a hug. It was a tough week for celebrities who arguably peaked in the 1980s:
    • Malcolm-Jamal Warner, best known for playing the lovable and charismatic son Theo on “The Cosby Show,” drowned while on vacation in Costa Rica at the age of 54.
    • Ozzy Osbourne, the heavy metal singer who fronted Black Sabbath before making it on his own, and who became a mainstream sensation with his reality television show “The Osbournes,” passed away at the age of 76.
    • Hulk Hogan, the mustachioed, headscarf-wearing icon in the world of professional wrestling,” died at the age of 71.
    • And I’ll add Chuck Mangione to the list because while his musical career peaked in the 1970s, his cultural relevance may have peaked in the late 1990s and early 2000s with his cameos on “King of the Hill” as the trumpeter whose every song – “Taps,” “Star-Spangled Banner,” etc. – transitions slowly into his 1977 hit, “Feels So Good.” He passed away at the age of 84.
  • A photograph of a police officer escorting a handcuffed Chuck E. Cheese mascot out of a Tallahassee, Fla., location while stunned children watched went viral. He was still wearing his costume head when police arrested him for credit card fraud.

Who won the week?

  • The Colorado Rockies drafted Ethan Holliday, the son of Rockies legend Matt Holliday, with the fourth overall pick in the MLB amateur draft. Holliday received a $9 million signing bonus, a record for a player drafted out of high school.
  • Denver‘s homicide rate has dropped to a 10-year low, and credit is being given to better staffing, smarter enforcement strategies, strategic community partnerships and tougher gun laws.
  • A one-of-a-kind Caitlin Clark rookie card sold for $600,000, setting an all-time record for the most expensive women’s sports card.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Boulder Weekly appears to be in a death spin after the owners fired the editor and the entire reporting staff. Curiously, the owners retained the special projects manager and bookkeeper.
  • There are 75% fewer reporters working in the U.S. today compared to 2002. That stunning stat came from a Muck Rack and Rebuild Local News analysis that also found that one in three counties across the country do not have “the equivalent of even one full-time local journalist.
  • Former Denver Nuggets President Tim Leiweke helped make Ball Arena a reality and is known for making other high-profile sports venue projects happen. What’s his secret? I don’t know, but in other news Leiweke was indicted for conspiracy to rig the bidding process for a venue at University of Texas at Austin. If convicted, he is probably hoping for home confinement rather than prison because he bought a 10,000-square-foot, $7.2 million home in Cherry Creek a couple of months ago.
  • The dust has settled on the historically bad Colorado Rockies‘ promotion of Walker Monfort, son of the team’s owner, to executive vice president, and the consensus is that more Monfort is not what the team needs. Troy Renck of The Denver Post said, “They need to repo the franchise, not a nepo hire” and the Denver Gazette‘s Mark Kiszla noted, “Born on third base, can Walker…find [his] way home, much less to first place in the National League West? Don’t bet on it.” 
  • If you are looking for a stock to short, BarkBox is hiring a “Chairdog” to make company decisions via a telepathic communicator. The dog will report to the CEO and make product-related decisions.
  • University of Denver faculty have issued a vote of “no confidence” in Chancellor Jeremy Haefner. “Financial management, shared governance and the future vision for the university” were cited as some of the reasons for the vote.
  • Red Rocks concertgoers got more than they bargained for when a couple of bears roamed the venue at a Russ concert this week.
  • The WNBA is facing an officiating crisis that is undermining the integrity of the league, and superstars such as Kelsey Plum and Angel Reese are among the players expressing frustration.
  • Ted Cruz, the U.S. senator from Texas, has a knack for making bad decisions during natural disasters. You may recall in 2021 when he left the state for Cancun, Mexico, amid a devastating cold snap that left millions without heat. This week, he reportedly delayed returning to Texas from a vacation in Greece following the deadly floods so he could tour the Parthenon.
  • The co-op board responsible for approving the sale of a New York City apartment once owned by Babe Ruth rejected social media influencer and collegiate gymnast Olivia Dunne‘s bid. Co-op boards are notoriously tough on celebrities who may draw paparazzi, and Dunne joins others such as Madonna, Mariah Carey and Calvin Klein whose bids to own apartments have been rejected.
  • It is hard to imagine anyone willingly having their brand associated with the dumpster fire that is the Colorado Rockies, but Denver-based aerospace and defense technology company York Space Systems inked a six-year deal to have the company’s logo on the team’s uniforms.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Ogilvy is laying off 700 employees, or about 5% of its workforce, and shuttering its DEI division. Meanwhile, We. Communications is laying off 2% of its staff globally.
  • CBS parent company Paramount has agreed to pay $16 million to President Donald Trump to settle his lawsuit against “60 Minutes.” Experts were certain Paramount would prevail in the suit, but noted that Paramount needs governmental approval for its plan to sell itself to Hollywood studio Skydance.
  • It was a tough week for Colorado board members:
  • Prada is dealing with a problem in India. The fashion house either was “inspired by” or “culturally misappropriated” the Kolhapuri chappal-like sandal that it featured in a Milan fashion show. Indian social media exploded with protests, and Prada quickly apologized. It added that it is “opening a dialogue for a meaningful exchange with local Indian artisan communities.”
  • The attorney representing an Aurora dentist accused of murdering his wife has withdrawn from the case a week before trial because the attorney was arrested for arson related to a fire at his own home.
  • Carnival Cruise Lines can’t be happy about a new Netflix documentary that revisits its infamous 2013 “poop cruise” when a catastrophic power outage created “postapocalyptic scenes of passengers sleeping on pool decks, hoarding food and collecting biohazard bags to relieve themselves.” Happy cruising!
  • The Denver City Auditor‘s office apparently has a new tagline for 2026 – “We’re tired. You do it.” Having attended about as many community meetings as they want, this year they have instituted a social media hashtag – #AuditDenver2026 – so that members of the community can suggest what gets audited.
  • Sean “Diddy” Combs will remain in jail pending sentencing after he was convicted of transporting prostitutes. Combs was found not guilty on more serious charges, but he also faces more than 50 civil lawsuits.
  • The Denver Animal Shelter has been forced to increase its weekend adoption hours because it has been inundated with animals turned over to it.
  • The Trump administration is withholding about $7 billion in K-12 funding nationally that includes about $70 million to Colorado schools. The administration says it wants to review whether the funding, which has been approved by Congress, will be spent according to the president’s priorities.
  • Amazon will soon have more robots than people working in its warehouses. If you are an Amazon investor, you can mentally move this one to the “Who Won the Week” section.
  • The Glastonbury Music Festival in England went sideways quickly when two performers – Bob Vylan and Kneecap – shared anti-Israel comments from the stage. Government officials threatened criminal investigations and the department that regulates broadcasters demanded to know why the BBC aired the comments while live streaming the event.
  • The Wimbledon tennis tournament has experienced both its hottest opening ever and the largest number of seeded players eliminated in the first couple of rounds.

Who won the week?

  • America celebrates our 249th birthday today. We have survived a civil war, a depression, two world wars, a Cold War, two pandemics, slavery, internment and the Cuban Missile Crisis over the course of those years. Here’s hoping we make it another 249 years.
  • Former New York Mets star Bobby Bonilla received his annual $1.2 million payment from the team this week despite having retired in 2001. How did he manage that? In 2000, the Mets wanted to buy out the remaining $6 million on his contract, but instead of paying him that amount, they agreed to make annual payments of $1.2 million for 25 years starting in 2011. At the time, that seemed like the smart financial decision for the Mets because – and I’m not making this up – their investments in a Bernie Madoff fund were returning such strong results.
  • George Constanza bobbleheads that will be given away to attendees of a New York Yankees game in August are pre-selling on eBay for five times the cost of tickets to the actual game.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • A postal carrier who stole, filled out and submitted 19 mail ballots as part of a rogue plan to test the security of Colorado‘s signature verification process was sentenced to five years in jail. The scheme was identified when election officials contacted alleged voters whose signatures did not match and learned they had not submitted ballots.
  • University of Colorado Regent Wanda James and her colleagues are using The Denver Post‘s editorial page to fight over a board investigation that could lead to her censure.
  • The U.S. Navy stripped former San Francisco Mayor Harvey Milk‘s name from one of its vessels. Milk was a U.S. Navy veteran and the first openly gay man to be elected to office in California. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth justified the decision by saying, “People want to be proud of the ship they are sailing in.”
  • Jake Rosencranz, a University of Denver alum who worked in Denver at the Behm Consulting Group, was struck by lightning and killed while on his honeymoon in Florida.
  • Two U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team players – Weston McKennie and Tim Weah – who play professionally with Juventus in Italy have caused an uproar by alleging that the country’s food is boring and lacks variety.
  • What appeared to be an off-the-cuff comment in a press conference from Denver Nuggets Vice Chairman Josh Kroenke about the potential to trade MVP Nicola Jokić serves as a reminder of how careful and prepared executives need to be when speaking to the media. The throwaway comment completely overshadowed the intention of the press conference, which was to introduce the team’s new co-GMs.
  • Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and journalist Lauren Sanchez‘s wedding this weekend had to be relocated to a more secure venue after residents of Venice, Italy, threatened to crash it. If you are still looking for a gift for the couple, $2,000 is the largest gift card Amazon offers.
  • Elon Musk fired Tesla‘s head of North American and European operations following a prolonged sales slump, as if that guy was the problem.
  • Brad Pitt‘s Los Angeles home was ransacked and robbed while he was away promoting a new movie.
  • Microsoft has updated its infamous “blue screen of death” to a new-and-improved black version. Maybe the engineers instead could have focused on eliminating the bugs that cause it in the first place?
  • President Donald Trump‘s new cell phone venture, Trump Mobile, quickly pulled the coverage map from its website when critics noticed that it included the “Gulf of Mexico” rather than the “Gulf of America.”
  • Gov. Jared Polis‘ desire to build a legacy project in the form of a $30 million bridge to connect the state capitol to Lincoln Park has hit a snag in the form of 9News’ Kyle Clark. The most influential media figure in town has been on a crusade to kill the project, even spending a six-minute block of his “Next with Kyle Clark” show on a commentary criticizing every aspect of the plan.

Who won the week?

  • PRSA Colorado announced the winner of its 2025 awards:
    • Doug Hock, longtime oil-and-gas communications executive, won the Lifetime Achievement award.
    • Jennifer Quermann, senior director of Communications and Marketing at the Butterfly Pavilion, won the PR Person of the Year award.
    • Walker Shumock-Bailey, marketing coordinator at A Little Help, won the Rookie of the Year award.
    • Jake Kasowski, managing supervisor at FleishmanHillard, won the Chapter Service award.
    • Jason Evans, communications manager at FlatironDragados, won the Mentor of the Year award.
    • Rosalind “Bee” Harris, publisher of the Denver Urban Spectrum, won the Outstanding Business Leader award.
    • Tina Griego, senior editor at the ProPublica Local Reporting Network, won the Media Professional of the Year award.
  • Reporter Nicky Andrews announced she is leaving the Boulder Daily Camera/Longmont Times-Call. No word yet on where she will land.
  • Metro State, a longtime commuter campus, has unveiled plans to build its first on-campus residence hall, a $118 million project that will house 550 students.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Boulder‘s Comprise PR, formerly MAPR and Metzger before that, has shut down following a bankruptcy filing. Owner Doyle Albee had hoped to reorganize and survive the filing, but he said that former employees who poached clients had made that impossible. Albee and most of the remaining employees are moving to California-based Hawke Media, which touts its “10 years of marketing domination.”
  • The crash of an Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner bound for London killed at least 269 people. It is India’s worst aviation disaster in decades.  
  • Journalist Terry Moran is out at ABC News after he tweeted that top White House aide Stephen Miller is a “world-class hater” whose “hatreds are his spiritual nourishment.” Because truth is an absolute defense against defamation claims, ABC News doesn’t need to worry about a lawsuit, but they nonetheless wanted to stay on President Donald Trump‘s good side.
  • Conservatives weren’t happy several years ago when major brands declined to advertise on Twitter/X for political reasons, so much so that the FTC is trying to include a prohibition on that as a formal requirement for approving a merger between marketing conglomerates Omnicom and Interpublic Group.
  • Miami-Dade police are searching for oft-troubled former NFL wide receiver Antonio Brown on a charge of attempted murder. Brown was allegedly involved in a shooting during a celebrity boxing event in Miami last month.
  • Former Denver Public Schools board member Auon’tai Anderson continues to harbor delusions of grandeur. Two years ago, he was censured for flirting with a 16-year-old student and he then declined to run for re-election after polls found that he had the support of only 9% of respondents. So, of course, this week, Anderson teased a possible run to rejoin the board, perhaps in 2027.
  • University of Colorado football coach Deion Sanders is dealing with an unspecified health issue that has caused him to miss the team’s annual summer football camps. There is no announced timeframe for his return.
  • FIFA introduced dynamic pricing for tickets to this summer’s inaugural Club World Cup that will take place in the U.S., and it is not going well. Tickets for the opening match between Inter Miami (featuring soccer superstar Lionel Messi) and Egyptian team Al-Ahly are going for as little as $4.
  • The Dyson bandits – two brothers who stole nearly $30,000 worth Dyson vacuum cleaners and other items from Denver-area Targets and resold them – have been sentenced to a combined 10 years in prison.
  • The Denver City Council has authorized another $400,000 in settlement payments to protesters injured by police during the George Floyd protests in 2020. The latest payment means that Denver has now paid nearly $20 million in settlements to protesters injured that summer.
  • If you had actress Olivia Munn and children’s YouTuber Ms. Rachel in a blood feud, well, you are more prescient than I am. It’s gotten so bad that People magazine had to remove an online article about them because of the violent threats it triggered.
  • City engineers have warned city council members that two bridges in Denver may soon be off limits to ambulances and other heavy vehicles due to deteriorating conditions. What’s worse is the two bridges are located within blocks of Denver Health.
  • If you are from the Pacific Northwest, there’s at least a decent chance you are a serial killer.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Denver Post is shuttering its hyper-local YourHub section effective this week. The paper claims the move “is part of our effort to focus our resources on other areas of news coverage.” What it didn’t mention is that it has also laid off a deputy sports editor, a part-time photo editor and a part-time breaking news reporter. Corey Hutchins‘ “Inside the News in Colorado” newsletter has those details.
  • Bridges generally are designed to get people from point A to point B as efficiently as possible, but a bridge proposed for Civic Center Park wanders a bit aimlessly, perhaps in a subconscious nod to the drunk people who would no doubt be among its biggest users. The CEO of Historic Denver was more succinct, saying the bridge is “completely unnecessary” and “does nothing right.”
  • A Christian school in Tennessee banned a senior from graduation after she announced online that she is gay.
  • NPR, Colorado Public Radio and two other Colorado radio stations have sued the Trump administration arguing that an executive order cutting millions in public funding violates their free speech and relies on an authority that he does not have.
  • Starbucks baristas in South Korea have stopped calling out customers’ names for completed drink orders after customers were using political insults as part of their “names.”
  • An employee in the Washington Capital‘s corporate sales department may have accidentally shared star player Alex Ovechkin‘s plans to play one final year before retiring.
  • Two Secret Service agents were caught on video brawling outside the home of former President Barack Obama. Both have been suspended pending an investigation.
  • Speaking of brawling, a group of parents attending a kindergarten graduation in Arkansas fought in full view of kids in the school’s hallway.
  • President Donald Trump loves handing out insulting nicknames, but he isn’t very happy to be on the receiving end of one. When asked about the nickname TACO – Trump Always Chickens Out – that has been used to describe his tariff policy, President Trump was … less than pleased. One political analyst believes that the TACO insult may have legs.
  • Analysts are blaming repeated missed quarterly earnings and overall bad publicity for Vail Resorts‘ decision to dump its CEO Kirsten Lynch and replace her with former CEO Rob Katz.
  • A judge has ordered Twitter/X to pay $8 million for breaking its office lease in Boulder in 2022.
  • Southwest Airlines this week officially ended one of its most-beloved perks – free checked bags.
  • Former gymnast Mary Lou Retton, the darling of the 1984 Summer Olympic Games, was arrested for DUI.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • A Colorado Rockies fan is suing the team after he was hit in the eye with a foul ball. In his suit, he alleges that the team is so bad that it encourages fans not to pay attention to what is happening on the field. He almost certainly isn’t going to win the suit, nor should he, but the absolute shade he throws at the inept Rockies makes it one of my favorite lawsuits of all time.
  • Speaking of the Colorado Rockies, their 8-42 record after the first 50 games is the worst in MLB history.
  • A Lufthansa flight from Germany to Spain flew about 10 minutes without a pilot at the controls after the pilot left the cockpit to use the restroom and the co-pilot lost consciousness. Newark air traffic controllers were like, what’s the big deal?
  • The U.S. Supreme Court was unable to achieve the required six-judge quorum required to hear a case in a lawsuit against a publisher who has book deals with four of the justices. The inability to hear the case left standing a lower-court ruling for the publisher, so maybe those book deals were a really good investment.
  • The news division at CBS continues to reel after several high-profile resignations. This time it was the division’s CEO Wendy McMahon, whose resignation was blamed on CBS’s and parent company Paramount‘s willingness to capitulate to Trump administration demands. A month ago the executive producer of “60 Minutes” resigned for the same reason.
  • The Chicago Sun-Times and the Philadelphia Inquirer published syndicated content that they were unaware was created by generative artificial intelligence. The material included “unidentifiable quotes from fake experts and imaginary book titles.
  • Denver is laying off employees, instituting a hiring freeze and requiring employees to take unpaid furloughs to address a $50 million budget shortfall this year that is forecast to grow to $200 million next year
  • Slip-and-fall law firms Frank Azar & Associates and Bachus & Schanker are locked in a legal battle, with Azar accusing his rival firm of illegally using Google keyword ads to trick litigants trying to find Azar’s firm. Fun fact: Azar has turned to the law firm Taft Stettinius & Hollister to represent it.
  • Salt-N-Pepa are suing Universal Music Group for the rights to their master recordings from the 1980s, including their hit “Push It.
  • Walmart is cutting approximately 1,500 high-paying corporate positions.
  • If you are a North Korean ship builder, now would be a good time to make run for the China border. The country’s newest warship capsized during its high-profile launch ceremony. Kim Jong Un called the incident a “catastrophic failure” and a “criminal act,” and promised to punish those responsible.
  • Speaking of naval mishaps, two sailors died when the mast of a Mexican naval ship navigating the East River in New York City struck the Brooklyn Bridge.

Who won the week?

  • Margaret Fogarty and Leigh Picchetti have launched Corkboard Communications, “a collective of marketing communications veterans with expertise in brand, public relations and digital engagement.”
  • Christine Perkett and Michelle Baum have launched The Nova Method, a marketing communications and PR firm “purpose-built to move brands beyond surface-level visibility to measurable audience engagement.” 
  • Linhart PR won a PRSA Bronze Anvil for its campaign for client National Cattleman’s Beef Association, and Denver Water won a Bronze Anvil for its “Splashstreet Boys: I Water that Way” video.
  • Jaden Knowles has joined 9NEWS as weekend morning meteorologist.
  • Barefoot PR is hiring for three positions: two PR associates and a web development contributor.
  • The Denver Nuggets removed the “interim” title from head coach David Adelman. Taking over the team with just three games left in the regular season, Adelman guided the Nuggets to one playoff series win against the L.A. Clippers before losing to the Oklahoma City Thunder in seven games. Fun fact: Adelman’s record is 3-0 in the regular season and 7-7 in the postseason, making him the only coach to have more playoff wins than regular season wins.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • God may forgive, but the IRS doesn’t. Which is bad news for Pope Leo because U.S. tax law says he may owe annual $135,000 payments to the U.S. Treasury.
  • The jockey of Kentucky Derby-winning horse Sovereignty was fined $62,000 for whipping his horse too many times down the stretch during the iconic race. If you are curious about the allowable number of times you can whip a horse during a Derby, it is six.
  • Two years after taking lighter fluid and a match to billions of dollars in brand equity by dropping the name HBO from its streaming service, executives at Warner Bros. Discovery have announced that Max will now be rebranded back to HBO Max. HBO is synonymous with prestigious programming (“The Sopranos,” “The Wire,” “Succession,” “Veep,” “Euphoria,” etc.), and I can only assume the same people who dropped HBO in the first place are the same marketing geniuses who named the parent company Warner Bros. Discovery.
  • A Consumer Reports investigation found that King Soopers is overcharging Colorado customers nearly 20% compared to the prices that are listed on the shelves.
  • The nonprofit National Trust for Local News is selling 14 of its 21 community papers in Colorado — including the Arvada Press, the Englewood Herald and the Littleton Independent — to Arizona-based media company Times Media Group. The Nieman Foundation calls The Times Media Group an “out-of-state, for-profit media company with a history of reducing local newsrooms.” Corey Hutchins has a deep dive into the news at his “Inside the News in Colorado” Substack.
  • Nissan announced plans to lay off 11,000 workers globally, and Microsoft is laying off 6,000 people, or about 3% of its workforce.
  • DIA joined the ranks of airports nationally that have experienced brief communications outages that prevented air traffic controllers from communicating with pilots. Enjoy your summer vacations!
  • I suspected that Gérard Depardieu was a skeevy perv ever since the first time I saw him in “Cyrano De Bergerac.” It took 35 years to be proven right, but a French court this week found him guilty of sexually assaulting two women.
  • Following encampment protests of the war in Gaza last year, the Colorado Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights plans to spend the next year investigating Denver’s Auraria campus to determine whether antisemitism exists on the downtown campus.
  • The University of North Carolina has hired a former NFL PR expert to help head football coach Bill Belichick. Here’s hoping the guy’s first piece of advice to Belichick is to stop talking about his girlfriend who is 50 years younger than he is. The second piece: he better win a lot of football games quickly to help change the subject.
  • DIA CEO Phil Washington is playing defense explaining how he and eight of his colleagues spent $165,000 on a trip to a a three-day conference in Madrid.
  • The NWSL acknowledged it should have postponed the remaining part of a recent game between Angel City and Utah after an Angel City player collapsed on the field and was taken to the hospital via ambulance.
  • Colorado Republicans are plotting a comeback in our state, and part of that path now includes a gala event hosted by Heidi Ganahl (who lost her 2022 gubernatorial race to Gov. Jared Polis by 19 points) and featuring … Eric Trump. There’s a “definition of insanity” thing that makes me think Heidi Ganahl and Eric Trump are hardly the best advocates for Republicans to “take back Colorado.”
  • Morris, the alligator from the movie “Happy Gilmore,” passed away in Colorado. He was approximately 80 years old.
  • You missed your chance to buy the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park. It sold for $400 million.

Who won the week?

  • Longtime 9News journalist Tom Green announced he is stepping down from the station after 43 years in Denver. Green is arguably the funniest journalist in town, albeit in an under-the-radar way.
  • The Denver Nuggets forced a game 7 in its series against the Oklahoma City Thunder. Not bad for a team that fired its head coach and GM three games before the end of the regular season.
  • Pete Rose, “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and host of other baseball outcasts have been made re-eligible for the baseball Hall of Fame. They still have to be voted in, though, which is unlikely.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • The Denver School Board voted to extend Superintendent Alex Marrero’s contract by another two years, a move that makes it harder for board members elected in the fall to remove him.
  • Denver sports fans get a rare game-seven doubleheader tomorrow when both the Colorado Avalanche and Denver Nuggets will play series-deciding games. The only downside? The games will be played at the same time.
  • “60 Minutes” reminded everyone why it has been the most-respected television news program for decades when it closed last week’s show with an on-air rebuke of its Paramount corporate owners for trying to meddle with its content.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • PRSA Colorado is accepting nominations for its Chapter Service, Lifetime Achievement, Mentor of the Year, PR Person of the Year, Rookie of the Year, Business Leader, Media Professional and PR Team of the Year awards.
  • University of Colorado WR/CB and Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter was both selected second overall in the NFL draft and does not have to play for the Cleveland Browns. The Browns traded the pick to the Jacksonville Jaguars, allowing Hunter to return to his home state of Florida.
  • Colorado Avalanche captain Gabe Landeskog returned to the ice after a 1,032-day break to rehabilitate a knee injury.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Actor Rob Lowe was not amused when a Beverly Hills sightseeing tour bus driver pointed him out to passengers as “John Stamos.” Lowe, who was on a sidewalk near Rodeo Drive, confronted the driver of the open-air bus and told him he needed to “Get better at your job.”
  • Tesla is facing legal allegations that it speeds up the odometers on its electric vehicles so they fall out of warranty faster.
  • Actor Kelsey Grammer‘s plans to raze a 200-year-old cottage in Bristol, England has outraged locals. He wants to build a four-bedroom modern home.
  • The drummer for the band New Pornographers was arrested on child pornography charges.
  • Former members of the University of Colorado football team aren’t impressed by coach Deion Sanders‘ plans to retire the number of QB Shedeur Sanders. The alumni agree with Coach Prime‘s decision to retire Heisman trophy winner Travis Hunter‘s number, but are annoyed that he has used that as an opportunity to retire his son’s number as well.
  • If you had Wendy’s vs. Katy Perry in the celebrity feud pool, you are smarter than I am. The burger chain is playing defense after its social media team poked fun at the singer for joining the all-female crew that went to space. The backlash came from celebrities Emily Ratajkowski, Olivia Wilde and Olivia Munn, and forced the brand to backtrack slightly by claiming it has a “ton of respect” for Perry.
  • The production of craft beer fell to 23.1 million barrels in 2024, which represents a 4% decline compared to the previous year and is the largest non-pandemic drop in industry history. That is not a good statistic for Colorado, which has the fourth most craft breweries in the country.
  • United Airlines took the unusual step of issuing two different profit outlooks for 2025 – one that assumes a recession and a second that doesn’t.
  • It is starting to feel little like Groundhog Day in Colorado politics. Former U.S. Rep. Yadira Caraveo (D) announced she will run to try to reclaim CD-8, while former U.S. Rep. Greg Lopez (R) announced he will run for governor for a third time. He didn’t win the primary race in either of his first two attempts.
  • President Donald Trump was no fan of the latest episode of “60 Minutes” that featured stories on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the territory of Greenland. He called on the FCC to revoke CBS’s broadcast license “for their unlawful and illegal behavior” airing stories he did not like.
  • Speaking of President Trump, he is also at war with Harvard University after it refused to acquiesce to his demands on a variety of issues. President Trump froze $2.2 billion in grant funding and then asked the IRS to revoke its tax-exempt status as punishment for defying him.
  • You don’t really think about competitive fishing as a particularly dangerous sport, but three people died when two boats collided during a fishing tournament in Alabama.
  • Actor Haley Joel Osment was arrested and charged with public intoxication and possession of cocaine.
  • All 1.4 million residents of Puerto Rico are again without power as the island suffered its second catastrophic blackout in four months.
  • A judge in Florida said she was powerless to release an American citizen born in Georgia who was detained as a suspected undocumented immigrant. ICE had moved the prisoner to a detention center and the judge said while she had the power to dismiss the charge, she did not have jurisdiction to force his release.

Who won the week?

  • DIA ranked as the third busiest airport in the U.S. and sixth busiest in the world in 2024.
  • Fourteen Coloradans landed on Forbes‘ list of the world’s richest billionaires. Phil Anschutz was first among Coloradans with $16.9 billion, while Cargill MacMillan III ($1.4 billion) had the most billionaire-ish name.
  • ESPN‘s Lee Corso announced he would retire from “College Gameday,” where he built a cult following by predicting winners by donning the team mascot’s head. Corso is 89 and has been part of the show for 38 years.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • How have budget and staff reductions at major newspapers impacted journalism? The Dallas Morning News‘ managing editor admitted that it did not cover the recent “Hands Off!” anti-Trump Administration protests because “we didn’t realize the protest was going on.” She added, “I regret this is the answer because that’s a big miss for us to be unaware of such a large event.”
  • Denver Nuggets head coach Michael Malone may have won a championship less than two years ago, but the NBA is quickly joining the NHL as the most “what have you done for me lately” leagues. The Nuggets fired Malone on Tuesday – just a week before the playoffs (for which the Nuggets had already qualified).
  • The death toll from the collapse of a nightclub roof deck in the Dominican Republic has now passed 200, and is thought to include several former MLB baseball players.
  • Fundraising for the 2025 Denver Pride Parade has dropped by about two-thirds compared to last year — part of a national trend in response to DEI fears associated with the Trump Administration
  • Despite having spent more than a billion dollars subsidizing stadiums for men’s sports (Ball Arena, Empower Field, Coors Field), Denver City Council members have reservations about taxpayers providing $70 million of the $200 million needed for a stadium for a new women’s professional soccer team.
  • Perceptions of a lack of safety, affordability and vacant retail spaces are being blamed for a 15 percentage point drop in the number of visitors who say they had a “great” experience in Downtown Denver.
  • Dublin officials are taking steps to protect a life-size statue of “Molly Malone” – the central figure of the eponymous song most associated with St. Patrick’s Day. It seems that visitors have been rubbing the statue’s ample cleavage for good luck, causing it to discolor awkwardly.
  • A judge has ruled that Newsmax made defamatory statements about Colorado-based Dominion Voting Systems when it falsely claimed that the company rigged votes in the 2020 presidential election. The ruling clears the way for a jury trial to determine whether the statements were intentionally false and, if so, to calculate damages. You may recall that Fox News reached a $787.5 million settlement with Dominion over similar allegations.
  • A European rugby match was delayed 40 minutes after a parachutist delivering the match ball was caught and left dangling from the roof of the stadium.
  • An rare play forced SEC Conference officials to stop a college softball game between the Florida Gators and the Arkansas Razorbacks for 25 minutes as they thumbed through a copy of the official rule book to figure out what to do.
  • Barstool Sports and ESPN‘s Pat McAfee – arguably the two leaders in “bro sports” culture – are facing a reckoning over their actions propagating a salacious sex rumor about a 19-year University of Mississippi student. The student, who is neither a public figure nor an athlete, has fought back and said she intends to file a lawsuit. Barstool CEO Dave Portnoy responded by saying he is “sad, and I wish we didn’t play any part in it,” while also acknowledging his company will be entering mediation with the student’s attorneys. McAfee and ESPN continue pretend nothing is happening.
  • The U.K. reality TV show “Celebrity Big Brother” is shocked – SHOCKED – that actor Mickey Rourke, a known sleazebag, is behaving like a sleazebag.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • A United Airlines flight from Los Angeles to Shanghai was forced to return to the U.S. two hours into the flight when one of the pilots realized he had forgotten to bring his passport. A new crew was brought in and the flight took off again six hours after its initial departure.
  • What do you get when you put librarians in charge of doing math? A $25.4 million estimate for an open-records request. The Pikes Peak Library District in El Paso County gave a journalist the $25.4 million estimate that calculated it would take 613,440 hours to complete, the equivalent of a team of five people working full-time for 59 years.
  • The genetic testing company 23andMe has filed for bankruptcy, meaning that its DNA registry containing sensitive information on millions of people could be bought for pennies on the dollar by bad actors. California‘s attorney general issued a rare consumer privacy alert reminding residents that they have the option to direct the company to delete their data and destroy any samples of genetic material it holds prior to any sale.
  • Don’t delay that vacation: Hawaii is sinking 40 times faster than scientists initially thought.
  • It was quite a week for the White House:
  • The live-action remake of “Snow White” is on pace to be one of the biggest flops of the decade, even bigger than “Joker: Folie à Deux.” At the heart of the debacle: a series of self-inflicted wounds.
  • A jury ordered the makers of the Roundup weed killer to pay $2.1 billion in damages to a plaintiff who argued the product caused his non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma cancer. Appeals courts have reduced previous large jury awards against Roundup by about 95%, which could also happen here.
  • The Colorado Rockies will play the first game of the 2025 season today, and they are already 1.5 games back from the division-leading L.A. Dodgers.
  • It is not easy being a mid-major program like the Colorado State University Rams. You want the program to do well, but when they do, you start to worry about losing players or coaches to schools in bigger conferences. That is what happened this week. Men’s basketball coach Niko Medved methodically built CSU into a team that made the NCAA “March Madness” tournament regularly, and his team gave one of the all-time great performances in a last-second loss to the University of Maryland. And then, less than 24 hours later, the University of Minnesota hired Medved away.
  • It has been a tough couple of weeks for the Denver arts and business communities. First, we lost former Metro Denver Economic Development Corporation CEO Tom Clark, who was a behind-the-scenes driving force for many of Denver’s biggest accomplishments over the past few decades. And, this week, the family and friends of Denver Botanic Gardens CEO Brian Vogt are mourning his passing. He was 66.

Who won the week?

  • GFM|CenterTable added Shelbey Royal as a senior director of search.
  • Connect For Health Colorado named Nina Schwartz as its new chief policy and external affairs officer.
    • Turner PR has been named agency of record for Xanterra Travel Collection. Turner will handle earned media and social media strategy for the company’s National Parks collection, including accommodations, experiences and outposts in the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Death Valley, Glacier, Rocky Mountain and Mount Rushmore.
  • The Sundance Film Festival is relocating from Park City, Utah, to Boulder. Fun fact: The New York Times article covering the news first described Boulder as a “ski town,” which it is not, and then issued a correction calling it a “mountain town,” which it also is not. We’ll see if a second correction appears.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Tesla issued a recall for 46,000 Cybertrucks – nearly every one it has produced – due to a risk that its stainless steel panels can fall off. It’s been a tough year for Tesla. Between increasing competition for electric cars in China and Elon Musk‘s embrace of President Donald Trump, the company’s stock has dropped more than 50% over the past four months.
  • We experienced an annual rite of spring last weekend when the best team left out of the NCAA March Madness basketball tournament started complaining about how unfair the process is. This year, West Virginia has that (dis)honor, and the state’s governor held a press conference announcing he had directed the state attorney general to launch an investigation into the selection committee.
  • Employees who work at the Cherry Creek Shopping Center are not happy that the mall plans to start charging them $20 per month for parking.
  • Uber-progressive ice cream maker Ben & Jerry’s has been a thorn in the side of its uptight corporate parent Unilever for the past couple of decades, but the war in Gaza – combined with the current boycott culture – has amplified their conflict. Unilever announced it would spin Ben & Jerry’s off by the end of this year, but that hasn’t stopped the conglomerate from trying to kick the ice cream maker one final time. This week, Unilever fired Ben & Jerry’s CEO despite its continued strong financial performance.
  • The NHL was minding its own business when it learned from media reports that it had become a bargaining chip between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. What could go wrong?
  • ICE has been having a hard enough time reaching its quota for arresting undocumented immigrants, and now it is having to arrest some of them twice. Two of its detainees held in a secure facility in Aurora escaped during a power outage.
  • What could you possibly say about an oil company that would cause $667 million in damages? I don’t know, but that is what a jury in North Dakota has ordered Greenpeace to pay to the one that operates the Dakota Access Pipeline.
  • The last time Jackie Robinson had a win this big was the 1955 World Series. Robinson posthumously defeated Pentagon spokesman John Ullyot after Ullyot defended removing an online article about Robinson’s military background to the point that even Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was uncomfortable and demoted him.
  • It’s Spring Break week for Jeffco, Cherry Creek, Douglas County and several other school districts, so say a little prayer for those who ventured to Europe for a little vacation. A fire at a nearby power substation shut down Heathrow Airport in London, throwing the schedules of international airlines into chaos. Heathrow officials claim the airport will be operating at 100% again by Saturday, but I wouldn’t count on it.
  • Friends are mourning the loss of former Rocky Mountain News reporter Norm Clarke. He was known for his must-read Herb Caen-inspired column about celebrities, politicians, sports stars and business leaders. He left Denver in 1999 for Las Vegas, where we can all agree that he had much better fodder for his columns. He was 82.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Boulder’s Comprise PR Files for Bankruptcy

BizWest: “’To be clear, this is a reorganization; it’s not a closing the doors kind of thing,’ Comprise owner and CEO Doyle Albee told BizWest. Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code enables businesses or individuals to reorganize debts while continuing to operate, rather than liquidate assets.”

“’What it allows me to do is kind of right-size things to some degree,’ Albee said. ‘I’m going to not have the entire team that I had, and this allows me to do that with fewer restrictions and dramatically less upset to clients.’”

“Albee said Comprise’s current financial situation is in part a result of several clients being unable to pay their bills. ‘We’ve had plenty of work, we just haven’t been paid for all of it,’ he said. ‘I absorbed 30% to 35% of my billings last year. Three clients went bankrupt (and others) just have some payment issues. It was just a gut punch that we just couldn’t economically recover from.'”

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Last year was not great for global PR firms. Edelman reported a 5% drop in 2024 revenue while WPP fell 1.7%. “It was a challenging year for PR, but also for the entire communications sector,” said Edelman CEO Richard Edelman.
  • Denver Broncos outside linebackers coach Michael Wilhoite was arrested on felony assault charges after allegedly punching a police officer in the face in a disagreement about his unattended vehicle at DIA.
  • Computer and printer company HP has been caught trying to force customers to use its online support channels by setting a minimum 15-minute wait time for anyone phoning its call center. The wait applies even if representatives are available to talk with customers.
  • Bowers & Wilkins sound systems are options in a number of higher-end cars ranging from Aston Martin to McLaren to BMW. Volvo even offers it as an option, but some buyers in China were surprised to find that their brand new Volvos featured knock-off “Bovvers & VVilkins” sound systems. Volvo has launched an investigation into the dealers.
  • The Westernaires, the Golden-based organization that features youth horseback riders who perform tricks, is rolling like it’s still the 1990s. The organization has refused repeated requests to stop dressing up “non-Native riders in Indigenous-inspired clothing to perform sacred Native American dances and reenact Custer’s Last Stand.”
  • A Buffalo Sabres announcer stationed next to the ice between the team benches dropped an “Ah, f—!” live on air after he was hit in the forehead by an errant puck. Don’t know if there is an FCC exemption for that, but there should be.
  • It was a tough week for property developers with Denver connections. Brad Eide, a developer with Elevate Cos., was allegedly body slammed by Nick Steitz, a former NFL lineman-turned-CBRE-real estate broker, at a golf outing in Lakewood. Meanwhile, The Denver Post reported that former Colorado real estate developer Boris Mannsfeld “was found face down in a pool of blood … at his Belize luxury development project…. Police told local reporters that Mannsfeld died from a gunshot to the back of his neck.”
  • The NBA playoffs are still almost two months away, but a time-tested rule of thumb says only one of three teams is likely to win the championship: the Boston Celtics, Oklahoma City Thunder and Cleveland Cavaliers. The Denver Nuggets did not meet the “40-20 rule” by winning 40 games before they lost 20, a litmus test that 90% of NBA winners achieve.
  • If you are looking for real-estate bargains, good news! The asking price for a Palace of Versailles-like castle in Evergreen was reduced by $10 million. You can now have it for a mere $50 million.
  • Hundreds of NOAA and National Weather Service employees were laid off this week, potentially threatening the flow of information that local meteorologists use to create accurate forecasts.
  • At one time, Skype was king of the video chat services, but then the pandemic hit and Zoom, Teams, FaceTime, Webex and Google Meet, among others, took off. Skype announced this week it is shutting down.
  • Two strip clubs – Diamond Cabaret and Rick’s Cabaret – have been ordered by the Denver auditor to pay nearly $14 million in back pay and penalties to dancers and other workers. Expect them to pay all $14 million in one-dollar bills.
  • You may have had a bad week, but it could have been worse – you could be the family of a two-year-old who was mistakenly named “Unakite Thirteen Hotel.”

Who won the week?

  • Kristy Bassuener is the new Vice President of Communications and Outreach at the Rose Community Foundation.
  • Former 9News and MSNBC producer Kerry Leary has joined Be Clear Communications as a senior associate.
  • My GFM|CenterTable colleague Carissa McCabe has joined the board of Project Angel Heart.
  • Vail native Mikaela Shiffrin won her 100th World Cup race, a quest that had been sidelined by injuries she suffered in a crash in November.
  • NBC Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt announced he will step down from that position after a decade. He said he will remain with the network and continue to host “Dateline.”

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • If you own real estate in Aspen – and I assume the demographics of Denver PR Blog readers are such that you do – there’s good news: three of the 10 most expensive home sales in the country last year occurred there. If you haven’t already bought your chalet, well, tough break. I hear good things about Meeker if you are looking for the next hot market.
  • Some of the best baseball players in the world have what is known as a meth-chic look – long stringy hair, disheveled beards, etc. In related news, the New York Yankees, a team that hasn’t won a World Series in 15 years, has changed their policy and will now allow players to have beards for the first time in five decades.
  • The right-leaning New York Post reports that President Donald Trump ordered the iconic Resolute Desk removed from the Oval Office for a deep cleaning after Elon Musk‘s son wiped a booger on it during a recent reporter Q&A event. The newspaper described President Trump as a “known germaphobe.”
  • If the villains in James Bond‘s next movie are Walmart executives who look like Jeff Bezos‘ ex-wife MacKenzie Scott, don’t be surprised. The Broccoli family that has owned the intellectual property rights to the film franchise for decades sold them to Amazon MGM Studios. It must have been for a lot. Barbara Broccoli has previously said of the Amazon team, “These people are f— idiots.
  • The U.S. is facing the worst flu season in 15 years. An additional concern: “The two predominant strains that are circulating right now are known to be more severe and have more severe outcomes, especially in high-risk patients.”
  • Meanwhile, a measles outbreak in west Texas continues to grow and has now spread into New Mexico.
  • Meghan Markle‘s lifestyle brand American Riviera Orchard never quite found its footing, so she has rebranded to As Ever. Now we will see whether the name was the issue, or if it is the polarizing Duchess of Sussex herself.
  • TFC? Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) is relocating its headquarters from Louisville, Kentucky to Plano, Texas.
  • The NHL did something no one thought possible: it made America care about a hockey game in February. Unfortunately, the U.S. lost that game – the final of the 4 Nation’s Face-Off pitting Canada against the U.S. Canadians were quite generous following the win, however, offering to make the U.S. their 11th province.
  • A high-end burglary ring that targeted athletes such as Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow and Travis Kelce was busted in part due to selfies the criminals shared online posing with the loot they stole.
  • A judge in Mississippi ordered a newspaper to remove an editorial from its website criticizing a local mayor and city council, a decision that has alarmed free speech advocates.
  • Yesterday, the Colorado GOP announced that Steve Bannon, a former senior advisor to President Donald Trump, would headline the group’s annual fundraising dinner in March. Today, Bannon is making headlines for what many say was a Nazi salute at the end of his speech at the conservative CPAC conference this morning.
  • Hyde Park Jewelers in the Cherry Creek Shopping Center was the victim of a slow-motion robbery that saw thieves steal $12.3 million in jewelry and watches over eight hours.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Kanye West pulled what The Wall Street Journal called a “switcheroo” when he submitted local-market Super Bowl ads that directed people to his website that sold non-controversial apparel, and then swapped the clothing out for wildly sexist and antisemitic versions. The ads aired in markets such as Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Atlanta before the local stations realized what was going on.
  • Kid Rock threw an on-stage temper-tantrum that was posted to social media when a Nashville crowd was not clapping enthusiastically enough for his taste. “If you ain’t gonna clap, we ain’t gonna sing. That’s how it’s gonna go,” the singer told the crowd. In (probably) unrelated news, reports emerged this week that Kid Rock was seen getting into a cab at 2:30 a.m. with Colorado‘s own Rep. Lauren Boebert on inauguration night.
  • If you are hug-deprived, good news! Denver apparently has a cadre of “professional cuddlers” who can help. That’s not creepy at all.
  • Mittens the cat may have more frequent fliers miles than you do. The cat ended up making repeated trips between Australia and New Zealand when cargo unloaders overlooked her crate due to a wheelchair that had been stowed in front of it.
  • Are egg prices out of control? Thieves swiped 100,000 of them from the trailer of a semi in Pennsylvania. I doubt George Clooney or Brad Pitt will play any of the characters in the movie version of this whodunnit.
  • If you were hoping President Donald Trump would get tired and settle down a bit, it’s not looking good. This week he banned AP reporters from news conferences for not using his “Gulf of America” designation, gutted the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, imposed a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum, stopped DOJ investigations into friends WWE founder Vince McMahon and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, pardoned former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, banned eco-friendly paper straws from government buildings, appointed himself chair of the Kennedy Center (expect a lot of Lee Greenwood and Kid Rock performances), fired numerous inspector general watchdogs, furloughed 97% of the employees at USAID, and cut federal NIH medical research funding, among other things.
  • Meanwhile, President Trump‘s announcement that he wants the U.S. to stop minting pennies could hit the Denver Mint hard. The facility makes more than a billion pennies each year.
  • The Colorado legislature saw some rare bipartisan spirit this week. Unfortunately for Sen. Sonya Jaquez Lewis (D-Longmont), it was the Senate Ethics Committee that is investigating accusations that she was abusive toward five of her legislative aides. She did not impress her colleagues by railing against the appropriateness of an ethics investigation when she herself publicly called for one to investigate the allegations several months ago.
  • Happy Valentine’s Day! (Presumably male) researchers have found that men are actually more romantic than women. The researchers did acknowledge that, “In relationship research, ‘romanticism’ refers to general beliefs about love, rather than (actual) actions taken within romantic relationships.” So, in men’s minds, thinking about getting you flowers is basically the same thing as doing it.
  • A celebration of life was recently held for Ned High, a Denver journalist and public relations firm owner. He passed away at the age of 90.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Girl Scouts of Colorado say they could lose millions of dollars in cookie sales due to the King Soopers strike. “We’re respecting the strike and the picket lines, but also being creative and really banding together and making calls and doing whatever we can to support the girls,” said Leanna Clark, CEO.
  • Six years – SIX YEARS – after a ComcastAltitude Sports carriage dispute blacked out Colorado Avalanche and Denver Nuggets games for most of Denver, the two companies agreed to a new television deal that reflects the terms essentially offered back in 2019. What did fans miss in those six years? Two championships and four MVPs.
  • 9News parent company TEGNA has laid off its 20-member VERIFY fact-checking team whose mission was “to stop the spread of false information.” I’d love to hear the “Next with Kyle Clark” editorial commentary on that decision.
  • Media outlets have been dismissive of President Donald Trump‘s strategy of using “deceptive advertising” claims as a legal strategy to sue media he doesn’t like (CBS, Des Moines Register, etc.), but now some First Amendment lawyers are growing concerned it could actually lead somewhere with the current U.S. Supreme Court.
  • Few Colorado school districts are taking the Denver Broncos up on their generous offer of free “smart” football helmets. Districts are concerned about potential liability and student privacy. The Broncos intended to donate more than 15,00 helmets statewide at a cost of about $12 million.
  • Karla Sofia Gascón, the first openly transgender woman to be nominated for an Oscar for best performance by an actress in a leading role, has apologized for since-deleted social media posts in which she appears to attack Muslims, George Floyd and the lack of diversity at the Oscars. She probably only needed to apologize for two of those.
  • Waffle House is charging a $0.50 surcharge per egg due to the shortage caused by an aggressive strain of the avian flu. Speaking of bird flu, you may want to stock up on milk and butter now. A new strain has started infecting dairy cows.
  • The cost to insure a car in Colorado increased 26% last year, one of the largest jumps in the nation. The biggest jump was Minnesota at 58%. Extreme weather, including hail, is driving the increase in our state.
  • Side hustles are all the rage, but the NFL cannot be happy that the president and head of communications of the New Orleans Saints have gotten caught up moonlighting in a local Catholic diocese sex abuse scandal. Emails show that team representatives may have persuaded city prosecutors to remove some names from a list of clergy members accused of abuse that was released, and the PR head gave media interview critiques to church officials.
  • Colorado could see fewer federal transportation dollars thanks to a new directive from President Donald Trump that prioritizes projects in places with high birth and marriage rates. Colorado has one of the lowest fertility rates in the country.
  • It’s been a tough few weeks for “old” Denver. First, we lost preservationist Dana Crawford and now we have lost Dan Ritchie. The impact of both on the development of Denver was immeasurable.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The air control tower at Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C. was understaffed when an American Airlines flight collided with a military helicopter, killing 67 people.
  • A spectator was killed at a high school track and field meet on the University of Colorado’s Colorado Springs campus when a competitor lost control of a hammer in the hammer throw event and hurled it into the stands.
  • You might want to grab your popcorn to watch this situation play out: the Downtown Denver Partnership has hired a London– and New York City-based branding firm – DNCO – to create a new brand identity for the 16th Street Mall. Not sure the firm’s “concepts for new digital and physical logos, brands and wayfinding signage” will overcome issues such as the recent double murder and the challenges with the mall being overwhelmed with people experiencing homelessness.
  • Frontier Airlines took the bottom spot (and Delta the top spot) in The Wall Street Journal‘s annual ranking of U.S. airlines. From the report: “The good news for fliers: Carriers held it together relatively well. They lost fewer bags. More than three of four flights arrived on time (by the government’s admittedly generous definition), on par with 2023. Cancellations were flat. Hold the thunderous applause, though. Bumping and tarmac delays were weak spots.”
  • How did the University of South Carolina women’s basketball team celebrate a recent win over LSU? By having the team’s in-arena DJ blast a song from the late rapper Camouflage, who was the father of one of LSU’s players. USC apologized and suspended the DJ.
  • If we aren’t already in a post-truth society, we’re headed there fast. Edelman‘s latest Trust Barometer data finds that 7 in 10 people believe government officials, business leaders and journalists deliberately mislead them by saying things they know are false or gross exaggerations.
  • Facebook and Instagram parent Meta threatened to fire workers who leak information in a memo that was leaked to the media.
  • In the past month, ABC News and Meta, two companies who have deals that will need to be approved by the federal government, have settled legally dubious claims from President Donald Trump for a combined $41 million. And now CBS parent company Paramount is negotiating a settlement with President Trump over allegations that “60 Minutes” deceptively edited a story on former Vice President Kamala Harris, a claim that would never survive court. As Taegan Goddard noted, “Trump’s lawsuit settlements look a lot like bribery.
  • Five years after the pandemic, U.S. students’ test scores still have not recovered. Overall, just 39% of fourth-graders and 28% of eighth-graders scored at or above the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) standard for proficiency in math.
  • 9News parent company Tegna is using AI to write articles for some of its affiliates’ websites.
  • Medals won by athletes at the Paris Olympic Games in 2024 are already disintegrating due to a defective varnish intended to protect them. Olympic officials promise that all the medals will be systematically replaced.
  • CNN anchor Jim Acosta has been a thorn in President Donald Trump‘s side for years, and it appears that the network was eager to try to get back into the president’s good graces. CNN moved Acosta’s show to midnight ET, a move that caused Acosta to resign. It also prompted President Trump to praise CNN and post, “Jim is a major loser who will fail no matter where he ends up.”
  • A BBC investigation into comedian Russell Brand when he was one of its radio presenters acknowledged that the company mishandling what the broadcaster called Brand’s “unacceptable behavior” that included sexual assault.
  • A total of 30 professional tennis players have now been suspended for their connections to a match-fixing syndicate in Belgium.
  • A woman who gave birth at a Krispy Kreme in Alabama named her newborn son “Glaze.”

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The electronic payment processor Stripe terminated 300 people, or about 3.5% of its global workforce, and many of them received the news via an email that inadvertently included an image of a yellow cartoon duck. The head of HR followed up with another email that said in part, “I apologize for the error and any confusion it caused,” but left unsaid “but you are still fired.”
  • CNN is laying off about 200 employees as part of shift to from a cable-first to a digital-first model. That transition is driven in part by historically low television ratings. Sadly, there is no indication that those who were fired received an email with an emotional support cartoon duck.
  • A former CBI DNA scientist who worked on thousands of cases, has been charged with 102 felonies alleging that she manipulated evidence. Prosecutors worry that more than 1,000 convictions could have relied on her evidence, and an unknown number of cases may not have been prosecuted due to her faulty findings.
  • The Salt Lake City-based NHL hockey team – temporarily named Utah Hockey Club while it tries to finalize its permanent name – had its first choice, the Utah Yetis, rejected by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. It is not distinctive enough.
  • Everyone always says they want to be in The Wall Street Journal. Unfortunately for one local company, its moment came with the headline, “Vail Resorts Has an Epic Problem.”
  • The NFL forced the New England Patriots to remove its Bluesky social media account because the league has not “approved” the Twitter/X competitor.
  • Jewelry designer Lynn Ban, who starred in the Netflix reality series “Bling Empire: New York,” died following emergency brain surgery due to a skiing accident in Aspen.
  • The head of Panama’s football federation was suspended after he called one of the country’s star players “fat” and “out of shape” after she complained about the lack of investment in the sport.
  • Allen Media Group television stations were forced to back away from a plan to fire local meteorologists and replace them with a Weather Channel feed after a backlash from viewers.
  • One of the bigger stories coming out of the Australian Open tennis tournament this year has been the media. One of the biggest sports anchors in the country was forced to apologize after he insulted Novak Djokovic and his Serbian fans on air, and U.S. player Ben Shelton criticized the post-match, on-court interviews as being “embarrassing and disrespectful.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Ten people are dead and nearly 200,000 people have been ordered to evacuate their homes due to wildfires in the Los Angeles area. Like the Marshall Fire in Boulder several years ago, these wildfires are fueled by high winds that are growing fires faster than firefighters can respond. The scale of the fires may impact Coloradans as insurers further evaluate their premiums in what they consider areas vulnerable to wildfires.
  • Could the Denver Broncos build a new stadium in Lone Tree? 9News reports the team is considering it.
  • The public relations team was among the hardest hit departments from recent layoffs at The Washington Post.
  • The Colorado State Patrol is walking back its initial claims that a driver involved in a New Year’s Day crash that killed two people fell asleep at the wheel. The CSP did not explain why potentially inaccurate information was released, but they did apologize to friends and families of the deceased.
  • Colorado is expensive and full, a finding underscored by the U-Haul Growth Index that ranks states by the number of people moving into vs. out of states. Colorado ranked 40th. Before you get too excited about the potential for lower rents, 50.3% of one-way U-Haul trips were out of Colorado, while 49.7% were to Colorado.
  • 9News traffic and entertainment reporter Erica Lopez is taking some time off to have a cyst removed from one of her vocal cords.
  • Denver City Auditor Tim O’Brien has spent the past decade justifying his existence by finding all manner of problems – real and imagined – with numerous city-related programs and departments. This time he has his sights on DIA, and he is threatening to conduct multiple audits if the airport doesn’t bend to his will.
  • TikTok influencers who have made a living off the social media platform are bracing for its potential ban in the United States effective Jan. 19. The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing arguments today attempting to overturn the legislative ban.
  • States in the Southeast are getting hammered by a rare snowstorm, with cities such as Atlanta and Nashville expected to get 2-4 inches (which affects them the way 12-24 inches of snow would affect Denver – Atlanta doesn’t own very many snowplows).
  • Vince McMahon, the founder and former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) agreed to pay the SEC $400,000 and reimburse the WWE $1,3 million to settle allegations that he “failed to disclose multimillion-dollar settlements he had reached with two women when he led the W.W.E.”
  • ESPN, Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery abandoned plans to launch Venu, what would have been a new streaming service featuring content from each. The three announced the new network a year ago, but Fubu had sued alleging that the service was anticompetitive.

Who won the week?

  • KOSI 101 saw its ratings number nearly double in December as it made its annual month-long transition to Christmas music.
  • The University of Colorado Boulder helped launch 35 start-ups over the past fiscal year, a new record. That puts CU Boulder in very good company. For context, Stanford launched 35 start-ups and MIT launched 32.
  • The Denver Broncos are in the NFL playoffs for the first time in a decade. They play the Buffalo Bills on Sunday.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The niche online car rental service Turo is getting massive media attention, but unfortunately for the company it is because its cars were used in both the New Orleans and Las Vegas terror attacks on New Year’s Day.
  • We are getting an inside glimpse into the world of celebrity publicists and crisis communications, and it is every bit the cesspool you imagined. Actress Blake Lively obtained text messages between producer/actor Justin Baldoni and several of his crisis communications consultants that outline a media smear campaign to delegitimize the actress as she prepared to go public with claims that he behaved improperly on set. “All of this will be most importantly untraceable,” said Melissa Nathan, one of the crisis publicists, apparently unaware of how group texts work.
    • Not happy with the resulting media coverage, Baldoni has filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against The New York Times. Expect it to be withdrawn just before discovery starts.
  • De Beers is sitting on a $2 billion pile of unsold diamonds as demand for the gemstone has slumped to levels not seen since the 2008 recession. “It’s been a bad year for rough diamond sales,” said De Beers’ CFO.
  • Two Oregon men who set out in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest to find conclusive proof that Sasquatch exists died of exposure. Weather conditions in the Cascade mountains had been below freezing in the days before and during the search, which included snow and freezing rain.
  • United Airlines almost created its own operational meltdown when the food it served to employees at DIA on Christmas Day resulted in food poisoning.
  • All five college football teams – Georgia (SEC), Arizona State (Big 12), Oregon (Big 10), Clemson (ACC) and Boise State (Mountain West) – who made the playoffs by virtue of winning their conference championships have already been eliminated.
  • The Washington Post has assembled the list of 2024’s weirdest celebrity apologies.
  • The cruise industry reported that December 2024 was the worst month for mass gastrointestinal illness outbreaks in more than a decade. Bon voyage!
  • The Times Square Applebee’s offered a New Year’s Eve celebration package that starts at $850. And it sold out.
  • A glowing-hot piece of space junk more than eight feet in diameter and weighing more than 1,000 pounds fell from the sky and crashed in a remote village in Kenya. No one was injured, but scientists warn we should expect more incidents like this as low-orbit space gets more crowded with satellites. GoogleKessler Syndrome” if you want to know more.
  • The U.S. Surgeon General has proposed putting cancer warnings on alcohol, a move that could further depress sales that were already trending down since 2023.
  • Westerra, the sixth-largest credit union in Colorado, selected New York-based Impact PR & Communications as its public relations firm.

Who won the week?

  • 2024 was a mixed bag for the conglomerates that own Denver‘s television news stations. Tegna’s (9News) stock was up 20% for the year, but Nexstar (Fox31) was down 1% and Scripps’ (7News) was down 82%. CBS4 is owned by CBS, which is owned by Paramount, and Paramount’s stock was down 28% for the year. Even more concerning is that 2024 was a presidential election year, which resulted in about $18 billion in political ad money being spent with local television stations.
  • Red Rocks Amphitheatre was the second-most attended concert venue in the country in 2024, trailing only Madison Square Garden. Globally, it ranked No. 4, behind MSG, the O2 Arena in London and Mexico City’s Auditorio Nacional.
  • Actor Will Ferrell attended a post-Christmas L.A. Kings hockey game dressed as Buddy the Elf. This Buddy, however, had a three-day beard and was chugging beers with a cigarette dangling from his mouth. Ferrell, in character as Buddy, said it had been “a tough holiday season.”
  • After eight years of acrimonious negotiations and legal filings, actors Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie finally reached a divorce settlement. They had been married for two years when they filed the initial divorce papers.

The Biggest PR Disasters of 2024

There is an element of chaos theory to a PR crisis. Some are horrific, but seemingly have little long-term impact. Others appear relatively benign but ultimately serve as a catalyst for a corporate death spiral. The truth is that the true impact of a crisis is often best judged years after the fact. So, in that spirit, feel free to enjoy the 2020 list of Biggest PR Disasters to see which ones had a meaningful and lasting impact. 

And if you are more interested in this year’s list of PR disasters, here you go:

VIC VELA

Colorado Public Radio reporter and podcast host Vic Vela was beloved because of his engaging social media presence and inspiring personal story of overcoming drug and alcohol addiction. It came as a shock in January when CPR fired Vela for what it claimed was his failure “to address his hostile behavior.” Vela went on the public relations offensive, filing a lawsuit and conducting media interviews claiming that CPR fired him for asking for accommodations to help maintain his sobriety. The strategy seemed to have worked, and Vela and CPR reached a financial settlement in April.

In July, Vela accepted an on-air position with New Mexico PBS, but that came to an end in September when he announced he had relapsed and lost his new position as a result. This unfortunate series of events highlights the ongoing challenges faced by individuals in recovery. Addiction is a complex and deeply personal struggle, and relapses can be a difficult part of the journey.


MATTEL

The toy manufacturer was hit with a class-action lawsuit after mistakenly printing the URL of a porn site on the packaging of its “Wicked”-themed children’s doll rather than the movie’s official website. It’s fair to say Mattel likely received more media coverage in 2024 than it has in the past few years combined, which may have benefited the Universal Pictures movie. “Wicked” is the eighth-highest-grossing movie of 2024. 


SEAN ‘DIDDY’ COMBS

After years of rumors and allegations, singer and rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs was arrested in September on charges of racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He was taken into custody and denied bail, meaning he will remain in jail at least until his trial. 

Media and lawyers representing Combs’ alleged victims quickly began circling, and numerous celebrities who attended Combs’ famous – now infamous – “White Parties” also faced intense scrutiny. Several, most notably rapper Jay-Z and actor Cuba Gooding Jr., have been sued for allegedly sexually assaulting women associated with Combs. Meanwhile, rumors of large confidential settlements involving other, as-yet-unnamed celebrities continue to swirl in Hollywood and New York City.


UNITEDHEALTHCARE

UnitedHealthcare became a symbol of public frustration with the American health care system when its CEO, Brian Thompson, was shot and killed outside a New York City hotel. Rather than being universally condemned, the alleged assailant was celebrated by some on social media as delivering a blow against what they perceive to be greedy insurance conglomerates.


BOEING

Boeing has joined the ranks of FacebookUber and Subway as repeat offenders vying for spots in the PR Disasters Hall of Fame. You might have thought that the two 737 Max crashes that killed 346 people, and the subsequent 20-month grounding imposed on the aircraft that disrupted air travel globally, would have been rock bottom, but it wasn’t.

In January, a door plug blew out of an Alaska Airlines 737 Max flight. No one was killed, but the images of the plane making an emergency landing with a massive hole in its side went viral worldwide. The subsequent investigation found a pattern of shoddy construction by the vendor who assembled parts of the plane for Boeing. As bad as that was, it would get worse.

Things worsened in September when a seven-week employee strike halted most production, exacerbating Boeing’s financial troubles. After the strike, the company announced 17,000 layoffs and was forced to raise $25 billion through stock sales, debt and loans to avoid a junk bond credit rating. Since the initial crashes in 2019, Boeing’s stock has dropped nearly 60%, even as the S&P 500 rose 216%.


CROWDSTRIKE

It is likely you had never heard of the cybersecurity company Crowdstrike until July, when a bug in the company’s automated software update shut down computer systems around the world, including at 60% of Fortune 500 companies. When the 72-hour outage was over, Crowdstrike customers had lost more than $5 billion in revenue and the company’s stock price had dropped 22% – approximately $20 billion.


UNITED AIRLINES

United Airlines may be based in Chicago, but it feels like Denver’s hometown airline. That is one of the reasons it was so shocking to learn that Denver Broncos legend and NFL Hall of Famer Terrell Davis had been handcuffed and escorted off a United flight in July – in front of his family, no less – and immediately banned from flying the airline again.

A flight attendant claimed Davis struck them, while Davis insisted he had merely tapped the flight attendant’s arm to ask for ice. There were plenty of witnesses, and United, after a quick investigation, apologized to Davis, fired the flight attendant and restored Davis’ ability to fly on the airline. Davis sensed the incident was racially motivated and his PR team went to work, posting Davis’ thoughts on social media and talking to media outlets ranging from CNN to the “CBS Morning Show.”


IVY LEAGUE PRESIDENTS

It can’t be easy running a university when your students lean liberal and your alumni and biggest donors are largely conservative. The attack on Israel and subsequent war in Gaza only heightened those tensions. Congressional hearings on campus “wokeness” and antisemitism coincided with the resignations of five of the eight presidents of Ivy Leagueuniversities – HarvardUniversity of PennsylvaniaColumbiaCornell and Yale


AURORA, COLORADO

In crisis communications, one of the first questions we ask is whether there are photos or videos of whatever issue a client is facing. It makes an enormous difference. That proved true in Aurora when video of several members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua were shown on surveillance cameras trying to enter an apartment carrying high-powered assault weapons. That video led to claims that gangs had taken over entire apartment buildings, which snowballed into claims that the city of Aurora had been overrun by Venezuelan gang members. 

Aurora hit rock bottom when former and future President Donald Trump announced he would hold a rally in Aurora to bring attention to the city’s plight. Aurora’s Republican mayor, Mike Coffman, pleaded with Republicans nationally to stop misrepresenting his city, to no avail. In fact, Trump doubled down, naming a proposed deportation initiative “Operation Aurora,” further entrenching the city in controversy.


NETFLIX

Legendary boxer Mike Tyson’s return to the ring at age 58 to fight Jake Paul was the talk of the sports world in November, but only some of it had to do with the boxers. The fight was streamed on Netflix, one of the platform’s first major live sporting events, and, well, it proved the company was not up for the moment. Wannabe viewers reported massive buffering and freezing issues due to Netflix technical issues, and Netflix responded by suggesting subscribers check their internet connections, as if that was the problem. Meanwhile, nearly 8 million people bypassed Netflix altogether, watching the fight on Twitter via a livestream from the phone of former NFL player Antonio Brown, who was in the crowd. 


PRINCESS KATE

Some of the biggest PR disasters come from unforced errors, and Princess Kate Middleton provided a textbook example this year. After undergoing a surprise abdominal surgery in January, she disappeared from public view for several months. As weeks passed, British media scrutiny grew, and increasingly wild rumors spread. To calm the frenzy, Kate released a photo of herself with her three children on British Mother’s Day in March.

However, the media quickly realized the image had been photoshopped, sparking outrage and fueling even more conspiracy theories. Instead of quelling speculation, the poorly edited photo intensified it. Kate apologized and released unaltered photos in an effort to regain public trust. This incident underscores the intense public scrutiny faced by high-profile figures and the challenging decisions they must make to protect their privacy. In hindsight, Kate’s actions may reflect the immense pressure she was under while quietly dealing with significant personal health challenges.


LEGACY MEDIA

Experts are still assessing the winners and losers from President’s Trump’s re-election, but a consensus early loser is legacy media. While Trump campaigned through alternative media –such as podcaster Joe Rogan, influencer Adin Ross and professional wrestler Logan Paul – mainstream outlets such as The Washington Post and The New York Times became walled-off echo chambers for left-leaning audiences. Adding injury to insult, billionaire owners of The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times blocked the newspapers from making presidential endorsements, creating a flood of subscriber cancellations that primarily hurt reporters and editors. 

Who Had the Worst Week – 2024 Year in Review

Once again, we learned there is no shortage of people doing stupid things. It’s like that is humanity’s superpower. Below is a stroll down memory lane as we remember some of the dumber things that happened in 2024.

JANUARY 2024

  • Peloton instructor complained that a Christopher Nolan movie was a waste of time not knowing the director was in her class.
  • A firearms instructor with the Denver Sheriff’s Department was suspended for 14 days after accidentally shooting his neighbor’s house.
  • Boeing faced yet another public relations crisis when its 737 Max aircraft was grounded again after a side door plug blew out mid-flight on an Alaska Airlines jet.
  • Disgraced former Denver Public Schools board member Auon’tai Anderson first chose not to run for school board re-election because polls showed him with the support of only 9% of voters. Then he announced he would instead run for a state house seat. Well, it turns out those voters also recognized his name, and in January he dropped out of that race as well.
  • The L.A. Times was thrown into a state of mayhem as it laid off 115 positions – about 20% of its newsroom. Said one staffer, “I cannot overstate the level of chaos.” It was a harbinger of what was to come.

FEBRUARY 2024

MARCH 2024

  • We learned that about a dozen people who attended the bitterly cold playoff game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins suffered such severe frostbite that amputations were required. Unfortunately for Broncos fans, Patrick Mahomes was not one of them.
  • Colorado Public Radio eliminated 15 employees in its audio and podcast production departments, although the station’s newsroom was spared.
  • Comedian Nick Swardson had a melt-down on-stage in Beaver Creek that forced organizers to yank him from the stage. He blamed the effects of alcohol and edibles for his bizarre behavior.
  • Russia added the “LGBT movement” to its list of terrorists and extremists.
  • To political progressives, it must have felt like mommy and daddy were fighting. Former Colorado Public Radio host Vic Vela lawyered up and accused CPR of “belittling and mocking his mental health concerns” related to his ongoing struggles with addiction. Meanwhile, CPR contends that Vela was fired because he “demonstrated behaviors that are not in alignment with the values, culture and environment we have at CPR.”

APRIL 2024

MAY 2024

JUNE 2024

 JULY 2024

  • Chinese company accidentally launched its prototype rocket during what was supposed to be a ground test.
  • Washington, D.C., woman was accused of killing a man and using his severed thumb for several days to access his electronic devices to steal money from his bank account and pay for Uber rides.
  • Investment company BlackRock pulled a two-year-old viral online ad that coincidentally included footage of Thomas Crooks, the man who was killed while trying to assassinate former President Donald Trump.
  • Former Denver Bronco and Pro Football Hall of Fame running back Terrell Davis was handcuffed and removed from a United Airlines flight by FBI agents after a flight attendant alleged Davis hit him. Davis said he and witnesses to the incident were left confused because he simply tapped a flight attendant’s arm to ask for ice.
  • The Clocktower Cabaret in the basement of the Daniels & Fisher Tower on 16th Street was flooded with raw sewage during a construction mishap.

AUGUST 2024

SEPTEMBER 2024

OCTOBER 2024

NOVEMBER 2024

DECEMBER 2024

  • Edelman announced it is laying off 330 employees as it navigates what it expects to be an 8% decline in revenue in 2024.
  • The CEO of UnitedHealthcare was shot and killed while arriving at an investor conference Manhattan. After a five-day manhunt, the alleged shooter is found in Altoona, Pa. wearing essentially the same clothes and mask, and still carrying the murder weapon. DB Cooper, he is not.
  • The Morrison Police Department, most known for running the most brazen speed traps in the state, has disbanded
  • Albertsons officially ended its merger agreement with Kroger after federal and state rulings against it, ending what would have been the largest supermarket acquisition in U.S. history. Albertsons then sued Kroger for breach of contract and accused it of failing to exercise its “best efforts” to get regulatory approval.
  • Consulting firm McKinsey & Co. will pay $650 million to resolve a U.S. DOJ investigation into its work advising opioid manufacturer Purdue Pharma on how to boost sales.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Edelman is laying off 330 employees as it navigates what it expects to be an 8% decline in revenue in 2024.
  • When we last heard from John Bowlen, the son of former Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen, he was being arrested for domestic violence charges in 2015. So, did receiving $500 million from the sale of the Broncos help his situation? Looks like not. Westword reported this week that Bowlen posted a series of statements – “White fucking power. … F**k Black people. White is right” on his Instagram while attending a Broncos game in Las Vegas.
  • The CEO of UnitedHealthcare was shot and killed while arriving at an investor conference Manhattan in what appears to be a targeted attack. The New York Times noted that the assassination “has unleashed Americans’ frustrations with an industry that often denies coverage and reimbursement for medical claims.” Some users on social media platforms posted sentiments such as “Thoughts and deductibles to the family” and “Unfortunately my condolences are out-of-network.”
  • In what may or may not be a related story, 24 hours after the shooting Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield dropped its plan to limit the amount time it would cover anesthesia used in surgeries after doctors went ballistic strongly protested.
  • PR Week released its annual rankings of “Best Places to Work,” and as usual it is heavy on the coastal firms. Of the 29 winners, 62% are located in NYC/NJ and 90% are located in coastal states. Only three non-coastal agencies – in Austin, Chicago and Fairfax, Va. – managed to break through.
  • Vail native Mikaela Shiffrin suffered a deep abdominal puncture wound and “severe muscle trauma” during a frightening crash in a giant slalom race in Killington, Vermont. It is not clear when she may return.
  • Florida International University fired its head football coach, Mike MacIntire, after his third straight 4-8 season. You may remember MacIntire as the head coach of the University of Colorado Buffaloes from 2013-2018.
  • U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley excoriated representatives from Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines at a Senate hearing this week. Hawley proclaimed, “Flying on your airlines is a disaster,” and it went downhill from there.
  • The City of Denver has seized the Wash Park Grille for back taxes. The unpaid taxes reportedly date back to April.
  • The Morrison Police Department, most known for running the most brazen speed traps in the state, has disbanded. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department will now provide police support to the town.
  • An Italian nun was arrested as part of a raid against the mafia in Milan. She is alleged to have served as a go between for the mafia and its jailed members.

Who won the week?

  • Daniel Brogan has sold 5280, the magazine he launched in 1993, to Charity Huff, the owner of January Spring, a Denver-based advertising technology company that works with dozens of niche publishers.
  • Spencer Soicher, the nephew of former 9News sports anchor Drew Soicher, is joining the station as a reporter. His father, Marc Soicher, was a sports reporter at Fox31.
  • 9News meteorologist Laurann Robinson announced she is leaving the station.
  • Jeremy Bloom, the Olympic skier who also starred in football for the University of Colorado and the Philadelphia Eagles, has been named CEO of the X Games.
  • The annual Forbes 30 Under 30 list included three with Boulder connections – social media content creator Alex Haraus; Sristy Agrawal, the cofounder of Mesa Quantum; and Maddie Freeman, the founder of the nonprofit NoSo.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The University of Denver is cutting jobs and tightening its budget amid an $11 million budget deficit. Officials cite decreasing enrollment as the cause.
  • An Australian police officer who fatally Tasered a 95-year-old senior care home resident was found guilty of manslaughter. The officer said the woman – again, 95 years old – was holding a steak knife and acting erratically.
  • Disney has agreed to pay $43 million to settle allegations that it systematically paid women less than male counterparts for more than a decade.
  • Denver-based VF Corp., the parent company of brands such as The North Face, Vans and Timberland, announced it will lay off 242 employees at a warehouse distribution center in Virginia.
  • A ransomware attack against Blue Yonder, a major supply chain technology provider, has left retailers including Starbucks resorting to backup plans to manage operations including scheduling and handling inventories.
  • The new NWSL team in BostonBOS Nation – is still another year away from taking the field, and the franchise is already a dumpster fire. After introducing the team’s new name with a video that was widely criticized as homophobic, the team is now revisiting the name after yet another public backlash.
  • The dreaded PIP (Performance Improvement Plan) – hated by workers and managers alike – is becoming more prevalent than ever.
  • You think your Thanksgiving dinner with family was awkward? Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Baker Mayfield filed a $12 million lawsuit against his father and brother for taking millions of dollars from him without his knowledge and now failing to make payments to repay that money as part of a settlement agreement.
  • Bodhi, the “menswear dog” who became a social media celebrity as a model for Coach and others, passed away at the age of 15.
  • Alabama A&M University announced that linebacker Medrick Burnett Jr. had passed away from injuries sustained in a football game a month ago, only to announce several hours later that he actually was still alive and remains hospitalized.
  • Former NHL star Paul Bissonnette has been hospitalized after getting into a brawl with seven people at a Houston’s restaurant in Scottsdale. Who other than a hockey player would try to take on seven people?
  • A California man was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport after he tried to check two suitcases filled with clothing soaked in methamphetamine, including a cow pajama onesie.
  • There is now a Hallmark Christmas movie inspired by the romance of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce – “Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story.
  • Kraft Mac & Cheese has inexplicably launched a new flavor – Everything Bagel.

Who won the week?

  • Children’s Hospital Colorado will build a new playground at its Anschutz Medical Center location thanks to a $150,000 lead donation from Denver Broncos head coach Sean Payton and his wife Skylene.
  • The University of Colorado men’s basketball team defeated the No. 2-ranked defending national champions, the University of Connecticut Huskies.
  • Vito the pug beat over 1,900 other dogs to win Best in Show at the American Kennel Club‘s National Dog Show. It is the first time a pug has won Best in Show.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • A Russian court fined Google $20,604,600,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (that’s $20.6 decillion for you math nerds). The fine, for allegedly blocking access to Russian media outlets, literally exceeds all the money on Earth.
  • Speaking of Google, it announced its quarterly earnings on Tuesday and shared with analysts that additional cost reductions would be coming following several rounds of layoffs over the past few months. The executives then addressed the issue with concerned employees during a town hall while wearing Halloween costumes. A man dressed as a starfish explained to employees that the leadership team was examining the issue of potential layoffs thoughtfully.
  • Los Angeles Dodgers fans set a metro bus ablaze celebrating the team’s World Series win.
  • New Jersey‘s largest newspaper, The Star-Ledger, will stop publishing its print edition early next year and transition to online only.
  • The Miami Heat unveiled a statue of the team’s Hall of Fame player Dwyane Wade, and, well, it’s not good. It may be the worst likeness of an athlete since the infamous Cristiano Ronaldo bust.
  • A 20-year-old rising star pro golfer, Jeffrey Guan, was struck in the face by a golf ball and has completely lost sight in his left eye.
  • Thieves stole more than 24 tons of artisan cheese from a London cheese retailer in a crime local authorities are calling the “grate cheese robbery.”
  • Women’s Tennis Association CEO Portia Archer is trying to defend holding the WTA Tour Finals in Saudi Arabia. “It’s difficult for me to say where we would ‘draw the line,’ so to speak,” Archer said of Saudi Arabia’s terrible women’s rights record.
  • Former Denver Broncos wide receiver and longtime Denver sportscaster Mike Haffner died. He was 82.
  • An age-old maxim – the Infinite Monkey Theorem – holds that a monkey given a typewriter and an infinite amount of time could reproduce the entire works of William Shakespeare. However, two mathematicians in Australia are trying to burst our monkey bubble by calculating that our universe would die a natural death before that could happen. Apparently “infinite” isn’t a term that is taught in Australian math classes.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • Boulder‘s Comprise has been named “Agency of the Year” for the fourth straight time by Business Intelligence Group.
  • Philosophy Communications added Phyllis Offee to its team. I’ll give you a minute.
  • The Denver Post healthcare reporter Meg Wingerter will be on maternity leave beginning Monday.
  • A crowdfunding effort has at least temporarily saved The Denver Voice. The Voice’s editor is Elisabeth Monaghan who is well known and loved in Denver’s PR community.
  • University of Colorado QB Shedeur Sanders earned more NIL money – $5.6 million – this year than any other college athlete in the country.
  • Seven friends in England who were testing a new metal detector discovered $5 million-worth of Norman-era coins.
  • Taylor Trammell, currently a 27-year-old minor league outfielder enjoying the offseason, played in 10 major league games this year – five for the Los Angeles Dodgers and five for the New York Yankees. As a result, he is assured of a championship ring when the two teams play in the World Series.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • Erin Rist has accepted the position as Director of Marketing and Development at BGOLDN.
  • Denver‘s Turner PR been reappointed as the PR agency of record for the South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism.
  • Publicis Groupe, which owns PR agencies MSL and Kekst CNC, saw organic revenue increase 5.8% in Q3. And Omnicom Group increased its organic revenue 4.3% in Q3.
  • Ent Credit Union has signed Denver Broncos QB Bo Nix and KOA NewsRadio announcer Dave Logan as brand ambassadors.
  • Recently retired Colorado Rockies star Charlie Blackmon didn’t waste any time getting out of Colorado. He and his family have relocated to Atlanta and his home in the Belcaro neighborhood is now listed for $4.3 million.
  • We are seven weeks into the NFL season, and the Denver Broncos have a winning record.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • A Jeffco man on probation for auto theft showed up to his meeting with his probation officer … in a stolen car.
  • A U.K. woman said she was knocked unconscious and remains unable to work after a cauliflower fell from a rack at a grocery store and hit her in the head.
  • One person died and 12 people were stranded 1,000 feet underground at a Colorado gold mine when an elevator malfunctioned.
  • Elected officials in Aurora, including Republican Mayor Michael Coffman, will try to protect the city’s reputation as former President Donald Trump visits today to bring attention to what he calls the “war zone” in the city. Coffman and others dispute that characterization. Interestingly, the Gaylord Hotel agreed to host the event that presumably will trash its own city’s reputation, a move that can’t help its standing among conference organizers.
  • An attorney with the Florida Department of Health has sent cease-and-desist letters to at least two TV stations demanding that they stop airing an ad calling for the repeal of the state’s six-week abortion ban.
  • When one of the faces of Hurricane Milton became a one-legged, seemingly eccentric Tampa sailor nicknamed Lt. Dan who intended to ride out the hurricane on his 22-foot sailboat, well, you knew it wouldn’t end well. And it didn’t. Lt. Dan was profiled widely across the Weather Channel, CNN and social media platforms, but his “eccentricity” turned out to be “mental illness,” and media uncovered a lengthy arrest record shortly after the hurricane passed.
  • TD Bank has been hit with a record $3 billion fine from federal regulators for, among other things, laundering money for drug cartels.
  • Two prominent hedge funds have taken short positions in the communications agency holding group WPP, a sign they think economic conditions will cause the company’s stock price to drop further.
  • The legendary Tropicana hotel in Las Vegas was demolished this week to make room for a new baseball stadium for the former Oakland A’s. Another piece of old Vegas bites the dust.
  • NPR stirred controversy with a headline questioning whether Crocs are bad for kids’ feet. The catch? Despite the sensational claims, no real data supports it—just a couple of experts who say, “Well, maybe,” while admitting their own kids wear them.
  • Ex-crypto exec Ryan Salame made a dark career announcement, updating his LinkedIn profile to reflect his new position: “Inmate at FCI Cumberland.” Salame is now behind bars after his role in one of the industry’s recent scandals.
  • Qantas passengers on a Sydney-to-Tokyo flight were in for a shock when an entertainment system glitch forced everyone to watch the same movie—a steamy, R-rated flick called “Daddio.” While kids were amused, many adults were far from thrilled about the inappropriate in-flight content.
  • CBS rebuked its morning show anchor Tony Dokoupil after his tense and personal interview with author Ta-Nehisi Coates. Dokoupil challenged Coates’ views about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and his belief that Israel is engaged in apartheid.
  • A disturbing trend is emerging in the world of online sports betting: An alarming 12% of posts attacking athletes on social media now comes from disgruntled gamblers. As sports betting grows, so do the threats against athletes.
  • A Broomfield tree trimmer who lost both his legs last month when a branch caught his court-ordered ankle monitor and dragged him into a wood chipper is telling his story.

Who won the week?

  • Tennis star Rafael Nadal announced he will retire at the end of this season. He is behind only Novak Djokovic with 22 men’s championships.
  • Have you ever wanted to buy a $50 million home in Telluride, but you wished it was located at sea level? Good news! For only an additional few hundred thousand dollars, you can install a system to pump fresh oxygen into bedrooms to simulate an altitude thousands of feet lower.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • B Public Relations’ Jordan Blakesley was named a winner for the Denver Business Journal‘s Most Admired CEO awards.
  • A lot of changes at 9News. Anchor Anusha Roy will join Denver7 later this month as a morning anchor. Meanwhile, anchor Jennifer Meckles announced she is expecting a child and will be on maternity leave starting immediately. And sports reporter Jacob Tobey is leaving to become the play-by-play announcer for the NBA‘s San Antonio Spurs.
  • U.K.-based online gambling company bet365 has selected Denver for its U.S. headquarters in a move that will bring more than 800 jobs.
  • The Monforts’ revised renovation plan for the historic El Chapultepec building adjacent to Coors Field received approval from the Lower Downtown Design Review Commission. The building itself will be mostly demolished, but a portion of its iconic facade will be retained.
  • WNBA phenom Caitlin Clark was named “Rookie of the Year.”

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Wall Street Journal ranked colleges nationally, and the Colorado results were … interesting? Colorado School of Mines led the state rankings, which is plausible, but then Colorado College was ranked lower than the University of Colorado Denver and Colorado State University.
  • Search and rescue officials made the “agonizing” and “gut-wrenching” decision not to try to retrieve the body of a 31-year-old Colorado man who died climbing Arikaree Peak. Teams made two attempts to retrieve his body but determined it couldn’t be attempted safely.
  • Former longtime 9News investigative reporter Ward Lucas passed away at the age of 75. And Jim Green, the musician and sound artist who created the iconic jingle on the Denver International Airport trains, passed away, also at the age of 75.
  • It was a tough week for musicians:
    • A fight broke out on-stage at a Jane’s Addiction concert when lead singer Perry Farrell became enraged and threw a punch at guitarist Dave Navarro. Crew members had to break up the fight, and the band has now canceled the rest of the tour.
    • Rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs has been arrested, charged with activities including sex trafficking, forced labor, interstate transportation for purposes of prostitution, drug offenses, kidnapping, arson, bribery and obstruction of justice.
  • Zimbabwe announced plans to kill about 200 elephants to feed communities facing severe hunger after the worst drought in four decades.
  • The latest profession to be squeezed financially? Oscar-winning Hollywood producers. Meanwhile, you think your job is tough? X just hired a new head of global marketing.
  • Amazon has told all its employees to be back in the office five days a week. Some staff have speculated that the demand is an attempt to conduct a layoff without actually having to fire people.
  • Home Depot has agreed to pay a $2 million fine for false advertising.
  • River otters look pretty cute, but don’t believe the hype. One attacked a young child in the Seattle area, biting them on the head and briefly dragging them underwater. The child’s mother came to the rescue.
  • The Denver Broncos are 0-2, and the oddsmakers’ predictions of only 4-5 wins is starting to look optimistic.
  • A news anchor running for mayor of São Paulo, Brazil, threw his chair at his opponent during a live television debate.

Who won the week?

  • Boulder is now one of three finalists to play host to the Sundance Film Festival.
  • Casa Bonita ended its formal lottery for reservations and transitioned to an informal lottery. On the first day anyone could make a reservation, more than 50,000 wannabe diners fought for about 60 days’ worth of slots.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • University of Texas tennis player Maya Joint earned $126,000 by winning a few matches at this year’s U.S. Open, but she isn’t allowed to accept it if she wants to maintain her NCAA eligibility. “But University of Texas QB Quinn Ewers makes $1.7 million from ads for Dr Pepper, Hulu and others,” you might say. Apparently NIL ad money and prize money are treated differently. The NCAA never fails to disappoint.
  • The Paris Olympics and Paralympics may have just ended, but a battle is brewing over whether to keep the Olympic Rings on the Eiffel Tower. Paris’ mayor announced that she plans to keep the rings indefinitely, a decision that is not sitting well with many Parisians, including the family of the tower’s designer, Gustave Eiffel.
  • Edelman‘s decision to hire former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley who served in the Trump Administration may be strategic, but it isn’t going over well with some employees. Axios reports that her hiring “has impacted morale and the tongue-in-cheek hashtag #MEGA — Make Edelman Great Again — has been circulating among teams.”
  • On May 27, it hit 100 degrees in Phoenix, and it has been 100 degrees or hotter every day since – a now 111-day streak that sets a new record each day. The previous record of consecutive 100+ degree days was 76 set in 1993.
  • Two Delta planes collided while taxiing in Atlanta, knocking off the tail section of one of the planes.
  • Facebook has been removing posts from federal and state agencies that warn local residents about active wildfires. Officials are frustrated because in many rural communities it is one of the most effective way to alert and update residents on evacuations.
  • The S.E.C. – the government agency, not the athletic conference – fined Keurig $1.5 million for claiming that its single-use plastic coffee and tea pods are more recyclable than they really are.
  • The Miami-Dade Police Department is playing defense after body-cam footage showed that its officers cowboyed up and unnecessarily escalated a traffic ticket incident with Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill outside the stadium just hours before a game. Hill ended up face down on the pavement in handcuffs before being released.
  • Denver and other metro cities should be prepared to receive less in commercial real-estate taxes next year. Assessors in Colorado value real estate every two years, and this year’s assessments are likely to see many metro commercial office buildings valued at a fraction of what they were worth due to historic vacancies.
  • District Attorney Linda Stanley, the woman whose unethical conduct caused a judge to dismiss murder charges against Barry Morphew in the killing of his wife Suzanne, was formally disbarred.
  • Former Denver Broncos star Shannon Sharpe first claimed that he did not accidentally livestream a video on Instagram of him having sex. He said it was the work of hackers and that he and his team were “working vigorously” to find those responsible. Then, a day later after he apparently confirmed ESPN wasn’t going to fire him for the incident, he acknowledged it was his mistake after all.
  • Corey Hutchins reports that Michael De Yoanna is out as editor of Colorado Community Media, and he will not be replaced. Instead, publisher Linda Shapley will move into a new position of director of editorial and audience engagement.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The PR firm Red Banyan, which is based in Florida but has a Denver office, is representing CBZ Management, the “out-of-state slumlords” (Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman‘s words) that own the apartment complex in Aurora that has become ground zero for allegations that Venezuelan gangs have taken over the city.
  • Is the venerable Brown Palace hotel on the edge of collapse? Aging infrastructure, mismanagement by out-of-state owners and competition from the Four Seasons and Ritz-Carlton have put the 132-year-old hotel in a “free fall,” according to former employees.
  • It has been a bad week for the family that owns the Colorado Rockies. The Monfort’s latest plan to redevelop the El Chapultepec building adjacent to Coors Field was rejected by the Lower Downtown Design Review Committee. This marks two straight redevelopment proposals that have been rejected.
  • Meanwhile, the Colorado Rockies will miss the playoffs for the 27th time in their 32-year history after they were eliminated from contention this week. If you are looking for a silver lining, they technically made it until September before being eliminated, I guess.
  • Compared to last year, wine sales in Colorado have declined 16%, liquor sales have declined 4% and beer sales have declined 1%. That trend, combined with wine and beer sales at grocery stores, is killing independent liquor stores.
  • The author Landon Jones, who coined the term “Baby Boomers,” passed away at the age of 80. And Jim Riswold, the creative force behind Nike‘s “Bo Knows” and “Air Jordan” advertising campaigns, passed away at the age of 66.
  • The U.S. Navy sacked one of its commanders after a photo of him firing a rifle with a scope mounted backward went viral. Among those mocking him online – the U.S. Marine Corps. Ouch.
  • A “self-styled serial entrepreneur” was ordered to pay a $75,000 fine after he created 15,000 new business filings in Colorado when the Secretary of State lowered the filing fee to $1. He then sold the unused corporations to buyers who wanted to assume the corporate identities to bypass some requirements of starting a new one, making it easier to get access to credit.
  • U.S. Supreme Court Justice and Denver native Neil Gorsuch told an audience in Colorado Springs that attorneys who are concerned about the court’s declining case load should file more appeals. But the court receives an average of about 6,000 appeal requests each year and rules on fewer than 200 of them, so demand isn’t exactly the court’s issue.
  • The Washington Commanders football team has fired one of its VPs who was secretly recorded saying that a majority of the team’s players are “homophobic,” that many players are “dumb as hell,” that Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones “hates gay people (and) black people,” and that the league’s social justice initiatives are merely “performative.”
  • Scientists think a decline in the bat population may be responsible for the deaths of as many as 1,000 infants.
  • The Kansas City Chiefs look like they will be very good again this season, something no Denver Broncos fan wants to see.
  • Two Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) workers were killed by a driver in Mesa County. Sadly, it looks like CDOT may eventually need to get a bigger memorial where it displays the names of those who have died.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Some people are so stupid that the Jackson Hole Travel & Tourism Board developed an Instagram filter that alerts amateur photographers when they are standing too close to wildlife. Apparently the old method of letting you know you are too close – having a buffalo gore you – was considered suboptimal.
  • The City of Aurora unexpectedly announced a new police chief, and community groups were not happy that they did not have the usual chance to weigh in on the decision. Given that Aurora has had five police chiefs in five years, city leaders may have been looking to avoid the usual process.
  • So many Denverites are watering their lawns at 5 am on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays that it is threatening the supply of locally stored water. Water officials are asking homeowners to switch to Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, instead.
  • Google and California lawmakers reached a landmark agreement that will direct millions of dollars to local newsrooms, but there is one problem: many news outlets want no part of the deal.
  • MIT announced the composition of its first freshman class since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled race-conscience admissions in colleges unconstitutional, and the impact is clear. The number of Black students dropped 62% and the number of Latino students dropped 27%.
  • A federal judge blocked the launch of a new streaming service called Venu Sports from Fox, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, agreeing with competitor Fubo that it is anticompetitive.
  • The family of French actor Alain Delon has declined to honor his request that his beloved Belgian Shepherd be euthanized and buried with him.
  • Harley-Davidson has joined John Deere and Tractor Supply Co. in distancing itself from previous DEI initiatives after it too was targeted by conservative activists.
  • World No. 1-ranked tennis player Janik Sinner‘s claims that he tested positive for steroids twice because of a spray his masseuse exposed him to were good enough for the sport’s anti-doping authorities. The International Tennis Integrity Agency‘s decision has infuriated most of Sinner’s competitors.
  • Emory University Hospital Midtown in Atlanta lost a piece of a patient’s skull while treating him for a brain hemorrhage. Doubling down on its incompetence, the hospital then billed the patient for a synthetic replacement.
  • Critics aren’t impressed with an 8-foot statue of his wife that Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg commissioned.
  • In one of the unlikelier feuds, Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill – considered the fastest player in the NFL – has challenged Olympic gold medalist sprinter Noah Lyles to a 50-yard race. The offer follows months of taunts between the two.
  • Taliban leaders in Afghanistan have banned the sound of women’s voices singing or reading in public.

Who won the week?

  • Dovetail Solutions added Trina Foster as vice president.
  • The Denver Broncos named QB Bo Nix as the teams starter for the regular season. He will be the first rookie to start a season for the Broncos since John Elway.
  • Jim Pittenger of Biker Jim’s Gourmet Dogs fame has rebounded from the closure of his ballpark restaurant and opened a popup restaurant inside the food hall at the Denver Milk Market.
  • The outrageous Colorado School of Mines football roster photos have become an annual tradition, and 9News reporter Scotty Gange breaks down this year’s best.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • GFM|CenterTable Vice President Amy Moynihan has joined the Boulder Board of County Commissioners Cultural Council.
  • Dana Lauren Berry, senior director of Public Relations and Communications at Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts, has joined the board of directors at the nonprofit Runway to Hope.
  • Workwear brand Dickies selected Carbondale’s Backbone to provide public relations, affiliate marketing and influencer management services.
  • Former CBS4 meteorologist Chris Spears left the station two years ago to open a home-and-garden decor shop in Olde Town Arvada. He has now returned to television, this time with 9News.
  • The DCPA has leased a 25,000 square foot building south of downtown that will hold an upcoming immersive experience: “Monopoly Lifesized: Travel Edition.
  • The temperature may be in the 90s in Denver, but that hasn’t stopped Vail, Keystone and Breckenridge from announcing their opening dates for the 2024-25 ski season. Right now, Breck is first on Nov. 8.
  • The Waltons, owners of the Denver Broncos, are spending nearly $50 million on a residence in the exclusive Polo Club neighborhood in Cherry Creek North
  • Arguably the greatest coach in the history of NCAA athletics has announced his retirement. Anson Dorrance led the University of North Carolina‘s women’s soccer team to 22 national championships. His record was 934-88-53.
  • The street artist Banksy has been on a tear in London, unveiling new pieces each day over the past week and a half.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Paris Olympics conclude this weekend and they have been celebrated as a return to what people expect from the games (no COVID, monster TV ratings, few human rights concerns, etc.). But not everything has gone well:
    • It’s every announcer’s nightmare. Leigh Diffey, NBC‘s announcer covering the men’s 100-meter sprint, botched the call, loudly proclaiming that Jamaica‘s Kishane Thompson had beaten American Noah Lyles. In Diffey’s defense, it took a photo finish to determine that Lyles had edged Thompson by 0.005 seconds.
    • Speaking of Noah Lyles, he only won bronze in the 200 meter, but he apparently placed third while battling COVID.
    • France insists on holding the swim portion of the triathlon in the Seine River, whose E. coli levels bounce between tolerable and unacceptable daily. This week, Belgium withdraw from the mixed relay triathlon after one of its athletes who previously swam in the Seine fell ill.
    • Ryan Gosling may be Canadian, but he apparently was afraid of angering his U.S. fans when he appeared at the Paris Olympics wearing a generic hat featuring only the Olympic Rings.
    • “Saturday Night Live” star Colin Jost was sent home from covering the surfing competition after he cut his foot and got a staph infection. Who knew covering Olympic surfing was more dangerous than participating in it?
    • Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokic learned that one NBA MVP is not enough to defeat four NBA MVPs. But he sure looked good trying. It is a shame that the way the bracket played out that Team Serbia will only get to play for a bronze medal. They are clearly the second-best team in the tournament.
  • Financial firm TIAA is planning to close its Denver office, which will affect 1,000 jobs in our city.
  • A judge ordered the Penrose, Colorado, owners of a funeral home that stored nearly 200 decaying bodies and gave families fake ashes to pay $950 million to the victims’ relatives. The ruling is largely symbolic because the owners don’t – and never will – have $950 million.
  • Private equity firms are buying up veterinary practices, and the results are not good for pets, pet owners or vets.
  • Fox31 morning anchor Ashley Ryan‘s sleep issues have forced her to leave the station.
  • Rapper Travis Scott‘s legal woes continue. He was arrested in Paris for allegedly assaulting a hotel security guard.
  • Let’s pour one out for cougars across the city – Elway’s in Cherry Creek North is closing.
  • Organizers cancelled two Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna after authorities discovered an ISIS-al Qaeda bomb plot. I’m really hoping this results in a revenge song against ISIS.
  • A reporter who had no previous journalism experience in Wyoming has been fired for stealing some quotes, fabricating others and using AI to write stories. One of his giveaways: a paragraph in one of his stories that included a line intended just for him from his AI tool: “This structure ensures that the most critical information is presented first, making it easier for readers to grasp the main points quickly.” Thanks to Corey HutchinsInside the News in Colorado newsletter for sharing that story. You should sign up for it.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • We’re a week into the Paris Olympics, and many, many things have gone very well. But not everything:
    • South Korea demanded a meeting with the head of the IOC after it was mistakenly introduced as North Korea during the opening ceremony.
    • Olympic officials followed that up by playing the wrong national anthem for South Sudan prior to its men’s basketball game against Puerto Rico.
    • The Nigeria women’s basketball team wasn’t allowed to board the delegation’s boat for the opening ceremony. The players and coaches were told there were already too many people on board.
    • Very few world records have been broken in swimming, and experts are blaming a shallower-than-usual pool.
    • If you had Iraq and judo for the first positive doping disqualification, you are a winner.
    • Paris organizers apologized for part of the opening ceremonies that featured drag queens that some say evoked Leonardo da Vinci‘s famous painting, “The Last Supper.”
    • Italian high jumper Gianmarco Tamberi lost his wedding ring in the Seine River when he waved a little too vigorously during the boat ride to the opening ceremonies.
    • How bad is the food in the athletes village? Even the British are complaining.
    • Eurosport, which broadcasts the Paris Olympics in Europe and parts of Asia, fired swimming commentator Bob Ballard after he mocked participants in the women’s 4x100m freestyle relay, saying, “Well, the women just finishing up. You know what women are like … hanging around, doing their makeup.”
    • Speaking of the Seine, heavy rains caused E. coli levels to spike in the river, forcing the postponement of triathlon training sessions.
    • Sadly, Samoan boxing coach Lionel Elika Fatupaito died from a heart attack in the athletes village.
  • Omnicom PR agencies, including Porter Novelli, Ketchum and FleishmanHillard, have quietly been conducting layoffs.
  • Hosting the Oscars has always been a high-wire act, and most of the time not flopping is the big win. So it isn’t a surprise that comedians John Mulaney and Jimmy Kimmel have already passed on hosting next year’s show.
  • Champagne sales are down 12% this year, which many are blaming on the idea that there is “not much joy in the world.” That checks out.
  • “On the heels of spots like Bistro LeRoux, Enzo’s End and Cochino Taco’s Edgewater location calling it quits in July, D Bar announced … that its last day of service at its Uptown location is Sunday, August 4.”
  • Stop me if you have heard this one before: Meta has agreed to pay $1.4 billion to settle a claim it violated regulations. This time it was a facial recognition suit in Texas.
  • Extreme heat this summer has turned soda cans into “little bombs” that spontaneously explode on Southwest Airlines flights. Unlike other airlines, Southwest doesn’t refrigerate its cans because it doesn’t serve perishable food and so it isn’t required to have refrigerated storage.
  • Are the Monforts slum lords?
  • A former Denver Police Academy recruit is suing the City and County of Denver and Denver Health alleging that he lost the use of his legs following a brutal beating that was part of a “hazing ritual.”
  • The latest TikTok-inspired cocktail: Coke and marshmallow fluff. You won’t be able to put the glass down. Literally.
  • A Florida woman was arrested after being pulled over during a traffic stop when an officer spotted a bag in her car labeled “Bag of Drugs.” It contained … wait for it …  crack, meth and pills.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Olympics are here, and already we have seen some interesting storylines:
    • Charlotte Dujardin, a six-time Olympic medalist from Great Britain, withdrew from the Paris Olympics abruptly after a video of her repeatedly whipping a horse during a training session surfaced. In a statement, she said the video “does not reflect how I train my horses,” but of course it actually does.
    • It was a tough week for the U.S. men’s and women’s national basketball teams. In tune-up games leading to the Paris Olympics, the men’s team barely beat South Sudan and the women’s team lost to a WNBA all-star team composed of women who were not picked for the national team.
    • The head coach of the Canadian national women’s soccer team has been sent home after members of her staff were caught flying a spy drone over the practice of their first opponent, New Zealand. Seems like a pretty low risk-to-reward ratio. The drone probably confirmed that New Zealand planned to kick the ball around a bunch and then try to shoot it in the opponent’s goal.
    • Vandals created a series of arson fires on high-speed rail lines overnight in what officials describe as a “coordinated attack” intended to disrupt access to the opening ceremonies.
    • Meanwhile, the IOC awarded the 2034 Winter Olympic Games to Salt Lake City, but only if the United States goes easy on the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). WADA has been accused of allowing Chinese swimmers who tested positive for a banned substance to participate in the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. Every time you think FIFA is the most corrupt organization on the face of the planet, the IOC steps its game up.
  • It’s not exactly like Cleveland Browns fans throwing D-cell batteries at opponents, but a professional soccer match in Norway had to be suspended after fans objected to a referee’s call by throwing fish cakes onto the field.
  • The janitors who clean the office buildings in downtown Denver could strike as early as Sunday if they don’t reach a new agreement.
  • RTD police chief Joel Fitzgerald has been on administrative leave since July 1 for unspecified reasons.
  • It’s not just reporters who have an issue with what records governmental agencies hand over. Denver City Auditor Tim O’Brien is pushing to give his office subpoena power. Meanwhile, the Colorado Department of Human Services is charging its own Colorado Child Protection Ombudsman $30 per hour to gather records it has requested.
  • Things are tough all over. King Charles and his British Monarchy have received a $60 million pay raise as Great Britain grapples with the impacts of inflation.
  • Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: A brother of a Denver Nuggets player has been arrested. This time it was Strahinja Jokic, the brother of NBA MVP Nikola Jokic, who was arrested for assaulting a man during a Nuggets playoff game against the L.A. Lakers in April.
  • Wildfires in the Pacific Northwest have caused Denver to rank in the Top 10 globally for worst air quality.
  • Former Denver Bronco and local sports radio host Chad Brown has agreed to pay $200,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by a former business partner. Curiously, the settlement bars the business partner from defaming Brown, including any mention of “’sex, sexuality, cameras, extramarital affairs, pornography’ or a particular adult toy.”
  • Southwest Airlines announced it would begin assigning seats, ending its 50-year practice of letting passengers pick their seats when they board. Business passengers, particularly, had not been happy with the number of people pre-boarding by claiming medical, military or other reasons.
  • Climate activists in Germany forced the cancellation of more than 100 airline flights in an attempt to highlight climate change. The protesters breached security fences at Frankfurt Airport, an important European hub. Meanwhile, flights in South Korea have been disrupted by a North Korean campaign to send large balloons filled with trash into the country. The balloons have small explosive devices with timers that cause the balloons to pop and rain debris.
  • After 101 years in Denver, the Hanneck Dry Cleaners on East Sixth Avenue is closing. As Westword noted, Hanneck is older than bubble gum, parking meters and penicillin.
  • You think you are annoyed by the never-ending 16th Street Mall construction? The Clocktower Cabaret in the basement of the Daniels & Fisher Tower on 16th Street was flooded with raw sewage during a construction mishap.

Who won the week?

  • The Colorado State Rams are retiring the No. 14 across all of its sports teams in honor of Lt. Col. John Mosley. Mosley, who enrolled at CSU in 1939, was a Tuskegee Airman and the first Black person to earn a varsity letter at the university.
  • Colorado Rockies star Todd Helton was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
  • Denver Nuggets announcer Chris Marlowe, a volleyball gold medal winner in the 1984 Summer Olympics, is headed to Paris to serve as an announcer for his tenth Olympics.
  • Boulder was named one of six finalists to be the new host of the Sundance Film Festival.
  • The movie “Twisters” nabbed $80.5 million in its opening weekend, blowing away pre-opening estimates of $50 million to $55 million.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Former Denver Bronco and Pro Football Hall of Fame running back Terrell Davis was handcuffed and removed from a United Airlines flight by FBI agents after a flight attendant alleged Davis hit him. Davis said he and witnesses to the incident were left confused because he simply tapped a flight attendant’s arm to ask for ice.
  • Colorado native Ingrid Andress was the buzz of social media after she butchered the national anthem at the MLB Home Run Derby in a performance that made people nostalgic for Roseanne Barr‘s version. Afterward, Andress acknowledged being drunk and said that she had made the decision to enter rehab.
  • Denver Nuggets first-round draft pick DaRon Holmes II tore his Achilles tendon during his first NBA Summer League game. He is expected to miss the 2024-25 season.
  • Colorado is the fourth most expensive state for home insurance — a metric that reflects the state’s propensity for hail and wildfires.
  • Russia sentenced Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich to 16 years in prison following a very short sham trial. The surprisingly quick nature of the trial led some to speculate that a prisoner swap is being negotiated between Russia and the U.S.
  • A global data network outage related to Microsoft and the cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike has shut down everything from airlines to banks to media companies to 911 service. Not the Denver PR Blog, however. We only use time-tested technologies such as AOL dial-up internet service and Netscape browsers.
  • Facebook parent company Meta is walking away from half of its office space in downtown Denver. The tech giant originally had about 40,000 square feet in the Union Station building located at 1900 16th St.
  • Investment company BlackRock has pulled a two-year-old viral online ad that coincidentally included footage of Thomas Crooks, the man who was killed while trying to assassinate former President Donald Trump.
  • Actor Kevin Costner‘s second western-themed Horizon” movie has been cancelled after the first installment fizzled at the box office.
  • Colorado mortgage holders lead the nation when it comes to average locked-in interest rate vs. the current interest rate. Coloradans who have mortgages average a 3.8% interest rate compared to the 7.25% rate today. That difference, known in the industry as “golden handcuffs,” creates a strong disincentive to sell.
  • The Hard Rock Stadium in Miami failed its off-Broadway test as one of the sites for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Hosting the final of the 2024 Copa America tournament last weekend, the stadium and its security teams were overrun by Colombia and Argentina fans, forcing the venue to close and lock its gates to try to regroup.
  • Actress Shannen Doherty, star of the 1990s iconic TV show “Beverly Hills, 90201,” passed away at the age of 53 following a series of battles with cancer.
  • A 19-year-old member of the Japan women’s artistic gymnastics team headed to the Paris Olympics has been booted off the team after she was caught smoking cigarettes and drinking alcohol. If that’s the standard, expect the U.S. Mens Basketball Team to be replaced by the BYU men’s team.
  • Pity the Hamptons elite during this summer’s social season. Many are expressing frustration at the dress codes shared for parties that include things like “red carpet royal core,” “garden party retro” and “Nancy Meyers Meets Wyoming.”
  • Three Colorado newspapers – the Lamar Ledger, the Burlington Record and the (Springfield) Plainsman Herald – announced they are shutting down.
  • It turns out Hello Kitty is not actually a cat, according to its creators.
  • Want to buy a house in Aspen? Good luck. The Colorado Sun reports that the price-per-square-foot of real estate in the first half of the year averaged $3,427. That means a million-dollar budget would get you … 291 square feet of living space.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • PRSA Colorado announced the winners of its annual Gold Pick Special Awards:
    • Public Relations Person of the Year: Merideth Hartung | VP, Social and Digital Media, B Public Relations
    • Joe Fuentes Rookie of the Year: Caroline Campbell | Public Relations and Communications Manager, VISIT DENVER
    • Chapter Service Award: Liz Viscardi | Owner, LV Events and PR
    • Jane Dvorak Mentor of the Year: Shawna Seldon McGregor | Founder, Maverick Public Relations
    • Business Person of the Year: Doyle Albee | President and CEO, Comprise
    • Media Person of the Year: Greg Avery | Managing Editor, Denver Business Journal 
    • Public Relations Team of the Year: Gomez Howard Group
  • My colleague Ramonna Robinson was featured in a Denver Business Journal “Outstanding Women in Business” panel discussion on work-life harmony.
  • Proof PR, which has opened additional offices in New York City and Los Angeles, added Katrina Salon as a PR manager in its Denver office. The agency also announced a number of recent client wins, including Bagel Brands (Einstein Bros.), Tide Cleaners, Lake Hour and Wing Snob.
  • History Colorado named its board room in honor of outgoing board members Cathey McClain Finlon and Tamra Ward.
  • Denver Nuggets head coach Michael Malone and his wife Jocelyn purchased a $7 million home in Highlands Ranch. The home has six bedrooms and nine bathrooms.
  • Tennis star Serena Williams once tried to deposit a $1 million check at a drive-thru ATM. Said Williams, “I just went through the drive-thru and the guy was like, ‘Uh, I think you need to come inside for this.'”
  • Billionaire philanthropist and former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg has donated $1 billion to Johns Hopkins University to make medical school free for most students and increase financial aid for those in its nursing and public health graduate programs.

Who Had the Worst Week

  • A Chinese company accidentally launched its prototype rocket during what was supposed to be a ground test. A “structural failure” allowed the rocket to separate from its platform while its propulsion system was being tested. The rocket climbed into the air before it crashed into a mountain and exploded in flames.
  • As the rest of the world tries to move to a four-day workweek, Greece is going the other direction. The country adopted a new employment law this week that lays out a six-day workweek.
  • Applewood Heating, Plumbing and Electric is, ironically, in hot water over a $13,000 fee it charged to install a residential hot water heater. An inquiry from 9NewsSteve Staeger managed to get the family’s money back.
  • The latest Colorado UFO sighting was at Red Rocks, which shouldn’t be that big a surprise given it may have the highest concentration of edible use in the state.
  • If you wanted something to distract you from COVID, good news! Colorado recorded this year’s first case of West Nile Virus. Concerningly, it has occurred earlier than usual following a record year for cases last year.
  • JaMarcus Russell, the overall No. 1 overall pick in the 2007 NFL draft, was fired as a volunteer assistant coach at his former high school and is accused of stealing more than $50,000.
  • The mother of Pat Tillman expressed “shock” that Prince Harry was selected to receive an ESPN award that carries her late son’s name. Tillman voluntarily retired from the NFL to join the U.S. Army and was later killed in a friendly fire incident in Afghanistan. “I am shocked as to why they would select such a controversial and divisive individual to receive the award,” Tillman’s mother said. ESPN noted that Prince Harry has been a champion of the Invictus Games and was deployed to Afghanistan twice as a British Army officer.
  • A former Boeing quality-control manager estimates that as many as 50,000 parts that evaded the company’s quality control process were used in planes.
  • Hooters and NASCAR seem like a match made in redneck heaven, but the chicken wings chain’s financial problems are causing a rift in the relationship. Hendrick Motorsports had to drop the longtime sponsor after it couldn’t pay its sponsorship bill. Hooters recently closed more than 40 of its locations around the country.
  • Department of Justice antitrust investigators are scrutinizing Denver-based Alterra Mountain Company’s proposed acquisition of Arapahoe Basin. A-Basin is one of the site’s last independent ski resorts.
  • The U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team never fails to disappoint. The latest was a 1-0 loss to Uruguay, which eliminated the Americans in the group stage of the COPA America tournament that is being hosted in the U.S.
  • From the “Get Off My Lawn” department: The New York Post complains that Gen Z has destroyed the art of flirting.
  • Inexplicably, Colorado Parks & Wildlife is the latest to jump on the “Hawk Tuah” meme, using the phrase in a social media post to promote fishing at Bald Eagle Pond.
  • CDOT has issued $40 million in fines in just nine months for drivers who weave in and out of toll lanes. Hopefully that will at least pay for a lot of pot hole repairs.
  • South Metro Fire Rescue said its crews responded to 45 fires between 6 p.m. and midnight on July 4.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Everyone wants to blame the pandemic for learning loss among our students, but maybe something else is going on. A year after testing found excessive levels of lead in 2,200 drinking sources across Colorado’s 10 largest school districts, two-thirds of them still have not been fixed.
  • Curious what would be at the center of a Venn diagram of Carmen Miranda and Colombian death squads? We now know the answer: Chiquita bananas.
  • Adding insult to injury, Barnes & Noble appears to be the top bidder for the beloved-but-bankrupt independent Denver bookstore chain Tattered Cover.
  • Wells Fargo confirmed it fired a dozen remote employees who were caught using tools that simulate keyboard activity – think mouse jigglers. In its statement, the company said “Wells Fargo holds employees to the highest standards and does not tolerate unethical behavior,” which is laughable given all of its recent scandals.
  • The U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team is ranked fifth in the world, its lowest ranking since FIFA began releasing standings for women’s teams in 2003. There is hope, however. The women will have a chance to climb back up the rankings when they participate in the Paris Olympics in July.
  • Speaking of soccer, Yan Couto, a defender on the Brazil men’s national soccer team, changed his signature pink hair after a request from officials of his national team. He plays professionally for Manchester City, and they apparently had no concerns about the color of his hair.
  • If you are wondering how the world sees the state of American politics, Canada is game-planning for what a U.S. civil war would mean for our polite neighbors to the north.
  • Ahhh, Independence Day. The holiday synonymous with fireworks, apple pie and … competitive eating? Organizers of the Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest have banned Joey Chestnut from its signature July 4th event after he signed an endorsement deal with plant-based, meat alternative company Impossible Foods.
  • Ball Arena has evicted Biker Jim’s Gourmet Dogs for allegedly not paying sponsorship fees. The arena is suing the restaurant that has its flagship location in the Ballpark neighborhood for $868,000.
  • Gum-maker Orbitz clearly understands Millennials and Gen Z. Rather than focusing on fresh breath or taste, the company is launching a $50 million ad campaign to convince consumers that chewing gum “can silence anxious thoughts, improve focus or boost confidence.” Fun fact: chewing gum sales peaked in 2011.
  • Friends of Keo Frazier are mourning her passing. She was the owner of 9+2 Agency, and held a number of marketing and communications positions with organizations such as Denver Housing Authority, Emily Griffith Technical College and McWhinney.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

  • If you haven’t been able to snag a reservation via Casa Bonita‘s lottery system, good news. The iconic restaurant plans to migrate to a traditional reservation system by late summer.
  • Chipotle shareholders approved a 50-1 stock split that would lower the cost of a single share of the restaurant chain’s stock from $3,200 to $64.
  • 9News anchor Kyle Clark made national headlines for his no-nonsense approach to moderating the recent Republican debate for CD-4 that included Congresswoman Lauren Boebert. My first thought was that I’m shocked that Republicans would allow a journalist like Clark anywhere near their debate. My second thought was that all the Democrats calling for Clark to moderate a presidential debate are underestimating the extent to which Clark challenges candidates of both political parties. It would be no free ride.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Former Denver Broncos and current (for the moment) Washington Commanders kicker Brandon McManus is being sued by two women who say he sexually assaulted them on a team flight last year when he was with the Jacksonville Jaguars. He denies the allegations.
  • A man in Michigan joined a Zoom court hearing about his suspended drivers license while he was driving. The judge immediately revoked his bond.
  • A necklace straight out of the Mr. T collection likely saved a Colorado man’s life when it stopped a bullet, according to Commerce City police.
  • Deion Sanders‘ son Shiloh has filed for bankruptcy. Shiloh has earned hundreds of thousands of dollars in NIL money, but he appears to be trying to get out from under an $11.3 million judgment against him from a civil trial alleging that he assaulted a school security guard when he was 15.
  • American Airlines quickly fired its outside law firm after its lawyers filed court documents blaming a 9-year-old girl for allegedly being secretly recorded in one of its airplane’s bathrooms by a flight attendant. The filing claimed that the young girl “knew or should have known” about the secret recording device. This should serve as a reminder to C-level executives that some lawyers care only about winning in court and do not consider what brand damage they may cause in pursuit of that.
  • Newcomers may complain about the skunky smell coming from grow houses along I-70, but those of us who have been here more than few decades know that the Purina pet food plant is the OG of I-70 nasty smells. Now, a group of nearby residents has filed suit, claiming that the plant emits “rancid” and “noxious” odors.
  • If you are headed to Red Rocks, you may want to closely follow the speed limit. The Town of Morrison‘s new radar camera system ticketed more than 10,000 speeders in its first two weeks. At that rate, Morrison will generate more than $10 million in annual revenue from the system.
  • The Denver Post‘s editorial page team is tightening its requirements for contributed articles after an open-records request identified that a lobbyist actually wrote a column submitted under the name of the mayor of Pueblo.
  • A freak lightning strike in Jackson County, Colo., east of Steamboat Springs, killed a rancher and 32 head of cattle.
  • Denver-based STK Steakhouse had its newest restaurant in Washington, D.C. reviewed by The Washington Post, and it was ugly. Describing his meal, food critic Tom Sietsema noted, “For a moment, I imagine(d) myself at 30,000 feet, eating an airplane meal.”
  • If you were wondering how fashion designer Alexander Wang got Taylor Swift, Beyonce, Ariana Grande and Kylie Jenner to appear in an ad campaign, it turns out they are actually celebrity look-a-likes. I wouldn’t want to be the person that has $1,500/hour attorneys, the FTC and the BeyHive after him.
  • TV networks are scrambling for advertising dollars as the median ages of their viewers continue to climb. Fun fact: the median age of MTV viewers is 51.
  • Nissan issued a rare “do not drive” warning for nearly 84,000 of its cars due to potentially exploding airbags.
  • An Ohio billionaire who apparently does not read the news has announced an audacious new plan – traveling to the wreck of the Titanic in a submersible.
  • Pope Francis has issued an apology after it was reported that he used an offensive slur to refer to gay men in a meeting with bishops.
  • June is Pride Month, but PR Week reports that “many brands are taking a break from Pride this year due to the economy or political opposition to DEI and ESG programs.”
  • Denver’s Carrie J. Austin wrote a letter to the editor of The Denver Post complaining about all the growth that Denver has experienced since she “relocated here in 1995 after having spent more than 20 years in the San Francisco Bay Area and in Manhattan and Brooklyn.”
  • Bill Walton was a Hall of Fame basketball player and one of the all-time eccentric basketball announcers. Like all of the all-time greats, he was loved by most and hated by some. He died at the age of 71 after a lengthy battle against cancer.
  • Correction: Last week, I expressed surprise that CPR agreed to a settlement with former host Vic Vela that included leaving the door open to collaborate on his “Back from Broken” podcast. CPR’s Clara Shelton let me know that the agreement is that Vela can continue his podcast on his own and that CPR would not be involved in any future editions.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Coke bottles in Europe that have the tops attached to aid in recycling keep hitting drinkers in the face. “You literally have a fight with your bottle now every time you take a drink,” said one frustrated soda enthusiast.
  • Colorado Public Radio reached a confidential settlement with former host Vic Vela. The agreement opens the door for CPR continuing Vela’s “Back from Broken” podcast, which is a curious development since the news outlet previously claimed Vela was fired for “repeatedly fail(ing) to address his hostile behavior” in the workplace.
  • Speaking of CPR, it has now been nine months since the news organization received $8.3 million from a donor it still refuses to disclose.
  • Kid Rock went full-Kid Rock in a recent interview with Rolling Stone magazine, in which he allegedly “ranted about immigration, liberally used the N-word and, at one point, waved a gun in the air.”
  • The liability waivers that Colorado ski resorts have relied on to protect them from litigation and financial judgments aren’t as iron-clad as thought, according to a new ruling by the Colorado Supreme Court.
  • Colorado has seen a spike in gun-related road rage incidents over the past six years, and now has a rate that is double the national average.
  • The WNBA is investigating a mass sponsorship agreement between the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority and all 12 players on the Las Vegas Aces that would give each player $100,000. The WNBA is concerned that the deal circumvents its team salary cap. The real issue is how vulnerable the WNBA is to outside influences such as gamblers and sponsors because its salaries are so low. Top veteran players barely make more than $200,000 per season, and rookie stars like Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese make closer to $76,000.
  • Cable channel AMC‘s threshold for adding trigger warnings to old movies seems to be moving. It makes sense that AMC would add disclaimers disavowing racist or stereotypical portrayals of characters in movies such as “Gone with the Wind” or “The Jungle Book,” but the channel has now added them to “Goodfellas.”
  • Actress Scarlett Johansson has threatened a lawsuit alleging that OpenAI illegally copied her voice after she refused to license it to the company for its AI efforts. Johansson famously portrayed the voice of the AI assistant in the 2013 movie, “Her.”
  • Denver-based online worker training platform Guild unexpectedly laid off 25% of its 1,200 employees, and its explanation for why was a “buzzword salad” that felt like it was written by AI, according to SE2‘s Eric Anderson.
  • The chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC), Martin Gruenberg, agreed to resign once a successor is confirmed following a damning report that concluded Gruenberg was responsible for a hostile workplace at the agency.
  • A recent Fox31 social media post about a drunk-driving crackdown in Denver featured a prominent photo of a police officer wearing a City of Miami safety vest. I guess the Fox31 photo archives aren’t curated all that carefully.
  • Tom Brady‘s attempt to purchase a minority stake in the NFL‘s Las Vegas Raiders has hit several road bumps with other team owners who must approve the sale. They are concerned that his presence as the lead FOX Sports analyst for NFL games poses a conflict, and they aren’t happy about the steep discount Raiders owner Mark Davis appears to be trying to give Brady.
  • A California mother was fined $88,000 after her children “collected clams — thinking they were picking up seashells — on the beach without a fishing license.” A judge has agreed to reduce the fine to $500.
  • The stock of E.W. Scripps, owner of Denver7/KMGH, is trading at about $2.50, its lowest level since 2009. You might want to say a prayer for the employer contribution portion of its employees’ 401(k)s.

Who won the week?

  • Altitude Sports’ Vic Lombardi is being inducted into the Heartland Emmy Silver Circle, which recognizes his 25 years in the television industry.
  • CBS4‘s 10 p.m. newscast finished the May ratings period as No. 1 among adults 25-54 for the first time since 1995.
  • The Trust for Public Land ranks Denver as the 13th-best big-city park system in the nation.
  • Liam and Charlotte were the most popular baby names in Colorado in 2023. Milo, Arlo and Atlas also made the top 100.
  • The median pay for CEOs of S&P 500 companies is now $15.7 million.
  • Colorado Springs is the third-best place to live according to U.S. News & World Report, while Boulder ranks 10th, Fort Collins 39th and Denver 40th. Huntsville, Ala., ranks as the seventh-best place to live, so there probably is a flaw in the methodology.
  • The NCAA has reached a $2.8 billion settlement that opens the doors for universities to directly pay its athletes. Part of that settlement will be used to pay former athletes who were denied payment in the past.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

I take a few weeks off and suddenly Colorado Rockies coaches are flying United Airlines jets, Denver Public Schools gets caught requiring employee non-disclosure agreements, and the Jokic brothers are brawling in the stands again. Here is this week’s list:

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Note: “Who Had the Worst Week” will be taking a few weeks off while I am on vacation. It will return at the end of April.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • It turns out Rockies Fever may actually be the Black Plague. After losing a record 103 games last year and then spending the offseason promising that winning is its top priority, the team lost 16-1 in its Opening Day game against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
  • The Denver Auditor’s Office is accusing local teen shelter Urban Peak of violating Denver wage laws when it apparently inadvertently paid workers building its new facility according to residential pay scales instead of commercial ones. Urban Peak says the difference could be as much as a couple of million dollars.
  • A 72-year-old Denver Nuggets superfan named Vicki Ray has been banned indefinitely from Ball Arena for violating the NBA‘s Code of Conduct. Known for giving players and refs bags of candy, holiday cards and notes of encouragement, she reportedly crossed the line and hit a player and grabbed a ref.
  • Former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel was unceremoniously dumped two days after her hiring as an analyst at NBC News. Staffers at the network revolted, citing her history of election denial, her role in former President Donald Trump‘s fake elector plot and her previous criticism of media as “fake news.”
  • It has been a year since Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovitz was arrested by Russia, and his newspaper has commemorated the grim anniversary with a mostly blank front page today.
  • The String Cheese Incident brought its traveling musical circus normally reserved for Red Rocks to Dillon’s new amphitheater last year, and organizers apparently weren’t down with that. They are not on this year’s schedule.
  • The NCAA provided a waiver allowing women’s basketball teams playing in the Spokane, Wash., regional to stay in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, a city 30 miles from where the tournament was being played, due to a lack of hotel rooms in Spokane. If you’ve heard of Coeur d’Alene, it is a good bet it is in the context of the high number of Aryan Nation members who live there. So how did it turn out? As you would expect. The University of Utah team was forced to change hotels after being targeted by a group of white men screaming racial slurs at them and following them from a restaurant back to their original hotel.
  • AI technology has allowed grifter marketers to take content primarily from videos on women’s social media profiles and deepfake them into ads or propoganda, and there is little the justice system can do. One deepfaked video showed “a Christian social media influencer who posts about travel, home decor and wedding planning — in her real bedroom, wearing her real clothes but describing a nonexistent partner with sexual health problems.”
  • Colorado state legislators have been trying to change the composition of RTD‘s board of directors because they apparently have realized that electing board members to represent specific geographic districts – and those constituents’ interests – is a recipe for dysfunction. They are not wrong, but how is that different from how it works at the State Capitol?
  • In a development everyone saw coming, Boeing CEO David Calhoun announced he will step down in the wake of a string of safety issues at the company. If you are concerned about Mr. Calhoun, fear not. Despite his alleged incompetence, he still stands to walk away with an exit package of about $24 million.
  • Members of the U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team just seem intent on pissing off their fans (and now teammates). A month after star player Lindsey Horan apologized for saying that U.S. soccer fans just “aren’t smart” about the game, rising star Korbin Albert has apologized for social media posts that were anti-LGBTQ+.
  • It’s been a bad week for law enforcement officers. Ones in Windsor and two in Denver were arrested this week on harassment and domestic violence charges.
  • Rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs is the TMZ gift that keeps on giving. Not only did he generate days worth of coverage from the federal raids on his residences seeking evidence in a human trafficking ring, but a corresponding lawsuit dropped A-List names such as Jennifer Lopez and Prince Harry.

Who won the week?

  • Doyle Albee and his firm Comprise have acquired VisiTech PR. The move extends Comprise’s “expertise in technology for the global media and entertainment, telecom, cable, wireless, satellite, security and information technology industries.”
  • Andrew Hudson, who may have contributed to more Denverites getting jobs than anyone in history, will speak on Strategic Career Development at PRSA Colorado‘s April event. Register here.
  • Denverite editor Obed Manuel is joining NPR’s Morning Edition in Washington, D.C.
  • Former Denver Broncos trainer Steve “Greek” Antonopulos is now part of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He was awarded the Award of Excellence, which recognizes the contributions of non-players to the the game.
  • Rumors are that the Colorado Rockies are close to an over-the-air agreement that would see some of its games aired free on a station such as Channel 20. If true, they should announce it quickly – they will likely be eliminated from playoff contention in another month or two.

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Former Denver Public Schools board member Auon’tai Anderson has been ordered to pay $61,000 in legal fees to Black Lives Matter 5280 and its board member Amy Brown related to his unsuccessful defamation suit.
  • The layoffs in the journalism industry continue and are hitting close to home. Colorado Public Radio has cut 15 employees in its audio and podcast production departments, although the station’s newsroom was spared.
  • The Denver Broncos announced they will cut QB Russell Wilson, a move that will count $85 million against the salary cap for a player no longer with the team. In his two years with the Broncos, Wilson earned $124 million in salary and bonuses. The Broncos also cut fan favorite safety Justin Simmons.
  • Comedian Nick Swardson had a melt-down on-stage in Beaver Creek that forced organizers to yank him from the stage. He blamed the effects of alcohol and cannabis edibles for his bizarre behavior.
  • European Union regulators fined Apple the equivalent of $1.95 billion for allegedly “thwarting competition among music streaming rivals.”
  • Three passengers who were aboard the Alaska Airlines flight whose door plug blew out mid-flight are suing Boeing and the airline for $1 billion.
  • And Boeing just can’t catch a break. This week, a tire fell off of a United Airlines Boeing plane shortly after take-off as it was en route from San Francisco to Osaka, Japan.
  • A jury has ordered the Denver Police Department – i.e., Denver taxpayers – to pay a 78-year-old Montbello woman $3.76 million for conducting a SWAT-style raid on her house that found nothing. The jury determined that police did not have reasonable cause to search her house.
  • New York Times crossword puzzle editor and NPR “puzzle master” Will Shortz is recovering from a stroke he suffered last month.
  • Meta (Facebook and Instagram) and LinkedIn both suffered unusual outages this week.
  • Scammers cost Coloradans about $164 million in fraud in 2023, up 17% from 2022 and nearly double the amount Coloradans lost to fraud in 2021.
  • Liberty University has been fined a record $14 million by the Department of Education for violations of federal law that included failing to issue timely warnings about criminal activity, failing to notify the campus about emergencies and dangerous situations, and not maintaining an accurate and complete crime log.
  • A U.S. House committee unanimously supported a bill to force TikTok’s Chinese parent company to divest its ownership or face an app store ban in the U.S. 
  • Ikon season passes for Alterra resorts will cost $1,249 (up 7.7%), and Vail ResortsEpic passes will set you back $982 (up 8%).
  • About a dozen fans who attended the bitterly cold January playoff game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins suffered such severe frostbite that amputations were required. Unfortunately for Broncos fans, Patrick Mahomes was not one of them.

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Vogue released its 2024 list of best Denver restaurants, which is great. One of its selections, Populist, closed in 2019, however, which is not. I expect Racines to be on next year’s list.
  • AI-generated fake photographs of a “nude” Taylor Swift spread across the internet this week. The silver lining: it may spur federal legislation making the creation and dissemination of deepfake images illegal.
  • Gov. Jared Polis claims he wants a high-speed transportation option to connect Denver and Colorado Springs, but when a motorcyclist posted a video showing him making the commute in just 20 minutes (he was, at times, traveling 180 mph), the Colorado State Patrol issued an arrest warrant.
  • CDOT has made $4 million so far from the cameras that identify drivers illegally weaving in or out of carpool lanes. I expect potholes to now be fixed faster, CDOT.
  • Speaking of CDOT, thoughts and prayers to I-70 this weekend. It is that time of year when the Aspen X Games, the Breckenridge International Snow Sculpture Championship and the Freestyle Competition in Vail all happen on the same weekend.
  • Tesla lost about $80 billion in market cap this week after its Q4 2023 earnings disappointed analysts. CEO Elon Musk didn’t help much when his earnings conference call was described by analysts as a “train wreck.”
  • Thefts from online payment apps such as Venmo, Cash App, PayPal and Zelle are “skyrocketing.”
  • Director Greta Gerwig and lead actress Margot Robbie – the driving forces behind the billion-dollar “Barbie” movie – did not receive Oscar nominations for their work while actor Ryan Gosling did for his portrayal of Ken. That, some say, “kind of proves the point of the movie, that the patriarchy is still with us.”
  • Denver-based VF Corp. – parent company of brands such as Vans, The North Face, Timberland and Dickies – had personal information for 35.5 million customers stolen by cyber criminals.
  • Atomic scientists are keeping the “Doomsday Clock” at 90 seconds to midnight – as close to midnight as ever – as conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza drive the risk of global catastrophe.
  • Former WWE CEO and current board member Vince McMahon has been sued for allegedly engaging in human trafficking.
  • The L.A. Times “has been thrown into a state of mayhem as it laid off 115 positions – about 20% of its newsroom. Said one staffer, “I cannot overstate the level of chaos.”
  • Speaking of layoffs, those in the tech industry continue. This week, eBay announced plans to lay off 1,000 employees, SAP 8,000 employees, and Microsoft, 1,900 employees. Those cuts follow recent ones from Amazon, Google, Twitch and Audible and TikTok.
  • The CEO of Kyte Baby, a manufacturer of infant clothing, has now had to apologize twice for refusing to allow an employee to work remotely from a NICU where the employee’s newborn was being treated. The first apology was immediately shouted down for being robotic and insincere.
  • The CEOs of Alaska Airlines, United Airlines and American Airlines are all expressing frustration and anger at Boeing’s ongoing quality-control problems. That’s not exactly a recipe for Boeing getting past this quickly.
  • Closing retailer H&M has removed and apologized for a school uniform ad that critics said sexualized children.
  • Beloved University of Colorado and Denver Broncos announcer Larry Zimmer passed away. He was 88.

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Ouray County Plaindealer published a story this week about an alleged rape that took place at the home of the police chief, and mysteriously nearly all the copies of the paper were stolen from its newspaper racks throughout town. You don’t get to do that, and it was heartening to see media from across the state step up and report on the theft and the possible motivation behind it. The result was media coverage 50 times bigger than it would have been had the theft not occurred.
  • Apparently there has been an epidemic of people crashing into funny road signs that we haven’t heard about. The U.S. Federal Highway Administration issued new guidelines that ban clever or funny signs because they can be “distracting.” Among those that will be going away: Massachussets’ “Use Yah Blinkah” and Ohio’s “Visiting in-laws? Slow down, get there late.”
  • Former Denver Nugget Carmelo Anthony, who left Denver by forcing a trade to the New York Knicks, has accused the Nuggets of being “petty” by allowing Nikola Jokic to wear the No. 15 jersey number that belonged to Anthony when he was here. Ever humble, Anthony did concede that perhaps Jokic requested the number to “pay homage” to him.
  • Regulators denied JetBlue‘s attempt to acquire Spirit Airlines, a move that many on Wall Street expect to result in Spirit Airlines’ bankruptcy. It shouldn’t affect air travel in Denver, however. Spirit announced last fall that it was pulling out of DIA completely.
  • Sinclair CEO David Smith acquired the Baltimore Sun this week, and his introductory meeting with staff wasn’t exactly warm and fuzzy. He started by sharing, “Full disclosure, I haven’t read the newspaper in 40 years. Literally have not read the newspaper. … I read the paper maybe four times since I started working on trying to buy this place.” He then suggested to the Pulitzer Prize-winning staff that they should follow the journalistic lead of the local Fox TV affiliate that Sinclair owns.
  • Bobi, the 31-year-old dog who has been recognized by Guinness World Records as the “oldest dog ever,” has been provisionally stripped of his title pending an investigation.
  • Drake has once again rescheduled his concert dates in Denver at the last minute. Last time it happened, his team apparently miscalculated how long it would take to drive the equipment trucks to our city. No word this time on what the issue is.
  • Elon Musk pulled a “You have a nice company here … it’d be a shame if anything happened to it” move with the board of Tesla. Musk threatened to work outside the company on Tesla-relevant technology unless it increases his ownership stake from 13% to 25%, an increase valued at $80 billion.
  • If your pastor is promoting cryptocurrency, you might want to think twice about your church.
  • The Australian Open tennis tournament is underway, and Coco Gauff is not a fan of the way the United States Tennis Association is promoting the American participants. A social media graphic portrayed them like they were members of the TV show “Rugrats.”
  • Fitness guru Richard Simmons and actor Pauly Shore are feuding, which seems like a story straight out of 1990 but is actually taking place in 2024. Simmons is not happy about an unauthorized biopic that will feature Shore as Simmons.

So, who won the week?

  • Fox31 reporter Evan Kruegel is heading to 9News.
  • Former Fox31 reporter Michael Konopasek has been named external communications manager at DIA. He most recently was the corporate communications manager at Frontier Airlines.
  • Longtime Denver Post sports columnist Mark Kiszla has joined the Denver Gazette.
  • Former KNUS task show host Steffan Tubbs has been named public affairs officer for the Drug Enforcement Administration‘s Rocky Mountain Field Division.
  • Miss Colorado, U.S. Air Force 2nd Lieutenant Madison Marsh, was crowned Miss America. She is the first active duty service member to win the title.
  • Elton John won an Emmy for his televised farewell performance at Dodger Stadium, giving him the final piece of the rare and coveted “EGOTEmmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony awards. Fun fact – the term “EGOT” was coined in 1984 by “Miami Vice” actor Philip Michael Thomas, who said his goal was to win all four. Sad fact – Thomas has never even been nominated for any of them.
  • Today is “Sam’s Day of Stoke,” a fundraiser benefitting the Sam Aden Kindness Fund. Sam was a wonderful and loved kid, and those of us who are part of the Love/Aden family’s community are thinking about him, Laura and their entire family today.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • The Boeing 737 Max has become the Ford Pinto of jets. The aircraft faced a global grounding for 20 months starting in 2019 due to malfunctions in its flight control system, leading to two fatal crashes that claimed 346 lives. This week, it has been grounded again after a side door plug blew out mid-flight on an Alaska Airlines jet.
  • A Texas man accused of shoplifting filed a handwritten lawsuit against Walmart demanding either $100 million or “unlimited lifetime free shopping” at the store.
  • There are a lot of talented reporters in Denver, but I have never used regional Emmy award wins as a measure for who is among the best. The number of reporters, both great and average, who have more than a dozen of the things speaks to how liberally they hand them out. That belief was further confirmed this week when ESPN acknowledged submitting fake names to the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) to obtain more than 30 fraudulent Emmy awards for members of its “College GameDay” show who were technically ineligible. ESPN then re-engraved the Emmys with actual names and gave them to the employees.
  • Frigid weather has caused more than 10,000 flight delays today across the country.
  • The National Association of Realtors is a bit of a dumpster fire at the moment. CEO Tracy Kasper abruptly resigned this week after allegedly receiving a blackmail threat, five months after her predecessor resigned after being accused of sexual harassment.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported concerns among leaders and board members at Tesla and SpaceX regarding alleged illegal drug use by CEO Elon Musk. The mercurial CEO responded in part with a couple of statements, including “Whatever I am doing, I should obviously keep doing it” and “If drugs actually helped improve my net productivity over time, I would definitely take them.”
  • It will be 78 degrees in Miami this weekend, but weather forecasters are predicting 0-degree weather with a negative 30-degree wind chill for Saturday’s Kansas City ChiefsMiami Dolphins playoff game in Kansas City.
  • Some members of the Gambian national soccer team passed out mid-flight on their way to an Africa Cup of Nations tournament when the oxygen supply on their Air Cote d’Ivoire flight failed. Said the team’s coach, “I am ready to die for Gambia, but on the football pitch, not off it. I had short dreams where my life passed, I had moments where I thought I was dying.”
  • Quote of the week: “I am not trying to villainize my mom,” uttered by Denver restaurateur Frank Schultz as he attempted to villainize his mom in court regarding a lawsuit about the finances of his company, Tavern Hospitality Group. Schultz’s mom handled the company’s financial accounts.
  • Disgraced former Denver Public Schools board member Auon’tai Anderson first chose not to run for school board re-election because polls showed him with the support of only 9% of voters. Then he announced he would instead run for a state house seat. Well, it turns out those voters also recognized his name, and he has now dropped out of that race as well. And now he has founded an education nonprofit, but of course there is already an issue: 9News reported that “the nonprofit is not currently recognized by the IRS as a 501(c)3 nonprofit, which would allow for tax-deductible contributions while requiring more financial transparency and conflict of interest protections.”
  • Even winners at this year’s Golden Globes weren’t aware of who is behind the awards. Many thanked the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a now-defunct organization that had been heavily criticized over the past few years for a lack of diversity, transparency and competency. It turns out that Dick Clark Productions actually owns the Golden Globes, having acquired the brand earlier this year.

So, who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Retail giant Target has filed suit against Xcel Energy, CenturyLink and Teleport alleging that they are responsible for the deadly Marshall Fire that destroyed the company’s location in Superior. Xcel already faces hundreds of lawsuits from homeowners, but this appears to be the first filed against CenturyLink and Teleport.
  • Alcohol deaths in Colorado have surged 60% over the past four years.
  • A firearms instructor with the Denver Sheriff’s Department has been suspended for 14 days after accidentally shooting his neighbor’s house.
  • Former “90210” star Ian Ziering fought off a group of mini-bikers (the motorcycles were mini, not the people riding them) who attacked him while driving in L.A. He was fine, but his $100,000 Mercedes suffered significant damage.
  • There were more media layoffs in 2023 than in the post-pandemic years of 2021 and 2022. Data through November 2023 alone shows that there were 20,324 job cuts in media nationally.
  • Harvard University President Claudine Gay resigned, the second of three university leaders to resign following their recent bungled Congressional hearing on the schools’ responses to antisemitism. As I said when Penn‘s president resigned last month, being prepped by $1,500 per hour attorneys instead of $500 per hour PR professionals gives you answers that may work in a court of law, but not necessarily in the court of public opinion.
  • Carolina Panthers billionaire owner David Tepper has been fined $300,000 by the NFL for throwing a drink at Jacksonville Jaguars fans who were heckling him during last week’s game. The $300,000 fine for Tepper, who is worth $20 billion, is the equivalent of the average American being fined $1.77.
  • Chi cazzo credi di essere? Italians are in an uproar after their legendary pizza maker Gino Sorbillo added a pineapple pizza to his menu.
  • Two stray dogs caused $350,000 in damage to vehicles at a Houston car dealer. Security video shows the dogs jumping on vehicles, scratching off paint and forcibly removing bumpers while chasing feral cats. 
  • European supermarket chain Carrefour has dropped PepsiCo products such as Pepsi and Lay’s because of the company’s “unacceptable price increases.” The decision is part of Carrefour’s ongoing attempts to pressure some of the world’s biggest consumer goods companies to cut prices. 
  • ESPN‘s Pat McAfee quickly apologized after NFL QB Aaron Rodgers used McAfee’s show to try to settle a score with ABC talk show host Jimmy Kimmel, who has criticized Rodgers in the past. Rodgers suggested that Kimmel might be one of the celebrities who was caught up in the Jeffrey Epstein human trafficking lawsuits, a charge that Kimmel suggested could be grounds for a lawsuit. Interestingly, both ESPN and ABC are owned by Disney.
  • Cecil, a 7-year-old goldendoodle from Pittsburgh, ate $4,000 in cash that his owners had withdrawn to pay for a new fence. “You could leave a steak on the table, and he wouldn’t touch it because he’s not food motivated,” said his owner. “But apparently he is money motivated.”
  • A Florida man has filed a $100,000 lawsuit against Dunkin’ Donuts alleging that he was hurt when a toilet at one of its locations “exploded.
  • A Peloton instructor complained that a Christopher Nolan movie was a waste of time not knowing the director was in her class.

Who won the week?

  • Alvina Vasquez of PowerMap has joined SE2 as a principal and shareholder. Vasquez and SE2 have collaborated for years on impactful campaigns to support healthy and successful communities.
  • The Denver Business Journal announced its 2024 40 Under 40 honorees, and it included Dovetail Solutions’ Emily Tiefel and the Denver Office of the Mayor‘s Jose Salas.
  • Nelson Garcia of 9News has accepted a new position at fellow TEGNA station KARE 11 (NBC) in Minneapolis.
  • Former Denver7 anchor Anne Trujillo has been named to the Board of Trustees of Adams State University
  • At 8-8, the Denver Broncos may be a pretty average football team, but three of its players were named to the Pro Bowl – cornerback Pat Surtain II, safety Justin Simmons and rookie wide receiver and return specialist Marvin Mims Jr.
  • Japan Airlines flight attendants deplaned 367 passengers in mere minutes when one of its jets caught fire after it collided with another plane on a Tokyo runway.

The Biggest PR Disasters of 2023

Writer and philosopher George Santayana once said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” That, apparently, is a lesson that many of our biggest PR disaster repeat offenders – Uber, Facebook and Kanye West, among others – took to heart. They have avoided this year’s list, and instead we have a group of first-time contenders for the year’s biggest PR disasters.

OCEANGATE SUBMERSIBLE
OceanGate was a boot-strapped submersible tour company, and that should have been enough to scare off most people. Somehow, however, the company developed credibility-building partnerships over the past decade with NASA and the University of Washington. It wasn’t until June, though, that most people heard of the company, when the world watched as rescuers frantically attempted to locate and save five people aboard an OceanGate submersible bound for the wreckage of the Titanic. Unfortunately, the sub had imploded before it even made it to the ocean floor. The debris field was finally discovered five days after it launched, and the rescue mission was changed to a recovery effort.


FORMER UPENN PRESIDENT ELIZABETH MAGILL
University of Pennsylvania President Elizabeth Magill prepared for a congressional hearing about the university’s response to antisemitism on campus with the help of $1,500 per hour attorneys instead of $500 per hour PR professionals, and the result was a debacle so bad that she was forced to resign. Responses that work in a court of law don’t always translate to the court of public opinion.


SCOTT ADAMS/”DILBERT”
No one captured the spirit of Corporate America better than Scott Adams and his comic strip, “Dilbert.” At its peak, the strip appeared in more than 2,000 newspapers and it even spawned a short-lived “Dilbert” TV show in 1999. Around, oh, I don’t know, maybe 2016, Adams began going down the rabbit holes of conspiracy theories. 

In February, Adams set the “Dilbert” industrial complex completely ablaze with racist comments on his YouTube channel. He said, in part, “… I would say, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from Black people, just get the (expletive) away …” In response, The Denver Post joined hundreds of other newspapers in dropping “Dilbert” – a move Adams said would mean that “most of my income will be gone by next week” and “my reputation for the rest of my life is destroyed.”


BUD LIGHT
Do you remember in 2015 when Bud Light had to apologize for printing “rapey” slogans on its bottles as part of its #UpForWhatever marketing campaign? Bud Light executives probably recall those as the good old days. 

In April, Bud Light cannonballed into the culture wars when it included transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney in a marketing campaign. Cultural conservatives lost their minds, and they accomplished something that is very rare – a boycott that actually worked. Bud Light parent company AB InBev’s stock was downgraded from “Buy” to “Hold,” CNBC reported that the company’s sales dropped 18%, and it laid off 400 employees several months after the campaign.


PAC-12
The PAC-12 was one of the most storied athletic conferences in the country that included legendary schools such as UCLA, USC, Stanford and Oregon. It billed itself as the “Conference of Champions” and then lived up to it by winning the most NCAA titles of any conference for the past 18 consecutive seasons.

You would think it would be positioned to thrive in this eat-or-be-eaten environment of conference realignment, but it bet its existence on a game of chicken and lost. Poor strategic decisions and an ill-fated PAC-12 cable network didn’t help, but the death knell was rejecting what turned out to be a very reasonable proposal from ESPN for a new television deal. And in a flash, its seat at the Major Conference table evaporated when most of its teams fled to the Big 10, Big 12 and the ACC.


ELON MUSK/X (FORMERLY TWITTER)
There is an old joke – “How do you become a millionaire in (insert industry here)? Start with a billion dollars.” That is especially relevant for Elon Musk. He bought X, nee Twitter, for $44 billion last year, and by the second half of this year had managed to devalue it to about $19 billion thanks to erratic decisions and poor management. Most recently, it was his embrace of antisemites, and trolls like Alex Jones, that caused most mainstream advertisers – Warner Bros. Discovery, Apple, Sony and IBM, to name just a few – to finally walk away.


THREADS
With all of Twitter’s problems, it seemed the perfect time for a well-designed alternative to step up, and Meta – owner of Facebook and Instagram – did exactly that with Threads in July. It became the fastest-growing app in social media history and seemed poised to replace Twitter as the go-to news and information app. By mid-August, however, it became clear that the early momentum had faded, and usage dropped by nearly 80%


AUON’TAI ANDERSON
Former Denver Public Schools board member Auon’tai Anderson is like a toddler who thinks he is playing chess but actually just throws the pieces at you. He was the most-visible DPS board member, and yet in April a poll found that just 9% of likely Denver voters supported his re-election. To put that in context, 13% of expelled N.Y. Rep. George Santos’ constituents still supported him.

Anderson read the political winds and quickly announced that he would not run for re-election … and instead that he would run for a Colorado House of Representatives seat. That at least postponed the embarrassment of being crushed in an election by a year.


SPAIN’S SOCCER FEDERATION
Spain won the FIFA Women’s World Cup in August, but the president of the country’s soccer federation, Luis Rubiales, stole the spotlight from the team when he forcibly kissed one of its players during the post-game celebration. He was widely condemned even by members of his own country’s government, but he refused to step down even after FIFA suspended him for 90 days. Players on the Spanish national team refused to play until Rubiales was fired, and Rubiales’ mother went on a hunger strike to protest what she said was the unfair treatment of her son. The pressure finally overwhelmed Rubiales and he resigned in September.


SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
Once-revered magazines like Sports Illustrated and Newsweek have become shells of their former selves, milked for whatever revenue can be extracted from their legacy brands. In Sports Illustrated’s case, that was especially painful this year. Earlier this fall, the magazine that was once the pinnacle of sports journalism was accused of publishing AI-generated stories that used fictitious names alleged to be reporters. Sports Illustrated’s publisher declined to comment on the allegations, but this month it fired its CEO and three other high-level executives.  


HAWAIIAN ELECTRIC
Hawaiian Electric expects to face as many as 1,000 lawsuits over the devastating Maui wildfires that killed more than 100 people and caused somewhere between $3 billion and $5 billion in damages. Meanwhile, the company’s stock is down 65% from its pre-fire trading level, and its market cap is sitting at about $3.9 billion. What’s the Hawaiian word for “bankruptcy?”


CASA BONITA
In June, it was reported that new Casa Bonita owners Trey Parker and Matt Stone spent $40 million renovating the iconic restaurant. If Casa Bonita maintains standard restaurant profit margins, Parker and Stone only need to generate somewhere between $400 million and $650 million in revenue to make back their investment. 


THE PGA TOUR
Where to begin? Convincing golfers such as Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy to reject literally hundreds of millions of dollars from Saudi-funded LIV Golf, only to then turn around and merge with the rival league? Spending two years making moral arguments (9/11, Jamal Khashoggi, women’s rights, etc.) against the Saudi league, only to, again, turn around and merge with it? Blindsiding its own golfers and having them learn about the merger on social media? No wonder PGA Tour players said they felt “betrayed and humiliated.”