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For more than 30 years, John Kiesewetter has been the source for information about all things in local media — comings and goings, local people appearing on the big or small screen, special programs, and much more. Contact John at johnkiese@yahoo.com.

Former WLWT-TV reporter Michael Collins dies at 77

Michael Collins was a features reporter at WLWT-TV in the late 1980s and 1990s.
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Michael Collins was a features reporter at WLWT-TV in the late 1980s and 1990s.

The 'superlative storyteller' left his mark on Cincinnati TV with an unforgettable celebrity-packed rendition of ' 'Twas The Night Before Christmas.'

Of all the crazy things that happened in “Michael Collins' World,” the one most people remember is his rendition of “ ‘Twas The Night Before Christmas” in 1992 on WLWT-TV.

Collins — who died April 4 of cancer in Palm Springs, California, at age 77 — began brightening Channel 5 newscasts with his feature stories in the late 1980s when Jerry Springer and Norma Rashid anchored the news.

Along with Springer’s nightly commentaries, one of the unique elements of Channel 5’s newscasts after they went from worst to first in the ratings was Collins’ four-minute “Michael Collins' World” features. (Yes, four minutes devoted to soft news features!)

One of the most talented features reporters in Cincinnati TV history did everything from being an extra in Eight Men Out, filmed here with Charlie Sheen and John Cusack in 1988, to interviewing Frisch’s customers during the local restaurant’s promotional stunt about possibly dropping it’s iconic Big Boy logo.

But Collins’ most enterprising — and enduring — segment was a recitation of the epic 19th century Christmas classic by more than 50 Greater Cincinnati familiar faces. His all-star cast included the Reds Johnny Bench, Tom Browning, Lou Piniella, and Marge Schott; businessmen Buddy LaRosa, Ted Gregory, Doc Rusk, Gene Elkus, and Buddy’s Carpet Barn owner Buddy Kallick; Bengals Boomer Esiason, Sam Wyche, and Ickey Woods; retired kiddie TV hosts Wanda “Captain Windy” and “Uncle Al Lewis; radio personalities Gary Burbank, Dusty Rhodes, Robin Wood, Marty Brennaman, Joe Nuxhall, Bill Cunningham, Andy Furman, and Wildman Walker; the Enquirer’s Jim Borgman and Jim Knippenberg; Cincinnati Pops conductor Erich Kunzel; two adult dancers; lots of politicians; and the Kwik Brothers.

It was, well, epic. .

"He was just the best. A great writer and friend and one of the funniest people I’ve ever known," says Rashid, Channel 5’s primary co-anchor in the 1980s and 1990s. "He was one of a kind."

Channel 5 reporter John London, who worked with Collins, called him a “terrific, fun guy and a superlative storyteller.” Former WLWT-TV news producer Rob Dauber called him “a smart and creative reporter, and a wonderful friend.”

Born Michael Adamski in Detroit, he attended Ferris State University in Grand Rapids and worked in radio in Cleveland and Detroit before going into television.

Retired WGRR-FM morning host Chris O’Brien first met Collins at Cleveland’s WHK in 1973.

“I did nights and Michael did afternoons. We were both night owls. After I got off at midnight, we'd usually meet at an all-night diner or somewhere, staying up until probably 4 a.m. We lived in the same apartment building in Berea and had many great adventures. Later, we reunited when he came to Channel 5 and I was at Q102,” O’Brien says.

Bill Kubota, who worked with Collins at WLNS-TV in Lansing, Michigan, says the Michigan native worked at WJIM-TV in Lansing before WLWT-TV, and at Detroit’s WJBK-TV after Cincinnati. Collins’ death was announced April 6 on Collins’ Facebook page by a friend, Dominic Jr. Lopez.

Collins loved broadcasting history. He did stories on the early days of both Cincinnati and Detroit TV. for WLWT-TV’s 40th anniversary on Feb. 9, 1988 with Nick Clooney:
 

You can see more of Collins’ videos on his

John Kiesewetter, who has covered television and media for more than 35 years, has been working for and WVXU-FM since 2015.