Former UC student fulfills her love of journalism at local news station
A&S alum manages the enterprise and investigative team at WCPO-9
By Nailah Edwards
From the age of 15, Meghan Goth knew she wanted to pursue a career in journalism.
She was inspired by the creative writing and journalism classes she took during middle school and high school in Denver, Colorado, with a teacher who she says, "did a fantastic job of fostering my love of writing.”
Goth is now the senior manager of the enterprise/investigative team of WCPO-TV in Cincinnati, where she manages the I-Team and enterprise reporters.
Goth and her family moved to Cincinnati when she was 16. She returned to Colorado to attend the University of Colorado in Boulder, but she decided to finish her degree at the University of Cincinnati, where she studied journalism and minored in French in the College of Arts & Sciences.
At that time UC had just begun offering a journalism major. In fact, when Goth graduated in 2007, she was in the second graduating class of the major.
She said she benefited from being in a smaller program. “You have so much more of an opportunity to get the one-on-one attention and experience that you need,” Goth said.
After she received her degree from UC, Goth moved to New York for graduate school at Columbia University. In 2008, she received her master of science in journalism with a concentration in investigative journalism. In New York, Goth worked for the New York Times Syndicate as an associate editor.
The professors are really good about keeping up with the local journalism community and making sure students are exposed to it.
Meghan Goth, WCPO news manager and UC alumna
She returned to Cincinnati in 2009 and took a job as a copy editor at the Cincinnati Enquirer. Eventually she moved to the digital team, running it for two years before becoming the breaking news editor and a daily story coach.
In 2015, an opportunity at WCPO came knocking on her door, and she’s been working there ever since.
In 2019 Goth was recognized among the Department of Journalism’s first class of “Young Alumni Award” honorees. The award recognized UC Journalism alumni whose news media careers are on the rise with notable achievements approximately 10 years after graduation.
Goth believes anyone who wants to be in journalism or now works in the field should be a lifelong learner. The more you are open to learning and adapting to changes, the better you will be, she said.
Goth said she had many professors and mentors at UC that inspired her. Occasionally, she returns to UC to make guest speaking appearances in journalism classes.
“One of the things I like about A&S is how integrated into the community the professors are,” she said. “The professors there are really good about keeping up with the local journalism community and making sure that the students are exposed to it.”
This profile is one of a series exploring the career paths of graduates from UC’s College of Arts and Sciences. Student Nailah Edwards wrote this story for educator associate professor Bob Jonason’s Journalism capstone class at UC.
Featured image at top: WCPO senior news manager Meghan Goth. Credit/Alex Martin
Related Stories
UC Foundation reveals 2025 philanthropy winners
October 27, 2025
The University of Cincinnati Foundation recognized its Outstanding Philanthropic Volunteer Award honorees at the George Rieveschl Recognition Dinner on Oct. 23, 2025.
UC team unveils Wyandot Removal Trail across Ohio
October 24, 2025
Rebecca Wingo, an associate professor of history and director of the public history program in the University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts and Sciences, is featured in a WVXU story about new historical markers honoring the Wyandot people—the last Indigenous nation forcibly removed from Ohio.
John Updike called his letters dull. They’re anything but.
October 23, 2025
James A. Schiff, founding editor of The John Updike Review and UC English professor, edited Selected Letters of John Updike, the first comprehensive collection of the author’s correspondence. Drawing from thousands of letters spanning Updike’s life, Schiff offers new insight into the writer’s personal and literary world. The volume was edited by The New York Times.