The resignation read like a private matter until the economic-development layer peeled back. Once JobsOhio tied Walter Ted Carter Jr.’s exit to a sponsored podcast and a Columbus host seeking public support for a personal business, the story stopped being only about judgment and started being about who gets access to Ohio States stage and who writes the check.
JobsOhios sponsorship makes the scandal a patronage problem, not just a personal one
According to NBC4 WCMH-TV, JobsOhio said it linked Carter’s resignation to Krisanthe Vlachos, who hosts The Callout Podcast, a veterans-focused show JobsOhio sponsored. Carter appeared in nine episodes, including a two-part co-hosted series, NBC4 WCMH-TV reported. That detail matters because it places the university president inside a pipeline where a state-chartered nonprofit pays for airtime and the host simultaneously registered a business, Vet Earn USA LLC, in December 2025 with an address at WOSU public radio, as cleveland.com and the Columbus Dispatch reported in March 2026.
Ohio State confirmed the filing is part of its investigation into whether public resources were improperly used, cleveland.com reported. NBC4 WCMH-TV quoted the university as saying officials do not know whether the relationship was romantic, underscoring how much remains unresolved even as the board moved quickly after a March 7, 2026 executive session.
The board moved fast because the thread led straight to liquor money and legislative season
JobsOhio is not a typical agency. Mahoning Matters and Ohio Capital Journal coverage has documented years of criticism that the body operates with limited transparency while controlling liquor profits that lawmakers periodically extend. When a scandal touches both a flagship campus and JobsOhio sponsorship, reputational risk spreads to the governors economic-development brand, not only to the presidents office.
The Columbus Dispatch reported Carter acknowledged a mistake in allowing inappropriate access to Ohio State leadership. NBC4 WCMH-TV noted the board accepted his resignation the same weekend. That sequencing reads less like a slow governance process and more like containment before Columbus and statehouse reporters could widen the frame from one administrator to the incentive structure around the podcast.
What This Actually Means
The evidence in NBC4 WCMH-TV and cleveland.com does not prove a quid pro quo. It does show that naming the podcaster connection through JobsOhio reframes the exit as economic-development leverage intersecting with personal conduct. For readers, the takeaway is that Ohio States next president inherits not only a personnel crisis but a spotlight on who sponsors whom in the states public-private development stack.
What is JobsOhio?
JobsOhio is Ohios private nonprofit economic development corporation, created by the legislature and funded in large part through the states liquor enterprise. It awards incentives and promotes investment; critics including outlets cited by Ohio.news have questioned cost-per-job figures and transparency. Understanding that structure explains why a podcast sponsorship line item can become front-page news when it intersects with a university presidents appearances.
Sources
NBC4 WCMH-TV cleveland.com The Columbus Dispatch Mahoning Matters Ohio Capital Journal