UPDATE: To post "Patrick Stewart will emcee...."
ATHENS, Ga., April 4,
2012 -- Thirty-eight recipients of the 71st Annual Peabody Awards
were announced today by the University of Georgia's
Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. The winners, chosen by the
Peabody board as the best in electronic media for the year 2011, were named in a
ceremony in the Peabody Gallery on the University of
Georgia Campus.
"The range of the Peabody Awards' search for excellence has never been wider
or deeper than this year," said Horace Newcomb,
Director of the Peabody Awards. "Local news organizations covered stories with
international import as well as those significant within their communities.
Documentaries and news reports on issues missed or overlooked by big
organizations were available on websites. Comedians engaged in political
actions. Radio proved again the power of the individual human voice. Drama
took on issues of power and control. Images of disaster appeared alongside
images of hope and freedom."
The latest Peabody recipients reflect variety in content, genre and sources
of origination.
The winners included Homeland, Showtime's psychologically intense
anti-terrorist drama; the classic game show Jeopardy!; TED.com, a
website devoted to making creative thinkers' ideas available to one and all;
remembrances of 9/11 collected by StoryCorps and broadcast on National Public
Radio; and Toxic Secrets, a powerful series of reports by Phoenix's KPHO-TV about American soldiers and South
Korean children exposed to Agent Orange three decades ago.
My Perestroika, a POV documentary that examined Russia's difficult transition from communism through
the prism of five schoolmates who lived through it, was honored with a Peabody,
as was Intersexions, a South African public-service drama aimed at
curbing the spread of AIDS.
Other international recipients included A Year in the Clouds, a
Taiwanese documentary about life in a remote mountain village; People's
Republic of Cheating and Misjudged Cases, a pair of investigative
reports from Hong Kong's TVB; Fuji Television's
The Untold Stories of the Tsunami in Japan,
which emphasized human interest as much as gob smacking flood
footage; Somalia: Land of Anarchy, a BBC1
report from deep inside a country decimated by never-ending war; and NHK's
Surviving the Tsunami, a meticulous post-mortem of the tidal wave and
nuclear disaster with an eye to lessons for the future.
The anti-tyranny demonstrations in the Middle
East, flaring up like wildfire, inspired some of the most impressive news
reporting of the year. CNN earned a Peabody with comprehensive "Arab Spring"
coverage that included the reports Egypt –
Wave of Discontent and Uprising in Libya. National Public Radio's Arab Spring from
Egypt to Libya
, vividly reported by Lourdes Garcia-Navarro,
was cited for its excellence as was Inside Syria , a trio of enterprising undercover reports
by Clarissa Ward for the CBS Evening News with
Scott Pelley. Al Jazeera English was cited for
its wide-ranging coverage of the escalating wave of protests it labeled the
"Arab Awakening."
The Peabody board also noted CNN's GPS series, citing Fareed Zakaria's commentary and analysis regarding Iran's nuclear ambitions as well as a special report,
Fixing the American Dream, addressing problems with the U.S. educational
system.
Other entertainment programs receiving Peabodys for 2011 include HBO's
Game of Thrones, a fantasy-drama that immerses viewers in a richly
imagined dark-ages society, and Treme, a note-perfect evocation of
everyday life, love and music in post-Katrina New
Orleans. NBC's Parks and Recreation was cited for its sweet and
prickly take on friendship and rivalry within a small town's parks department,
and Portlandia, shown on IFC, was recognized for the freshness and
amiability of its send-ups of Oregon's trendy
city.
Austin City Limits, public television's venerable showcase for roots,
rock, country and pop music, was voted an institutional Peabody for its eclectic
taste and unflagging commitment to quality. And Comedy Central's The Colbert
Report won its second Peabody for its deadpan anchor's "Super PAC" segments
lampooning the rise of megabucks politics.
Along with TED.com, the Internet winners for 2011 were BBC.com, a news site
that draws on reports from the BBC's 72 overseas news bureaus; the On
Location posts on www.globalpost.com, a site devoted to world events neglected
by other media outlets; and a pair of online reports created under the banner of
Human Rights Watch, Acting Up: Russia's
Civil Society (www.newyorker.com) and Gold's Costly Dividend: The Porgera
Joint Venture (www.hrw.org).
The documentary honorees underlined the robust, kaleidoscopic state of the
non-fiction form. They included Triangle Fire, Freedom Riders and
Stonewall Uprising, a trio of historical documentaries presented under
the banner of American Experience; Showtime's Rebirth, a poignant
film about five different people who experienced and rebounded from the 9/11
attacks; and Earth Made of Glass, an HBO documentary that examined the
painful legacy of Rwanda's genocide.
Bhutto, a comprehensive Independent Lens biography of martyred
Pakistani leader Benazir Bhutto, was awarded a
Peabody, as was Charles and Ray Eames – The
Architect and the Painter, an appropriately creative American Masters
portrait of the great designing couple.
Other news programs cited by the Peabody board included Operation Deep
Freeze, a report by Cleveland's WEWS-TV about
Navy personnel unknowingly exposed to atomic radiation while on duty in Antarctica; Their Crime, Your Dime, a
high-impact investigation of food stamp and welfare fraud by Seattle's KING-TV; and
Desert Underwater, a thorough, comprehensible examination of why the
housing bubble burst hit Las Vegas so hard by
KLAS-TV.
ABC News Brian Ross Investigates was cited for Peace Corps – A
Trust Betrayed, a stunning expose of widespread sexual abuse and official
cover-ups within the esteemed humanitarian agency. Who Killed Chea
Vichea?, from Denver's KBDI-TV, didn't let a
limited budget or official resistance derail its investigation of the murder of
a top labor leader in Cambodia, a major producer
of low-cost clothing. A Peabody also went to Native Foster Care: Lost Children, Shattered Families, a
three-part NPR investigation that found more than 30 states flaunting federal
laws that forbid the separation of Native American children from their families
or tribes.
In the realm of public service, a Peabody was awarded to CNN Heroes: An
All-Star Tribute, the program that caps a year-round program created to
identify and reward people around the world who affected the lives of others in
a significant way.
"As media systems continue to expand and intensify, the Peabody Award will
continue its search for excellence and significance," Newcomb said. "Programs
such as those honored this year will always be noted for outstanding achievement
and they will always serve as models for the best work yet to come."
The awards announced today will be formally presented at a luncheon ceremony
at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City on May 21.
Sir Patrick Stewart, star of two Peabody winners,
Star Trek: The Next Generation and Macbeth, will be the
host. For ticket information, contact Sandy
Friedman at 917-281-4718 or sfriedman@nbmedia.com .
All entries become a permanent part of the Peabody Archive in the University of Georgia Libraries. The collection is one of
the nation's oldest, largest and most respected moving-image archives. For more
information about the Peabody Archive or the Peabody Awards, visit www.peabody.uga.edu.
Established in 1915, the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication
offers undergraduate majors in advertising, digital and broadcast journalism,
magazines, newspapers, public relations, publication management and mass media
arts. The college offers two graduate degrees, and is home to the Knight Chair
in Health and Medical Journalism and the Peabody Awards, internationally
recognized as one of the most prestigious prizes for excellence in electronic
media. For more information, see www.grady.uga.edu or follow @UGAGrady on Twitter.
SOURCE Peabody Awards
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