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Newspaper dot-coms dominate Online Journalism Award finalistsUSA Today leads this year's nominees with four honors in the Online News Association's annual journalism awards.
Posted: 2006-08-29
The Online News Assocation today named USA Today's website as a finalist for four Online Journalism Awards, leading all news organizations. The New York Times on the Web earned three finalist designations, as newspaper-affiliated websites dominated the honors. The awards attracted 694 entries for the 18 categories this year, according to ONA executive director Lori Schwab.
The Online Journalism Awards will be presented on October 7, during the ONA's annual national conference, which will be held this year at the Capital Hilton in Washington, DC. The awards are administered by the University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Communication, which also publishes OJR. An OJR analysis of the offline media affiliations of the finalists in the non-student categories shows that newspaper dot-coms led the way, earning 38 finalist honors for 27 sites, including that of the Associated Press. Magazine-published websites earned eight finalist awards. Cable television networks earned five honors, while over-the air networks earned three and one local television station (Indianapolis's WTHR) earned a finalist nod. Ten websites not affiliated with an offline media partner earned 12 finalist honors, though that number includes Slate, which is now owned by the Washington Post, and The Smoking Gun, which is owned by the cable TV network Court TV. [Editor's note -- Numbers corrected to note that Gulf Coast News is not affiliated with a newspaper.] Finalists in each category are listed below, along with the finalist's offline media affiliation. The designation between "large" and "small" websites is determined by the individual domain's monthly visitors, and does not reflect the size of the news organization behind the site. General Excellence in Online Journalism (Large) MSNBC (cable network) General Excellence in Online Journalism (Medium) New West (not affiliated) General Excellence in Online Journalism (Small) The Center for Public Integrity (not affiliated) Breaking News (Large) “London Terrorist Bombings”, CNN (cable network) Breaking News (Small) “The 404 Debate," CFO.com (magazine) Online Commentary (Large) “The Drive-In with James Hill,” BET (cable network) Online Commentary (Medium) “Stuck in the 80s,” TampaBay.com (newspaper) Online Commentary (Small) CJR Daily (magazine) Outstanding Use of Multiple Media (Large) “London Attacks,” BBC News (broadcast network) Outstanding Use of Multiple Media (Small) “An Enduring Mystery,” Herald Tribune (newspaper) Specialty Journalism (Large) Business Week (magazine) Specialty (Small) Bicycling (magazine) Service Journalism (Large) “The Mercury Menace,” Chicago Tribune (newspaper) Service Journalism (Small) “Quality Counts at 10: A Decade of Standards Based Education,” Education Week (magazine) Enterprise Journalism (Large) “A Million Little Lies,” The Smoking Gun (not affiliated, though owned by a cable network) Enterprise (Small) “Cause for Alarm,” WTHR 13 Eyewitness News (local TV) Knight Foundation Award for Public Service “Hurricane Katrina: The Storm We Always Feared,” NOLA.com (newspaper) Student Journalism “Chasing Crusoe,” University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the Universidad de Los Andes, Facultad de Comunicación The judges for the 2006 awards were: Links to this article: Technorati, Yahoo Comments:From Barry Parr on August 30, 2006 at 10:39 AMI've been complaining/whining about the OJA's big-media bias for several years. I'm biased, because I did submit some work this year from Coastsider that I'm particularly proud of.But when I'm competing in the "small" category with LJWorld.com and the company formerly known as Knight-Ridder (Good Morning Silicon Valley), I feel like a chump for signing the check on my entry fee. Everybody loves Lawrence. But a lot of important work is happening in citizen journalism and the OJA is MIA for yet another year. This article has been archived and is no longer accepting comments. |
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From Tish Grier on August 30, 2006 at 6:17 AM
This really wasn't much of a surprise. When there's little understanding of how the online world works, when it is seen only as another way to deliver content, then the mainstream's efforts will continue to dominate. If anything, the OJA awards could start to open up new categories to include outstanding efforts in new media.Yeah, sure...there must be something other than coffee in my coffee today....;-)