The Peabody Awards have more than a few surprises

Peabody Statuette

The Peabody Awards are out and my first thought is, "Why in the bloody hell are they giving an award to NBC for their Olympics coverage?" But then there's well deserved awards like the one to YouTube and two which I didn't comment (because I don't watch the shows): Lost and Entourage.

Other winners include :

NBC Coverage of 2008 Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony and Zhang Yimou (NBC)
I thought it was actually quite crappy the coverage with restricted web access and fucked up advertisement breaks.

This American Life: The Giant Pool of Money (Public Radio International/NPR)
Absolutely deserved. It is such an amazing documentary about the factors involved in the current economic crisis that I find myself referring to it constantly as background historical and theoretical information.

Coverage of 2008 Presidential Primary Campaigns and Debates (CNN)
CNN had indeed the best team covering the elections.

The New York Times Web site (www.nytimes.com)
Their's may be an example of the future of online newspapers but they still suck at attribution and linking back to bloggers (in the main newspaper articles, not the blogs. Their bloggers are actually quite cool.)

Saturday Night Live Political Satire, 2008 (NBC)
Sadly, the only funny stuff to happen on SNL in like 20 years ... maybe with the exception of "Dick-In-A-Box".

Avatar: The Last Airbender (NICK)
Best. Animation. Show. EVER! Ok, not the best ever because their ending actually sucked a little (am totally opposed to Aang and Katara getting it on. Still, it's really like nothing we've had in kids TV in this country. It is truly exceptional and brilliant.

Onion News Network (www.theonion.com)
This truly blew me away, but ONN is like extremely Daily Show. They really are pushing parody and satire to the limit.

YouTube (www.youtube.com)
Broadcasting and cablecasting will never be the same no thanks to YouTube. For that, they should get a Noble Prize in Computer Science as well.

From The Peabody Awards :: An International Competition for Electronic Media, honoring achievement in Television, Radio, Cable and the Web :: Administered by University of Georgia's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication:

Complete List of 2008 Peabody Award Winners: omplete List of 2008 Peabody Award Winners
Contact: Noel W. Holston, (706) 542-8983, nholston@uga.edu

NBC Coverage of 2008 Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony and Zhang Yimou (NBC)
NBC Olympics
An exponential magnification of what was once known in television as a "spectacular," the Beijing opening ceremony was crafted and choreographed by creative director Zhang Yimou, executive produced by Dick Ebersol and directed by Bucky Gunts.

This American Life: The Giant Pool of Money (Public Radio International/NPR)
Chicago Public Radio's This American Life, National Public Radio, News Division
The first-ever collaboration of "This American Life" and NPR's news division, this report was impressive for the arresting clarity of its explanation of the financial crisis we're in, and even more so for its having aired so early - May 2008.

Coverage of 2008 Presidential Primary Campaigns and Debates (CNN)
CNN
With state-of-the-art technology and a small army of reporters, producers and analysts, CNN gave viewers unparalleled coverage of a historic presidential election process.

Entourage (HBO)
Leverage and Closest to the Hole Productions in association with HBO Entertainment
Hollywood gets an affectionately merciless tweaking in this picaresque about an ambitious male starlet, his posse of pals, and his multi-faced agent.

Depression: Out of the Shadows (PBS)
Twin Cities Public Television and WGBH Boston
The documentary explored the many forms of depression and an expanding range of treatment strategies as it dispelled the stigma that often inhibits action and fostered hope.

The New York Times Web site (www.nytimes.com)
The New York Times
Aggressively and imaginatively adding sound and moving images to the news that's fit to print, the "Gray Lady" became a leader in the emergence of new journalistic forms.

Black Magic (ESPN)
ESPN Films in association with Shoot the Moon Productions
This unusually penetrating sports documentary illuminated the lives of African-American basketball players and their coaches at historically black colleges and universities during the civil rights era.

Jungle Fish (KBS 2TV)
Korean Broadcasting System
Interactive blogging was integral to the plot of this handsome film, a stylized slice of life among students at a ruthlessly competitive South Korean high school.

China: The Earthquake of Chengdu (National Public Radio)
NPR
On assignment in China when earthquakes devastated Sichuan province, members of an NPR team were on the air in Chengdu when the tremors began, and they provided riveting, first-hand accounts from around the region for days.

NOAH Housing Program Investigation (WWL-TV)
WWL-TV, New Orleans
Dogged inquiry by anchor/reporter Lee Zurik embarrassed the New Orleans Authority Housing Program, a non-profit agency intended to help poor and elderly victims of Hurricane Katrina, and prompted a federal investigation of its misuse of funds.

Hopkins (ABC)
ABC News
All-access filmmaking in the corridors and operating rooms of a fabled teaching hospital produced human drama of open-heart intensity.

Saturday Night Live Political Satire, 2008 (NBC)
SNL Studios in association with NBC Universal Studios
The late-night legend stole the election-year thunder from its satirical competition on cable and may have swayed the race itself.

John Adams (HBO)
Playtone in association with HBO Films
The American Revolution was made flesh and blood in this richly detailed miniseries focused on the political evolution of colonial lawyer John Adams and his wife, Abigail.

Hear and Now (HBO)
HBO Documentary Films in association with Vermillion Films, Inc.
This moving documentary explored the consequences -- positive, negative, unforeseen -- of the decision by a 60-something couple, deaf since birth, to undergo cochlear implant surgeries.

Washington Week with Gwen Ifill (PBS & pbs.org/weta/washingtonweek)
WETA-TV, Washington, DC
Thoughtful, informed and timely, the political talk show that sets the standard for the genre supplemented its contribution to the national discourse in 2008 with a series of live events far outside the Beltway.

Independent Lens: King Corn(PBS)
Mosaic Films, Independent Television Service (ITVS), Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB)
Starting off like a post-grad goof -- two college buddies plant one acre of corn and follow it to market -- the documentary ended up raising questions about everything from crop subsidies to animal cruelty to our obesity epidemic: What's in YOUR gullet?

Breaking Bad (AMC)
AMC, Sony Pictures Television, High Bridge Productions, Gran Via Productions
Bleak, harrowing, sometimes improbably funny, the series chronicled the consequences of a mild-mannered, dying science teacher's decision to secure his family's future by cooking methamphetamine.

The Gates (HBO)
Maysles Films in association with HBO Documentary Films and CVJ
Filmmakers explored how the now-celebrated Central Park installation by artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude came to be in this memoir of a creative process that survived a 24-year odyssey of bureaucratic hoop-jumping.

The Red Race (Shanghai TV Station)
NDR Fernsehen, Shanghai Media Group
Without narration or judgment, this documentary, riveting from its first frame, depicted the rigorous training of China's potential gymnastic stars, age 6.

36 Years in Solitary: Murder, Death and Justice on Angola
(NPR/All Things Considered)
NPR
Laura Sullivan's gripping three-part report raised questions about the guilt of two Louisiana prison farm inmates who have been kept in solitary confinement for more than three decades.

Avatar: The Last Airbender (NICK)
Nickelodeon
Unusually complex characters and healthy respect for the consequences of warfare enhanced this American-made, anime-influenced martial-arts adventure.

Crossfire: Water, Power and Politics (KLAS-TV, Las Vegas)
KLAS-TV
This network-quality documentary by Las Vegas' CBS affiliate was a brave, meticulous examination of a plan to pipe massive amounts of water from rural Nevada to booming Sin City and the potential consequences for ranchers, farmers, Native Americans and the environment.

Ape Genius (PBS)
NOVA, National Geographic Television, John Rubin Productions, Inc.
A synthesis of the latest research on the intelligence and creative capacity of gorillas and other great apes, this stimulating documentary also explored what it means to be human.

CBS News 60 Minutes: Lifeline (CBS)
CBS News 60 Minutes
The world of the uninsured and underinsured in America was unforgettably illuminated by this report about a free-clinic mission, designed for Third World communities, that set up shop in Tennessee for a weekend and treated hundreds of patients.

Lost (ABC)
ABC Studios
Breezily mixing metaphysics, quantum physics, romance and cliffhanger action, the genre-bending series about a group of air-crash survivors on a mysterious island has rewritten the rules of television fiction.

Sichuan Earthquake Coverage (Sichuan Television)
Sichuan Television (SCTV)
When a massive earthquake devastated its province, Chengdu-based Sichuan Television dispatched its camera crews and for several days was the only source of images for TV news organizations around the world.

Independent Lens: Mapping Stem Cell Research -- Terra Incognita (PBS)
Kartemquin Educational Films, Independent Television Service (ITVS)
Neither scientific facts nor ethical complexity nor emotional drama was sacrificed in this documentary about a neurologist who took up stem-cell research after his beloved daughter suffered a spinal injury.

P.O.V.: Campaign (PBS)
Laboratory X Inc., American Documentary Inc., P.O.V., Center for Asian American Media
Soda Kazuhiro's revealing, sometimes painfully funny documentary observed the ragged political campaign of a naif handpicked and backed by Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

Failing the Children: Deadly Mistakes (KMGH-TV)
KMGH-TV, Denver
Motivated by the starvation death of a 7-year-old boy, the station's persistent investigation turned up systemic incompetence in Denver's Department of Human Services, and then broadened into a state-wide story.

Richard Engel Reports: Tip of the Spear (NBC)
NBC Nightly News
Under fire at times, the war correspondent and his team produced an extraordinary series of reports from remote outposts in Afghanistan, making vivid and visceral the hardships and danger faced by American soldiers.

The Metropolitan Opera: Live in HD Series
The Metropolitan Opera Association
With vividly designed, smartly annotated productions of "Hansel and Gretel," "Dr. Atomic," "Peter Grimes" and other operas, the Met used state-of-the-art digital technology to reinvent presentation of a classic art form.

Nanking (HBO)
A Ted Leonsis Production in association with HBO Documentary Films
Human decency rises to confront human atrocity in this powerful, newly documented remembrance of a small group of Westerners who saved thousands of Chinese during the 1937 "rape of Nanking" by Japanese invaders.

Hearst-Argyle Television: Commitment 2008(Hearst-Argyle Stations)
Hearst-Argyle Television
Exemplars of public-service broadcasting, 25 Hearst-Argyle stations fulfilled a company mandate with extensive reporting on candidates and issues in their respective communities and supplemented on-air reports with online forums, profiles and debate coverage.

Onion News Network (www.theonion.com)
The Onion
The satirical tabloid's online send-up of 24-hour cable-TV news was hilarious, trenchant and not infrequently hard to distinguish from the real thing.

Turner Classic Movies (TCM)
Turner Broadcasting System Inc.
It's a wonderful network, this dedicated presenter and preserver of vintage films, and after 15 years, no other in the cable spectrum has stayed truer to its original mission.

YouTube (www.youtube.com)
YouTube, LLC
The video-sharing Web site, a "Speakers' Corner," where Internet users can upload, view and share clips, is an ever-expanding archive-cum-bulletin board that both embodies and promotes democracy.

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Liza Sabater is the founding blogger and publisher of culturekitchen and Daily Gotham. She also a new media producer and social technologist with 10 years experience. You can reach her at blogdiva [at] culturekitchen.com or follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogdiva

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