Tag: Peabody Awards

  • BBC America, HBO win multiple Peabody awards

    BBC America, HBO win multiple Peabody awards

    MUMBAI: HBO, Cinemax and BBC America have won multiple Peabody awards in the US. The Peabody Award is considered to be very selective and prestigious and is administered by the University of Georgia.

    The ceremony takes place on 16 May in New York City.

    BBC America won two awards for State of Play a gripping political thriller and The Kumars at No. 42. The sitcom was cited by the Peabody Board for its fusion of genres that never fails to delight as it illustrates the quirks that unite families, regardless of culture or background. In India, the show airs on Star World. The local version that involves a Parsi family airs on Sony.

    The History Channel’s Rwanda-Do the Scars Ever Fade? was honoured for documenting world humanitarian issues. Through first-person accounts the documentary special asks the question of how an entire nation and culture can recover from the terrors of its past.

    Comedy Central’s The Daily Show with Jon Stewart ‘Indecision 2004’ won a Peabody for its presidential campaign coverage. The Peabody Board cited the show’s appeal as satire that deflates pomposity on an equal opportunity basis. This is the programme’s second Peabody; it also won for its 2000 election coverage.

    Cinemax received honours for the documentary Bus 174. This is an examination of the disintegration of a violent hostage situation in Brazil – covered live on TV. HBO was cited for Beah: A Black Woman Speaks. This is a loving biographical tribute to actress Beah Richards and was cited by the Peabody Board as giving a remarkable insight into her life as an actress, poet and teacher. Its movie Something the Lord Made, which is the true story of two men who defied racial strictures in the Jim Crow South and pioneered the field of heart surgery in 1944, was also cited.

    Discovery won for Black Sky: The Race for Space. This documentary chronicles the first great aeronautical feat of the 21st century and its reinvention of space travel.

  • Radio series ‘The DNA Files’ adjudged best at Peabody Awards

    Radio series ‘The DNA Files’ adjudged best at Peabody Awards

    The DNA Files bagged the prestigious Peabody/Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Award for Excellence in Health and Media Programming last weekend.

    The DNA Files, a five-part radio series exploring the mystery of genetic science, hosted by Peabody Award winner, John Hockenberry and produced by SoundVision, was broadcast on National Public Radio in the US.

    The Peabody Awards, considered the broadcast and cable industry’s most sought after prize, entered into a partnership in 1998 with The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation of Princeton, with the goal of encouraging increased in-depth coverage of health-related issues by electronic media.

    The producers of The DNA Files received a $10,000 cash award to produce additional programming in the areas of health and/or medicine. The DNA Files will also be repackaged with helpful information on producing health/medical-related programming,which will be distributed free of charge to television and radio newsrooms, broadcast professionals and medical communicators across the US to encourage more quality health related and medical programming.

  • Nickelodeon and HBO triumph at Peabody Awards for broadcast excellence

    Nickelodeon and HBO triumph at Peabody Awards for broadcast excellence

    The 61st annual Peabody Awards announced recently saw HBO and Nickelodeon reap a rich harvest of awards.

    The awards will be given away on 20 May by the University of Georgia’s Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

    HBO has received multiple awards for original programmes like Band of Brothers, the 10-part World War II miniseries created by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, and Wit, with Emma Thompson as an English teacher dying of cancer. HBO films Conspiracy and Boycott have also bagged awards.

    Nickelodeon has scored with its shows Little Bill and Blue’s Clues, the latter an animated series for pre-schoolers. CNN and Channel 4 International received an award for two documentaries, Beneath the Veil and Unholy War, produced by Saira Shah. These works chronicle the terror and violence in the lives of Afghan women. America: A Tribute to Heroes, which aired on Star World shortly after 11 September has also bagged a Peabody. The show was produced by Joel Gallen and simulcast by more than thirty broadcast and cable networks.

    A Peabody has also gone to the ABC movie Anne Frank. The films stars Ben Kinglsey and goes beyond previous accounts of the familiar tragic story. The Showtime network was cited for Things Behind the Sun, a harrowing depiction of rape and its lingering personal effects.

    Peabody winners include several international productions. WTO Challenge, produced by Television Broadcast Limited in Hong Kong examines the personal, social and economic implications of China’s growing involvement in world affairs.

    Awards were also presented to National Public Radio for its more than 180 hours of programming related to September 11.