2003 Selected Entries

Public Broadcasting System - Wide Angle

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/wideangle/

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“Six billion people. 200 nations. Somebody’s got to cover it.” So goes the slogan for this PBS series, launched in July 2002, which examines stories from around the world. The accompanying Web site features more in-depth information and interactive content such as time lines, interactive maps and polls that add a different dimension to the stories.

The Providence Journal - The Station Fire Digital Extra

http://www.projo.com/extra/2003/stationfire/

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Through animated graphics, pictures, text, video and quotes, the Providence Journal tells how over 100 people lost their lives when The Station dance club caught on fire. Each victim of the blaze is remembered through an obituary while a bulletin board lets visitors share their thoughts about the tragedy. A news ticker and Weblog round out the package. Launched in February 2003.

Orange County Register - The Boy Monk

http://www.ocregister.com/features/monk/index.shtml

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This striking online version of a print feature, launched in January 2003, tells the tale of a 12-year-old Vietnamese boy who was born in California but traveled to India to become a Buddhist monk. The story is told through text, video, audio, graphics and an interactive gallery.

WFAA-TV (ABC) Dallas/Forth Worth - Tragedy over Texas

http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dallas/specialreports/2003/columbia/accounts.html

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Launched in February 2003, this searchable database of images and eyewitness accounts chronicles the Columbia shuttle disaster. An accompanying CD-ROM features video and text news reports as the story unfolded as well as archived pictures and editorials about the disaster.

The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer - Merging Media: How Relaxing Ownership Rules has Affected the Media

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/media/conglomeration/

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An online companion to a June 2002 NewsHour feature, Merging Media assembles data and reports about the media ownership debate. The Web site goes over the rules that had dictated media ownership across the country and details how the new rules would change them. An interactive map of local media ownership in the biggest markets breaks the issue down to the local level, and video excerpts complete the multimedia package.

Kent State University, Institute for CyberInformation - Digital Newsbooks (PDF)

http://www.ici.kent.edu/newsbooks.htm

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The Digital Newsbook concept, developed at Kent State, affords newspapers with an innovative new vehicle for widely disseminating series and other in-depth stories in a visually rich interactive format that blends the familiar page-based attributes of traditional print with the hypermedia features of the Web. While the Digital Newsbook format was designed to take full advantage of the recently introduced pen-based Tablet PCs, it can be read comfortably on any contemporary computer monitor. A pilot Digital Newsbook titled ÒEnriqueÕs JourneyÓ was created at ICI for the Los Angeles Times in November 2002. The contents derive from a six-part series by the same name published in the Los Angeles Times between Sept. 29, 2002 and Oct. 7, 2002.

The Philadelphia Inquirer - Redevelopment of Penn's Landing

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/special_packages/penns_landing/

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This print and Web series, launched in August 2002, helped readers understand choices involved in three different development proposals for the waterfront real estate known as Penn’s Landing. Through discussion forums hosted by the paper and online renderings of development designs that visitors could vote on, readers registered their opinions with the city planners. Articles and editorials about the progress kept the public informed about the fate of the waterfront, while online polls, time lines and photo galleries provided content exclusive to the web.

The Hartford Courant - Complicity

http://www.ctnow.com/slavery/

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The Courant’s special print feature and accompanying Web site, launched in September 2002, detail Connecticut’s unspoken, complicit acceptance of goods and services that slavery helped produce. Interactive graphics, audio and videos clips and a searchable database of Connecticut slave owners provide information in ways that the newspaper feature alone could not.

NPR - The Sonic Memorial Project

http://www.sonicmemorial.org/

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The tragic story of the World Trade Center is told through hundreds of audio clips—news reports, poetry, songs, voice mails and more—on a site that is part documentary and part memorial. The Sonic Browser provides a unique visual representation of the sea of sound floating about the site. Visitors are invited to call in and add their stories to the archive. Launched in September, 2002.

The Philadelphia Inquirer - 2003 School Report Card

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/living/special_packages/school_report_card/

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A comprehensive Web package, launched in March 2003, chronicles how Philadelphia-area public and private schools stack up against each other in the region. A searchable database lets users compare schools and districts by criteria such as number of teachers, average class size and SAT scores. Features such as sample standardized tests and a Web-chat with an expert are integrated with traditional, newspaper-style reporting in the package.

BET.com - Crack: Up in Smoke

http://www.bet.com/package/0,1035,p164,00.html

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In November 2002, BET.com offered in-depth articles examining crack from a variety of angles, from the drug’s influence on popular entertainment to the social effects of crack babies and stiff drug sentencing. A flash animation shows crack’s effects on the body. Message boards and audio and video clips round out the multimedia package.

WBUR-FM Boston - Vote by Issue Quiz

http://www.wbur.org/news/candidateq/

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It can be hard to learn candidates’ positions on the issues amid their carefully controlled media “images.” In this Web-based game, launched in October 2002, users pick the statements they most agree with on a variety of issues without knowing which candidate actually said them. At the end of the quiz, users finds out which candidate or candidates match their opinions on each issue and can follow links to more information on the candidates’ platforms.

WFLD (FOX 32) Chicago - The Experiment: Gay and Straight

http://www.foxchicago.com/experiment/

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In July 2002, Fox affiliate WFLD in Chicago selected 10 people—young, old, male, female, gay and straight—to live in the same house for a week for this reality-TV experiment on homosexual relations in America. The series, broadcast in nightly installments with the news, features the housemates’ frank conversations on topics ranging from gays in the military to AIDS. Viewers had the chance to weigh in on who got to live in the house and could directly e-mail the housemates throughout the series.

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