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Notable
Entries:
Interactive Storytelling |
The Mercury Menace
The Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL) |
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"Very
good story. Very good use of multimedia."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
The
Chicago Tribune’s
investigative series revealed supermarkets in Chicago
are routinely selling seafood contaminated by mercury at levels
underreported by the government and in violation of food
safety rules. The report prompted an FDA investigation.
An accompanying interactive educational Web site includes
a calculator of how much fish you can safely eat. |
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Absence
of Place: The Reader's View
The Miami Herald
and MiamiHerald.com (Miami, FL) |
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"They
pulled the thread on a wonderful idea
and attracted more participants...
Tell us their stories,
too."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board
Judges
Inspired
by a photo collection of an individual artist,
the Miami Herald launched an interactive
multimedia project inviting readers to photograph
disappearing cityscapes and share their memories
of what used to be there in a combination
of public art and citizen media. It is both
an online presentation (more than 200 photos
were uploaded) and an actual art exhibit
at the Miami Herald.
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iHerald
Portland Press Herald and Maine Sunday
Telegram (Portland, ME) |
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"Clever
ideas here and a new take on reverse publishing."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
A
Monday print section of the Portland Press herald brings
citizen voices into the newspaper via the
Web. Two-thirds
of staff-written centerpieces have been based on reader
suggestions. Regular features include: “Since you Asked,” a
reader story idea factory; “Write about it,” for
readers essays; favorite bookmarks of local people; and a “plog,” a
print blog in which a columnist reacts to and weaves in readers’ Web
dialogue about news stories. |
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Reader's
Choice
Wisconsin State
Journal (Madison, WI) |
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"Bold
... It's bringing the community into
the newsroom."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board
Judges
The
Wisconsin State Journal invites readers to
vote every day between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.
on what news story they'd most like to see
on the front page of the next day's newspaper.
The paper chooses four or five possible stories
to be voted upon by readers and the winner
goes on the front page of the next day's
State Journal unless breaking news displaces
it.
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P.O.V.
Borders: American ID
P.O.V./
PBS (New York, NY) |
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"Cool,
deep, rich non-linear storytelling.
The Describe America in Three Words
exercise is great."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory
Board Judges
Attractively
composed Web site featuring interactive video,
audio and photos of American and international
people voicing their opinions on what "freedom" means,
the perception of America and what shapes
American identity. Articles discuss how America
markets itself and democracy and provide
further insight on how people view the U.S.
PBS uses a Flickr "feed-grab" to
show image result for searches on "freedom," "democracy" and "American."
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Unrighteous
Traffick
The Providence Journal
and projo.com (Providence, RI) |
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"Another
beautifully told story."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
This artful
and informative series composed by The Providence
Journal tells the story of the dominant role
Rhode Island played in the slave trade. Original
art, music, stories and audio interviews
with key subjects and experts enrich the
exploration of the controversy surrounding
Brown University and the Brown family that
was heavily involved in the state’s
slave history.
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Toxic
Legacy
The Record (Bergen County, NJ) |
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"A
classic use of multimedia to enhance a story."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
Investigative
report by The (Bergen County, NJ) Record detailing
the ongoing environmental disruption and community
health issues caused
by an industrial waste dump left behind by a factory
that has been closed for 25 years. A five-day newspaper
series was also displayed
on the Web enhanced with video, audio, photo slide
shows, community message boards and a log of documents
used to write the story. The
report prompted government action. |
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Nuclear
Nightmares: Twenty Years Since Chernobyl
PixelPress (New York, NY) |
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"The
stunning images tell their own stories."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
A package
of overwhelming photographs and captions depicting
the physical, social and economic
effects still plaguing
an area 20 years after the Chernobyl disaster. Photos compiled
by New York City’s PixelPress show birth defects
and rare conditions caused by Chernobyl and other Soviet
and
Russian nuclear testing. Captions provide brief stories
of the affected people. Facts about nuclear testing in
the former
Soviet Union are included. |
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Money
Power and Respect/
Big Trigg
University of Miami School of Communication
(Coral Gables, FL) |
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"Kudos
for the production values."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
University
of Miami School of Communication project includes
two artistic, moving, Flash-driven Web packages
about inner-city life and drugs. Money Power and Respect
profiles
four drug-addicted Brooklyn women and their families through
an audio-accompanied slide show with photographs spanning
10 years. Big Trigg is a short film and slide show that tells
the story of an aspiring rapper who sells drugs
to support his career. |
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Private
Property or Public Gain: The Battle Over Eminent Domain
Asbury Park Press (Neptune,
NJ) |
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"Good
multimedia on an emerging issue."
-2006
Knight-Batten Advisory Board Judges
The
story of an oceanfront development plan which threatens
to take away the homes of long-time shore dwellers told
through the eyes of those affected using maps, video, audio
and other interactive elements. The Asbury Park Press coverage
of this issue has propelled property rights into a national
debate. |
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Check
out last year's entries:
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