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NGE >> Media >> Broadcasting >> Television >> George Foster Peabody Awards |
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George Foster Peabody Awards Broadcasting's most prestigious award, the George Foster Peabody Award, is given annually by the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia (UGA). Several awards are given for "distinguished achievement and meritorious service" by individuals, networks, stations, and organizations. Each winner receives a bronze medallion bearing the likeness of philanthropist and financier George Foster Peabody, a native of Columbus. In 1938 the National Association of Broadcasters formed a committee to establish a prize, analogous to the Pulitzer Prize, for distinguished radio programs.
The inaugural Peabody Awards, for radio, were given in 1941. Television awards followed in 1948, and cable television winners were first recognized in 1981. Awards for CD-ROM and multimedia were added in the late 1990s, and the inclusion of awards for the World Wide Web began in 2002. The winner of the first personal Peabody Award was the New York Times reporter and freelance writer Elmer Davis, who was a news analyst for CBS during World War II (1941-45) and later the director of the Office of War Information. Other Peabody winners have included Christiane Amanpour, Walter Cronkite, Bob Geldof (for the Live Aid concert), Charles Kuralt, Norman Lear, Studs Terkel, Orson Welles, and Oprah Winfrey. John Drewry oversaw the Peabody Awards program until his retirement in 1963. Subsequent directors have been Worth McDougald, who served from 1963 to 1991; Barry Sherman, whose tenure lasted from 1991 until his sudden death in 2000; and Horace Newcomb, who succeeded Sherman. All have held faculty appointments in the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at UGA. The number of Peabody Awards varies from year to year, and merit is the sole basis for recognition. Individuals, companies, and organizations submit programs or news stories that they believe are worthy of consideration; typically, more than 1,000 such entries are received each year. Review committees at UGA watch or listen to all the submissions to determine which ones meet the awards' standards of excellence. The selections of the review committees are forwarded to the board of directors, which makes the final decisions, first in regional meetings and then at a final plenary session. The board often selects, on its own, particular programs or individuals for special meritorious awards. Some of the material submitted over the years is available to the public through the UGA Libraries Media Department, while other materials, such as scripts and entry forms, are housed in the Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library at UGA. The collections include radio transcriptions, audiotapes, 16 mm kinescopes and prints, videotape reels, and cassettes, as well as CDs and CD-ROMs. The Peabody Awards Collection includes more than 40,000 entries. Presentation
Suggested Reading "George Foster Peabody (1852-1938)," Broadcasting & Cable, May 26, 2003. Ted Loos, "A Little-Known Award That Is a Big Deal to Insiders," New York Times, June 24, 2001, p. 25. Horace Newcomb, "The Peabody Cachet," Broadcasting & Cable, November 26, 2001. Laurence W. Etling, Valdosta State University Published 2/4/2005 |
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