Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award

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Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award
Awarded forThe best in television, radio, and digital journalism
LocationNew York City
Country United States
Presented byColumbia University Graduate School of Journalism
WebsiteduPont-Columbia Awards

The Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award honors excellence in broadcast and digital journalism in the public service and is considered one of the most prestigious awards in journalism. The awards were established in 1942 and administered until 1967 by Washington and Lee University's O. W. Riegel, Curator and Head of the Department of Journalism and Communications.[1] Since 1968 they have been administered by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in New York City, and are considered by some to be the broadcast equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize, another program administered by Columbia University.[2]

Dedicated to upholding the highest journalism standards, the duPont awards inform the public about the contributions news organizations and journalists make to their communities, support journalism education and innovation, and cultivate a collective spirit for the profession.

The duPont-Columbia Awards were established by Jessie Ball duPont in memory of her husband Alfred I. du Pont. It is the most well-respected journalism-only award for broadcast journalism; starting in 2009, it began accepting digital submissions. The duPont, along with the George Foster Peabody Awards, rank among the most prestigious awards programs in all electronic media.

The duPont-Columbia jury selects the winners from programs that air in the United States between July 1 and June 30 of each year. Award winners receive batons in gold and silver designed by the American architect Louis I. Kahn. The gold baton, when awarded, is given exclusively in honor of truly outstanding broadcast journalism.

Notable winners[]

In 2003, the first-ever foreign-language program was awarded a duPont-Columbia Award: CNN en Español and reporter Jorge Gestoso won a Silver Baton for investigative reporting on Argentina's desaparecidos.

In 2010, the first award for digital reporting was given to MediaStorm and photographer Jonathan Torgovnik for "Intended Consequences" about children born of rape in Rwanda.

In 2012, the first-ever theatrically released documentary film was honored by the duPont jury: the Oscar-nominated Hell and Back Again, about the war in Afghanistan and the struggles facing veterans when they return home.

Note[]

All winners are listed on the website of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.[3]

duPont Award[]

1942[]

  • Fulton Lewis Jr.
  • KGEI Radio, San Francisco

1943[]

  • Raymond Gram Swing
  • WLW Radio, Cincinnati
  • WMAZ Radio, Macon, Georgia

1944[]

  • H. V. Kaltenborn
  • WJR Radio, Detroit
  • WTAG Radio, Worcester, Massachusetts

1945[]

  • Lowell Thomas
  • KDKA Radio, Pittsburgh
  • WNAX Radio, Yankton, South Dakota

1946[]

  • Elmer Davis
  • WHO Radio, Des Moines, Iowa
  • WFIL Radio, Philadelphia

1947[]

  • Edward R. Murrow
  • WBBM Radio, Chicago
  • WFIL Radio, Philadelphia

1948[]

  • Henry J. Taylor
  • KLZ Radio, Denver
  • WLS Radio, Chicago

1949[]

  • Morgan Beatty
  • WNOX Radio, Knoxville, Tennessee
  • WPIX-TV, New York
  • WWJ Radio, Detroit
  • Special Program Award—American Broadcasting Company and Association

1950[]

  • John Cameron Swayze
  • AVZ Radio, Hartford, Connecticut
  • WFIL-TV, Philadelphia

1951[]

  • Joseph C. Harsch
  • WCAU Radio and WCAU-TV, Philadelphia
  • WEEI Radio, Boston

1952[]

  • Gerald W. Johnson
  • WBNS-TV, Columbus, Ohio
  • WMT Radio, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

1953[]

  • Pauline Frederick[4]
  • WBZ Radio and WBZ-TV, Boston
  • WOI-TV, Ames, Iowa

1954[]

  • Eric Sevareid
  • KGAK Radio, Gallup, New Mexico
  • WHAS Radio, Louisville, Kentucky

1955[]

  • Howard K. Smith
  • WICC Radio, Bridgeport, Connecticut
  • WTIC Radio, Hartford, Connecticut

1956[]

  • Chet Huntley
  • KNXT-TV, Los Angeles
  • WFMT Radio, Chicago

1957[]

  • Clifton Utley
  • KARD-TV, Wichita, Kansas
  • KRON-TV, San Francisco

1958[]

  • David Brinkley
  • KLZ-TV, Denver
  • WSNY Radio, Schenectady

1959[]

  • David Schoenbrun
  • KOLN-TV, Lincoln, Nebraska
  • WNTA-TV, Newark, New Jersey

1960[]

  • Edward P. Morgan
  • KDKA-TV, Pittsburgh
  • WAVZ Radio, New Haven, Connecticut

1961[]

  • Martin Agronsky
  • KING-TV, Seattle
  • KPFK Radio, Los Angeles

1962[]

  • Howard K. Smith
  • KVOA-TV, Tucson, Arizona
  • WFMT Radio, Chicago

1963[]

  • Louis M. Lyons
  • WFBM Radio, Indianapolis, Indiana
  • Silver Baton—WJZ-TV, Baltimore

1964[]

  • WFTV, Orlando, Florida
  • WRCV-TV, Philadelphia

1965[]

  • Cecil Brown
  • KTWO-TV, Casper, Wyoming
  • WBBM-TV, Chicago
  • WCCO Radio, Minneapolis
  • WFBM-TV, Indianapolis, Indiana
  • WHCU Radio, Ithaca, New York
  • WRVR Radio, New York

duPont–Columbia Award[]

1969[]

1971[]

1972[]

  • CBS News, John Sharnik and Eric Sevareid, "Justice in America" (parts one, two, and three)
  • Group W, George Moynihan and Susan Garfield, “All The Kids Like That: Tommy’s Story”
  • KUTV, Salt Lake City, Richard Spratling, Diane Orr and Fred Edwards, "Warriors Without A Weapon"
  • NBC News, William B. Hill and Tom Pettit, “First Tuesday: The Man from Uncle (Sam)" and "The FBI”
  • NBC News, Martin Carr, “White Paper: This Child is Rated X
  • WABC-TV, Geraldo Rivera, “Drug Crisis in East Harlem”

1973[]

  • Mike Wallace for outstanding reporting on CBS News "60 Minutes"
  • CBS News, Perry Wolff, Robert Markowitz, and Charles Kuralt, "CBS Reports: ...But What If the Dream Comes True?
  • Group W, Dick Hubert and Paul Altmeyer, “The Search for Quality Education”
  • KERA-TV, Dallas, for outstanding coverage of the 1972 political campaigns
  • National Public Affairs Center for Television, for coverage of the 1972 political campaigns
  • NBC News and Fred Freed, “White Paper: The Blue Collar Trap
  • WABC-TV, Richard Thruston Watkins, "Like It Is: Attica -- the Unanswered Questions"
  • WNET-TV, New York, and Tony Batten, “The 51st State: Youth Gangs in the South Bronx
  • WNJT-TV, Trenton, New Jersey, Ken Stein and John Dimmer, “Towers of Frustration: Assignment: New Jersey”
  • WTVJ-TV, Miami, “The Swift Justice of Europe” and “A Seed of Hope”

1974[]

  • ABC News and Arthur Holch, "Inquiry: Chile: Experiment in Red"
  • CBS News, Irv Drasnin, "CBS News Reports: You and the Commercial"
  • Group W, Dick Hubert and Rod MacLeish "And the Rich Shall Inherit the Earth"
  • KGW-TV, Portland, Oregon, Pete Maroney, "Death of a Slideshow"
  • KNX Radio, Los Angeles, California, for editorials on important community issues
  • NBC News and Robert Northshield, "The Sins of the Fathers" (a segment of NBC Reports)
  • National Public Affairs Center for Television and Elizabeth Drew, "Thirty Minutes With..."
  • WBBM-TV, Chicago, Illinois, Judy Muntz, Jim Hatfield, and Lee Phillip, "The Rape of Paulette"
  • WTIC-TV, Hartford, Connecticut, Jean Sablon and Bard Davis "The Nine-Year-Old in Norfolk Prison"

1975[]

  • ABC News, Av Westin, "Close-Up"
  • CBS News, Don Hewitt, 60 Minutes
  • KFWB Radio, Los Angeles, "SLA 54th Street Shootout"
  • KNXT, Los Angeles, "Why Me?"
  • NBC News, Fred Freed, "The Energy Crisis" (an NBC White Paper)
  • NBC News, Series of Reports on Feeding the Poor
  • National Public Affairs Center for Television, "Washington Week in Review"
  • National Public Affairs Center for Television, Watergate coverage
  • WNET-TV, New York and Frederick Wiseman, "Juvenile Court"
  • TVTV and WNET, New York and David Loxton, Lord of the Universe
  • WKY-TV, Oklahoma City and Bob Dotson, "Through the Looking Glass Darkly" (parts one, two, and three)
  • WPVI-TV, Philadelphia, "Public Bridges and Private Riches"

1976[]

  • KNBC, Burbank, California, Don Harris, “Prison Gangs
  • NBC Nightly News and Tom Pettit for a series on feeding the poor
  • NPR, All Things Considered
  • WBTV, Charlotte, for news and documentary programming
  • WCCO, Minneapolis, Minnesota, David Moore, “Moore on Sunday
  • WCCO Radio, Minneapolis, for news and documentary programming
  • WGBH, Boston, Roger Fisher, “Arabs and Israelis
  • WHEC, Rochester and Warren Doremus, “The Riots Plus Ten Years”
  • WKYC, Cleveland and Brian Ross, “Teamster Power”
  • WPLG, Miami and Clarence Jones, for crime reporting

1978[]

1979[]

  • Associated Press Radio, "The New South: Shade Behind the Sunbelt"
  • KOOL-TV, Phoenix, Burt Kennedy, “Water: Arizona's Most Precious Resource”
  • KPIX-TV, San Francisco, Robert Klein and Richard Hart, “Laser Con-Fusion”
  • National Geographic Society and WQED-TV, Pittsburgh, “The Living Sands of Namib”
  • NBC News, Robert Rogers and Garrick Utley, “NBC News Reports: Africa's Defiant White Tribe”
  • WBBM-TV, Chicago, Illinois, Gail Sikevitz, Scott Craig, Jim Hatfield, and Mort Crim for documentary reporting
  • WFAA-TV, Dallas, Texas, Byron Harris for investigative report
  • WGBH-FM, Boston, "Banned in Chelsea"
  • WGBH-TV, Boston and William Cran, “WORLD: Chachaji: My Poor Relation” and John Angier, “NOVA: The Final Frontier
  • WMHT-TV, Schenectady, “Capital Punishment: Inside Albany
  • WPLG-TV, Miami and Clarence Jones for investigative reporting
  • Special Award: Richard Salant

1980[]

  • ABC News, "Closeup: Arson: Fire for Hire!" (reported by Brit Hume[6]) and "World News Tonight: Second to None?"
  • Bill Moyers, for outstanding reporting on CBS News and WNET-TV, New York
  • CBS News, "CBS Reports: The Boat People" (produced by Andrew Lack and reported by Ed Bradley[7]) and "60 Minutes"
  • KCTS-TV, Seattle, "Do I Look Like I Want to Die?"
  • KDFW-TV, Dallas, for investigative reporting
  • KUTV-TV, Salt Lake City, "Clouds of Doubt"
  • KXL Radio, Portland, "The Air Space -- How Safe?"
  • WGBH-TV, Boston, "WORLD: F-16: Sale of the Century" on PBS (reported by Andrew Cockburn)
  • WHA-TV, Madison, Catalyst Films and Wisconsin Educational Television Network, "An American Ism: Joe McCarthy"

1981[]

  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "The Iran Crisis: America Held Hostage"
  • SILVER BATON Ed Bradley and CBS News, "CBS Reports: Blacks in America: With All Deliberate Speed?"
  • SILVER BATON Group W and KYW-TV, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; WBZ-TV, Boston, Massachusetts; WJZ-TV, Baltimore Maryland for I-Team Investigations
  • SILVER BATON Mississippi Center for Educational Television, Jackson, Mississippi, "William Faulkner: A Life on Paper"
  • SILVER BATON National Public Radio, "All Things Considered" and "Morning Edition"
  • SILVER BATON Perry Miller Adato and WNET-TV, New York, New York, "Picasso: A Painter's Diary" (parts one, two, and three)
  • SILVER BATON Red Cloud Productions and WGBY-TV, Springfield, Massachusetts, "Joan Robinson: One Woman's Story"
  • SILVER BATON Roger Mudd and CBS News, “CBS Reports: Teddy"
  • SILVER BATON Rueven Frank and NBC News, "White Paper: If Japan Can... Why Can't We?"
  • SILVER BATON Special Independent Production Award: Carol Mon Pere, Sandra Nichols and KTEH-TV, San Jose, California "The Battle of Westlands"
  • SILVER BATON Special Tribute: Walter Cronkite
  • SILVER BATON Walter Jacobson and WBBM-TV, Chicago, Illinois, "Perspectives"
  • SILVER BATON WLS-TV, Chicago, Illinois and Chicago Sun-Times, "The Accident Swindlers"

1982[]

  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "America Held Hostage: The Secret Negotiations"
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, Charles Kuralt, “Sunday Morning
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, Dan Rather, "CBS REPORTS: The Defense of the United States"
  • SILVER BATON David Productions and ABC News, "CLOSEUP: Can't it Be Anyone Else?" (produced by Bill Couturié)
  • SILVER BATON KCTS-TV, Dr. Willard Gaylin, "Hard Choices"
  • SILVER BATON National Public Radio, "Father Cares: The Last of Jonestown"
  • SILVER BATON Robert Spencer and WTTW-TV, Chicago, Illinois, "Six O'clock and All's Well"
  • SILVER BATON SPECIAL INDEPENDENT PRODUCTION AWARD: KTEH-TV, San Jose, California and John Else, "The Day After Trinity"
  • SILVER BATON SPECIAL TRIBUTE: David Brinkley
  • SILVER BATON WBBM-TV, Chicago, Illinois, "Election Night Coverage"
  • SILVER BATON WCCO-TV, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Dave Moore, The Moore Report
  • SILVER BATON WGBH-TV, Boston, Massachusetts, "WORLD"
  • SILVER BATON WPLG-TV, Miami, Florida, "The Billion Dollar Ghetto"

1984[]

  • SILVER BATON CBS News, "60 Minutes: Good Cop, Bad Cop; Honor Thy Children; and Go Park It in Tokyo"
  • SILVER BATON John Camp and WBRZ, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, For investigative reporting
  • SILVER BATON KCTS-TV, Seattle, Washington and Face to Face Productions, "Rape: Face to Face"
  • SILVER BATON KRON-TV, San Francisco, California, "The War Within"
  • SILVER BATON National Public Radio, "The Most Dangerous Game: Nuclear Face-off in Europe"
  • SILVER BATON NBC News, "News Overnight"
  • SILVER BATON Richard Threlkeld, Status Reports on "ABC World News Tonight"
  • SILVER BATON SPECIAL INDEPENDENT PRODUCTION AWARD: Jon Alpert and NBC News, "American Survival" (aired on Today[8])
  • SILVER BATON Terry Drinkwater, Cancer Reports on "CBS Evening News"
  • SILVER BATON WBBM-TV, Chicago, Illinois, "Killing Crime: A Police Cop-Out"
  • SILVER BATON WMAQ-TV, Chicago, Illinois, "Unit 5: The Chicago Police Investigations"
  • SILVER BATON WSMV-TV, Nashville, Tennessee, "Innocent Shame: The Legacy of Child Sexual Abuse"
  • SILVER BATON WTCN-TV, Minneapolis, Minnesota, "Herpes is Forever"

1985[]

  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "Nightline"
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "World News Tonight: US-USSR: A Balance of Powers"
  • SILVER BATON Brian Ross and Ira Silverman, Outstanding investigative reporting on NBC News
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, "60 Minutes: Lenell Geter's in Jail"
  • SILVER BATON KOSU Radio, Stillwater, Oklahoma, "Selling the Public Spectrum"
  • SILVER BATON KRON-TV, San Francisco, California, "Climate of Death"
  • SPECIAL INDEPENDENT PRODUCTION AWARD: Medvideo, Ltd. and Group W, "Whispering Hope: Unmasking the Mystery of Alzheimer's"
  • Special Independent Production Award: Quest Productions and PBS, "The First Fifty Years: Reflections on US-Soviet Relations"
  • SILVER BATON Suburban Cablevision, Avenel, New Jersey, "Right to Know: Hillside: A Desegregation Story"
  • SILVER BATON The Documentary Consortium and PBS “Frontline: Mind of a Murderer
  • SILVER BATON WGBH-TV and PBS, Boston, Massachusetts, "Vietnam: A Television History"
  • SILVER BATON WJXT-TV, Jacksonville, Florida, "The Smell of Money"
  • SILVER BATON WJZ-TV, Baltimore, Maryland, "Baby Boom: The Pig in the Python"

1986[]

  • GOLD BATON ABC News, "Nightline: South Africa"
  • SILVER BATON Cable News Network and IMAGO, Ltd., "Iran: In the Name of God"
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, "CBS Evening News: Afghanistan: Operation Blackout" (with footage from Mike Hoover)
  • SILVER BATON Chris-Craft Television Productions and Churchill Films, "Down for the Count--an Inside Look at Boxing" (aired on Frontline)
  • SILVER BATON Desert West News, Flagstaff, Arizona, For a series of radio reports on the American Sanctuary Movement
  • SILVER BATON KNX Radio, Los Angeles, California, "Assignment 84/85"
  • SILVER BATON Nancy Montoya and KGUN-TV, Tucson, Arizona, For outstanding reporting
  • SILVER BATON NBC News, "The Real 'Star Wars'--Defense in Space"
  • SILVER BATON WCAU-TV, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Coverage of the MOVE siege
  • SILVER BATON WCCO-TV, Minneapolis, Minnesota, "The Moore Report"
  • SILVER BATON WDVM-TV, Washington, DC, Investigation of Dr. Milan Vuitch
  • SILVER BATON WNET-TV, New York, New York, and PBS, "The Brain"

1987[]

  • GOLD BATON CBS News, "CBS Reports: The Vanishing Family--Crisis in Black America", presented by Bill Moyers[9]
  • SILVER BATON ABC News with Ted Koppel, "45/85"
  • SILVER BATON Chedd-Angier Production Company and The Documentary Consortium, "Frontline: Sue the Doctor? on PBS
  • SILVER BATON Drew Associates and PBS, "For Auction: An American Hero"
  • SILVER BATON KING-TV, Seattle, Washington, "Washington 2000"
  • SILVER BATON KTUL-TV, Tulsa, Oklahoma, "Tulsa's Golden Missionary"
  • SILVER BATON KYTV-TV, Springfield, Missouri, For outstanding reporting by Erin Hayes
  • SILVER BATON NBC News, Investigative Reporting on NBC Nightly News, citing the work of Brian Ross and Mark Nykanen
  • SILVER BATON NBC Radio News, For coverage of the American raid on Tripoli
  • SILVER BATON WBZ-TV, Boston, Massachusetts, "Afghanistan: The Untold Story"
  • SILVER BATON WCBS-TV, New York, New York, "No Place to Call Home"
  • SILVER BATON WCCO-TV, Minneapolis, Minnesota, "State of Texas vs. Steven Lynn Fossum"
  • SILVER BATON WMAQ-TV, Chicago, Illinois, "Cicero: Community of Controversy"

1988[]

  • GOLD BATON Blackside, Inc., Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "20/20: By His Father's Hand: The Zumwalkts"
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, "48 Hours on Crack Street"
  • SILVER BATON Florence Films, "Huey Long"
  • SILVER BATON KMOV-TV, St. Louis, Missouri, "Sauget: City of Shame"
  • SILVER BATON NBC News, Robert Bazell, For Coverage of the AIDS epidemic
  • SILVER BATON Pam Zekman and WBBM-TV, Chicago, Illinois, For Investigative Reporting
  • SILVER BATON Roberta Baskin and WJLA-TV, Washington, D.C. For Investigative Reporting
  • SILVER BATON WCCO-TV, Minneapolis, Minnesota, For the I-Team
  • SILVER BATON WFAA-TV, Dallas, Texas, SMU Investigation
  • SILVER BATON WJXT-TV, Jacksonville, Florida, Jacksonville, Florida, "Jacksonville's Roads: The Deadly Drive Home"
  • SILVER BATON WLAP Radio, Lexington, Kentucky, "Passing On the Secret of Sexual Abuse"
  • SILVER BATON WPLG-TV, Miami, Florida, "Florida: State of Neglect"

1989[]

  • GOLD BATON CBS News, "60 Minutes"
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "Nightline: In the Holy Land"
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, Coverage of the Persian Gulf by Alen Pizzey
  • SILVER BATON KING-TV, Seattle, Washington, "Looking for Lincoln"
  • SILVER BATON NBC News, "A Conversation with Mikhail Gorbachev
  • SILVER BATON Nina Totenberg and National Public Radio, Coverage of the Supreme Court Nominations
  • SILVER BATON Public Affairs Television and Alvin H. Perlmutter, Inc., "Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth with Bill Moyers"
  • SILVER BATON WCAX-TV, Burlington, Vermont, "The Politics of Pollution"
  • SILVER BATON WCVB-TV, Needham, Massachusetts, "We the Jury", reported by David Ropeik
  • SILVER BATON WSMV-TV, Nashville, TN, for investigative reporting by Erin Hayes
  • SILVER BATON WUSA-TV, Washington, D.C. "Thurgood Marshall: The Man", reported by Carl Rowan
  • SILVER BATON WWOR-TV, Secaucus, New Jersey, "For the I-Team"

1990[]

  • GOLD BATON WGBH and Frontline: "Remember My Lai," "The Spy Who Broke the Code," "Who Profits From Drugs?," "The Choice," and "Children of the Night"
  • SILVER BATON ABC News and Koppel Communications, "The Koppel Report: Tragedy at Tiananmen--The Untold Story"
  • SILVER BATON Byron Harris and WFAA-TV, Dallas, Texas, "Other People's Money"
  • SILVER BATON CBS, Television and Radio Coverage of China
  • SILVER BATON CNN, Coverage of China
  • SILVER BATON Gardner Films and WETA, Washington, D.C., "Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land" on PBS
  • SILVER BATON KCET-TV, Los Angeles, California, "For the Sake of Appearances," and "Expecting Miracles"
  • SILVER BATON Kentucky Educational Television, "On Our Own Land" (produced by Appalshop)
  • SILVER BATON Maryland Public Television, Owings Mills, Maryland, "Other Faces of AIDS"
  • SILVER BATON National Public Radio, "AIDS and Black America: Breaking the Silence"
  • SILVER BATON WBRZ, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, "The Best Insurance Commissioner Money Can Buy"
  • SILVER BATON WJXT, Jacksonville, Florida, "Crack Crisis: A Cry for Action"

1991[]

  • GOLD BATON WGBH-TV and Martin Smith Productions, "Frontline: Inside Gorbachev's USSR with Hedrick Smith"
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "Peter Jennings Reporting: From the Killing Fields"
  • SILVER BATON Blackside Inc., "Eyes on the Prize II: America at the Racial Crossroads"
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, "CBS Evening News with Dan Rather" for human stories behind the fall of Communist governments (reported by Dan Rather, Tom Fenton, Betsy Aaron, Anthony Mason and Peter Van Sant)
  • SILVER BATON Exit Films, Cambridge, Massachusetts, "Near Death"
  • SILVER BATON Helen Borten and National Public Radio for "Horizons: And Justice for All"
  • SILVER BATON KCBS-AM, San Francisco, California, for coverage of the earthquake
  • SILVER BATON KING-TV, Seattle, Washington, "Critical Choices: America's Health Care Crisis"
  • SILVER BATON KQED-TV, San Fransciso, California, Scott Pearson and Lewis Cohen, "Express: Shield for Abuse"
  • SILVER BATON NBC News, "NBC Nightly News: Tragedy at Pine Ridge" (reported by Betty Rollin)
  • SILVER BATON P.O.V. and WTVS-TV, "Who Killed Vincent Chin??
  • SILVER BATON WCBD-TV, Charleston, South Carolina, Coverage of Hurricane Hugo
  • SILVER BATON WJLA-TV, Washington D.C., "NFL Drug Testing: Illegal Procedure", for reporting on Forest Tennant by Roberta Baskin
  • SILVER BATON WKYC-TV, Cleveland, Ohio, Dick Feagler for nightly commentaries

1992[]

  • GOLD BATON PBS, Public Affairs Television, Bill Moyers, "After the War," "The Home Front," "Beyond Hate," "Amazing Grace"
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, Peter Jennings, "A Line in the Sand: War or Peace?", "World News Tonight: Children in Crisis" and "World News Tonight: War in the Gulf: Answering Children's Questions"
  • SILVER BATON CNN, Peter Arnett's Reports from Baghdad
  • SILVER BATON KBDI-TV, Denver, Colorado, Carolyn Hales, Tierra O Muerte: Land or Death
  • SILVER BATON KPIX-TV, San Francisco, Richard Saiz, California, "Wards of the State"
  • SILVER BATON KWWL-TV, Waterloo, Iowa, "Cloud of Concern"
  • SILVER BATON National Public Radio for coverage of the Gulf War
  • SILVER BATON PBS, Friends of Le Chambon, Pierre Sauvage, "Weapons of the Spirit"
  • SILVER BATON PBS, Frontline: High Crimes and Misdemeanors (reported by Bill Moyers)
  • SILVER BATON WETA-TV and Florentine Films, Ken Burns, "The Civil War"
  • SILVER BATON WFAA-TV, Dallas, Texas, Coverage of the Gulf War
  • SILVER BATON WGBH-TV, Boston, Massachusetts, "Frontline: Innocence Lost" (produced by Ofra Bikel)
  • SILVER BATON WTBS-TV, National Geographic Society, "Explorer: The Urban Gorilla"

1993[]

  • GOLD BATON National Public Radio, "All Things Considered," "Morning Edition," "Weekend Edition," Coverage of Clarence Thomas Nomination Hearings, Coverage of the 1992 Los Angeles Riots and Aftermath, Voices from the Backstairs, American Folklife Radio Project, and The Case Against Women: Sexism in the Court
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "Nightline" Coverage of the Los Angeles Riots
  • SILVER BATON Bill Leonard, former producer at CBS News and director of the duPont Awards
  • SILVER BATON CBS News, "60 Minutes: Made in China" (reported by Ed Bradley)
  • SILVER BATON David Grubin Productions and KERA-TV, Dallas, Texas, "The American Experience: LBJ" on PBS
  • SILVER BATON HBO, "Abortion: Desperate Choices" (America Undercover) (directed by Susan Froemke, Albert Maysles, and Deborah Dickson)
  • SILVER BATON KCNC-TV, Denver, Colorado, "Erin's Life"
  • SILVER BATON Kitchell Films and ″P.O.V.″, "Berkeley in the Sixties"[10]
  • SILVER BATON KSTP-TV, St. Paul, Minnesota, "Who's Watching the Store"
  • SILVER BATON KTTV-TV, Los Angeles, California, "Cops on Trial: The Rodney King Case"
  • SILVER BATON Louisiana Public Broadcasting, Baton Rouge, Louisiana "Louisiana Boys" (produced by the Center for New American Media)
  • SILVER BATON Lucky Duck Productions and Nickelodeon, "Nick News: W/5"
  • SILVER BATON WCPO-TV, Cincinnati, Ohio, "Made in the USA?"
  • SILVER BATON WCVB-TV, Boston, Massachusetts, "Chronicle" and Environmental Reporting (by David Ropeik)
  • SILVER BATON WGBH-TV, Boston, Massachusetts, "Frontline: Who Killed Adam Mann?"

1994[]

  • GOLD BATON Fred Friendly, winner for his lifetime contribution to the ethics and practice of journalism
  • SILVER BATON ABC News, "20/20: The Gift of Life"
  • SILVER BATON CNN, Coverage of Bosnia by Christiane Amanpour, Jim Clancy, Brent Sadler, and Jackie Shymanski
  • SILVER BATON ETC Films, Barbara Kopple, "Fallen Champ: The Untold Story of Mike Tyson" on NBC
  • SILVER BATON KRON-TV, San Francisco, "In the Shadow of the Wall"
  • SILVER BATON M.W. Productions, KQED "Harry Bridges: A Man and His Union"
  • SILVER BATON PBS and Jigsaw Productions, "The Pacific Century"
  • SILVER BATON WBAI/Pacifica Radio for "Massacre: The Story of East Timor"
  • SILVER BATON WBFF-TV, Baltimore, Maryland, "Justice on Trial/The Lost Generation/Walking Wounded"
  • SILVER BATON WGBH-TV, Boston, Massachusetts, "Frontline," The Best Campaign Money Can Buy (produced by the Center for Investigative Reporting)
  • SILVER BATON Wisconsin Public Television, "Move Over: Women and the '92 Campaign"[11]
  • SILVER BATON WPLG-TV, Miami, Florida, “Armed Enemies of Castro”
  • SILVER BATON WTVJ-TV, Miami, Florida The Coverage of Hurricane Andrew

1995[]

1996[]

1997[]

1998[]

1999[]

2000[]

2001[]

2002[]

  • ABC News, Terence Wrong and Peter Bull, "Hopkins 24/7" (reported by Sylvia Chase)
  • CBS News, David Martin and Mary Walsh, for reporting on national security on "CBS Evening News" and "60 Minutes II"
  • CBS News, Steve Kroft, and Leslie Cockburn, "60 Minutes: America's Worst Nightmare?"
  • CBS News and Steve Hartman, "CBS Evening News: Everybody Has Story"
  • CNN, Nic Robertson and Jonathan Miller “Northern Ireland: Dying for Peace” (aired on CNN Presents)
  • Court TV, "The Interrogation of Michael Crowe"
  • KCBS-TV, Los Angeles, and Randy Paige, "Poison Paint"
  • KIRO-TV, Seattle, "Why the Orcas of Puget Sound Are Dying"
  • KOLD-TV, Tucson, and Chip Yost, "Exploding Patrol Cars?"
  • NPR and Peter Overby for campaign finance coverage
  • Palfreman Film Group and WGBH-TV, Boston, "Frontline/Nova: Harvest of Fear" on PBS
  • WABC-TV, New York, Jim Hoffer and Daniela Royes, "Caught Off Guard"
  • WNYC Radio, New York, and Beth Fertig "The Edison Schools Vote"

2003[]

2004[]

2005[]

The duPont Jury also announced four finalists for their exemplary broadcast journalism:

2006[]

  • ABC NEWS for Live Coverage of the Death of Pope John Paul II and the Election of Pope Benedict XVI
  • CNBC for The Age of Wal-Mart: Inside America's Most Powerful Company (David Faber, reporter)
  • CNN for Coverage of the Tsunami Disaster in South Asia
  • FRONTLINE and WGBH, BOSTON, for Al Qaeda's New Front on PBS (Lowell Bergman, correspondent)
  • FRONTLINE, WGBH, BOSTON, and The New York Times for "The Secret History of the Credit Card" on PBS (Lowell Bergman, correspondent)
  • HBO for Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel: The Sport of Sheikhs (Bernard Goldberg, correspondent)
  • North Carolina Public Radio-WUNC, Chapel Hill, for North Carolina Voices: Understanding Poverty
  • PRI, WGBH, BOSTON, and BBC WORLD SERVICE for "The World: The Global Race for Stem Cell Therapies"
  • The Kitchen Sisters, Jay Allison and NPR for Hidden Kitchens
  • THE SUNDANCE CHANNEL, Denis Poncet, Jean-Xavier de Lestrade and Allyson Luchak for "The Staircase"
  • WFTS-TV, TAMPA, for Crosstown Expressway Investigation (Mike Mason, reporter)
  • WJW, CLEVELAND, for School Bus Bloat (Tom Merriman, reporter)
  • WPMI-TV, MOBILE, for For Lauren's Sake (Bruce Mildwurf, reporter)

2007[]

2008[]

The thirteen awards for 2008 were announced on December 17, 2007, and presented on January 16, 2008.[16]

2009[]

Television: Golden Baton Winner

  • WFAA-TV in Dallas for "Money for Nothing", "A Passing Offense", "The Buried and the Dead" (Byron Harris, Brett Shipp, reporters)

Television & Radio, Silver Baton Winners

  • ABC News / Nightline for "The Other War: Afghanistan" (Sebastian Junger, reporter; Tim Hetherington, photographer; Brian Ross, correspondent)
  • California Newsreel, San Francisco & Vital Pictures for "Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?"
  • Chicago Public Radio, PRI, NPR, Alex Blumberg & Adam Davidson for "This American Life: The Giant Pool of Money"
  • CNN for "God's Warriors" (Christiane Amanpour, correspondent) (aired on CNN Presents)
  • Current TV & Christof Putzel for "From Russia with Hate"
  • HBO, Thomas Lennon & Ruby Yang for Cinemax's Reel Life: The Blood of Yingzhou District
  • NPR, All Things Considered, Melissa Block, & Robert Siegel for "Coverage of the Chengdu Earthquake" (Louisa Lim, Anthony Kuhn, correspondents)
  • NPR, All Things Considered, for "Sexual Abuse of Native American Women" (Laura Sullivan, correspondent)
  • Oregon Public Broadcasting for "The Silent Invasion" (Ed Jahn, producer)
  • Safari Media, ITVS, PBS for "Independent Lens, Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story" (Patty Kim and Chris Sheridan, directors)
  • WJLA-TV, Washington, DC for "Drilling for Dollars: Children's Dentistry Investigation" (Roberta Baskin, correspondent)
  • WTVT-TV, Tampa for "Small Town Justice" (Doug Smith, reporter)

2010[]

Television, Radio, and Web: Silver Baton Winners

  • American RadioWorks, Michael Montgomery & Joshua E. S. Phillips for "What Killed Sergeant Gray"
  • CBS News & Katie Couric for "The Sarah Palin Interviews"
  • CBS News for "CBS Reports: Children of the Recession" (Katie Couric, reporter)
  • HBO & Edet Belzberg for "The Recruiter"
  • KHOU-TV, Houston & Mark Greenblatt for "Under Fire: Discrimination and Corruption in the Texas National Guard"
  • KMGH-TV, Denver & Tony Kovaleski for "33 Minutes to 34 Right"
  • MediaStorm & Jonathan Torgovnik for "Intended Consequences"
  • NPR, Michele Norris & Steve Inskeep for "The York Project: Race and the 2008 Vote"
  • POV, Elizabeth Farnsworth & Patricio Lanfranco for "The Judge and the General," on PBS
  • WCAX-TV, Burlington & Kristin Carlson for "Foreigners on the Farm"
  • WGBH, Boston, FRONTLINE/World, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy & Dan Edge for "PAKISTAN: Children of the Taliban," on PBS
  • WSVN-TV, Miami, Carmel Cafiero & Anthony Pineda for "Pill Mills"
  • WTVF-TV, Nashville & Phil Williams for "General Sessions Court"
  • WWL-TV, New Orleans for "NOAH Housing Program Investigation" (Lee Zurik, reporter)

2011[]

Television, Radio, and Digital: Silver Baton Winners

2012[]

2013[]

Source:[17]

2014[]

  • American DocumentaryPOV, Gail Dolgin & Robin Fryday, "The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement", on PBS
  • CBS News, Newtown Tragedy Coverage
  • Center for Investigative Reporting, "Broken Shield"
  • ESPN, Outside the Lines: Youth Football Concerns (Tom Farrey, Paula Lavigne, reporters)
  • KMGH-TV, Denver & Keli Rabon, Colorado Rape Victims: Evidence Ignored, Justice Denied
  • KSHB 41 Action News, Kansas City, "Tragedy on the Plaza" (Keith King, Ryan Kath, & Melissa Yeager, reporters)
  • NBC News, "Devastation in Oklahoma"
  • Scott Thurman & Silver Lining Film Group, Magic Hour Entertainment, Naked Edge Films, "The Revisionaries" on Independent Lens
  • U. C. Berkeley IRP, CIR, FRONTLINE & UNIVISION, "Rape in the Fields/Violación de un Sueño"
  • WBEZ Chicago, This American Life: "Harper High School Parts 1 and 2" (Ben Calhoun, Alex Kotlowitz, Linda Lutton, reporters)
  • WBZ-TV, Boston, Boston Marathon Bombings Coverage
  • WFAA-TV, Dallas & Byron Harris, "Denticaid: Medicaid Dental Abuse in Texas"
  • WVUE-TV, New Orleans & Lee Zurik, "Body of Evidence"
  • WYPR, Baltimore, "The Lines Between Us" (Sheilah Kast & Tom Hall, hosts)

2015[]

2016[]

2017[]

2018[]

2019[]

2020[]

See also[]

  • The Peabody Awards
  • Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature
  • The Pulitzer Prizes

References[]

  1. ^ The Nemours Papers: Series 3 of the duPont family papers, Special Collections, Washington and Lee University Special Collections and Archives, James G. Leyburn Library. Box-folder 26:44 R5 Alfred I. duPont Radio Awards
  2. ^ "Columbia University Announces 2007 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Broadcast News Award Winners". Columbia News (Press release). Columbia University. June 5, 2007 [January 13, 2007]. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
  3. ^ All duPont–Columbia Award Winners Archived August 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Columbia Journalism School. Retrieved 2014-12-18.
  4. ^ Pauline Frederick Papers, 1917–1990, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College. Retrieved 2013-08-05.
  5. ^ O'Connor, John J. (1977-06-14). "TV: NBC Looks at Human Rights (Published 1977)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-02.
  6. ^ Buckley, Tom (1978-08-03). "TV: 'Arson: Fire for Hire' (Published 1978)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  7. ^ "Television (Published 1979)". The New York Times. 1979-01-16. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  8. ^ "LEANER TIMES FOR DOCUMENTARIANS (Published 1984)". The New York Times. 1984-06-10. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-02.
  9. ^ Belkin, Lisa (1987-02-05). "MOYERS WINS A TOP PRIZE IN BROADCAST JOURNALISM (Published 1987)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-02.
  10. ^ "Columbia University School of Journalism Honors NPR". AP NEWS. Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  11. ^ "Fred Friendly Honored In Broadcasting Awards (Published 1994)". The New York Times. 1994-01-28. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b "Daniel Schorr Wins Gold Baton at 54th duPont-Columbia Awards". Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  13. ^ "CBS News. Richard Schlesinger. Correspondent, 48 Hours Mystery". Archived from the original on 12 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-09.
  14. ^ "CRY FREETOWN" (Interview). PBS NewsHour. 25 January 2001. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
  15. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-06-07. Retrieved 2010-05-27.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. ^ Columbia News: December 17, 2007-
  17. ^ "2013 WINNERS: 14 SILVER BATONS". Columbia Journalism School. Archived from the original on 25 December 2012. Retrieved 3 January 2013.

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