Pulitzer winners span old, new media
The Pulitzer Prizes for journalism awarded here Monday
demonstrated the resilience of old media and the ascendance of the new, as the
venerable Philadelphia Inquirer won the prestigious public service medal and
the 7-year-old Huffington Post took the national reporting prize for its
exploration of the challenges that confront wounded U.S. service members.Digital-focused
media first leaped into the Pulitzer winner's circle last year when ProPublica
won the national reporting prize. That emergence continued this year with
victories by the Arianna Huffington-founded website once known mostly for
aggregation and by the Washington-based site Politico, which won a prize for
Matt Wuerker's editorial cartooning.At the same time, the New York Times, a
regular in the prize circle, was the only multiple winner, with prizes for
international reporting and explanatory reporting, bringing its all-time total
to 108.The 96th annual Pulitzer announcements at Columbia University were also
notable for the prizes not given: no award this year for editorial writing and,
more surprisingly, none for fiction writing. It's been 35 years since the
Pulitzer board chose not to present a fiction prize.The Inquirer's win for
"Assault on Learning" represented a show of resilience for one of America's
oldest newspapers, which recently emerged from bankruptcy and is now under its
fifth owner in six years. Repeated downsizing since 1999 has trimmed the staff
from 620 to 217.The judges praised the work for using a multimedia presentation
to reveal pervasive violence in public schools and to "stir reforms to
improve safety for teachers and students."Inquirer Editor Stan Wischnowski
said his staff "has not been this happy in years."The website created
by Huffington was honored for what the judges described as David Wood's
"riveting exploration of the physical and emotional challenges facing
American soldiers severely wounded in Iraq
and Afghanistan
during a decade of war."
Sometimes derided for merely showcasing original reporting by others, the site has built one of the largest news audiences on the Internet. Huffington said the win "shows that singular, vibrant reporting can thrive on the Web, and indeed be enhanced by it." She also called the honor "great for people over 50. David Wood is 66.... It's never too late."
The Los Angeles Times had three Pulitzer finalists for its work in 2011: Columnist Steve Lopez was one of three finalists for the commentary prize, won by Mary Schmich of the Chicago Tribune, for his columns on death and dying — a series that took on added emotional resonance with his accounts of his own father's final days. The judges also acknowledged the work of Francine Orr in feature photography for her images of autistic children and their families. Carolyn Cole and Brian van der Brug received recognition in the breaking news category for their pictures of the aftermath of the Japan earthquake.
The international reporting prize went to the New York Times' Jeffrey Gettleman, whose
Sometimes derided for merely showcasing original reporting by others, the site has built one of the largest news audiences on the Internet. Huffington said the win "shows that singular, vibrant reporting can thrive on the Web, and indeed be enhanced by it." She also called the honor "great for people over 50. David Wood is 66.... It's never too late."
The Los Angeles Times had three Pulitzer finalists for its work in 2011: Columnist Steve Lopez was one of three finalists for the commentary prize, won by Mary Schmich of the Chicago Tribune, for his columns on death and dying — a series that took on added emotional resonance with his accounts of his own father's final days. The judges also acknowledged the work of Francine Orr in feature photography for her images of autistic children and their families. Carolyn Cole and Brian van der Brug received recognition in the breaking news category for their pictures of the aftermath of the Japan earthquake.
The international reporting prize went to the New York Times' Jeffrey Gettleman, whose
stories followed the spread of Islamic radicalism in Africa,
provided a close-up look at Somalian pirates and cataloged the repeated rape of
men in eastern Congo.
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