Chauncey Bailey Project

Black Journalists’ Association Announces Winners of Salute to Excellence Awards

National Association of Black Journalists
Press Release

TAMPA, FLA. – August 8, 2009 – The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) announced that The Chauncey Bailey Project won two of its annual Salute to Excellence Awards tonight at a gala at the Tampa Convention Center, host to the organization’s 2009 Annual Convention and Career Fair.

The project won best New Media Online Project: News and it also won best investigative reporting project for newspapers with a circulation of more than 150,000.

Also at the event, Chauncey Bailey Project reporter Bob Butler was elected NABJ’s Vice President of Broadcast and, in a separate matter, he was re-elected as a Vice President of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.

The awards recognize journalists in more than 70 categories including special categories for new media. They are also the country’s only honors to commend the exemplary journalists covering the African and African-American experience.

Also receiving special honors at the ceremony tonight were NABJ Journalist of the Year Michele Norris of National Public Radio; Lifetime Achievement Award winner Michael Wilbon of The Washington Post and ESPN; and Emerging Journalist of the Year Cynthia Gordy of ESSENCE Magazine.

“Your excellent work means so much in light of the fact that we are all doing so much more with less,” said NABJ President-elect Kathy Times, who assumes the presidency of the organization on Sunday, August 9. “We’re going to make it together. We must embrace 21st century technology.”
 
CNN’s T.J. Holmes emceed the event and 700 were on hand to recognize publications like The Washington Post, which received six awards including honors to Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Eugene Robinson. The Plain Dealer of Cleveland also received three awards. In magazine, ESSENCE won four awards; EBONY won three; and Bloomberg Markets Magazine took home two awards.

In radio, National Public Radio won three awards. In television, both Tampa’s WTVT-TV and Bay News 9 were recognized, while Silver Spring, Md.-based TV One won for a Johnathan Rodgers/ Roland Martin interview with Michelle Obama in 2008.  In new media, Newsweek.com won two awards.

“NABJ launched my career. It nurtured my career and it continues to stand as a beacon in my life,” said NPR Morning Edition co-host Michele Norris upon receiving her award. “When they say the best days of journalism are behind us, prove them wrong.”

Co-host of ESPN’s Pardon The Interruption (PTI) Michael Wilbon also spoke to a strong contingent of sports fans in attendance.

“What I’ve been for the last 30 years, no matter what the medium, is a sportswriter. And I’m damn proud to be one,” Wilbon said. “We’re the ones who remind the world that eight years before we’d heard of Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson sacrificed the final third of his life to integrate baseball and change the world.”

 The Salute to Excellence National Media Awards competition is open to all media organizations and individuals involved in print, broadcast and/or online journalism media. Entries were judged on content, creativity, innovation, use of the medium and relevance to the black community.

The NABJ Convention is the largest gathering of minority journalists in the country with 2,000 in attendance at this year’s event. For more information about the NABJ Convention or the 2009 Salute to Excellence Awards and for a complete list of winners, please go to: www.nabj.org.

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