Some feathers in our cap |
There are contests and there are contests, but the annual Association of Alternative Newsweeklies (AAN) competition is one of the hardest — and sweetest — to win. And a first-place win is sugary beyond compare.
So good for us: this year, thePhoenix.com Web site was named Number One by a panel of expert judges assembled by the Medill School of Journalism at Chicago’s Northwestern University. Phoenix Web editor CARLY CARIOLI was on hand to collect the honor this past weekend at the 2008 AAN convention in his hometown of Philadelphia — where the heat and humidity were so high you felt as if you were trapped in a clothes dryer with a dozen damp towels.
Media reporter ADAM REILLY fielded the third-place prize in the hotly contested media-reporting/criticism category for his regular “Don’t Quote Me” column in the Boston Phoenix.
And Maine-based freelancer LANCE TAPLEY, who won first-place in the long-form news-story category in 2007 for his “Torture in Maine Prisons” exposé, landed an honorable mention for investigative reporting this year for his follow-up features to that series, which appeared in our sister edition, the Portland Phoenix.
At 30 years since its founding, AAN is a venerable and respected, if still somewhat rag-tag, “trade association” comprising more than 120 alternative weeklies throughout the US and Canada.
Congrats to all our winners, who prevailed against the stiffest competition we face all year.
Related:
Magnificent seven, Alternative victory, ‘Ugly’ story wins third prize, More
- Magnificent seven
The annual journalism awards handed out by the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies (AAN) are the real deal.
- Alternative victory
Each year, the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies holds an editorial contest among its 120-some member papers and announces the winners at the organization’s annual convention; this year the Boston Phoenix took home two prizes.
- ‘Ugly’ story wins third prize
The story, “Ugly Portland” took third place in the “format buster” category in the national Association of Alternative Newsweeklies competition.
- Off the press!
I can write the alternative press’s history — or one passably passionate version of it — because the institution’s trajectory matches my own.
- Laurels
The Portland Phoenix won two awards at last week’s convention of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies.
- Rock, she said
A few years back, I was approached by a publisher with a blank pagination for a new magazine. The only information he had was the page count and the title, Women Who Rock .
- Boston Phoenix Editor flies to New Times/Village Voice Group
Boston Phoenix Editor Bill Jensen is leaving the alternative news weekly to take a job directing the web operations of the New Times chain of alternative papers.
- Dirty Blonde: The Diaries of Courtney Love by Courtney Love
Lipstick kisses, mildewed edges, wine-stained composition-notebook covers duct-taped to yellow paper — this is People magazine meets Found . You gotta love that.
- Media monopolies kill
Anyone who doubts that big media monopolies are bad for democracy should take a look at how much the Post Office charges magazines to mail issues to subscribers.
- Prudish publication makes its debut
You won’t see any bikinis in Eliza’s swimsuit spread, just one-pieces and a few belly-covering tankinis.
- The player
The exit of Boston Globe business columnist Steve Bailey this past week to take a post in London as a general-interest news editor with Bloomberg signifies the exhaustion of a tradition.
- Less
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