Fil-Am among winners of journalism awards in US
When Connie Chung’s father, an intelligence officer under Chiang Kai Shek, fled his native China, his main source of news in the US was the Chinese language newspapers.
The TV journalist said her father spoke little English, but through the Chinese ethnic press, he kept himself informed about what was going on in China and the world.
“My father loved reading his Chinese newspapers,” she told an audience of community media publishers and journalists who gathered April 12 for the 2012 Ippies Journalism Awards, recognizing independent ethnic media.
Chung commended the ethnic media for its “fortitude” in reporting the news despite limited resources and bare-bones operations. She said immigrant journalists who write for the mainstream press could be “very effective in raising (immigrants) voices.” In some news reporting about Muslim and Asian immigrants, she said the mainstream media is “not doing its job.”
“You write with more details,” Chung said.
Chung also took potshots at the mainstream media for gender bias and too much “negativism.” While there may be more women and minority journalists in the mainstream media, “they have not reached a level of parity” in executive positions.
She also said the “creeping negativism” in media “is just plain wrong.” She would like to see the return of good old-fashioned reporting in the news and not too many opinions.
For this year’s Ippies, a record 46 publications, plus a few freelancers, submitted more than 240 entries for the 10 categories in which prizes are given. This is the 10th anniversary of the awards, and the first time the CUNY Journalism School has been their host.
Cristina DC Pastor, founding editor of The FilAm, won second place for an editorial she had written for Feet in 2 Worlds. The essay, “The Seductive Frenchman and a Feisty Hotel Maid,” examines whether the credibility of asylum seekers as court witnesses will always be in doubt following the dropping of sex assault charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
The rest of the winners are:
Best investigative/in-depth story: Investigates an issue overlooked by mainstream media or one that has great community impact
The TV journalist said her father spoke little English, but through the Chinese ethnic press, he kept himself informed about what was going on in China and the world.
“My father loved reading his Chinese newspapers,” she told an audience of community media publishers and journalists who gathered April 12 for the 2012 Ippies Journalism Awards, recognizing independent ethnic media.
Chung commended the ethnic media for its “fortitude” in reporting the news despite limited resources and bare-bones operations. She said immigrant journalists who write for the mainstream press could be “very effective in raising (immigrants) voices.” In some news reporting about Muslim and Asian immigrants, she said the mainstream media is “not doing its job.”
“You write with more details,” Chung said.
Chung also took potshots at the mainstream media for gender bias and too much “negativism.” While there may be more women and minority journalists in the mainstream media, “they have not reached a level of parity” in executive positions.
She also said the “creeping negativism” in media “is just plain wrong.” She would like to see the return of good old-fashioned reporting in the news and not too many opinions.
For this year’s Ippies, a record 46 publications, plus a few freelancers, submitted more than 240 entries for the 10 categories in which prizes are given. This is the 10th anniversary of the awards, and the first time the CUNY Journalism School has been their host.
Cristina DC Pastor, founding editor of The FilAm, won second place for an editorial she had written for Feet in 2 Worlds. The essay, “The Seductive Frenchman and a Feisty Hotel Maid,” examines whether the credibility of asylum seekers as court witnesses will always be in doubt following the dropping of sex assault charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
The rest of the winners are:
Best investigative/in-depth story: Investigates an issue overlooked by mainstream media or one that has great community impact
- 1st place: Meng Fang, Tu Yichen and Law Wai Ki for “Aftermath of September 11: New York’s Chinatown Ten Years On (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3),” World Journal (Translations coming soon)
- 2nd place: Jacky Tik Wong for “Private Danny Chen Allegedly Subjected to Physical Abuse and Racial Taunting before Death,” Sing Tao Daily New York (Translation coming soon)
- 3rd place: Megan Finnegan (Our Town) and Stephon Johnson for “Elite Racism,” New York Amsterdam News
- 1st place: Dan Coughlin and Kim Ives for “Washington Backed Famous Brand-Name Contractors in Fight Against Haiti’s Minimum Wage Increase,” Haïti Liberté
- 2nd place: Yuwei Zhang for “Talent hunters mean business,” China Daily USA
- 3rd place: Neil deMause for “One Woman’s Plan to Beat Poverty,” City Limits
- 1st place: Marco Salazar for “Scam U,” YCteen
- 2nd place: Cristina Pastor for “Looking Back at the Scandal of 2011: The Seductive Frenchman and a Feisty Hotel Maid,” Feet in 2 Worlds
- 3rd place: Kung Li for “A History of Georgia’s 1%: Why You Must Face Race to Occupy Atlanta,” Colorlines
- 1st place: Kurt Hoffman, The Forward
- 2nd place: Nick Sadowski, Nowy Dziennik
- 3rd place: Anthony Smyrski, City Limits
- 1st place: Nick Sadowski, Nowy Dziennik
- 2nd place: Gabrielle Birkner, The Forward
- 3rd place: Phong Bui and Walter Chiu, The Brooklyn Rail
- 1st place: A. Jesse Jiryu Davis for “The LD Presents ‘Strangers,’” The Lo-Down
- 2nd place: Peter Yan and Rick Ho for “911: The 10th Anniversary – At Ground Zero: Then and Now,” Sing Tao Daily
- 3rd place: Elizabeth Borda, Amelia Holowaty Krales, Ashley Marinaccio and Julie Turkewitz for “We Contain Multitudes,” The Indypendent
- 1st place: Karsten Moran for his photo accompanying the story “Albany Votes to Approve Same-Sex Marriage,” The Riverdale Press
- 2nd place: Carl Glassman for his photo accompanying, “Parting Shots: A Beloved Tribeca Ping Pong Club Shuts Down,” The Tribeca Trib
- 3rd place: Andrew Stern for his photo accompanying “Taking it to the Street,” The Indypendent
- 1st place: Nate Lavey for “Living Apart in Crown Heights,” The Forward
- 2nd place: Nate Lavey for “Naming Mushky,” The Forward
- 3rd place: Lan Trinh for “Immigrants and Native-Born Seek Chinese Language Instruction in NYC Public Schools,” Feet in 2 Worlds
- 1st place: Monica Miller for “Newark Roll Call,” WBGO 88.3FM
- 2nd place: Von Diaz for “LGBT Immigrant Youth Struggle in New York,” Feet in 2 Worlds
- 3rd place: Ewa Kern-Jedrychowska, with help from Mohsin Zaheer, for “With an Eye on the Sky, Immigrants Revive Practice of Pigeon Tending in New York,” Feet in 2 Worlds
- 1st place: DNAinfo.com staff for “Crime and Safety Analysis Delivers Surprises Across the Five Boroughs,” DNAinfo.com
- 2nd place: Gal Beckerman for “Crown Heights 20 Years Later,” The Forward
- 3rd place: El Diario team for “Sept. 11 – the Latino experience,” El Diario/La Prensa
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