Journalism awards

Walkley Mid-Year Celebration of Journalism Finalists Announced

The Walkley Foundation is delighted to announce the finalists for our 2020 Mid-Year Celebration of Journalism.

Peer-judged and selected on the basis of journalistic excellence, the Mid-Year Celebration suite includes the Walkley Young Australian Journalist of the Year Awards, June Andrews Award for Industrial Relations Reporting, June Andrews Award for Freelance Journalist of the Year, June Andrews Award for Women’s Leadership in Media, Our Watch Award, Media Diversity Australia Award, June Andrews Award for Arts Journalism and The Pascall Prize for Arts Criticism.

Winners will be announced at the (virtual) Mid-Year Celebration of Journalism on June 17.

Walkley Young Australian Journalist of the Year Awards

These awards recognise the hard work of our most outstanding young Australian journalists. They reward the efforts of journalists aged 28 and under who demonstrate excellence in the fundamental tenets of the profession, as well as the ability to present distinctive and original journalism that pushes the boundaries of the craft.

All media: Shortform journalism
Supported by ABC

All media: Longform feature or special
Supported by The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age

All media: Coverage of community and regional affairs
Supported by Google News Initiative

All media: Visual storytelling
Supported by Sky News

All media: Public service journalism
Supported by News Corp Australia

All media: ​Student journalist of the year
Supported by Macleay College

Walkley Young Australian Journalist of the Year
Supported by Jibb Foundation
The winner of each category will be in the running for the overall Walkley Young Australian Journalist of the Year Award. The winner will receive a two-week trip to US newsrooms (flights included) and a mentorship program to boost their career. In 2020 this prize will include placements at Buzzfeed , The New York Times , Columbia Journalism Review and Quartz Media.


June Andrews Award for Industrial Relations Reporting

(in memory of Helen O’Flynn and Alan Knight)
Supported by Ai Group, Unions NSW, ACTU, UTS and MEAA
With philanthropic support provided in memory of Emeritus Professor Alan Knight

June Andrews Award for Freelance Journalist of the Year

Supported by Media Super

June Andrews Award for Women’s Leadership in Media

Supported by PwC

Our Watch Award

Administered by The Walkley Foundation

Media Diversity Australia Award

Supported by Media Diversity Australia, CoHealth and The National Ethnic and Multicultural Broadcasters’ Council

Arts Journalism Prizes

Through the support of the Copyright Agency Cultural Fund, the winner of each award will receive $5000 in prize money.

All media: June Andrews Award for Arts Journalism

Supported by Facebook and the Copyright Agency

All media: The Pascall Prize for Arts Criticism, managed by the Walkley Foundation
Supported by the Geraldine Pascall Foundation and the Copyright Agency

SA Media Awards

Bronze Award Categories: All Media

Commentary, Analysis, Opinion & Critique

  • Jane Howard, Guardian Australia, Kill Your Darlings and Witness, “Body of Work”

Best Rural/Regional Journalist

  • Bec Whetham, 7pm news, ABC SA, News Breakfast and ABC Online, “Country convert”

Best Coverage of Public Service Journalism

  • Fiona Churchman, Travis Saunders, Rachel Fountain, Joel Werner and Monique Bowley, Audio Studios, ABC Radio, “The Parenting Spectrum”

Sports Journalism

  • Isadora Bogle, 7pm news, ABC SA and ABC News Online, “Sport in the South East”

Best Investigative Journalism

  • Casey Briggs and Rebecca Puddy, ABC News, “Combustible cladding fears over major Adelaide buildings”

Best Freelance Contribution supported by MEAA

  • Royce Kurmelovs, The Saturday Paper and Guardian Australia, “Body of Work”

Bronze Award Categories: Radio

Best Radio News or Current Affairs or Feature Report

  • Annie Hastwell, The History Listen, Radio National, ABC, “Waterloo Bay: That word Massacre”
  • Megan Spencer, Australian War Memorial website, “From A Whisper To A Bang!”

Bronze Award Categories: Television

Best TV/Video News Report

  • Mark Mooney, 7 News, “Cancer Bungle”

Best TV Current Affairs or Feature

  • Angelique Donnellan, 30, ABC, “Deadly DIY”

TV/Video Camerawork supported by Mosaic Audio Visual

  • Tony Salvatore, Today Tonight, “Body of Work”

Bronze Award Categories: Print/Digital

Print/Text News Report

  • Lauren Novak, The Advertiser and Advertiser.com.au, “Ashlee’s Out”

Best News or Lifestyle Feature

  • David Eccles, InDaily, “The Life and Death of Andy MacQueen: child sexual abuse, church cover-ups and the mental health system”

Bronze Award Categories: Photography

Best News Photograph or Photographic Series

  • Tricia Watkinson, The Advertiser, “Hellfire”

Best Sport Photograph or Photographic Series

  • William Bailey, Murray Valley Standard website and Facebook, “Eagles Break Drought”

Best Feature Photograph or Photographic Series

  • Brad Fleet, The Advertiser, “Leigh Creek”

Silver Award Categories

The Max Fatchen Award for Best Young Journalist

  • Joshua Boscaini, ABC News – online and television, “China’s reach in South Australia”

Julie Duncan Memorial for Student Journalism

  • Thomas Kelsall , The University of South Australia

Best Radio Broadcaster

  • Narelle Graham, Petria Ladgrove and Adam Jones, Regional Drive SA and Broken Hill, ABC Radio, “ABC radio Regional Drive SA and Broken Hill”

Best TV Broadcaster (Presenter, Reporter and/or Camera)

  • Ben Avery, Nine News, “Body of Work”

Best Print Journalist

  • David Eccles, InDaily, “The Life and Death of Andy MacQueen: Child sexual abuse, church cover-ups and the mental health system”

Best Photographer

  • Sarah Reed, The Advertiser, “Body of Work”

Gold Award Categories

Hall of Fame

  • Rex Leverington

Stepping in to the Hall of Fame in 2020 is a familiar name. He was not always in the media. Before he was in the media he was an office boy. We all have to start somewhere. He spent his early working life as a travel consultant for the Orient Steam Navigation Company and even Elder Smith. However, his heart had been elsewhere since he was a lad growing up in Edwardstown. His heart belonged to radio. It was 1957 when he managed to score a job as a junior tech with radio 5KA. He was a callow teenager, Sadly, he says now, he didn’t know a green wire from a red wire and he was quickly sidelined to other duties and then, well back into the workforce. It was a whole decade later when he got his foot in the radio door again. 5DN, bless it, took him on for the princely sum of $48 a week as the midnight to dawn announcer. The rest is fairly colourful history. These were the swinging 60s and the nascent days of talkback radio. Our man had workmates such as Mel Cameron, Vitor Stewart Braham and the great Jeff Medwell. There was a sort of “oops” moment in 1969 when he was sacked. But he shot straight over to 5KA where he made such a success of the graveyard shift that he went on to breakfast and then to the newsroom where he found his true raison d’etre. He wrote and chased up stories before slipping sideways into music PR at WEA records. In 1973 he returned to the newsroom as a journalist and newsreader at 5AD. But, like most journos of the time he simply had to do a London stint, so there he was working as a journalist for LBC and VISNEWS before returning home to the 5AD Broadcasting network. These were halcyon newsroom days. As news editor, he not only ran the newsroom then but when the Tiser and 5AD, who were one business and at the height of their profitable years, bought a helicopter, he was in charge of it. It was a busy working chopper, especially at lunchtimes. In 1983 he popped over to work as news editor of 2UE in Sydney for a year, co-ordinating the LA Games on air. Then it was back to Adelaide where, for the next decade he was one of the most beloved voices ever on the ABC Radio 5AN. He was the second longest serving AN Breakfast presenter and basked in fabulous ratings. He did the name on the night shift. He’s done myriad things and won myriad prizes – Best Current Affairs Program Pater Award for his interview with Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Daniel Award for edited highlights of 5AN’s Formula One coverage in 1987. Among other things, he was responsible for reintroducing live radio to the Adelaide public with audience participation shows out at the ABC and in the Capri Cinema – big crowds and TV coverage. He’s MCed and judged, opened and closed events and, notably he was the man behind the most popular ever Quiz Show on radio, Rex’s Quiz. Yes, indeed, inaugurated today into the SA Media Hall of Fame…… it is REX LEVERINGTON.

Journalist of the Year supported by University of South Australia

  • Ben Avery

Hardworking … versatile … and humble … just some ways to describe the 2020 South Australian Journalist of the Year. This journalist has the ability to produce high quality coverage of major breaking news events, in physically trying conditions. They have the skill to follow a story patiently, working and researching to shed light on some of the darker South Australian mysteries. This journalist also has the natural ease to talk with people from all walks of life and show us their highs and lows. From live coverage of the Adelaide Hills bushfire disaster… to a revealing cold case murder investigation… to the redemption of the Australian Cricket Team, this journalist is solidifyng a reputation of being determined, compassionate and engaging. Recently given the well-deserved role as a FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT with NINE NEWS, he’s already been seen running determinedly through the streets of London. First named Journalist of the Year in 2016, the 2020 JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR IS BEN AVERY .

Mid-Year Winners announced tonight.

Updated when list posted.

UPDATE 23/7:

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2020 NRMA KENNEDY AWARDS’ NOMINEES

More than 100 individual nominees from a near-record field of entries have been chosen for all competitive categories for the 2020 NRMA Kennedy Awards for Excellence in Journalism.

The finalists in those categories – including the $25,000 TPG Telecom Kennedy Prize for Journalist of the Year and the coveted pictorial categories - were announced tonight at a function at Royal Randwick ahead of the 2020 Kennedy Awards.

Chosen in a fiercely competitive news year, the finalists have been selected from major metropolitan newsrooms, international journalists and entrants from regional media throughout Australia.

The prestigious 2020 TPG Telecom Kennedy Prize for Journalist of the Year, the richest prize in Australian journalism, will be fought out by finalists from the Sydney Morning Herald, The Daily Telegraph and 60 Minutes/The Age.

The $5000 2020 Young Journalist of the Year - supported by Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas - features finalists from A Current Affair, The Daily Mail Australia and The Sydney Morning Herald.

The Chris Watson Award for Outstanding Regional Newspaper Reporting, sponsored by AGL, will be decided between journalists from the Northern Daily Leader, Western Australia’s Mandurah Mail and the Tumut and Adelong Times and Tumbarumba Times, after a year in which regional newspaper staff throughout Australia have worked under extreme difficulties and pressures.

The newly-named Tom Krause Outstanding Foreign Correspondent Award – sponsored by the ABC and honouring the late, great journalist and senior Kennedy Awards’ judge who passed away earlier this year – attracted an impressive field of entries whittled-down to ABC/BBC, Seven Network and ABC Syria.

All finalists were chosen after weeks of close scrutiny by experienced judges and the top three in each of the print, electronic and pictorial categories revealed at tonight’s function.

Kennedy Foundation chairman and judge Rocco Fazzari said the judges were highly impressed with the calibre of entries.

“In a massive news year, the standard of submissions is exceptional in every category,” Mr Fazzari said.

“In some categories it took judges days to finally sort out finalists from big fields, some of which had near-record entries.

“From investigative journalism to news breaking, superb feature writing, incredible pictorial entries and wonderful artwork, a class field has emerged to contest the coveted Spirax trophies.”

Please note deferment of the planned August 7 2020 gala night at Royal Randwick:

Due to recent political decisions over the management of the COVID-19 pandemic the 2020 Kennedy Awards for Excellence in Journalism will not be held on August 7th, as originally planned.

A restriction on the number of attendees at corporate events, announced in New South Wales on July 17th, would prevent the Kennedy Awards gala from accommodating its usual number of guests.

In the interests of highlighting the nominees in the 2020 awards, and maximising value for our generous sponsors, the Kennedy Foundation will extend the lead time to this year’s awards until the social distancing rules are eased.

We are aiming to stage the awards at Royal Randwick in the spring, and will confirm the gala date at the earliest opportunity (a full statement is on the Kennedy Awards website).

Les Kennedy Award for Outstanding Crime Reporting -Simon Bouda (A Current Affair); Australian Story: An Innocent Abroad (ABC); Michael Usher and team: Framed, the story of Scott Austic (7 News)

Paul Lockyer Award for Outstanding Regional Broadcast Reporting (sponsor AGL) – Prime 7 Local News - Coast Team; Jane Goldsmith (NBN News); ABC Background Briefing/Landline

Chris Watson Award for Outstanding Regional Newspaper Reporting (sponsor AGL) – Carla Hildebrandt (Mandurah Mail); Madeline Link (Northern Daily Leader); The Tumut and Adelong Times, Tumbarumba Times

Rod Allen Award for Racing Writer of the Year (sponsor Australian Turf Club) – Damien Ractliffe, Chip Le Grand (The Age); Ray Thomas (Daily Telegraph); Chris Roots (Sydney Morning Herald

Sean Flannery Award for Outstanding Radio Journalism (sponsor Hillbrick Bicycles) – Gavin Coote (ABC Audio Current Affairs); Steve Cannane and Kyle Taylor (ABC Background Briefing); Elini Psaltis (World Today ABC)

Outstanding Podcast (sponsor broadcast voice coach Sally Prosser) – Mark Whittaker: Blood Territory; Kimberley Pratt and Stephanie Coombes: First Person series (10 News First); The Eleventh (ABC Radio Programs)

Outstanding News Photo (sponsor Salty Dingo) – Sam Ruttyn (Sunday Telegraph); Nick Moir (Sydney Morning Herald); Dallas Kilponen (freelance pic for the Sydney Morning Herald)

Outstanding Portrait (sponsor Salty Dingo) – Richard Dobson (Sunday Telegraph); James Brickwood (Australian Financial Review Magazine); John Appleyard (Wentworth Courier)

Outstanding Sports Photo (sponsor Salty Dingo) – Brett Costello: Canberra Raiders (Daily Telegraph); Phil Hillyard: James Tedesco (Daily Telegraph); Micky Capparelli, freelance (Jeff Horn knockout)

Outstanding Online Video (sponsor Salty Dingo) – Let Her Speak: Nina Funnell, Lori Youmshajekian;(news.com.au) Paul Walker: CBD Stabber (7News); Tom Compagnoni: The Forgotten Sydney of AC/DC (Sydney Morning Herald)

Power of the Lens “The People’s Choice Award” (sponsor Salty Dingo) – to be announced at the gala event

Vince O’Farrell Award for Outstanding Illustration (sponsor Artline) – Christopher Downes (Mercury newspaper); Eric Lobbecke (The Australian); Cathy Wilcox (Sydney Morning Herald)

The Cliff Neville Award: Outstanding Team Player (sponsor) – to be announced at the 2020 gala event

Peter Frilingos Award for Outstanding Sports Reporting (sponsor Stonemasons and Landscapers) – Julian Linden: Chinese swimmer (Sunday Telegraph); Neil Breen: Josh Reynolds (9 News); Steve Cannane and Kyle Taylor: Bet 365 scandal (ABC)

2020 Young Journalist of the Year (sponsor Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas) – Lauren Golman (A Current Affair); Zoe Samios (Sydney Morning Herald); Joshua Hanrahan (Daily Mail Australia)

Outstanding Travel Writing (sponsor RM Asia Pacific ) – Katrina Lobley (Weekend Australian); John Borthwick (Weekend Australian); Anabel Dean (Island Life magazine)

Lifetime Achievement Award (sponsor Daily Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph) – to be announced at the 2020 gala event

John Newfong Award for Outstanding Indigenous Affairs Reporting – Michaela Whitbourn (Sydney Morning Herald); Living Black NITV; Australian Story, Making His Mark

Gary Ticehurst Award for Outstanding TV News Camera Coverage (sponsor Nine News) – Tim Myer (7 News); Cam Wallis (7 News); Paul Walker (7 News)

Harry Potter Award for Outstanding Television News Reporting (sponsor 10 News First) – Chris O’Keefe (9News); Kieran Gilbert, Andrew Clennell (Sky News); Tegan George (10 News First)

Outstanding Television Current Affairs Reporting (sponsor A Current Affair) – Mark Willacy: The Killing Field (Four Corners); Nick McKenzie, Grace Tobin, Nick Toscano: Crown Unmasked (60 Minutes); Tara Brown, Naomi Shivaraman (60 Minutes)

Mike Willesee Award for Outstanding Nightly TV Current Affairs Reporting (sponsor Nine News) – Tracy Grimshaw (A Current Affair); Paul Farrell, Alex McDonald (7.30 ABC); Dimity Clancey, Laura Mangham: Silent Killer (A Current Affair)

Peter Ruehl Award for Outstanding Columnist – Louise Roberts (Daily Telegraph); Will Swanton (The Australian); Michael Pascoe (The New Daily)

Outstanding Finance Reporting (sponsor Castle Rock Global Capital) – Adele Ferguson (Sydney Morning Herald); Nick McKenzie, Grace Tobin, Nick Toscano (60 Minutes and Fairfax/Nine); Aaron Patrick: Westpac Compliance Series (Australian Financial Review)

Outstanding Consumer Affairs Reporting – Amy Bainbridge, Lucy Kent, Loretta Florance: Bankruptcy Hunters (7.30 ABC); Natasha Robinson (The Australian); Alison Branley (ABC)

Outstanding Online News Breaking (sponsor Google) – Sarah Thompson, Anthony Macdonald, Tim Boyd (Australian Financial Review); Nine News bushfire coverage;(9news.com.au) Benedict Brook, Gavin Fernando ((News.com.au)

Outstanding Court Reporting (sponsor Stabilo) – Adam Cooper, Melissa Cunningham (The Age); Hagar Cohen (ABC); Michael Ruffles, Michael Evans (Sydney Morning Herald)

Outstanding Reporting on the Environment – Oliver Murray, Shannon Molloy, Stephanie Bedo (News.com.au); Peter Hannam (Sydney Morning Herald); ABC Landline and ABC Background Briefing

Rebecca Wilson Award 2020: Scoop of the Year – Chris O’Keefe (9 News); Mark Willacy: The Killing Field (Four Corners); Anna Caldwell, Richard Noone (Daily Telegraph)

Outstanding Investigative Reporting (sponsor 7News) – Family of Suspects (Seven Network); Kate McClymont, Jacqueline Maley (Sydney Morning Herald); The Killing Field (Four Corners)

Jim Oram Award: Outstanding Features Writing (sponsor Sydney Morning Herald) – Nick McKenzie (The Age); Trent Dalton (The Australian); Garry Maddox (Sydney Morning Herald)

Tom Krause Award for Outstanding Foreign Correspondent (sponsor ABC) – Adam Harvey (ABC Syria); Fiona Pepper (ABC, BBC); Ashlee Mullany (Seven Network)

Outstanding Political Reporting (sponsor Sky News) – Annelise Nielsen (Sky News); Chris O’Keefe: Ruby Princess (9News); Andrew Tillett (Australian Financial Review)

2020 TPG Telecom Kennedy Award for Australian Journalist of the Year (sponsor TPG Telecom) – Kate McClymont (Sydney Morning Herald); Nick McKenzie (60 Minutes/The Age); Sharri Markson (Daily Telegraph)

Finalist s announced in 2020 WA Media Awards

Includes

TELEVISION/AUDIO-VISUAL JOURNALISM News Story or Feature

  • Gary Adshead, Nine News, “Tow Truck Cowboys And Corruption”
  • Flashpoint, Seven, “Flashpoint: Height of the pandemic”
  • Erin Parke and Andrew Seabourne, ABC News, “The Odd Couple”

RADIO/AUDIO JOURNALISM News Story or Feature

  • Carla Hildebrandt, Mandurah Mail, “Annette Deverell investigation”
  • Erin Parke, ABC News – AM program Radio National, ABC online and ABC podcast, “Outback Born Again”
  • Kate Ryan, Natalie Bonjolo, Tim Clarke, Alison Fan and Emily Moulton, The West Australian’s podcast channel, Claremont: The Trial podcast, The West Australian online, Perth Now online, “Claremont: The Trial podcast”

Includes:

Major Awards

Investigative Journalism supported by MEAA

  • Mark Willacy, Four Corners, “Killing Field”

Most Outstanding Contribution to Journalism supported by The University of QLD

  • Nancy Bates

Journalist of the Year 2020 supported by MEAA

  • Tim Arvier, The Today Show and Nine News – National daytime coverage, “Live Reporting in Minneapolis” and “Minneapolis Burning”

Television/Audio Visual categories

TV News Report supported by QUT

  • Tim Arvier, Nine News and The Today Show, “Minneapolis Burning”

TV Current Affairs, Feature, Documentary or Special Broadcast supported by QLD Police Union

  • Mark Willacy, Four Corners, “Killing Field”

The John Bean Memorial Award for Television Camerawork supported by ABC

  • Luke Dorrington, Channel Seven News, “Country QLD COVID Comeback”

ABC takes Queensland honours for investigative and online journalism

An investigation by the ABC’s Mark Willacy into alleged war crimes by elite Australian soldiers in Afghanistan has been recognised with three of Queensland’s top journalism awards.

Willacy, a Brisbane-based member of the ABC Investigations team, won the trophies for Investigative Journalism and Best TV Current Affairs for the March 2020 Four CornersKilling Field”, which the judges described as “compelling viewing”.

“Mark Willacy has again set the benchmark for this category with an outstanding piece of investigative and agenda-setting work,” the judges said. “It ticked every judging criteria for the category: incisive, impact, public benefit.

“The story was followed by every major news outlet nationally and internationally, in what is a forerunner to undoubtedly the most significant scandal facing Australia’s defence forces in the months ahead.”

Willacy also shared the award for Radio News Current Affairs with Alexandra Blucher and Rory Callinan for their related AM report “The Village Idiot Killing”.

ABC News Digital teams comprised all three finalists in the Innovation category in what judges decribed as “a field of outstanding online content”, with Tim Leslie, Ben Spraggon, Joshua Byrd, Nathan Hoad and Cristen Tilley taking the prize for “How climate change has impacted the world since your childhood”.

Digital team ABC News Story Lab also won the Health category for its digital COVID-19 coverage.

Josh Bavas was awarded for Social Issues Reporting, Marian Faa was named New Journalist of the Year and Nibir Khan was named Most Outstanding Final Year Journalism Student for work done for ABC News Digital.

Director, News Gaven Morris congratulated all winners and finalists and said the ABC was producing some of the best journalism in its history across all platforms.

“Our journalism has never been stronger and our coverage has never been more comprehensive,” he said.

“To have this recognition from our peers and audiences for the hard work, talent and innovation of our people and teams is well deserved and very welcome.”

ABC winners and finalists at the 2020 Queensland Clarion Awards

Investigative Journalism

Winner: Mark Willacy, Four Corners, “Killing Field”

Finalist: Michael Atkin , ABC News Online and ABC 7.30, “Leaving Eden Camac to die”

TV Current Affairs, Feature, Documentary or Special Broadcast

Winner: Mark Willacy, Four Corners, “Killing Field”

Radio News Current Affairs

Winner: Mark Willacy, Alexandra Blucher and Rory Callinan, ABC AM, “The Village Idiot Killing”

Broadcast Interview

Finalist: Mark Willacy , Four Corners, “Killing Field”

Health Reporting

Winner: ABC News Story Lab, ABC News Digital, “ABC News Story Lab COVID-19 coverage”

Finalist: Elly Bradfield, Rebecca Richardson and Nathan Morris , ABC News, ABC Online and Radio National, Earshot, “Inside the Birth Suite”

Social Issues Reporting

Winner: Josh Bavas, ABC TV News and ABC News Online, “Angelo vs Bupa – A student’s fight for life”

Finalist: George Roberts and Josh Robertson , ABC TV News, ABC Radio Current Affairs, ABC Radio News and ABC News Online, “Autistic teens locked in squalor, despite reports to ‘Child Safety’”

Innovation

Winner: Tim Leslie, Ben Spraggon, Joshua Byrd, Nathan Hoad and Cristen Tilley, ABC News Digital, “How climate change has impacted the world since your childhood”

Finalist: Tim Leslie, Matt Martino, Colin Gourlay, Ben Spraggon and Cristen Tilley , ABC News Digital, “How extreme conditions drove Australia’s bushfire crisis”

Finalist: ABC News Story Lab, ABC News Digital, “Australia Talks”

The John Bean Memorial Award for Television Camerawork

Finalist: Stephen Cavenagh , ABC TV News, “Stanthorpe Fire”

Regional and Community – Broadcast Report

Finalist: Annie Guest, ABC Landline, “The fight for the right to repair”

Rural Journalism

Finalist: Nathan Morris and Elly Bradfield , ABC 7pm News, ABC Radio News, ABC News Online, “New Acland Coal vs the Oakey farmers”

Finalist: Dominique Schwartz , ABC Radio AM and ABC TV 7.30, “Rural mental health”

Most Outstanding Final Year Journalism Student – Graduating 2020

Winner: Nibir Khan, ABC News Online and JACDigital via Adobe Spark, “Coverage of the Rohingya and Muslim Communities in Queensland”

New Journalist of the Year

Winner: Marian Faa, ABC News Online and PM, “Ethical concerns over military’s COVID-19 drug trials”

Finalist: Tim Swanston , ABC News, ABC News Digital and Triple J Hack: “Body of Work”

Sports Journalism

Finalist: Brittney Kleyn , ABC News Online, ABC 7pm News, IGTV, “Issues facing Women in the AFLW”

Multicultural Reporting

Finalist: Kelly Butterworth , ABC News Online, “Community relations: Badge and Culture”

Finalist: Josh Robertson , ABC TV News and ABC AM, “Gus Kuster and the folly of Australia’s hard line”

ABC’s Russell Jackson wins Grant Hattam Award for sports journalism

image

Congratulations to ABC sports reporter Russell Jackson, who has been awarded the Grant Hattam Award for Excellence in Sports Journalism at the AFL Players Association Awards.

The trophy is awarded to the year’s best football journalist, as voted by all AFL players.

Jackson took this year’s prize for his powerful story on former St Kilda player Robert Muir, recounting the racial abuse and mistreatment that blighted the career of the “sublimely talented” and trailblazing Indigenous player in the 1970s.

“It’s an honour to accept this award on Robert Muir’s behalf,” Jackson said.

“Without his courage and willingness to tell his story, it wouldn’t have happened.

“To be acknowledged like this by his peers is a special feeling for Rob.”

Not exactly journalism awards - by media related.

lol. Wait till they hear about the cuts!

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In the TV categories includes

TELEVISION/VIDEO CAMERAWORK
Award Partner Australian Super

TELEVISION/VIDEO NEWS REPORTING
Award Partner Seven

TELEVISION/VIDEO CURRENT AFFAIRS SHORT (LESS THAN 20 MINUTES)
Award Partner SBS

TELEVISION/VIDEO CURRENT AFFAIRS LONG (MORE THAN 20 MINUTES)
Award Partner TEN

  • Nick McKenzie, Joel Tozer and Sumeyya Ilanbey , 60 Minutes , Nine, “The Faceless Man
  • Louise Milligan, Mary Fallon and Lauren Day , Four Corners , ABC, “Boys Club
  • Mark Willacy and the ABC Investigations-Four Corners Team , Four Corners , ABC, “Killing Field

INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM

The 2020 Excellence in Financial Journalism Awards were presented at the National Press Club in Canberra yesterday afternoon.

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The prestigious Alf Brown Award for the best overall media performer in 2020 went to broadcaster Gerard Whateley for his work with Fox Footy and SEN.
The AFL article includes the list of 2020 winners. News Corp (Fox Footy and Herald Sun) dominated the categories.