Peabody Award

American media award
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Also known as: George Foster Peabody Award
In full:
George Foster Peabody Award
Key People:
Jim Lehrer
Related Topics:
mass media

Peabody Award, any of the awards administered annually by the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication in recognition of outstanding public service and achievement in electronic media. Recipients are organizations and individuals involved in the production or distribution of content for such outlets as radio, broadcast and cable television, and the Internet. Because of their academic affiliation and reputation for discernment, the awards are held in high esteem within the media industry.

Each year the Peabody Board—a select panel of scholars, critics, and media professionals—collects submissions of content aired or otherwise distributed during the previous calendar year. Most electronically distributed productions are eligible; one notable exception is motion pictures intended for theatrical release. Guided by the recommendations of special committees, whose members are drawn from the University of Georgia community, the board determines the various winners, and the awards are presented in the spring. The specific number of Peabody Awards given each year is unfixed.

The awards were conceived by the National Association of Broadcasters in 1938 as the radio industry’s equivalent of the Pulitzer Prizes. After the University of Georgia agreed to sponsor the endeavour, the Peabody Awards—named after prominent university benefactor George Foster Peabody—were inaugurated in 1941. Awards for television were first given in 1948 and for Web sites in 2003. By the early 21st century, at least 30 awards were bestowed in a typical year, with honorees ranging from television documentaries and prime-time entertainment series to radio news segments and online videos.

In addition to particular programs and projects, awards have sometimes recognized the entire body of work of a person (e.g., Oprah Winfrey) or an institution (e.g., BBC Radio). Although non-American productions are eligible for the Peabody Award, historically they have represented a minority of recipients.

John M. Cunningham