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NYT Mag Wins Big at Virtual National Magazine Awards

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The New York Times Magazine was the top winner at this year's National Magazine Awards (commonly referred to as the "Ellies"), which were held as a virtual ceremony Thursday evening after the annual gala, originally set for Brooklyn in mid-March, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. By the broadcast's end, the Sunday magazine had received five awards, the most of any individual title, including its first-ever win for General Excellence, which is awarded across four categories based on publication type and is considered the program's top honor. The magazine also won for feature writing, reporting, podcasting and public interest, the latter two specifically for "The 1619 Project," which also received a Pulitzer Prize three weeks ago. In total, The New York Times Magazine has now earned 11 Ellie Awards since 2017, according to the American Society of Magazine Editors, which administers the awards in partnership with Columbia Journalism School. [caption id="attachment_181087" align="alignright" width="300"] ASME VP Janice Min introduces the profile writing category.[/caption] Much shorter in duration than the glitzy galas of years past (as a matter of practicality, there were no acceptance speeches, apart from a handful of awards with previously announced winners), this year's ceremony took on a different type of intimate feel, with editors like Time's Edward Felsenthal, Wired's Nicholas Thompson, Cosmopolitan's Jessica Pels or ASME VP Janice Min announcing each category's winners in pre-recorded messages from their homes—with the exception of Hearst Autos' editorial director, Joe Brown, who recorded his intro from the driver's seat of his (parked) car. Right behind The New York Times Magazine were Bon Appétit, which won four awards, including a General Excellence win in the lifestyle category and additional wins for design, video and leisure interests, as well as National Geographic, which won for photography (its 10th Ellie in that category), feature photography, feature design and social media. In the special interest category, the General Excellence award went to The Hollywood Reporter, crediting former longtime editorial director Matthew Belloni, who stepped down from that role in April amid disagreements with owner Valence Media. The fourth General Excellence award, in the literature, science and politics category, went to Quanta, an eight-year-old digital magazine covering advancements in science and mathematics, which was not only a first-time Ellie winner but also a first-time finalist. [caption id="attachment_181086" align="alignright" width="300"] Wired editor-in-chief Nicholas Thompson introduces the single-topic issue category.[/caption] But in perhaps the biggest surprise of the evening, two titles that have dominated the Ellie Awards in recent years, New York magazine and The New Yorker, were both shut out entirely. By comparison, the two magazines combined for 11 Ellies in 2018 and 2019 alone. This year, New York was named a finalist in eight categories, while The New Yorker was a finalist in seven. And notably absent at this year's awards, even among the finalists, was the nation's largest consumer magazine publisher, Meredith Corp., despite being a regular participant in prior years and having multiple employees serve on this year's list of judges. After several more winners were announced, including a first-timer in The Washington Post Magazine, in the single-topic issue category, one of the last big honors of the evening went to former Esquire editor-in-chief David Granger, who was this year's inductee into the Magazine Editors' Hall of Fame, introduced by journalist Tom Junod, himself a two-time Ellie Award winner who wrote for Granger at both Esquire and GQ. [caption id="attachment_181092" align="alignright" width="300"] Magazine Editors' Hall of Fame inductee David Granger.[/caption] "[David] was a true believer," said Junod. "He believed in magazines, he believed in the people who worked for magazines, and he believed in me. The power of that belief changed my life and gave me the courage to do things that I never thought were possible." "Nearly every day I worked at Esquire, I was fairly certain I was going to get fired," commented Granger in turn, after thanking several former colleagues, writers, editors and designers. "It dawned on me early, that given the certainty of my fate, my goal should be to do the things I’d be proudest of after I got shit-canned. So I did." View the full list of winners and finalists below (winners are in bold):

General Excellence: News, Sports and Entertainment

  • The California Sunday Magazine
  • ESPN The Magazine and ESPN Cover Story
  • The Marshall Project
  • New York
  • The New York Times Magazine

General Excellence: Service and Lifestyle

  • Bon Appétit
  • Cosmopolitan
  • National Geographic Traveler
  • SELF
  • T: The New York Times Style Magazine

General Excellence: Special Interest

  • Atlanta
  • Audubon
  • The Hollywood Reporter
  • National Parks
  • The Trace

General Excellence: Literature, Science and Politics

  • Aperture
  • Oxford American
  • Quanta
  • Stranger’s Guide
  • Virginia Quarterly Review

Design

  • 1843
  • Bon Appétit
  • Fast Company
  • GQ
  • New York

Photography

  • Aperture
  • GQ
  • National Geographic
  • TIME
  • WSJ. The Wall Street Journal Magazine

Feature Design

Feature Photography

Website

  • Emergence
  • The Marshall Project
  • New York
  • SELF
  • Vox

Digital Innovation

  • The Believer with support from the Tran Thi Oanh Black Mountain Institute Fund for “Cabramatta,” by Matt Huynh
  • Emergence in partnership with the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival for “Language Keepers,” by Adam Loften and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee
  • The Marshall Project in partnership with the Guardian for “Detained,” by Emily Kassie
  • National Geographic for “The Atlas of Moons”
  • ProPublica in partnership with the Charleston Gazette-Mail for “A Guide to Every Permitted Natural Gas Well in West Virginia,” by Al Shaw, ProPublica, and Kate Mishkin, The Charleston Gazette-Mail

Social Media

  • Bon Appétit for “Thanksgiving”
  • Mother Jones for “Disinformation”
  • National Geographic for “Wildlife Tourism”
  • The New Yorker for “The Food Issue”
  • SELF for “Reproductive Healthcare”

Podcasting

Video

Single-Topic Issue

  • Bloomberg Businessweek for “The Elements
  • MIT Technology Review for  “The China Issue”
  • National Geographic for “A World on the Move
  • Popular Science for “Make It Last”
  • The Washington Post Magazine for “Prison

Personal Service

Leisure Interests

  • 5280 for “Sheer Beauty,” by Lindsey B. King
  • Bon Appétit for “Absolutely Perfect,” by Alex Beggs, and “Making Perfect: Thanksgiving
  • New York for “The Great Pod Rush Has Only Just Begun”
  • Texas Monthly for “Long Live Honky Tonks!” by Christian Wallace
  • Whisky Advocate for “The World’s Greatest Whisky Cities”

Reporting

Feature Writing

Profile Writing

Essays and Criticism

Columns and Commentary

Public Interest

Previously announced:

ASME Award for Fiction

  • The Paris Review for “Under the Ackee Tree,” by Jonathan Escoffery; “Foxes,” by Kimberly King Parsons; and “Howl Palace,” by Leigh Newman 
  • Ecotone for “Horse,” by Dawna Kemper; “Organ Cave,” by Mesha Maren; and “Waltz,” by Erin Somers
  • The New Yorker for “Javi,” by Han Ong; “God’s Caravan,” by Tiphanie Yanique; and “The Trip,” by Weike Wang
  • Timothy McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern for “Ghost Lover,” by Lisa Taddeo; “After the Birds,” by Ope Adedeji; and “The Woman in the Closet,” by Mimi Lok
  • Zoetrope: All-Story for “24, Alhaji Williams Street,” by ’Pemi Aguda; “The Grotesques,” by Sarah Hall; and “Downstream,” by Thomas Pierce

ASME NEXT Awards for Journalists Under 30

  • Tyler Foggatt, Associate Editor, The New Yorker
  • Jazmine Hughes, Staff Editor, The New York Times Magazine
  • Miles Kohrman, Special Projects Editor, The Trace
  • Natalie Krebs, Senior Editor, Outdoor Life and Field & Stream
  • Sarah Esther Maslin, Brazil Correspondent, The Economist

Magazine Editors’ Hall of Fame

David Granger Award presented by Tom Junod

The post NYT Mag Wins Big at Virtual National Magazine Awards appeared first on Folio:.


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