Arkansas SPJ to host 2025 Diamond Journalism Awards on July 26

Rex Nelson, Heather Baker to be featured as special guests; $15,000 to be awarded for A-Mark Prize for Investigative Journalism

LITTLE ROCK—The Arkansas Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists will present the Diamond Journalism Awards banquet on Saturday, July 26, at Next Level Events in downtown Little Rock. Rex Nelson, senior editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, and Heather Baker, president and publisher of AY Media Group, will provide the keynote conversation. 

The event will recognize winners and finalists in more than 80 categories, showcasing work from Arkansas and bordering states. The placement of the inaugural winners of the A-Mark Prize for Investigative Journalism, which carries $15,000 in prize money, will be announced. This year’s finalists include Chris Fulton of the Mountain Home Observer, Jessica Ranck of KARK and FOX16 and Matt Campbell of the Arkansas Times.

“This year’s contest was our most competitive to date and we can’t wait to recognize the amazing work in Arkansas and surrounding states,” said Wendy Jordan, Arkansas SPJ president. “Rex is one of the best storytellers in the industry and having him join media powerhouse Heather Baker for the event’s keynote will be a perfect fit for an evening of celebrating journalism.”

Nelson is known for his columns, books, and the popular blog known as Rex Nelson’s Southern Fried and the Southern Fried podcast, as well as regular radio and TV appearances. A former communications director for Gov. Mike Huckabee and appointee under President George W. Bush, he has been honored as Rural Advocate of the Year and inducted into the Arkansas Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame.

Nelson will be joined by Baker who has worked in the publishing industry for more than 25 years. Under her guidance and leadership, AY Media Group has grown to elite status in media circles both in the local market and nationally. She is also a well-known media personality and influencer whose work spans multiple mediums and countless philanthropic endeavors.

This year’s contest drew 704 entries in more than 80 categories, including divisions that recognize professional journalism, student journalism, and communications. SPJ members from Connecticut judged the competitions.

FOX 16 Good Day Morning Anchor, Ashlei King will be this year’s emcee. King, who is a San Antonio native with Arkansas roots, has earned both a National and Regional Edward R. Murrow Award and a Regional Emmy for her reporting.

The Diamond Awards ceremony will be held at Next Level Events, 1400 W. Markham St. in Little Rock. Dinner will be served at 5 p.m., and the program will begin immediately following. Tickets to the event are $35 per person through July 7 and will be $40 starting July 8 and can be purchased here. Table purchases and sponsorship opportunities are available. 

The finalists are listed below, grouped by outlet or organization. A list sorted by individuals’ names and divisions can be found here

* Craft Achievement Finalist
** Special Award Finalist
***A-Mark Prize for Investigative Reporting Finalist

225 Magazine
Benjamin Leger
Collin Richie
Melinda Gonzalez Galjour
Olivia Deffes

40/29 News + KHBS/KHOG
40/29 News Staff
Darby Bybee

Arkansas Advocate
Antoinette Grajeda
Mary Hennigan
Tess Vrbin

Arkansas Children’s Health System
Aprille Spivey

Arkansas Community Foundation
Jessica Ford, APR

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Adam Vogler
Alex Thomas
Colin Murphey*
Cristina LaRue
David Barham
Dwain Hebda
Frank Lockwood
Grant Lancaster**
Heather Kersten
Josh Snyder
Liz Atkinson
Lucas Dufalla**
Michael Hoge
Mike Wickline
Neal Earley
Nick Popowitch*
Philip Martin
Remington Miller
Richard Davenport
Sarah Campbell-Miller*
Staci Vandagriff
Thomas Metthe*
Tommy Foltz
Wendy Jordan

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Community Journalism Project
Staci Miller

Arkansas State University
The Herald
Ibuki Hinohara

Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts Public Information Office
Corey Alderdice
Donnie Sewell
Mike Kemp

Arkansas Times
Annika Shunn
Austin Gelder
Benjamin Hardy
Cassie Stephenson
Daniel Grear
David Ramsey
Griffin Coop
Illan Ireland
Jeannie Roberts
Kasten Searles
Mandy Keener
Mary Hennigan
Matt Campbell***
Milo Strain
Phillip Powell
Sara Reeves
Stephanie Smittle

At Home in Arkansas + PLATED: The Arkansas Dining Guide
Stephanie Maxwell Newton*

Axios Northwest Arkansas
Alex Golden
Worth Sparkman

AY Magazine + Arkansas Money & Politics
Dwain Hebda
Mark Carter
Sarah DeClerk

The Associated Press
Andrew DeMillo

Cherokee Phoenix
Chad Hunter
Mark Dreadfulwater
Micah Fletcher
Stacie Boston

The Christian Chronicle
Audrey Jackson**
Bobby Ross Jr.**
Calvin Cockrell
Cheryl Mann Bacon
Erik Tryggestad
Ted Parks

Crafton Tull
Brittany Goff
Lindsay Young
Maggie Butler
Trevor Hensley

Cyclone Broadcasting
Russellville High School
Ava Brock
Drew Brent
Izzy Ohnmacht
Madison Estep
Mary Stratton
Noah Carter

Fort Worth Weekly
Anthony Mariani
Edward Brown
Jason Brimmer 

Fox 16 + KARK News
Alexis Burch
Ashlei King
Bob Clausen
Caitrin Assaf*
Caroline Derby
Donna Terrell
Jessica Ranck***
John Matthews
Julian Jones
Kevin Kelly*
Kimberely Blackburn
Kwasi Harshaw
Laura Monteverdi
Mattison Gafner
Ronni Romero
Samantha Boyd
Stephen Goodale*
Tylisa Hampton
Whitney Thomas

inRegister Magazine
Hoa Vu
Jackie Haxthausen
Jeffrey Roedel
Melinda Gonzales
Riley Bienvenu Bourgeois
Stephania Campos

Institute for Public Service Reporting
University of Memphis
Christopher Blank
Laura Kebede-Twumasi
Marc Perrusquia

KFDM 6 (Beaumont, Texas)
Kimberly Rusley
Steven Bui

KFSM 5News Fort Smith
Kayla Davis
Michael Aaron
Mike Nielsen
Skot Covert (Previously KTHV)*

KNWA/FOX24 Fayetteville
Anna Darling
Brad Horn
Chad Mira
Lauren Motley*

Leader Newspaper
Jonathan Feldman

Little Rock Public Radio + National Public Radio
Daniel Breen
Josie Lenora
Maggie Ryan
Nathan Treece

Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce
Leadership Greater Little Rock
Wendy Jordan + Class XL Community Project Team 2

Louisiana State University
LSU Tiger TV, LSU Reveille, KLSU 91.1 FM
Amelia Bridges
Cade Savoy
Cate Emma Warren
Gabriella Guillory
Jayden Slaughter
John Buzbee
Kaitlyn Hoang
Marty Sullivan
Mohammad Tantawi
Morgan Carter
Nicole Marino
Patricia Caputo
Payton Prichard
Taylor Hamilton
Torie Bovie

Madison County Record
Ellen Kreth**
Shannon Hahn**

McNeese State University
The Poke Press
Kyla Clark

Mississippi Free Press
Ashton Pittman
Cassie Stephenson
Donna Ladd
Heather Harrison
Illan Ireland
Nick Judin
Phillip Powell
Shaunicy Muhammad**
Stacey Spiehler
Torsheta Jackson
William Pittman

MLK50: Justice Through Journalism
Andrea Morales**
Ashli Blow
Jacob Steimer**
Jacob Steimer
Katherine Burgess
Katti Gray
Mikhaila Markham**
Rebecca Cadenhead
Zandria F.  Robinson

Mountain Home Observer
Alison Fulton
Chris Fulton*** **

St. Louis Public Radio
Danny Wicentowski

Tennessee Lookout
Adam Friedman
Anita Wadhwani
Cassie Stephenson
Holly McCall
Illan Ireland
Phillip Powell
Sam Stockard 

University of Arkansas
The Arkansas Traveler & UATV
Addie Jones
Emma Rasmussen
Ethan Doan
Katie Parker*
Maddi Phipps
MJ Ferguson

University of Arkansas at Little Rock Communications & Marketing Office
Angelita Faller
Benjamin Krain
Carrie Phillips
Meaghan Milliorn
Muriel Schrepfer

University of Mississippi
NewsWatch Ole Miss, Daily Mississippian
Ashlynn Payne
Chequoia Adderley
Erin Foley
Gabe Evans
Hannah Baker
Seth Parenteau

University of Tennessee
The Daily Beacon, WUOT and University of Tennessee for USA TODAY
Caleb Jarreau**
Pierce Gentry
Ryan Beatty

World Christian Broadcasting’s New Life station & worldchristian.org
Paul Ladd

WVLT News Knoxville
Aimee Fowler*
Brittany Tarwater
Casey Wheeless*
WVLT Staff**

Ya!Mule Wordsmiths
Dwain Hebda**

Arkansas SPJ Seeks Candidates for 2025–26 Board of Directors

Arkansas SPJ Seeks Candidates for 2025–26 Board of Directors


Check out the following duties and responsibilities of Arkansas SPJ board members and consider running for the board or an officer position. Send a photo and a brief bio that tells why you want to serve as an SPJ leader, your history with SPJ and what you will bring to the group, including any ideas you have for the coming year, to Arkansas SPJ president Wendy Miller at wendymillerjournalist@gmail.com or ArkansasSPJ@gmail.com by Sunday, June 15.

A list of candidates and their bios will be posted at least 10 days before the election and emailed to our membership. Voting will take place via online ballot Friday, June 27, through Sunday, June 29.

Don’t want to be a board member? Get involved in one of our committees.

ARKANSAS PRO CHAPTER BOARD
Duties and Responsibilities
To ensure the health of the Society of Professional Journalists Arkansas Pro Chapter, the members of the Board of Directors must be current on national dues and be accountable for the following duties and responsibilities:

Attendance
The Board of Directors meets monthly and sometimes calls special meetings via phone or email. Board members must attend a minimum of nine monthly meetings during their July-to-June term of office, but strive to make it to all meetings in-person or by Zoom. Absence from three consecutive meetings, or four or more monthly meetings during their term, will result in the appointment of a new director to the position.

Participation
Board members must actively participate in at least one of the following chapter committees: Freedom of Information Act, Programing, Contests, Membership and Marketing, or other special committees designated by the president. Active participation may include planning at least one event in a year, advancement of the FOIA through lobbying, contributions to the chapter’s website, newsletter or social media campaigns, or other efforts determined by the board.

Join us for Breaking (bad) News at 6 p.m. on Sept. 25!

In the world of journalism, sometimes “Breaking News” can feel as intense and unpredictable as a “Breaking Bad” episode — both reveal the raw and often unsettling truths of our times, and can push reporters to the limits of deciding between being the first to the story or doing their due diligence. Join Arkansas SPJ at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 25, at Stickyz Rock ‘n’ Roll Chicken Shack in downtown Little Rock for a game of “What Would You Do” as we discuss the best practices of breaking news in a digital age. The event will be emceed by Caitrin Assaf of KARK 4 and judges are Arkansas Democrat-Gazette senior online editor, Arkansas Advocate Editor-in-Chief Sonny Albarado and Log Cabin Democrat Editor Jeanette Stewart. Winner(s) will take home up to $100 in cash!

Winners of 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards announced

Winners of 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards announced

News release

2023 Diamond Journalism Awards announced

Contact: Sonny Albarado, contest chair
arkspjcontest@gmail.com
501-551-8811

LITTLE ROCK — Andrew DeMillo of The Associated Press was named the Diamond Journalist of the Year on Tuesday at the annual awards ceremony of the 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards.

A judge called DeMillo’s work “comprehensive without being wordy” and said his “writing has a natural flow to it that carries the reader forward.”

Journalists from any medium can enter the Diamond Journalist of the Year competition by submitting a portfolio of five to seven pieces published or broadcast in the previous calendar year.

The awards were announced during a dinner ceremony in Little Rock. Alan Leveritt, publisher of the Arkansas Times, was guest speaker.

The Diamond Journalism Awards are sponsored by the Arkansas Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. Entries come from Arkansas and six states that share borders with the Natural State: Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas.

This year’s contest drew 363 entries in more than 80 categories. Members of the Washington, D.C., Chapter of SPJ served as judges.

Proceeds from the competition fund scholarships for students enrolled in college journalism programs who plan a career in the field.

The list of winners and finalists follows.

PROFESSIONAL AWARDS

BREAKING NEWS – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Frank Lockwood, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Little Rock: “Elizabeth II mourned in England amid decline of church”

Tess Vrbin, Arkansas Advocate, Little Rock: “Arkansas Senate suspends Clark for ‘frivolous’ complaint”

WINNER
Michael R. Wickline, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: “Abortion ban begins”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Michael R. Wickline quickly provided a thorough and detailed report on a topic with widespread ramifications. He covered numerous angles and answered a significant number of questions that readers may have, all in a fast turnaround. Wickline also gathered a wide and diverse range of voices, providing balanced and objective reporting on a highly divisive topic.

GENERAL NEWS – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: “A Surprising Union”

Jacob Steimer, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism: “A homeless man died outside City Hall. How should the city respond?”

WINNER
Teresa Moss, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: Trial coverage of ex-sheriff’s deputy accused of killing teen

JUDGE’S COMMENT: A well-written story that captures the scope of the issue within the first few grafs.

OVERALL COMPETITION COMMENT: All the winners relied upon the intangible skills of journalism, while giving citizens the information they need to make decisions. They demonstrated curiosity, empathy, understanding of implicit biases and tenacity. It is a pleasure to see journalism that touches the conscience of the community.

GENERAL NEWS – AUDIO/VIDEO

FINALISTS
Hannah Campbell, East Arkansas Broadcasters, Jonesboro, AR: Arkansas Now News, evening newscasts

Brett Rains, KHBS/KHOG TV (40/29), Fayetteville, AR: “Teen Loses Friends to Drug Overdose”

WINNER
Ashlei King, Julian Jones, KLRT-FOX16, Little Rock: “Names Not Numbers,”

JUDGE COMMENT: This entry stands out for its respectful, in-depth coverage demonstrating the personal impact of an important local issue. Kudos.

ONGOING COVERAGE – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALIST
Jacob Steimer, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, Memphis: “Emergency Rental Assistance”

WINNER
Joseph Flaherty, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: Coverage of a Little Rock city property deal intended for a homeless shelter

JUDGE’S COMMENT: A classic example of excellent accountability work making a difference, with ample use of FOIA and source documentation to shed light on potential corruption. The writing for this series is crisp, delivering critical information to the community and laying facts at their feet without excess verbiage. The series also demonstrates the power of journalism, with a clear effect from this reporting.

ONGOING COVERAGE- AUDIO/VIDEO

FINALIST
Katie Hamner, Colleen Clement, 40/29 TV Staff, KHBS-KHOG TV: Springdale tornado coverage

WINNER
Chelsea Helms, KNWA News, Fayetteville: Coverage of sexual assault allegations against and subsequent arrest of a Northwest Arkansas doctor

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The level of detail and extensive investigation that went into this story can be seen throughout. This is what following up on a story should be.

ENTERPRISE/IN-DEPTH REPORTING – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Jacob Steimer, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism: “Feeling neglected, Parkway Village residents try to rebuild after ‘white flight’”

Ashton Pittman, Mississippi Free Press, Jackson, MS: “Christian Dominionist War on Abortion”

WINNER
Daniel Connolly, reporter; Duane Gang, editor; Ariel Cobbert, Joe Rondone, photographers. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, and The Tennessean, Nashville: “Big Hurt, Tiny Fines – Tennessee Workers Compensation Investigation”

JUDGE’S COMMENT:
Big Hurt, Tiny Fines shows some very robust reporting. It takes a hard look at the worker’s compensation program from multiple perspectives. He followed the money and the trail of medical records to a doctor hundreds of miles away. His reporting showed how innocuous reprimand can inadvertently do more harm. Finally, Mr. Connolly’s reporting displays ingenuity by showing how time and money can be used and misused to frivolously trap workers into a system that isn’t built to help them win.

ENTERPRISE/IN-DEPTH REPORTING – AUDIO/VIDEO

WINNER
Avery Lea Rogers, Danny Wicentowski, St. Louis Public Radio, St. Louis, MO: “St. Louis has a new basketball court. Its funders were raided by the FBI”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Avery Lea Rogers and Danny Wicentowski provided exhaustive detail into the FBI raid and covered every angle. Their story immediately grabs listeners’ attention by starting with the raid. The pair also made clear attempts to balance the coverage despite one party’s refusal to participate by closely scrutinizing FBI documents. They also included exhaustive interviews that address the claims and detail the African People’s Socialist Party community service, bringing the raid into full perspective. The final interview with a member of the community who would benefit from the new basketball court particularly drives the story home. Rogers and Wicentowski’s story analyzes the situation from an objective lens, showcases the African People’s Socialist Party’s work and giving them room for defense without shying away from serious allegations in an FBI indictment.

INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Daniel Connolly, The Commercial Appeal/The Tennessean, “Big Hurt, Tiny Fines” – Tennessee Workers Compensation Investigation

Nick Judin, Mississippi Free Press, Unsafe Conditions In Mississippi Delta Housing

WINNER
Joseph Flaherty, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, LitFest

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The investigation into Little Rock’s Lit Fest was very thorough and meticulous. Mr. Flaherty used public records obtained via FOIA and the “Blue Hog Report” to follow the money and unravel a complicated web of contracts and cronyism. He clearly laid out how Think Rubix’s connection to the mayor’s campaign, while not illegal, can bring forth some complexity that can eat away at public trust. Mr. Flaherty’s relentless reporting ultimately led to more oversight being done on contracts.

EXPLANATORY REPORTING – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Bill Bowden, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Disfarmer case

Hunter Field, Arkansas Advocate, Arkansas income tax changes explained

WINNER
Nancy Henderson, Missouri-Kansas Super Lawyers Magazine, “State of the Unions”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Ms. Henderson’s piece really lays out the plight of the unions and where they could be headed. She explained how working during the COVID pandemic exacerbated some issues with worker safety. She also clearly explains how to start unions with informed advice from trusted sources. Henderson provides some insight on how employers can attempt to take down union workers and about retaliation – a third rail topic not typically talked about. Her piece is backed by data and historical facts that show the complexity of starting and maintaining a union. Excellent reporting!

EXPLANATORY REPORTING – AUDIO/VIDEO

WINNER
Kevin Kelly, Stephen Goodale, KLRT-TV/FOX 16, “Road Rage on the Rise”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Kevin Kelly found a compelling and unique angle on a topic that’s swept the nation since the pandemic’s onset. His stories went above and beyond simply reporting on the increase in dangerous and reckless driving, an angle we’ve seen repeatedly over the past few years. Not only did Kelly reveal eye-opening data that showed just how much these life-threatening road rage incidents have risen, he also found captivating stories that encapsulates the terror victims experience during these sorts of shootings. His reports had me glued to the screen, my eyes wide open and mouth agape.

EDITORIALS – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Lindsey Castrellon, Arkansas Money & Politics (AY Media Group), Little Rock

David Barham, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

WINNER
Edward Brown , Anthony Mariani, Fort Worth Weekly, Fort Worth, TX, “Taking Care of Business”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Strong community focus. Immoderate language, but contextualized facts and process back up arguments. Calls for action, not just critiquing what’s past.

COMMENTARY – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Wendi C. Thomas, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, “To the Harvard professor who said MLK50 wasn’t ‘viable’: Look at us now”

Carrington Tatum, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, “Loans got me into journalism. Student debt pushed me out.”

WINNER
Sonny Albarado, Arkansas Advocate, Commentary collection

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Sonny Albarado tackles some of the weightiest issues of our time and their local impact, and he does so clearly, directly and with powerful detail.

COMPETITION COMMENT: These entries illustrate the range of voices, topics and challenges that Arkansas commentators are taking on with style and personality.

FEATURES – NEWSPAPERS

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Twist of Fate”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Mother Goose”

WINNER
Bill Bowden, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “President Japperson”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Making what some would assume to be a dry subject – the Census – fun with some humor and a lot of information.

COMPETITION COMMENT: A very wide range of entries. A few weren’t really feature articles and so – regretfully in at least one case – I could not award a high score to pieces that obviously required a lot of effort and were well-crafted. They just didn’t qualify as feature stories. I liked the vivid direct quotes in many of the articles. On the other hand, it’s permissible to clean the quotes up a bit – which in some cases should have been more rigorously done. I enjoy features that show why people “”tick.”” Many of these articles accomplished that. Also, as appropriate, flashes of humor or wit – especially as expressed by people in the article – help a lot.”

FEATURES – MAGAZINES

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for DO SOUTH Magazine, Fort Smith, AR, “The Greatest American Hero”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for DO SOUTH Magazine, “Soul Food”

WINNER
Sarah Komar, New Lines Magazine, Washington, D.C., “U.S. Army Confronts Mental Health Problems”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Good article on PTSD. Nicely combines the author’s personal experiences with her father – and his views – and a broader picture (historical and current) of PTSD in the military. Writing is overall good, but there’s some awkwardness at points.

COMPETITION COMMENT: Good topics but too often disappointing execution. I wanted to know more, but the articles were already (in many cases) too long, sometimes with minutiae or unneeded detail. Several were written more like term papers than feature articles. Several went too far in trying to capture the “country” feel. And most suffered from a lack of quote clean-up.

FEATURES – ONLINE ONLY

FINALIST
Kelly Connelly, Kristen Siler, Stuttgart Daily Leader, Stuttgart, AR, “2022 North Arkansas County Farm Family of the Year: Jackie and Duffie Banks Family”

WINNER
Grace Marion, Mississippi Free Press, “Batesville Park At Center Of Race Division”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This writer makes the reader care about the issues surrounding Patton Lane Park by digging into the subject from multiple angles. The story succeeds by including historical context, diverse sources, local government meetings and beautiful images that support the story. The writing and narrative could be more focused at times, but overall a feature with real purpose.

FEATURES – TV/VIDEO

FINALIST
Kevin Kelly, Lauren Swaim, KLRT-FOX 16, “Sharktender”

WINNER
Caitrin Assaf, Lauren Swaim, KARK 4 News, Little Rock, “Man in Black springs a leak”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Really good work on deadline.
Solid writing…great play on (musical) terms & titles; nice angles with video and wonderful local characters!

PROFILES – NEWSPAPERS

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Badges of Honor”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Once a Cowgirl …”

WINNER
Sean Clancy, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Harvey Lee Williams and his family own and operate Delta Dirt Distillery”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The story flows really well. Good description. Loved “looks like a steampunk fantasy.”

PROFILES – MAGAZINES

FINALISTS
Olivia Deffes, 225 Magazine, Baton Rouge, “Sending love down to Baton Rouge”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for DO SOUTH magazine, “The Boy in the Box”

WINNER
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for DO SOUTH magazine, “Lost & Found”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Well-framed story that utilizes vivid imagery to make its points.

PROFILES – ONLINE ONLY

WINNER
Aliyah Veal, Mississippi Free Press, “One Mother’s Solutions For Gun Violence”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: A sensitive and in-depth profile of a mother who organized assistance for others across the nation whose loved ones were victims of senseless shootings.

PROFILES – TV/VIDEO

FINALISTS
Caitrin Assaf, Lauren Swaim, KARK 4 News, “From Headlocks to Heimlich”

Brett Rains, KHBS/KHOG TV (40/29), Springdale tornado survivors

WINNER
Kevin Kelly, Lauren Swaim, KLRT-FOX16, “A League of Her Own”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This is what a profile should be. A story that shows who your character is, how they get there and why.

COMPETITION COMMENT: Profiles should tell the story of a or a number of characters, but done in detail. I needed to see that in two of the stories submitted, but it wasn’t accomplished.

PROFILES – RADIO/AUDIO

WINNER
Daniel Breen, KUAR Public Radio, “In Arkansas, slain journalist leaves behind long legacy”
NO JUDGE’S COMMENT

SPORTS – NEWSPAPERS

FINALISTS
Greg Geary, The Daily Citizen, Searcy, AR, “Angler casts aside handicap to become pro”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Catholic Newspaper, “Near Perfect”

WINNER
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Catholic Newspaper, “P.E. Padre´”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This was a compelling human interest story. This feature would have been at home at any paper, and certainly reflected the mission of the Catholic paper.

COMPETITION COMMENT: Every entry in this competition was a winner! From top to bottom this was the strongest overall category I’ve ever judged. So those who didn’t win easily could have. Kudos to every entrant.

SPORTS – MAGAZINES

FINALISTS
Mark Clements, 225 Magazine, “The Traveling Tiger”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for DO SOUTH magazine, “The Long Run”

WINNER
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for AMP Magazine, “Show Me the Money”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: A thorough, fact-filled explainer of how monied interests are paying college athletes.

SPORTS – ONLINE ONLY

WINNER
Torsheta Jackson, Mississippi Free Press, “Legacy of the Black Cowboy in Tunica”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Excellent writing in a story that takes the reader into a movement that would otherwise be hard to know about while also uncovering history otherwise hidden. Covers history and current events succinctly in a way that frames the story historically, which can be hard to do with a word limit.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT COVERAGE – NEWSPAPERS

FINALIST
Greg Geary, The Daily Citizen, Steel Drivers, Super Bowl Actress, Byrnes

WINNER
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Dogtown to Tinseltown”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Well written. There’s a single story thread throughout the article.

A&E COVERAGE – MAGAZINES

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for AY Magazine, Little Rock, “Raising Hell”

Tammy Keith, 501 Life Magazine, Conway, “Space toys and artist”

WINNER
Maggie Heyn Richardson, Olivia Deffes, Zane Piontek, 225 Magazine, Arts collection

NO JUDGE’S COMMENT

A&E COVERAGE – AUDIO/VIDEO

FINALISTS
Paul Ladd, World Christian Broadcasting, Song Searcher Story

Caitrin Assaf, Lauren Swaim, KARK 4 News, Action in AR

WINNER
Skot Covert, Kelly Tibbit, Zach Keast, KTHV-THV11, “Eat It Up”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: “Eat It Up” is thoroughly entertaining AND informative. A tasty selection of foodie issues wrapped around some wonderful story-telling as well. Great pacing, terrific editing!

A&E COVERAGE – ONLINE ONLY

FINALIST
Alexandria Brown, Remington Miller, Nick Popowitch, Thomas Metthe, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, State Fair coverage online

WINNER
Aliyan Veal, Mississippi Free Press, Art Interprets “Great Migration”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Veal’s article covers both the beauty of the art and the cultural importance with great, clear writing, and by picking just enough direct quotes to let the people she covers say the important things that move the story forward.

A&E CRITICISM & REVIEWS – NEWSPAPERS

WINNER
Andrew DeMillo, The Associated Press, Book Reviews

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Deftly handles a range of material fairly and evenly.

A&E CRITICIISM & REVIEWS – ONLINE ONLY
WINNER
Austin Castrellon, AY Magazine, “’Elvis’ Fails to Bring the King Back to Life”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: An EXCELLENT review and critique, that covers all the basis with its analysis, and extremely well written. This piece earns its first place win handily.

BUSINESS – ALL MEDIA

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for The Trucker Magazine, “Data Pirates”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Black Vitality Magazine, “The Good Stuff”

WINNER
Kayode Crown, Mississippi Free Press, Business, Equity and Ethics in Mississippi

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Writer Kayode Crown provides a regular supply of well-written, well-sourced, well-documented and well-illustrated work to put a spotlight on issues important to Mississippi and surrounding states.

EDUCATION – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Joel Phelps, arkadelphian.com, Arkadelphia, AR, “School district plans to balance teacher diversity”

Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for AMP Magazine, Charter schools in Arkansas

WINNER
Ashton Pitman, Mississippi Free Press, “School: Sharing LGBTQ Identity Fireable Offense”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Compelling and well-executed. The article is to the point and clearly showcases the issues present within the news piece.

EDUCATION – AUDIO/VIDEO

WINNER
Josie Lenora, KUAR Public Radio, “New superintendent talks about the future of the LRSD”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Such a good and thorough interview. Covered all the bases. Very well done.

HEALTH – ALL MEDIA

FINALISTS
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Do South Magazine, “A League of Their Own”

Nick Judin, Mississippi Free Press, Health and Equity in Mississippi

WINNER
Dwain Hebda, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for The Trucker Magazine, “Mother Trucker Yoga”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Interesting. Well-written. Not over-the-top or hokey. Straightforward with flashes of humor.
COMPETITION COMMENT: Interesting articles showing a wide range of healthcare applications – from traditional to yoga and CrossFit. Also shows the diverse populations that can be served by healthcare efforts. The articles come alive with patients and clients are interviewed.

ENVIRONMENT – ALL MEDIA

FINALIST
Ashli Blow, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, “Fake testing left South Memphis’ water vulnerable to toxins”

WINNER
Kayode Crown, Mississippi Free Press, Jackson Water Crisis

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The series provides a comprehensive look at Jackson’s devastating water crisis.

POLITICS – PRINT/ONLINE

FINALISTS
Andrew DeMillo, The Associated Press, 2022 Election Coverage

Lisa Hammersly, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Campaign Finance Reporting

WINNER
Jacob Steimer, Carrington Tatum, Brittany Brown, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, Municipal race 2022

JUDGE’S COMMENT: In this package MLK50 showed great respect for journalistic guidelines per SPJ; they make it clear what they’re doing, and why, when it comes to not naming sources. Further, the quality of the reportage (and the time invested in it) floored me. The amount of work hours that go into these stories is clearly pretty high. Their reporters have a superpower of latching onto information other reporters might pass over, and then combine them all to create nuanced and informative journalism.

POLITICS – AUDIO/VIDEO

FINALIST
Daniel Breen, NPR, “Sarah Huckabee Sanders is expected to win Republican primary for Arkansas governor”

WINNER
Josie Lenora, KUAR Public Radio, “Democratic Party of Arkansas delays choosing a new chair during emotional meeting”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Good job capturing the emotions of the meeting. Solid presentation.

SPECIAL SECTION/NICHE PUBLICATION

FINALISTS
Staff, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, ADG Voter Guide

Dwain Hebda, Mandy Keen, YA!MULE WORDSMITHS for Arkansas Times, Arkansas Wild

WINNER
Aliyah Veal, DeAnna Tisdale Johnson, Acacia Clark, Kristin Brenemen, Donna Ladd, Mississippi Free Press, Hinds County: Crime, Safety and Solutions

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This is a remarkably strong entry full of both tragedy and inspiration. Every article is strong. Particularly impressive were Aliyah Veal’s three articles on the unfathomable homicide rate in Jackson, with dramatic, depressing articles of dilapidated housing; on the inspirational former inmate who set up a foundation to provide housing and other support for women transitioning from prison; and her rich profile of Not Another Child founder Oresa Napper-Williams. Finally, powerful, moving work by Deanna Tisdale Johnson depicting the tragic death of Oren D’Lonte Anderson and his life that ended in violence, a life filled with love and trouble. Overall, this is such impressive journalism about people, events, and communities that are too often ignored by the mainstream media. Congratulations to all reporters, editors, researchers, and photographers who produced such important work!

COMPETITION COMMENT: Strong entries produced tough competition that led to difficult judging choices. The deep look at poverty, crime, and housing problems in Hinds County stood head and shoulders above the other entries in the depth and breadth of its reporting along with its powerful visual presentation. It was all the more impressive in having been reported and written by young journalists. As a nature and travel enthusiast, I can say that the Arkansas Wild magazine was better than most similar ones I’ve seen from other states, with more helpful and interesting information. For my third-place pick, it was a tough choice between the Arkansas Voter Guide and Blueprint. In the end, I selected the voter guide because of how important such guides are at this critical, fragile point in our democracy. If possible, I’d like to recommend an Honorable Mention award to “Blueprint” for its fine job covering the variety of technical jobs available with information that was both interesting and practical. Overall, this was an impressive group of contest entries.

PODCASTS – ALL MEDIA

FINALIST
J. Bradley Minnick, Mary Ellen Kubit, Joseph Fuller, KUAR Public Radio, Arts & Letters

WINNER
Rex Nelson, Nick Popowitch, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Southern Fried Podcast

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The selected podcasts displayed deep knowledge of state politics, business, and film/arts, very interesting even to a non-Arkansan. Sound quality was fine. Felt very authentic.

BREAKING NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY – ALL MEDIA

FINALIST
Thomas Metthe, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Davis Trial

WINNER
Staci Vandagrif, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Fatal Shooting At Hospital

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Great work!

GENERAL NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY – ALL MEDIA

FINALIST
Greg Geary, The Daily Citizen, Apartment fire in Searcy

WINNER
Thomas Metthe, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Memorial Day

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Excellent shots!

FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY – ALL MEDIA

FINALISTS
Greg Geary, The Daily Citizen, Showing Their Colors

Jenn Terrell, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “Lakeisha Edwards: Art Ventures director believes art is for everyone”

WINNER
Thomas Metthe, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Splash Pad

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Fabulous photograph. The composition is great, with a group of boys but the focus is on the one who is embracing the moment.

COMPETITION COMMENT: There were at least seven entries that should have won awards in this category. These three winners stood out though. Two for the effect that water had on the photo and one as an outstanding example of portrait photography.

PHOTO SPREAD/ESSAY – ALL MEDIA

FINALISTS
Lukas Flippo, Mississippi Free Press, “Latinx LGTBQ Mississippians Hold ‘Queerceanera’”

Kelli Bozeman, Hoa Vu, Jordan Hefler, Collin Richie, Sean Gasser, InRegister Magazine, Baton Rouge, LA, “A Day in the Life of the Arts”

WINNER
Andrea Morales, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, “AT THE ROOT: What Cristina Condori taught us”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Great job all around!

PHOTO PORTFOLIO – ALL MEDIA

FINALISTS
Colin Murphey, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Thomas Metthe, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

WINNER
Staci Vandagriff, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Staci captured pure, raw emotion in every picture. Each image told a story effortlessly.

COMPETITION COMMENT: This year, it was a tight competition, and everyone put together outstanding portfolio submissions. It was not an easy category to judge based on the talent on display, and everyone who entered should be proud of what they accomplished.

FRONT PAGE/COVER DESIGN – MAGAZINES

FINALIST
Staff, 225 Magazine, Baton Rouge
WINNER
Kelli Bozeman, Hoa Vu, InRegister Magazine, Bold Faced, A Day in the Life of the Arts, Shore Things

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Fabulous, excellent covers. Each cover conveyed something very different and they were all three compelling. I want a subscription!

COMPETITION COMMENT: This category only had two entries and both would have been deserving of awards had there been 10. The inRegister covers were among the best magazine covers I’ve seen. Great job.

PAGE DESIGN – MAGAZINES

FINALISTS
Mike Bedgood, AY Magazine, “True Colors”

Mike Bedgood, AY Magazine, “Painting the Town”

WINNER
Lora Puls, AMP Magazine, “Elbow Room”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This is a beautiful layout, allowing the wonder of the wildnerness set the scene. It set a peaceful, pleasant scene. Smart move to preserve the full image behind – and through – the text. Skillfully done.

STUDENT AWARDS

SPECIAL PROJECTS

WINNER
Sarah Smythe, The Echo (University of Central Arkansas, Conway), “UCA giving out expired KN95 masks”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Great example of accountability journalism and excellent deployment of staff to tackle the investigatory process.

BREAKING NEWS

WINNER
Madison Ogle, The Echo, “Three dead, one injured in series of Conway shootings”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Madison Ogle’s coverage for UCAnews.live of a shooting in a campus neighborhood quickly wrapped up a fast-developing situation that was of potential danger to the campus community.

GENERAL NEWS

FINALISTS
Emily Kennard, The Echo, “Students arrested for trans rights protest at school board meeting”
Sarah Komar, The Traveler (University of Arkansas, Fayetteville) “Where are the Workers” Labor Shortage Special Coverage

WINNER
Josh Archote, Reveille and lsureveille.com (Louisiana State University) “An LSU Greek Life mystery: fake names and potential entrapment?”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The reporter demonstrates impressive investigative journalism skills. The abuse of power angle is newsworthy and has implications beyond LSU’s campus. Overall great sourcing, writing, story pace and supporting documents. Well done.

FEATURES

FINALISTS
Aria Pons, Tiger TV (LSU), “More Than Meets The Eye”

Will Nickel, Reveille and lsureveille.com, “How much do LSU football players eat? I ate an offensive lineman’s diet to find out”

WINNER
Ava Borskey, Tiger TV, “Azaleas and Buddy Lee”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: A nicely done piece. Buddy has a good personality, and that comes through. The subject is one that interests a lot of people (plants, planting, landscaping), but the behind-the-scenes work to create new plants isn’t familiar to many people. The editing and matching of narration with the visuals are good. Although the narrator at times sounds a bit scripted, her bright cheerful voice is a good fit for the subject matter.

COMPETITION COMMENT: Many well-chosen, interesting topics. These three stand out for good execution and for understanding that a feature requires a mix of news/facts and human interest/a “lighter” touch than hard news. The top-ranked features also had a clear conclusion and answered the question “why?” Plus, they were enjoyable to read or watch.

SPORTS

FINALISTS
Connor Barney, Reveille and lsureveille.com, “Wonder Women: LSU female athletes”

Patricia Caputo, KLSU 91.1 FM, Baton Rouge, LSU tennis player Safiya Carrington interview

WINNER
Patricia Caputo, Liam Haley, KLSU, LSU swimmer Spencer Adrian interview

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Direct questioning by podcast hosts led to a compelling story about LSU swimmer Spencer Adrian’s experience as a member of a Denver college swim team.

COMPETITION COMMENT: This category included audio, video and print entries that illustrate the variety of ways sports stories can be told effectively.

EDITORIALS

FINALIST
Courtney Shepherd, The Echo, “Media restrictions for college athletes strain relationship”

WINNER
Reveille Editorial Board, Reveille and lsureveille.com

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The Reveille Editorial Board took bold stands in their editorials. Their well-written and well-researched editorials showed they are not afraid to call out university officials when necessary. They are a shining example of student journalists unafraid to speak on issues of concern to their communities.

COMPETITION COMMENT: The entries in the student journalist editorial category show that student publications are not afraid to challenge college officials when it comes to important issues on their campuses. They directly stated their views and did not hesitate to criticize college staff and administrators if student journalists felt they were wrong on the issues.

COMMENTARY
FINALISTS
Henry Huber, Reveille and lsureveille.com, Sports Columns

Brandon Poulter, Reveille and lsureveille.com, Columns

WINNER
Claire Sullivan, The Echo, Columns

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Claire Sullivan pulled me into each essay with her commanding use of descriptive language, personal/intimate tone, strategic use of facts – all critical to storytelling and column writing. I especially liked the way she placed herself inside each piece of writing, helping the reader to appreciate the importance of the topic to her but quietly inviting them to locate in their minds or in their lives their own intimacy with the topic. And while each was personal, she connected with the universal, making the work relevant to everyone who cares. She has a real talent.

A&E COVERAGE

WINNER
Katy-Ann McDonald, Reveille and lsureveille.com, “Valuable African American Poetry collection finds new home in Hill Memorial Library Special Collections”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This article could have been as flat as a press release, but McDonald reached out for the meaning of books, and this collection, from both the donor and the recipient. She made us see the value. Nicely done with strong writing and good depth.

A&E CRITICISM/REVIEWS

WINNER
Courtney Shepherd, Delaney Van Wilpe, Anna Yanosick, The Echo, Entertainment Reviews

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The three writers offer both unique and informed perspectives on their respective topics. The first entry offered a telling look at Gen Z’s view of school shootings, the second shed light on what Drake’s lyrics say about his real life actions, and the Wendy’s review was unexpected but fun. I hope all three continue to review and share their perspectives on what they are passionate about.

BUSINESS

FINALIST
Ally Kadlubar, Tiger TV, “Lip Smackin’”

WINNER
Bennett Tinnermon, Emilee Hagewood, The Echo, “UCA professor offers bonus points for fake reviews”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This story took a lot of information-gathering from different sources, and leveraged it to highlight a possible ethical issue on campus. That’s what student journalism is meant to do! Additionally, the reporters took great care to report only what they could observe and not to imply or state anything further.

EDUCATION

FINALIST
Piper Hutchinson, Reveille and lsureveille.com, “The Reveille digs into maintenance problems on the LSU campus”

WINNER
Mia Waddell, The Echo, “African/African American studies given two-year extension”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Excellent accountability reporting. Well-sourced overview of a significant issue on campus. Dense and informative without being complicated. Writer did an excellent job juggling all facets of the story.

NEWS PHOTO

WINNER
Madison Ogle, The Echo, Five news photos

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Nice Composition. Keep practicing.

FEATURE PHOTO

WINNER
Madison Ogle, The Echo, “A couple sit together on a ride at UCA’s Fall Fest”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Great moment!

PHOTO SPREAD/ESSAY

WINNER
Maci England, The Echo, Homecoming game proposal

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Well done! Great capture.

PHOTO PORTFOLIO

FINALISTS
Madison Ogle, The Echo, Fan Yelling

Madison Ogle, The Echo, Shooting Aftermath

WINNER
Madison Ogle, The Echo, Glow Rage

JUDGE’S COMMENT: This picture perfectly captures the fun and excitement of an on campus student paint night.

COMPETITION COMMENT: The Echo photographer did a great job documenting campus and community life. The photographer showed a strong command of lighting, and an ability to capture the heart of the story in pictures.

GRAPHICS/ILLUSTRATIONS

FINALISTS
Madison Ogle, The Echo, “Russia sends valentine to Ukraine”

Madison Ogle, The Echo, “Sarah Huckabee Sanders takes office”

WINNER
Madison Ogle, The Echo, “Rams win the Superbowl”

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Memorable illustration style with strong personality and atmosphere. Wonderful work!

DESIGN

FINALISTS
Courtney Shepherd, Mia Waddell, The Echo, Senior Columns

Madison Ogle, The Echo, Football Conference Champions

WINNER
Mia Waddell, Bennett Tinnermon, The Echo, Homecoming edition

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Impressive design work with high contrast and appealing color palette.

SPECIAL AWARDS

GARRICK FELDMAN COMMUNITY JOURNALISM AWARD

FINALISTS
Rick Kron, Leader newspapers, Jacksonville, AR
Greg Geary, The Daily Citizen, Searcy, AR

WINNER
Unsafe conditions in Mississippi Delta housing, Nick Judin, Mississippi Free Press, Jackson, MS

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Judin’s work is the kind of incisive and insightful reporting one hopes for from local reporting. I was deeply impressed by Nick’s empathetic writing and aggressiveness in chasing the story.

OVERALL COMPETITION COMMENT: This was difficult. All three journalists here are talented and deserve recognition. But Judin’s work, and the impact it appears to have had, swung me. There’s a good chance that his writing has made positive changes in the lives of the renters he covered, and making such a positive impact is a rare but vital role for local journalism to play.

CHARLOTTE TILLAR SCHEXNAYDER PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD

FINALISTS
Arkansas public defenders, Will Langhorne, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Little Rock

Mississippi Trusted Elections Project, Ashton Pittman, William Pittman, Donna Ladd, Mississippi Free Press

WINNER
Evictions in Memphis, Jacob Steimer, Mikhaila Markham, Andrea Morales, Brittany Brown, Wendi C. Thomas, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, Memphis

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Logical flow and organization of the article. Very important topic, and the reporter and paper put a lot of work into actually watching the judges to identify the variability in how they handled evictions and tenants. The printing of the photos of the judges made the point that the range of treatment by the judges wasn’t based (solely) on racism – an important element of the story. An attempt even was made to identify why ERA2 funds weren’t applied for. There are a few holes in the story: Why would landlords choose to turn down payment of up to 12 months of back rent? Overall, this article represents an excellent handling and coverage of the issue of evictions, steps that can address the problem, the functioning of the court system, and the grinding wheels of bureaucracy.

OVERALL COMPETITION COMMENT: Excellent entries, each addressing issues critical to the citizens served by the publications . . . and to the functioning of democracy. Each was interesting and well-written. The element that was comparatively weak in several of the entries was answering the question “Why?” The entries all demonstrated a great amount of research in establishing the problem and identifying an immediate cause of the problem. But they could have been stronger had they delved a bit more deeply into why the problems existed. It was great to see the solid work being done by journalists today. The citizens served by those publications will benefit in multiple ways.

ROBERT S. MCCORD FOI AWARD

WINNER
Fighting For Public Access to Mississippi Legislature, Nick Judin and Donna Ladd, Mississippi Free Press

JUDGE’S COMMENT: The Mississippi Free Press’ coverage of and challenge to this artful and dangerous removal of the public business from the public eye is nothing less than inspiring. This is something that state government reporters and other journalists nationwide should be watching. It’s particularly important in this time when one party dominates so many state legislatures, and we know knowledge on how to retain power is being traded around the nation. The Mississippi Free Press could have just gone on getting some stories as best it could. But instead it fought a battle that needed to be fought.

COMPETITION COMMENT: I wish that there had been more entries. But the Mississippi entry was such an important piece that I still felt it should obviously be awarded.

OUTSTANDING NEW JOURNALIST
(This award is given to a journalist who has worked 5 years or fewer for their outlet)

FINALIST
Aliyah Veal, Mississippi Free Press

WINNER
Chelsea Helms, KNWA-TV, Fayetteville, AR

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Concise, crisp, engagingly written and edited. Storytelling that draws the viewer in. Quality one would expect to find in a much larger media market. Intelligent, professional and meaningful journalism that seeks to educate, enlighten and improve the community.

OVERALL COMPETITION COMMENT: The top two contenders are both outstanding journalists. I was ordered to pick one, so I did. My feeling is that both these young ladies will go far.

DIAMOND JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR

FINALIST
Nick Judin, Mississippi Free Press

WINNER
Andrew DeMillo, The Associated Press, Little Rock

JUDGE’S COMMENT: Excellent writing. Comprehensive without getting wordy. This reporter’s writing has a natural flow to it that carries the reader forward. Thoroughly professional and deserving of a first place award.

Finalists named for 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards

Finalists named for 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards

The Arkansas Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists is pleased to announce the finalists for its 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards, a regional competition that recognizes journalism excellence among professionals and students from Arkansas and six bordering states.

Arkansas SPJ will present the winners at an awards ceremony on June 27 at Brewski’s Pub & Grub, 315 Main St., Little Rock. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased here. The reception starts at 5:30 p.m. with Alan Leveritt, publisher of the Arkansas Times, speaking at 6 p.m., followed by the awards presentation.

This year’s competition for work published or broadcast in 2022 drew 363 entries in more than 80 categories, including Diamond Journalist of the Year and Outstanding New Journalist, the Robert S. McCord FOI Award, the Charlotte Tillar Schexnayder Public Service Award, and the Garrick Feldman Community Journalism Award.

Judges were members of the Washington D.C. SPJ chapter.

Finalists for the 2023 Diamond Journalism Awards listed by the outlet in which their work appeared:

225 Magazine
Maggie Heyn Richardson, Olivia Deffes, Zane Piontek, Mark Clements

501 Life Magazine
Tammy Keith

Arkadelphian.com
Joel Phelps

Arkansas Catholic
Dwain Hebda

Arkansas Now News
Hannah Campbell

AY Magazine
Austin Castrellon, Mike Bedgood, Dwain Hebda

Arkansas Advocate
Sonny Albarado, Tess Vrbin, Hunter Field,

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Michael R. Wickline, Teresa Moss, Joseph Flaherty, Sean Clancy, Rex Nelson, Nick Popowitch, Staci Vandagriff, Thomas Metthe, David Barham, Alexandria Brown, Remington Miller, Lisa Hammersly, Jenn Terrell, Will Langhorne, Frank Lockwood, Bill Bowden, Dwain Hebda, Democrat-Gazette Staff, Colin Murphey

Arkansas Money & Politics (AMP) Magazine
Lora Puls, Dwain Hebda

Arkansas Times
Dwain Hebda, Mandy Keener

The Arkansas Traveler (University of Arkansas)
Sarah Komar,

The Associated Press
Andrew DeMillo

Black Vitality
Dwain Hebda

The Commercial Appeal/The Tennessean
Daniel Connolly, Duane Gang, Arriel Cobert, Joe Rondone, Mel Fronczek, Ana Hurler

The Daily Citizen
Greg Geary

Do South Magazine
Dwain Hebda

The Echo (University of Central Arkansas)
Sarah Smythe, Madison Ogle, Courtney Shepherd, Delaney Van Wilpe, Anna Yanosick, Bennett Tinnermon, Emilee Hagewood, Mia Waddell, Maci England, Emily Kennard

Fort Worth Weekly
Edward Brown, Anthony Mariani

InRegister Magazine
Kelli Bozeman, Hoa Vu, Jordan Hefler, Collin Richie, Sean Gasser

KARK 4 News
Caitrin Assaf, Lauren Swaim

KHBS/KHOG (40/29)
Brett Rains, Katie Hamner, Colleen Clement, 40/29 TV Staff

KLRT-FOX 16
Kevin Kelly, Stephen Goodale, Lauren Swaim, Ashlei King, Julian Jones

KLSU-FM
Patricia Caputo, Liam Haley

KNWA-TV
Chelsea Helms

KTHV (THV11)
Skot Covert, Kelly Tibbit, Zach Keast

KUAR Public Radio
Daniel Breen, Josie Lenora, J. Bradley Minnick, Mary Ellen Kubit, Joseph Fuller

Leader Newspapers
Rick Kron

Mississippi Free Press
Nick Judin, Donna Ladd, Grace Marion, Torsheta Jackson, Aliyah Veal, Ashton Pittman, DeAnna Tisdale Johnson, Acacia Clark, Kristin Brenemen, Kayode Crown, William Pittman, Lukas Flippo

Missouri-Kansas Super Lawyers Magazine
Nancy Henderson

MLK50: Justice Through Journalism
Jacob Steimer, Mikhaila Markham, Andrea Morales, Brittany Brown, Wendi C. Thomas, Carrington Tatum, Andrea Morales, Ashli Blow

New Lines Magazine
Sarah Komar

Reveille (Louisiana State University)
Josh Archote, Reveille Editorial Board, Claire Sullivan, Katy-Ann McDonald, Will Nickel, Patricia Caputo, Brandon Poulter, Ally Kadlubar, Piper Hutchinson, Connor Barney, Henry Huber

St. Louis Public Radio
Avery Lea Rogers, Danny Wicentowski

Stuttgart Daily Leader
Kelly Connelly, Kristen Siler

Tiger TV (Louisiana State University)
Ava Borskey, Aria Pons

The Trucker
Dwain Hebda

World Christian Broadcasting
Paul Ladd

2023 Diamond Awards Categories

2023 DIAMOND JOURNALISM AWARDS

CONTEST CATEGORIES

Diamond graphic

A NOTE ON CONTEST DIVISIONS: Please pay attention to entry requirements. For most categories, entries can be submitted in two divisions — print/online and audio/video (includes podcasts, radio and TV). However, some categories allow entries to be submitted in the following subdivisions: newspapers, magazines, online publications, TV/video, and audio/radio.

DIAMOND HONORS – ALL MEDIA

GARRICK FELDMAN COMMUNITY JOURNALISM AWARD — For focused coverage of a community or neighborhood, awarded in honor of the late Garrick Feldman, publisher of The Leader newspapers, Jacksonville, Ark., and proponent of strong local journalism. COVER LETTER REQUIRED. Submit no more than six stories and related multimedia content. Audio and video entries should not be longer than 60 minutes total.

01. ALL MEDIA

CHARLOTTE TILLAR SCHEXNAYDER PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD — For journalism that seeks to benefit society through extensive coverage of an issue facing a community, state or region. Named in honor of the late Charlotte Schexnayder, journalist, small-town newspaper publisher and Arkansas legislator. Entry MUST INCLUDE A NOMINATING LETTER providing background and context and results, if any. Judges will consider significance of the issue, journalistic initiative, presentation, and results. Submit no more than 10 items – stories and opinion pieces. Audio and video entries should not be longer than 60 minutes total.

02. ALL MEDIA

THE ROBERT S. MCCORD FOI AWARD — For coverage that focuses on the public’s right to know and that carries on the legacy of the late Robert McCord, a former national SPJ president who is considered the father of the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act. COVER LETTER REQUIRED in support of the nomination. Submit stories, opinion pieces, letters or other material (including audio or video) that demonstrate how the nominee contributed to the protection or enhancement of the public’s right to know.

03. ALL MEDIA

OUTSTANDING NEW JOURNALIST AWARD — For journalistic excellence demonstrated by an individual  who has worked five years or fewer in their market. The winner will be chosen based on a NOMINATING LETTER and supporting documents. Submit a portfolio by the nominee of five pieces representative of their work over the year.

04. ALL MEDIA

OUTSTANDING STUDENT  JOURNALIST AWARD — For journalistic excellence demonstrated by an individual student journalist. The winner will be chosen based on a NOMINATING LETTER and supporting documents. Submit a portfolio by the nominee of five pieces representative of their work over the year. 

05. ALL MEDIA

DIAMOND JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR — For journalistic excellence by a journalist in any medium over the preceding 12 months. Submit a portfolio by the nominee of five to seven pieces and a NOMINATING LETTER from a ranking editor or producer.

06. ALL MEDIA

PROFESSIONAL MEDIA

BREAKING NEWS For  clear, accurate and engaging coverage of a single, unexpected news event by individuals, teams or news. Judges will consider deadline pressure and complexity of the subject. 

07. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit up to three articles, any sidebars and related multimedia content. 

08. AUDIO/VIDEO –  Submit audio or video from up to three stories not longer than 30 minutes total and any related multimedia content.

GENERAL NEWS — For  coverage of a news-related topic. May include planned coverage of a single event or in-depth or enterprise reporting.

09. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit up to three articles and any related multimedia content.

10. AUDIO/VIDEO – Submit audio or video from up to three stories not longer than 30 minutes total and any related multimedia content.

ONGOING COVERAGE For continuing coverage over time of a topic or major event demonstrating solid reporting and presentation with complexity and perspective. 

11. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit up to five stories along with any related multimedia content. Entries may include a mix of story types, e.g. breaking news, features and explanatory.

12. AUDIO/VIDEO – Submit audio or video from up to five stories not longer than 60 minutes total along with any related multimedia content. Entries may include a mix of story types, e.g. breaking news, features and explanatory.

ENTERPRISE/IN-DEPTH REPORTING — For coverage that reflects a reporter’s or team’s initiative, ingenuity, use of sources and/or special research to dig deeper or capture more complexity than a typical news story.

13. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit a single story or a series of up to three stories and any related multimedia content.

14. AUDIO/VIDEO Submit audio or video from a single report or a series of reports not longer than 30 minutes total and any related multimedia content.

INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING — For reporting that  demonstrates initiative, persistence and resourcefulness in pursuing information that is restricted or not easily available and is of public interest and significance. COVER LETTER REQUIRED, explaining reporting process and impact or results.

15. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit one story or a series of no more than six stories and any related multimedia content.

16. AUDIO/VIDEO – Submit a single piece or a series on the same topic with a maximum combined run time of 60 minutes and any related multimedia content. 

EXPLANATORY REPORTING — For reporting and writing that elucidate significant stories and complex situations, that deepen understanding of a subject or that focus on subjects covered minimally or not at all by most media. 

17. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit one story or a series and any related multimedia content. If entering a series, please submit no more than six stories.

18. AUDIO/VIDEO  – Submit one audio clip of up to 30 minutes.

EDITORIALS — For opinion writing that represents a news organization’s position on a topic or issue. Judges will consider importance to the community, writing style, reasoning, originality and reader interest. 

19. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit three editorials as one entry.

20. AUDIO/VIDEO – Submit three editorials as one entry.

COMMENTARY — For commentary or analysis by an individual. News-related blogs also are eligible. Judges will consider quality of expression, clarity  and originality.

21. PRINT/ONLINE – Submit three samples as one entry.

22. AUDIO/VIDEO – Submit three samples as one entry.

FEATURES — For individual storytelling excellence. Judges will consider the use of narrative, use of humor or drama, style, creativity, clarity and suitability of the writing to the subject.

23. NEWSPAPERS – Submit one story.

24. MAGAZINES  – Submit one story. 

25. ONLINE ONLY (For stories, audio or video published or broadcast online only.) Submit one story or audio/video of not more than 15 minutes.

26. TV/VIDEO – Submit one story of not more than 15 minutes.

27. RADIO/AUDIO – Submit one story of not more than 15 minutes.

PROFILES — For reporting that  depicts the character and personality of a story  subject.

28. NEWSPAPERS Submit one story.

29. MAGAZINES Submit one story.

30. ONLINE ONLY (For written, audio or video stories published or broadcast online only.) Submit one written story or audio/video story of not more than 15 minutes.

31. TV/VIDEO Submit one story of no more than 15 minutes.

32. RADIO/AUDIO Submit one story of no more than 15 minutes.

SPORTS — For coverage of any sport or athletic endeavor. Judges will consider clarity and style.

33. NEWSPAPERS – Submit a single story or no more than three stories representing continuing coverage of a single topic.

34. MAGAZINES – Submit a single story or no more than three stories representing continuing coverage of a single topic.

35. ONLINE ONLY (For written, audio or video stories published or broadcast online only.) Submit a single story or no more than three stories covering a single topic. Audio/video entries should not be longer than 15 minutes total.

36. AUDIO/VIDEO Submit audio or video of no more than three reports covering a single topic with a run time not longer than 15 minutes. 

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT COVERAGE — For reporting on the arts, entertainment, restaurant and other cultural news. Entry may include columns, profiles and features. Judges will consider the quality of the writing and presentation and, where appropriate, analysis.

37. NEWSPAPERS – Submit up to three stories or a series of up to three stories.

38. MAGAZINES – Submit up to three stories or a series of up to three stories.

39. AUDIO/VIDEO Submit audio or video of no longer than 15 minutes.

40. ONLINE ONLY (For written stories, audio or video stories published or broadcast online only.) Submit one written story or audio/video story of not more than 15 minutes.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT CRITICISM/REVIEWS — For writing that demonstrates a journalist’s competence in evaluating performance, restaurants, books, recorded music or other cultural events or entities.

41. NEWSPAPERS Submit three samples of the author’s work.

42. MAGAZINES Submit three samples of the author’s work.

43. AUDIO/VIDEO Submit audio or video of no longer than 5 minutes.

44. ONLINE ONLY (For written stories, audio or video stories published or broadcast online only.) Submit one written story or audio/video story of not more than 15 minutes.

BUSINESS — For coverage of business or finance by an individual or team. Submit up to five samples and any related multimedia content. Run times for audio and video should not exceed 5 minutes.

45. ALL MEDIA Submit up to five stories and related multimedia content or audio/video with a run time of not more than 15 minutes.

EDUCATION — For coverage of education (news, features, analysis and investigative). 

46. PRINT/ONLINE Submit up to five samples and any related multimedia content as one entry.

47. AUDIO/VIDEO Submit audio or video with a run time of not more than 15 minutes.

HEALTH — For reporting clearly on health, including medicine, community health and health policy, and the health effects of COVID-19. 

48. ALL MEDIA Submit up to five stories and related multimedia content or audio/video with a run time of not more than 15 minutes.

SCIENCE — For reporting clearly on science, including technology, and its impact on individuals and society. 

49. ALL MEDIA Submit up to five stories and related multimedia content or audio/video with a run time of not more than 15 minutes.

ENVIRONMENT — For coverage of environmental issues, including climate change.

50. ALL MEDIA Submit up to five stories and related multimedia content or audio/video with a run time of not more than 15 minutes.

POLITICS — For coverage of public issues, political campaigns, candidates or campaign finance. 

51. PRINT/ONLINE Submit up to five stories and related multimedia content as one entry.  

52. AUDIO/VIDEO Run times for audio or video should not exceed 15 minutes total. 

SPECIAL SECTION/NICHE PUBLICATION — For a niche publication or special section devoted to a single topic. Judges will consider depth of coverage, presentation, and quality of writing. 

53. PRINT/ONLINE Submit one section or niche publication. 

PODCASTS — For public interest podcasting that stands alone or is part of a series. 

54. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three episodes as one entry. Podcast entries may have also aired as radio or TV broadcasts.

VISUAL JOURNALISM & DESIGN

BREAKING NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY — For photojournalism produced on deadline. Judges will consider deadline pressure, complexity of subject and visual presentation.

55. ALL MEDIA Submit photos with cutlines from up to three stories as one entry, but no more than six images in all. Be sure to include the accompanying story or link to the story.

GENERAL NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY — For photojournalism by an individual for any non-deadline news event.

56. ALL MEDIA Submit a single photo with cutline/caption. Link to or include accompanying story – if any.

FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY — For feature photography by an individual..

57. ALL MEDIA Submit a single photo with cutline/caption. Link to or include the accompanying story, if any, or contextual information.

PHOTO SPREAD/ESSAY — For a group of photographs on a single theme published as part of a single story or as a stand-alone layout. 

58. ALL MEDIA Submit no more than 10 images with cutlines. Link to or include the accompanying story or contextual information.

PHOTO PORTFOLIO — For photography that shows the work of a single photographer. 

59. ALL MEDIA Submit or link to no more than five photos with cutlines. 

DATA VISUALIZATION — For presentation of complex information using graphics, maps and other interactive tools to report on data.

60. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three samples, including the associated stories or links to them online.

GRAPHICS/ILLUSTRATIONS — For infographics or illustrations.

61. ALL MEDIA Submit three samples as one entry. Include or link to any accompanying story or text.

VIDEOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO — For video journalism by an individual.

62. ALL MEDIA – Submit up to three samples with a maximum combined length of 15 minutes.

VIDEO PROGRAM — For regular news-oriented programming over the air or online that focuses on a theme or subject, including but not limited to topics such as crime, politics or health.

63. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three samples with a combined length 15 minutes maximum.

FRONT PAGE/COVER DESIGN — For presentation that significantly enhances access to journalistic work and improves audience experience and engagement. Submit up to three samples as one entry.

64. NEWSPAPERS Submit up to three samples as one entry.

65. MAGAZINES Submit up to three samples as one entry.

PAGE DESIGN — For presentation on a page or pages other than a magazine cover or front page that significantly enhances access to journalistic work and improves audience experience and engagement.

66. NEWSPAPERS Submit up to three samples as one entry.

67. MAGAZINES Submit up to three samples as one entry.

ONLINE DESIGN — For  presentation that significantly enhances access to journalistic work and improves audience experience and engagement.

68. WEB/MOBILE Submit up to three samples as one entry.

STUDENT MEDIA

STUDENT – SPECIAL PROJECTS — For special projects that show exemplary reporting, writing, photography or videography. These should be student-generated and not part of an ongoing university-sponsored project.  COVER LETTER REQUIRED.

69. ALL MEDIA Submit an entire issue of a publication, series of stories or single piece, or a broadcast of up to 60 minutes in length. 

STUDENT – BREAKING NEWS — For  clear and accurate reporting and engaging writing on deadline by individuals or teams regardless of platform. Judges will consider deadline pressure, style and complexity of the subject. 

70. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three articles and any related multimedia content. Audio and video clips should not exceed 15 minutes. 

STUDENT – GENERAL NEWS — For  clear and accurate reporting and engaging writing by individuals or teams regardless of platform. Judges will consider style and complexity of the subject. 

71. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three articles and any related multimedia content. Audio and video clips should not exceed 15 minutes. 

STUDENT – FEATURES — For individual storytelling excellence regardless of platform. Judges will consider use of narrative, humor or drama, style, creativity, clarity and suitability of the writing or video/audio presentation to the subject. 

72. ALL MEDIA Submit one story and any related multimedia content. Audio and video clips should not exceed 15 minutes. 

STUDENT – SPORTS — For  coverage of any sport or athletic endeavor regardless of platform. Judges will consider clarity and style. 

73. ALL MEDIA Submit a single story or no more than three stories representing continuing coverage of a single topic. Audio and video clips should not exceed 15 minutes. 

STUDENT – EDITORIALS — For  opinion writing that represents a student news outlet’s position on a topic or issue. Judges will consider importance to the community, writing style, reasoning, originality, and reader interest. 

74. ALL MEDIA Submit three editorials as one entry.

STUDENT – COMMENTARY — For  commentary, reviews or analysis by an individual on any platform. Blogs also are eligible. Judges will consider quality of expression, clarity, and originality.

75. ALL MEDIA Submit three samples as one entry. Maximum run time for video or audio: 15 minutes.

STUDENT – ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT REPORTING — For coverage of arts, entertainment, restaurant and other cultural news. Entry may include columns, profiles and features. Judges will consider the quality of the writing and presentation and, where appropriate, analysis.

76. ALL MEDIA Submit three samples as one entry. Maximum run time for video or audio: 15 minutes.

STUDENT – ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT CRITICISM/REVIEWS — For writing that demonstrates a journalist’s competence in evaluating performance, restaurants, books, recorded music or other cultural events or entities.

77. ALL MEDIA Submit three samples as one entry. Maximum run time for video or audio: 15 minutes.

STUDENT – BUSINESS — For  coverage of business or finance, including the business of college athletics and of institutions of higher learning. Judges will consider clarity. 

78. ALL MEDIA Submit a single story or no more than three stories representing continuing coverage of a single topic. Maximum run time for video or audio: 15 minutes.

STUDENT – EDUCATION — For  coverage on any platform of education, including institutions of higher education, teacher training and educational research. Judges will consider clarity and thoroughness. 

  1. ALL MEDIA Submit three samples as one entry. Maximum run time for video or audio: 15 minutes. 

STUDENT – NEWS PHOTO For  photojournalism by an individual for breaking or general news. Judges will consider deadline pressure, complexity of subject and visual presentation. 

80. ALL MEDIA Submit one photo with cutline. Please include the accompanying story or link the story. 

STUDENT – FEATURE PHOTO For  feature photography by an individual. Judges will consider the complexity of  the subject and visual presentation. 

81. ALL MEDIA Submit one photo with cutline. Please include the accompanying story or link the story, if any.

STUDENT – PHOTO SPREAD/ESSAY — For  a group of photographs on a single theme published  as part of a single story or as a stand-alone layout. 

82. ALL MEDIA Submit up to 10 images with cutlines and an explanation of the context or the accompanying story or text. Links are acceptable. 

STUDENT – PHOTO PORTFOLIO — For  photography that shows the work of a single photographer. 

83. ALL MEDIA Submit no more than five photos with cutlines.  

STUDENT – DATA VISUALIZATION — For presenting complex information using graphics, maps or other interactive tools to report on data.. 

84. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three samples, including the associated stories or links to them online.

STUDENT – GRAPHICS/ILLUSTRATIONS — For infographics or illustrations on any platform. 

85. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three samples. Include any accompanying story or text. 

STUDENT – DESIGN — For presentation that significantly enhances access to journalistic work and improves audience experience and engagement. Design encompasses visual and sound elements as well as print and online display. 

86. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three samples as one entry. 

STUDENT – PODCASTS — For reporting and journalistic storytelling that stands alone or is part of a series. 

87. ALL MEDIA Submit up to three episodes as one entry with maximum run time of 60 minutes. Podcast entries may have also aired as radio or TV broadcasts.

Earn Your Diamonds

Enter the 2020 Diamond Journalism Awards Today!

Attention professional and student journalists in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas:

The 2020 Diamond Journalism Awards entry period is underway.

Sponsored by the Arkansas Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, the Diamond Journalism Awards is open to any professional or student journalist, including freelancers, working in Arkansas and bordering states (Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas and Tennessee).

Eligible work must have been published or broadcast between Jan. 1, 2019, and Dec. 31, 2019.

Entries are now being accepted online at https://betternewspapercontest.com/. Submitted entries can be either pdfs or URL links or both. No Word documents accepted.

The entry deadline is March 20, 2020

For details on entry rules and requirements please visit here.

To pay for entries, go here.