NEW YORK, Feb.20, 2007
Spike Lee & Producer Win Journalism Award
For Their Hurricane Katrina TV Documentary "When The Levees Broke: A Requiem In Four Acts"
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Play CBS Video Video Exodus From New Orleans After the Mardi Gras festivities end, and the tourists leave town, many longtime residents will be leaving with them. Tracy Smith reports on the expected mass departure from the Big Easy.
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Spike Lee in July 2006, revisiting the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans - one of the hardest hit neighborhoods in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the subject of his documentary which premiered on HBO last August. (AP Photo/HBO, Charlie Varley)
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Special Report Gulf Coast Disaster Complete coverage of the effects of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, including anniversary coverage.
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Section Eye On The Storm Check out our special section to recap past hurricane seasons and prepare for the next.
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Video Archive After The Storm Video Coverage: After the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, steps toward recovery.
Lee, the director of "Malcolm X" and "Do the Right Thing," was honored for "When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts," along with its producer, Sam Pollard. The pair won the award for documentary television for illustrating evidence of the government's poor performance in the aftermath of the devastating August 2005 hurricane.
Lee made eight trips to New Orleans and interviewed about 100 people while filming the documentary, which aired on HBO. Pollard is Lee's longtime collaborator, and the pair worked together previously on "Mo' Better Blues," "Jungle Fever," "Girl 6," "Clockers" and "Bamboozled."
Other 2006 winners ran the gamut from New York Times correspondent Lydia Polgreen, honored in foreign reporting for her work on the carnage in Sudan's Darfur region, to the staff of the free-circulation weekly Lakefront Outlook in Chicago, cited for its expose on cronyism at the Harold Washington Cultural Center.
The 12 awards, considered among the top prizes in U.S. journalism, were announced Tuesday by Long Island University in New York. The Polk Awards, created in 1949 in honor of CBS reporter George W. Polk, who was killed while covering the Greek civil war, will be presented at an April 12 luncheon in Manhattan.
Other winners were:
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- "Didn't know they gave awards out to racist.
Posted by FARTKNOCKER2 at 10:18 AM : Feb 20, 2007"
Are you kidding? Really?
Most of the awards given in the Land of Racism are to racists -- white supremacists that is. LOL - Reply to this comment
- I am glad that Spike Lee is finally getting the recognition he deserves. Spike's movies has made America think about the condition of the state of racial injustice in America, not only for Black Americans, but for all races. Congradulations Spike!
- Reply to this comment

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