Scroll down for the 2008 Still Contest, Video Contest, New Media Contest, followed by prior years (2007 - 2000)
STILL PHOTOGRAPHY

Click the image above or this link to view the prize-winning photos:

STILL CONTEST JUDGING HOSTED BY NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE)
List of winners (text)
http://www.whnpa.org/contest/eyes2008/stills/textresults/
WHNPA press release (pdf)

PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR: JAHI CHIKWENDIU, THE WASHINGTON POST
POLITICAL PHOTO OF THE YEAR: STARING DOWN THE COMPETITION
JAY L. CLENDENIN, LOS ANGELES TIMES
2008 VIDEO PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST
WINNING VIDEO CLIPS (QUICKTIME) ARE ONLINE IN THE 2008 CONTEST
VIDEO PHOTOGRAPHY AND VIDEO EDITING)
Video contest judging hosted by National Geographic Channel, FEBRUARY 9 - 10
VIDEO CONTEST
PRESS RELEASE

VIDEO PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR: MARK RABBAGE, BBC
PDF LIST OF VIDEO PHOTOGRAPHY WINNERS

2008 VIDEO EDITING CONTEST
VIDEO EDITOR OF THE YEAR: CHRIS SHLEMON, ITN
PDF LIST OF VIDEO EDITING WINNERS
. . . . . . . .
NEW MEDIA CONTEST RESULTS (final, updated Sunday 12:30 pm)
View the multimedia presentations online
PRESS RELEASE - WINNERS (PDF)
BEST USE OF PHOTOGRAPHY (NEW MEDIA)

First Place:
Struggle in Mississippi Delta:
African American farmers in the deep South struggle as major portions of federal
crop subsidies are given to large industrialized farms. Agricultural towns like
Shelby and Mound Bayou in Mississippi suffer from poverty, crime and high
unemployment.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/070619/GAL-07Jun19-78480/index.html
Producer: Whitney Shefte
Photo Editor: Whitney Shefte
Photographer: Carol Guzy
Second Place:
Abductions Hold Haiti Hostage
Despite the presence of thousands of U.N. troops and a new military offensive to
root out gangs, armed thugs still rule much of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where many of
the 2 million residents live in tin or cinder-block shacks.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/galleries/022107/haiti/index.html
Producer: Dee Swann
Photo Editors: Dee Swann, Alexandra Garcia
Photography: Michel du Cille
Third Place:
For Them. By Them.
For six weeks, 30 teenagers, most of whom are from Southeast D.C., have worked
tirelessly on proposals for a $300,000 project to enhance their community.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/070803/GAL-07Aug03-83470/index.html
Producer: Dee Swann
Photo Editor: Dee Swann, Tom Kennedy
Photographer: Carol Guzy
Award of Excellence:
The Lost Boys – Transforming Fort Dimanche
The boys warehoused at Fort Dimanche are the products of poverty, child abandonment,
rampant homelessness and an educational system that has failed to enroll 1 million
school-age children. A group using seed money from pop star Wyclef Jean hopes to
turn the children's prison into Haiti's first child rehabiliation center.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/070302/GAL-07Mar02-66790/index.html
Additional Work by Michel du Cille / The Washington Post and Nelson Hsu and Lindsay
McCulough / washingtonpost.com
Producer: Nancy Donaldson – washingtonpost.com
Photography: Michel du Cille – The Washington Post
Photo Editing: Nancy Donaldson and Lindsay McCullough – washingtonpost.com
Design: Nelson Hsu – washingtonpost.com
Award of Excellence:
Fixing D.C.’s Schools: A History of Washington Education
Take a photographic journey through the history of D.C.'s schools: from the
inception of the school system to the tumultuous era of racial integration to the
numerous reform efforts of the present, the schools have long reflected changes in
the city and the nation.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/070607/GAL-07Jun07-76881/index.html
Producer: Whitney Shefte
Photo Editor: Whitney Shefte
Best Use of Photography and Audio

First Place:
In Kentucky's Teeth, Toll of Poverty and Neglect
In Kentucky bootleg denture-makers exist here for a reason: Kentucky has the highest
proportion of adults under 65 without teeth and about half of the residents lack
dental insurance. "People need teeth, but they can't afford to go to dentists for
dentures," said one bootlegger who has seen the shame of a 14-year-old girl who
would not lift her head because she had lost most of her teeth from malnutrition,
and the do-it-yourself pride of an elderly mountain man who, unable to afford a
dentist, pulled his own infected teeth with a pair of pliers.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2007/12/21/us/20071224_KENTUCKY_FEATURE.html
Producers: Stephen Crowley and Thomas Lin
Picture and audio editing: Stephen Crowley
Audio and Photography: Stephen Crowley
Second Place:
A Mexican Football Team Tackles Misperceptions
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/gallery/2007/10/13/GA2007101300792.html
A high school team crosses the border seeking to validate Mexican football by
challenging a formidable opponent in Texas.
Producer: Alexandra Garcia
Audio, Audio Editing, Photo Editing: Alexandra Garcia
Photography: Toni L. Sandys
Third Place:
Fair Weather Fun
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/nation/interactives/ohiofairs/index.html
Fairs and festivals bring together communities too often too busy to share in
experiences. This series of audio slideshows puts a fresh face on the fun of a
little friendly competition.
Producer: Alexandra Garcia
Audio and Photo Editing: Alexandra Garcia & Sarah L. Voisin
Photography: Sarah L. Voisin | Audio Reporting: Sarah Hollander & Sarah L. Voisin.
Award of Excellence:
Why We Compete | Adrenaline
Jumpers take part in the 2007 Bridge Day on the New River Gorge Bridge in
Fayetteville, W.Va.
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/why-we-compete/2007/11/adrenaline.html
Producer: Whitney Shefte
Photo Editor: Whitney Shefte, Preston Keres
Photographer: Preston Keres, Whitney Shefte
Audio Reporter: Whitney Shefte, Preston Keres
Audio Editor: Whitney Shefte, Preston
Award of Excellence:
Burning Man
What type of religious experience would you expect at a festival dedicated to
radical self-reliance and carnal pleasure, revolving around rituals described as
pagan? Welcome to Burning Man, where you can talk to God from a phone booth and
listen to the gospel choir while watching a temple burn.
http://video1.washingtontimes.com/video/burningman3/
Producer: Allison Shelley
Best Use of Photography and Audio (Narrated)

First Place:
‘Continuous War’: Cluster Bombs in South Lebanon
Cluster bomblets may look like toys – small cups of heavy metal with a fold of
ribbon dangling from each bomblet’s detonator – but their affects are leaving a far
more destructive legacy, particularly among civilians in southern Lebanon, which was
hit hard during the summer 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/interactives/lebcbomb/
Producer: Nancy Donaldson
Photo Editor, Audio Editor: Nancy Donaldson
Photographer, Audio Reporter: Jahi Chikwendiu
Second Place:
Windfarms
http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/features/2007/nov/texas/slideshow/index.html
A look at how windpower was introduced to a small town in Texas by a
former cotton farmer.
Reporter: John Burnett
Photographer: Brian Connelly for NPR
Audio producer: Vikki Valentine
Slideshow producer: Coburn Dukehart
Third Place:
West Side Story:
http://www.npr.org/programs/atc/features/2007/sep/west_side_story/slideshow/index.html
A look back in sounds and photos to mark the 50th anniversary of "West
Side Story."
Reporter and audio producer: Jeff Lunden
Slideshow producer: Trey Graham
Mix engineers: Josh Rogosin, Neal Rauch
Photo researchers: Frannie Kelley, Patrick Jarenwattananon
Photo editor: Coburn Dukehart
Award of Excellence:
An IED Attack Unfolds
Washington Post photographer Andrea Bruce recounts an encounter with a roadside bomb
while embedded in Baqubah, Iraq. The June 2004 attack seriously injured two soldiers
who were traveling in an unarmored Humvee.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/gallery/2007/09/30/GA2007093001255.html
Producer: Whitney Shefte
Photo Editor: Whitney Shefte
Audio Editor: Whitney Shefte
Audio Reporter: Whitney Shefte
Photographer: Andrea Bruce
Best Multimedia Package

First Place:
Crisis in Darfur Expands
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/interactives/chad/
Eastern Chad has become a temporary home for hundreds of thousands of Sudanese
fleeing violence in the Darfur region. Their plight has become intertwined with
110,000 Chadians who have also become subject to banditry and violence, imperiling
international food and medical aid efforts.
Project by Travis Fox and Brian Cordyack.
Second Place:
Antarctica
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/science/interactives/antarctica/index.html
The frozen landscape, dry valleys and active volcanoes that make up Antarctica
provide a living laboratory for scientific study and a wondrous journey for those
traveling to the ends of the Earth. Experience the continent with this special
report.
Project by Lindsay McCullough, George Steinmetz, Adam Kipple, Amar Bakshi, and Alicia
Cypress
Third Place:
Fixing D.C. Schools
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/metro/interactives/dcschools/
For decades, the District's public schools have resisted scores of reform plans and
multiple changes in leadership to remain among the most troubled in the nation. As
Mayor Adrian M. Fenty orchestrates the latest attempt to fix the schools, The Post
is examining why the problems have been so difficult to solve.
Project by Liz Heron, Nelson Hsu, Adrian Holovaty, Nancy Donaldson, Dee Swann and
Ben de la Cruz
Award of Excellence
onBeing
http://specials.washingtonpost.com/onbeing/
onBeing is a project based on the simple notion that we should get to know one
another a little better. What you’ll find here is a series of videos that takes you
into the musings, passions, histories and quirks of all sorts of people. The essence
of who they are, who we are.
Project by Jennifer Crandall, Jesse Foltz, Rob Curly, Deryck Hodge, Tom Kennedy,
Ju-Don Roberts and Liz Spayd.
Scroll down to view prior contests (2007 -2000)
. . . . .
2007 STILL PHOTOGRAPHY RESULTS
AWARD-WINNING IMAGES • PRESS RELEASE (PDF) • CONTEST RESULTS

PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR - Michael Robinson Chavez, the Washington Post
CLICK IMAGE BELOW TO LAUNCH FLASH SLIDESHOW OF THIS YEAR'S PHOTOS BY MICHAEL ROBINSON CHAVEZ
POLITICAL PHOTO OF THE YEAR
CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES, THE FUTURE SPEAKER SPEAKS

VIEW THE AWARD-WINNING IMAGES • PRESS RELEASE (PDF) • CONTEST RESULTS
2007 TV CONTEST

QUICKTIME
VIDEO CLIPS of
the winning entries are now online.
Video Photographer of the Year is Dai Baker, ITN
Video Editor of the Year is Pierre Kattar, washingtonpost.com

PRESS RELEASE
List of winning
entries in this year's Video
Photography Contest
List of winning
entries in this year's Video
Editing Contest
The WHNPA acknowledges the generous support of the following organizations:
