Grimmies: SPOW Awards |
These will be SPOW’s first awards following the death beaters’ reorganization hiatus.
As always, SPOW
especially wants to recognize distinguished obit writing done by reporters and
freelance writers, who regularly work on the death beat. SPOW also wants to
feature news obituaries that stand out in the judges’ eyes. Obits presented on
radio, television, blogs and other online entities will also be considered.
Because of the short
window for submitting and judging obits this time, we will accept entries in
only five categories. More than one honoree may be chosen from each category
depending on the number of entries received and at the judges’ discretion.
Category 1: Body of Work
published in 2011.
Submit five obituaries
written by one author that were published in 2011.
Category 2: Body of Work
published in 2012.
Submit five obituaries
written by one author that were published in 2012.
Category 3: Outstanding
obituaries published in 2011.
Individual obits
(published in 2011), which you believe deserve recognition. These can be obits
about famous folks or everyday people. They should definitely be well-written
and reported, hold the readers’ interest and highlight the deceased’s life. If
appropriate, please include a brief letter with the entered obit explaining out-of-the
box approaches to the writing of the obit, difficulties that were overcome in
getting the story, the obit’s impact on the community, its relevance in regards
to the news of the day (i.e. elections, gun violence) or some other
significance our judges might not see automatically.
Category 4: Outstanding
obituaries published in 2012.
Individual obits
(published in 2012), which you believe deserve recognition. These can be obits
about famous folks or everyday people. They should definitely be well-written
and reported, hold the readers’ interest and highlight the deceased’s life. If
appropriate, please include a brief letter with the entered obit explaining out-of-the
box approaches to the writing of the obit, difficulties that were overcome in
getting the story, the obit’s impact on the community, its relevance in regards
to the news of the day (i.e. elections, gun violence) or some other
significance our judges might not see automatically.
In the past, the judges
divided longer word-count obits from shorter obits in judging the various
categories. This time, that distinction will not be made as the works are
entered. However, the judges have the discretion to make the length of the
obits a factor when selecting the honorees.
Category 5: Lifetime
Achievement Award.
Lifetime Achievement
Awards are designed to recognize recipients for their dedication to the craft
and profession of obit writing over time. Factors include how the obit writer
inspired or affected fellow obit writers, fellow journalists, funeral
directors, bereaved families, readers and the community.
Anyone can nominate an obituary
writer for Lifetime honors, and no entry fee is involved.
Letters of nomination should include the name of the obituary
writer, a brief bio, work history, why this individual deserves to be honored
and examples of obits the nominee has written.
The name of and contact information for the sender must be
included in the letter of nomination.
Two Lifetime recipients will be honored at the 2013 SPOW
Conference to make up for not having an LA recipient in 2012.
The nominations for nominees, who are not selected this year, will automatically be added to the nominations in subsequent years.
To Enter:
All submissions will be
handled online. Send submissions by category to obitwriters.org@gmail.com. The deadline is May 4, 2013.
Type the category name
in the subject line.
In the body of the
email, include the name of the obituary writer, headline and/or name of the obit
subject, name of publication, date of publication and contact information for
obit writer and an editor or other appropriate person at that publication. Also
include links to the obits under consideration.
If links are not
available, please copy the obit text to a Word document and send as attachments
to the email.
It is understood that by
entering this contest, the obituary writer and the news organization grant the
Society of Professional Obituary Writers permission to post the entered
obituary or obituaries online and to use excerpts for purposes of discussion on
SPOW's Obituary Forum blog at http://www.obituaryforum.blogspot.com.
Entry fees
The entry fee for each
obit submitted in Categories 3 and 4 is $25. The entry fee for the 5-obit
package submitted in Categories 1 and 2 is $50. Each obit included in each
5-obit package for Category 1 will also be entered in Category 3. The same goes
for the 5 obits for Category 2. Each will also be considered under Category 4.
Go to Eventbrite at http://www.eventbrite.com/event/5639271212#
to pay entry fees and SPOW Conference registration. (Conference registration
info has not been posted at Evenbrite yet.)
1 comment:
I so wish I could come to this conference! I have been hearing about obit writers conferences and how much fun they are. However, I've already planned an O/S visit this year and can't afford another! I live in Australia.
I am studying obituaries and obituary writing for my Masters of Journalism thesis this year and I believe the conference would have been the perfect place to learn a huge amount and meet everyone I've been harassing for information - in one place. So, I am bitterly disappointed that I don't own a private jet.... I hope you will be having another conference in 2014 and I will keep my eye on this blog to hear about how this year's conference goes. Cheerio!
Jennifer King (Brisbane, Australia)
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