17th GLAAD Media Awards
17th Annual GLAAD Media Awards (2006) were presented at four separate ceremonies: March 27 in New York City; April 8 at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles;[1] May 25 in Miami; and June 10 in San Francisco. The awards were presented to honor "fair, accurate and inclusive" representations of gay individuals in the media.
Special Recognition
- Vito Russo Award: David LaChapelle
- Vanguard Award: Charlize Theron
- Golden Gate Award: Jennifer Tilly
- Davidson/Valentini Award: Ron Cowen
- Stephen F. Kolzak Award: Melissa Etheridge
- Valentia Award: Fey
- Pioneer Award: Rev. Cecil Williams
- Visibilidad Award: Richard Pérez-Feria
- Special Recognition: "First Day of My Life," Bright Eyes music video, dir. John Cameron Mitchell
Winners and nominees
Winners are presented in bold.[2][3][4][5]
- Outstanding Film - Wide Release
- Outstanding Film - Limited Release
- Beautiful Boxer (Regent Releasing/here! Films)
- Mysterious Skin (Strand Releasing/Antidote Films)
- Saving Face (Sony Pictures Classics)
- Transamerica (The Weinstein Company)
- Walk on Water (Samuel Goldwyn Films)
- Outstanding Documentary
- American Experience: Kinsey (PBS)
- Middle Sexes: Redefining He and She (HBO)
- Same Sex America (Showtime)
- TransGeneration (The Sundance Channel/Logo)
- We Are Dad (Showtime)
- Outstanding Drama Series
- Commander in Chief (ABC)
- The L Word (Showtime)
- Queer as Folk (Showtime)
- Six Feet Under (HBO)
- South of Nowhere (The N)
- Outstanding Comedy Series
- Out of Practice (CBS)
- Shameless (BBC America)
- Will & Grace (NBC)
- Outstanding Individual Episode (in a series without a regular gay character)
- "Alien" - Law & Order: SVU (NBC)
- "Best Friends" - Cold Case (CBS)
- "Pilot" - My Name is Earl (NBC)
- "Someone's in the Kitchen with Daddy" - What I Like About You (The WB)
- "Transitions" - Without a Trace (CBS)
- Outstanding Television Movie or Mini-Series
- The Long Firm (BBC America)
- Partner(s) (Lifetime)
- Outstanding Reality Program
- The Amazing Race 7 (CBS)
- America's Next Top Model 5 (UPN)
- "Boone Luffey/Gillespie" - Wife Swap (ABC)
- Queer Eye (Bravo)
- "Straight/Gay" - 30 Days (FX)
- Outstanding Daily Drama
- General Hospital (ABC)
- Passions (NBC)
- Outstanding Talk Show Episode
- "Fighting for My Children" - Dr. Phil
- "Twins: Identical But Different" - The Montel Williams Show
- "When I Knew I Was Gay" - The Oprah Winfrey Show
- "When Your Identical Twin Has a Sex Change" - The Oprah Winfrey Show
- Outstanding TV Journalism - Newsmagazine
- "Becoming Diane" - 20/20 (ABC)
- "Gay Rodeo" - Only in America (Discovery Times Channel)
- "Lady Lions: Alleged Discrimination" - Outside the Lines (ESPN)
- "Lucky" - Dateline NBC (NBC)
- "The Mirror" - Nightline (ABC)
- Outstanding TV Journalism - News Segment
- "Andrew Goldstein" - ESPN SportsCenter (ESPN)
- "Coming Out" - Live From... (CNN)
- "Peter Hams" - ESPN SportsCenter (ESPN)
- "School Outing" - Anderson Cooper 360° (CNN)
- "Secret Sex Lives" - Anderson Cooper 360° (CNN)
- Outstanding Newspaper Article
- "A House Divided" by Laura Bond (Westword)
- "The New Radical" by Kim Martineau (The Hartford Courant)
- "Paradise Lost" by Michelle Boorstein (The Washington Post)
- "The Stewards of Gay Washington" by Anne Hull (The Washington Post)
- "When an Employee Switches Gender, What's a Company to Do?" by Stephanie Armour (USA Today)
- Outstanding Newspaper Columnist
- Marta Donayre (El Observador)
- Margery Eagan (Boston Herald)
- Mark Morford (San Francisco Chronicle)
- Andy Praschak (The San Juan Star)
- Deb Price (The Detroit News)
- Outstanding Newspaper Overall Coverage
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- USA Today
- The Washington Post
- Wisconsin State-Journal
- Outstanding Magazine Article
- "A Down Low Dirty Shame" by Joshunda Sanders (Bitch)
- "For the Soul of the Church" by Ethan Vesely-Flad (Color Lines)
- "The Gay Rodeo Rides Again" by Michael Joseph Gross (Details)
- "The Murder of a Boy Named Gwen" by Bob Moser (Rolling Stone)
- "What's in a Name?" by Beth Greenfield (Time Out New York)
- Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage
- Outstanding Digital Journalism Article
- "Debajo del Arcoiris" by Emily Alpert (IntheFray.com)
- "Gender Outlaws" by Emily Alpert (IntheFray.com)
- "The Lowdown on the Downlow" by Bruce Dixon (BlackCommentator.com)
- "Now I Get to be Like Everybody Else" by Greg Garber (ESPN.com)
- "Turning Off Gays" by Mark Benjamin (Salon.com)
- Outstanding Music Artist
- Antony and the Johnsons, I Am a Bird Now
- Melissa Etheridge, Greatest Hits: The Road Less Traveled
- Girlyman, Little Star
- Sharon Isbin, Rodrigo, Villa-Lobos, Ponce: Guitar Concertos
- Amy Ray, Prom
- Outstanding Comic Book
- Gotham Central by Greg Rucka and Ed Brubaker (DC Comics)
- Strangers in Paradise by Terry Moore (Abstract Studio)
- Top Ten: The Forty-Niners by Alan Moore (ABC Comics/Wildstorm)
- Y: The Last Man by Brian K. Vaughn (Vertigo/DC Comics)
- Young Avengers by Allan Heinberg (Marvel)
- Outstanding Advertising - Electronic
- "Cupid" - MTV
- "Guy Watcher" - Diet Pepsi
- "New Boyfriend" - Orbitz
- "Signs" - mtvU
- Outstanding Advertising - Print
- "Partnership Registry" - ABC Carpet and Home
- "So What's Cooking in the Kitchen?" - GE Monogram
- "There's One." - American Express
- Outstanding Los Angeles Theater
- Bunbury by Tom Jacobson
- I Am My Own Wife by Doug Wright
- Porcelain by Chay Yew
- A Pebble in My Shoe: The Life and Times of John Shelby Spong by Colin Cox
- Pera Palas by Sinan Unel
- Outstanding New York Theater: Broadway & Off-Broadway
- Border/Clash: A Litany of Desire by Staceyann Chin
- The Color Purple book by Marsha Norman, based on the novel by Alice Walker
- Ghetto Superstar (The Man That I Am) by Billy Porter
- Oedipus at Palm Springs by The Five Lesbian Brothers
- Swimming in the Shallows by Adam Bock
- Outstanding New York Theater: Off-Off-Broadway
- Busted Jesus Comix by David Johnston
- Christine Jorgensen Reveals created by Bradford Louryk
- Dress Suits to Hire by Holly Hughes in collaboration with Peggy Shaw and Lois Weaver
- Golden Age by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
- The Lightning Field by David Ozanich
External links
References
- "Snap!". The WOW Report. April 10, 2006. Archived from the original on 2008-11-21. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
- List of Winners: 17th Annual GLAAD Media Awards - Miami Retrieved on November 9, 2008
- List of Winners: 17th Annual GLAAD Media Awards - Los Angeles Retrieved on November 9, 2008
- List of Winners: 17th Annual GLAAD Media Awards - New York City Archived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on November 9, 2008
- List of Winners: 17th Annual GLAAD Media Awards - San Francisco Archived 2007-10-19 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on November 9, 2008
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.