Primetime Emmy Award For Exceptional Merit In Documentary Filmmaking
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Primetime Emmy Award For Exceptional Merit In Documentary Filmmaking
The Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking is handed out annually at the Creative Arts Emmy Award The Creative Arts Emmys are a class of Emmy Awards presented in recognition of technical and other similar achievements in American television programming. They are commonly awarded to behind-the-scenes personnel such as production designers, set ... ceremony since 2005. Entries are reviewed by a jury on the basis of the "filmmaker's expressed vision, compelling power of storytelling, artistry or innovation of craft, and the capacity to inform, transport, impact, enlighten, and create a moving and indelible work that elevates the art of documentary filmmaking." Entrants are ineligible for Outstanding Informational Series or Special and Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special. Winners and nominations 2000s 2010s 2020s Total awards by network * HBO – 10 * PBS – 5 * Nat Geo – 2 * A&E – 1 * CNN – 1 * Netflix – 1 * Pluto - 1 Ref ...
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Primetime Emmy Award
The Primetime Emmy Awards, or Primetime Emmys, are part of the extensive range of Emmy Awards for artistic and technical merit for the American television industry. Bestowed by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (ATAS), the Primetime Emmys are presented in recognition of excellence in American primetime television programming. The award categories are divided into three classes: the regular Primetime Emmy Awards, the Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards to honor technical and other similar behind-the-scenes achievements, and the Primetime Engineering Emmy Awards for recognizing significant contributions to the engineering and technological aspects of television. First given out in 1949, the award was originally referred to as simply the " Emmy Award" until the International Emmy Award and the Daytime Emmy Award were created in the early 1970s to expand the Emmy to other sectors of the television industry. The Primetime Emmy Awards generally air every September, on th ...
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Voices Of American Troops From The Battlefields Of Iraq
Voices or The Voices may refer to: Film and television * ''Voices'' (1920 film), by Chester M. De Vonde, with Diana Allen * ''Voices'' (1973 film), a British horror film * ''Voices'' (1979 film), a film by Robert Markowitz * ''Voices'' (1995 film), a film about British composer Peter Warlock * ''Voices'' (2007 film), a South Korean horror film * ''The Voices'', a 2014 horror comedy film * "Voices" (''Ghost Whisperer''), an episode of the TV drama Literature * ''Voices'' (Indriðason novel), a 2006 translation of a 2003 crime novel by Arnaldur Indriðason * ''Voices'' (Le Guin novel), a 2006 novel by Ursula K. Le Guin * ''Voices'' (magazine), a monthly English literary magazine 1919–1921 *''The Voices'', a 1969 book by Joseph Wechsberg *''The Voices'', a 2003 novel by Susan Elderkin * ''Voices'', the former journal of The Association for Feminist Anthropology Music * ''Voices'', former name of the a cappella group ''Voices in Your Head'' * ''Voices'' (Briti ...
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Nancy Dubuc
Nancy Jean Dubuc is an American businesswoman who currently serves as chief executive officer of the American-Canadian media company Vice Media. Early life and education Dubuc is the daughter of Carol D. Smith and Robert H. Dubuc Jr. Her parents later separated and remarried, giving Dubuc step-parents. She was raised in Bristol, Rhode Island, graduated from Lincoln School in 1987 and Boston University in 1991 after rowing on the school's Division I crew team. Her mother ran one of Rhode Island's most successful catering companies. Calling her "a hard-driving, entrepreneurial woman", Dubuc credits the "directness" and strong opinions of her mother as inspiring her own leadership style. In 1997, she married Michael Rashid Kizilbash, an Iranian-American copyeditor, in a Roman Catholic ceremony in Rhode Island. She has a son and a daughter. Career Dubuc briefly worked in NBC's publicity department before leaving to become a producer at ''The Christian Science Monitor'' and the Boston ...
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Showtime (TV Network)
Showtime is an American pay television, premium television television network, network owned by Paramount Media Networks, and is the flagship property of the namesake parent company, Showtime Networks, a part of Paramount Media Networks. Showtime's programming primarily includes Art release#Film, theatrically released Feature film, motion pictures and Original series, original television program, television series, along with boxing and mixed martial arts matches, occasional stand-up comedy television special, specials, and Television film, made-for-TV movies. Headquartered at Paramount Plaza on the northern end of New York City's Broadway (Manhattan), Broadway district, Showtime operates eight 24-hour, linear Multiplex (television)#Pay television multiplexes, multiplex channels; a traditional subscription video on demand service; and two proprietary streaming media, streaming platforms, the TV Everywhere offering Showtime Anytime (which is included as part of a subscription to th ...
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Peter Van Sant
Peter Van Sant (born February 21, 1953) is an American television news reporter and correspondent for '' 48 Hours''. Early life and education Van Sant was born on February 21, 1953, in Seattle, Washington. He graduated cum laude from Washington State University in 1975 with a bachelor's degree in Communications. Career After graduation Van Sant worked for KAPY-LP in Port Angeles, WA. He joined KMVT-TV in Twin Falls, Idaho, in 1975. He worked for Cedar Rapids-based KCRG-TV from 1976 through 1977, and from 1977 through 1978 for Omaha-based KETV. In 1978 he joined KOOL-TV in Phoenix, Arizona, as weekend anchor and reporter. In 1982 he moved to Dallas and worked at WFAA-TV until 1984. In 1984 Van Sant joined CBS News and worked in Atlanta as a correspondent for CBS Evening News for the next six years. His investigative report on high number of medical helicopter crashes won him his first Emmy Award in 1986. In 1989 he was assigned to the London bureau from where he reported on th ...
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Joe Halderman
Robert Joel "Joe" Halderman (born October 1957) is a television news writer, director, former producer for CBS News, and convicted felon. Halderman was found guilty of attempted extortion of talk show host David Letterman. Career Born in Dayton, Ohio, Halderman began his journalistic career in 1980 at CNN in New York City. He was hired as a sound man and then became a cameraman, a writer and an assignment editor. In 1982, he went to work for CBS News, first on the national assignment desk and then, as a producer on the '' CBS Morning Show'' with Diane Sawyer and Bill Kurtis. In 1986, he produced the CBS specials ''AIDS Hits Home'' and ''48 Hours on Crack Street.'' He became a foreign reporter who travelled to more than 70 countries, and was responsible for war reportage from nations such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, and Bosnia. He was stationed in London for 12 years, throughout the 1990s, from where he reported on events in the Soviet Union and, later, Russia. In 1992, ...
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Two Days In October
''Two Days in October'' is a 2005 documentary film about the Battle of Ong Thanh and the protest at the University of Wisconsin–Madison during the Vietnam War. Both events occurred in October 1967. The film aired on the PBS series ''American Experience'' during season 18. The film is based on the book, '' They Marched Into Sunlight'' written by David Maraniss. The film won a Peabody Award in 2005. The film consists of interviews with American soldiers, their families, Viet Cong soldiers, protesting students, police officers, and university faculty and administrators. Soldiers discuss the deadly jungle ambush of American troops by a much larger Viet Cong force, while those who were at the University of Wisconsin-Madison describe how a protest against Dow Chemical, the maker of napalm Napalm is an incendiary mixture of a gelling agent and a volatile petrochemical (usually gasoline (petrol) or diesel fuel). The name is a portmanteau of two of the constituents of the origi ...
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Matthew O'Neill (filmmaker)
Matthew O'Neill is a documentary filmmaker best known for his work on the HBO film ''Baghdad ER'', for which he and co-creator Jon Alpert won three Emmy Awards. He and Alpert were nominated for a 2010 Academy Award for their film '' China's Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province'' about the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. They were nominated again for a 2013 Academy Award for their film ''Redemption'' about individuals in New York City, known as canners, who survive by collecting cans and bottles from trash and recycling bins and redeeming them for money. Also co-producer of the Life of Crime: 1984-2020 which was nominated for a 2021 Peabody Award. He has been involved with Downtown Community Television Center since 1997. He primarily produces films about subjects outside the United States including ''In Tahrir Square: 18 Days of Egypt's Unfinished Revolution'' (2011) about the Egyptian Revolution for HBO, ''Turkey's Tigers'' (2006) about the rise of religious Islamic bus ...
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Jon Alpert
Jon Alpert (born c. December 13, 1948) is an American journalist and documentary filmmaker, known for his use of a cinéma vérité approach in his films. Life and career A native of Port Chester, New York, Jonathan B. Alpert is a 1970 graduate of Colgate University, and has a black belt in karate. Alpert has traveled widely as an investigative journalist and has reported from Vietnam, Cambodia, Iran, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Cuba, China, and Afghanistan. He has made films for NBC, PBS, and HBO. Over the course of his career, he has won 16 Emmy Awards and three DuPont-Columbia Awards. He has been nominated for a 2010 Academy Award in the category of Best Documentary, Short Subject for '' China's Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province''. He was nominated for a 2012 Academy Award in the same category for ''Redemption''. Alpert won the Erikson Institute Prize for Excellence in Mental Health Media with co-director Ellen Goosenberg Kent for their documentar ...
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Baghdad ER
''Baghdad ER'' is a documentary released by HBO on May 21, 2006. It shows the Iraq War from the perspective of a military hospital in Baghdad. It has some relatively disturbing scenes in it (e.g. amputations), therefore the U.S. Army is officially warning that military personnel watching it could experience symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). After being given a Peabody Award, the show was featured in the April 13, 2007 broadcast of NPR's ''Fresh Air''. Awards and nominations Awards * Emmy Awards: ** Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking ** Outstanding Cinematography for Nonfiction Programming – Single-Camera ** Outstanding Directing for Nonfiction Programming ** Outstanding Sound Editing for Nonfiction Programming – Single or Multi-Camera * Peabody Award ** 200666th Annual Peabody Awards
May 2007.


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58th Primetime Emmy Awards
The 58th Primetime Emmy Awards were held on Sunday, August 27, 2006, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California on NBC at 8:00 p.m. ET (00:00 UTC) with Conan O'Brien hosting the show. The ceremony attracted 16.2 million viewers, 2.5 million fewer than the previous year's ceremony, but still the ratings winner for the week. The Discovery Channel received its first major nomination this year. This awards show was the first in fourteen years to be held in August because of NBC's request; because of ''NBC Sunday Night Football'', the ceremony moved to accommodate NFL Kickoff Weekend. A new voting system determined nominees in particular categories (mostly lead acting and outstanding series categories) by a "blue ribbon" panel of judges, which resulted in the exclusion of popular shows such as ''Desperate Housewives'' and ''Lost'', and actors like Hugh Laurie from ''House''. ''Lost''s exclusion was mocked during the opening sequence ( see below), when O'Brien, accomp ...
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2006 In Television
2006 in television may refer to: *2006 in Albanian television * 2006 in American television * 2006 in Australian television * 2006 in Belgian television * 2006 in Brazilian television *2006 in British television *2006 in Canadian television * 2006 in Croatian television *2006 in Czech television * 2006 in Danish television * 2006 in Dutch television *2006 in Estonian television * 2006 in French television * 2006 in German television * 2006 in Indonesian television * 2006 in Irish television * 2006 in Israeli television * 2006 in Italian television * 2006 in Japanese television *2006 in New Zealand television * 2006 in Norwegian television * 2006 in Pakistani television * 2006 in Philippine television * 2006 in Polish television * 2006 in Portuguese television * 2006 in Scottish television *2006 in South African television This is a list of South African television related events from 2006. Events *25 March - Radio DJ Zuraida Jardine and her partner Michael Wentink win the first ...
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