1998 Webby Awards

Last updated

The 1998 Webby Awards were held on March 6, 1998, at the San Francisco Palace of Fine Arts, [1] and were the first event ever to be broadcast live via the Web in 3D. [2] The "People's Voice" awards, chosen by online poll, received 100,000 cumulative votes that year.

Contents

The Web magazine, which was hosting the awards, was closed down by its parent company IDG shortly before the awards, and the ceremony continued thereafter under the management of Tiffany Shlain, who IDG had hired in 1996 to coordinate the awards. [3] The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences was constituted that year as the judging panel for the awards, continues to do so as of the 2007 awards.

Nominees and winners

Winners and nominees: [4]

CategoryWinnerOther nominees

Net Art

Entropy8

Ada's web
Atlas
RGB Gallery
sfgallery

Community

The WELL

bianca.com
The Palace
Tripod
WBS

Education

StarChild

Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC)
Learn2.com
The Home Education Page
The Smithsonian

Film

The Internet Movie Database

E! Online
Film.com
Mr. Showbiz
Rough Cut

Games

BeZerk

GAMECENTER.COM
GameSpot
Imagine Games
PlaySite

Health

Mayo Clinic Health O@sis

Ask Dr. Weil
Reuters Health Information Services
The Body: A Multimedia AIDS and HIV Resource
thriveonline.com

Home

BabyCenter

Better Homes & Gardens Online
Disney's Daily Blast
Family.com
Virtual Garden

Living

Gurl.com

PlanetOut
SWOON
Virtual Jerusalem
Wedding Channel

Money/Business

The Vanguard Group

International Real Estate Digest
Nolo press Self-Help Law Center
The Financial Aid Information Page
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

Music

Experience Music Project

Addicted to Noise
MTV Online
TheDJ AOL Radio
Tunes.com

News

NEWS.COM

ABCNEWS.com
MSNBC
The New York Times on the Web
Wired News

Politics+Law

CNN/TIME All Politics

Annoy.com
Law Journal EXTRA!
The Black World Today
The Smoking Gun

Print+Zines

Salon Magazine

alt.culture
Literary Kicks
Merriam-Webster
The Libyrinth

Radio

AudioNet

Antique Radios Online
DigiBand Radio
The Art Bell Web Site
Uncle Ricky's Reel Top 40 Repository

Science

Exploratorium: ExploraNet

IBM Patent Server
Mars Pathfinder Mission
Paleontology Without Walls
Scientific American

Sports

CBS Sportsline

CHARGED
ESPN SportsZone
Outside Online
Science of Hockey

Travel

Citysearch New York City

Lonely Planet on-line
Preview Travel
Salon|Wanderlust
Travelocity

TV

PBS Online

GIST TV Listings Guide
NBC.com
Sci-Fi Channel: The Dominion
TV Guide Entertainment Network

Weird

Bert is Evil

BLAIR
Museum of Dirt
The Crash Site
The Onion

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Webby Awards</span> Award for online content

The Webby Awards are awards for excellence on the Internet presented annually by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, a judging body composed of over three thousand industry experts and technology innovators. Categories include websites, advertising and media, online film and video, mobile sites and apps, and social.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tiffany Shlain</span> American filmmaker and author (1970)

Tiffany Shlain is an American filmmaker, artist, and author. Described by the public radio program On Being as "an internet pioneer", Shlain is the co-founder of the Webby Awards and the founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.

NPG Music Club was the official website for Prince from 2001 to 2006, and was named after Prince's New Power Generation band. Based on being one of the first mainstream artists to use the internet as an independent music distribution hub, Prince won a Webby Lifetime Achievement Award for the site in 2006.

The 1999 Webby Awards were held on March 18, 1999, at the Herbst Theater in San Francisco, California. IDG, which still owned the awards organization, continued to retain Tiffany Shlain to produce the awards even though the magazine division she had been working for had been shut down. Mayor Rudy Giuliani had lobbied to move the ceremony to New York City, but San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown interceded with Schlain by promising the city's support, including hosting a post-award party at the newly remodeled City Hall.

The 1997 Webby Awards were the first of the annual Webby Awards, and also the first-ever nationally televised awards ceremony devoted to the Internet. 700 people attended the event on March 6, 1997, at Bimbo's Night Club in San Francisco, California.

Held in San Francisco's Masonic Center for a crowd of 3,000 invited guests, the 2000 Webby Awards were widely considered the peak of the Webby Awards and a watershed of dot-com party culture. The event took place May 11, 2000, shortly before many of the event's perennial nominees and participants suffered business failures in the dot com crash.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 Webby Awards</span>

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The 15th annual 2011 Webby Awards were held on June 13, 2011 in New York City. The show was hosted by Lisa Kudrow and was streamed live via Facebook, The Huffington Post and Funny or Die. The Webby for lifetime achievement was awarded to former Motorola executive, Martin Cooper.

The 13th annual 2009 Webby Awards were held in New York City on June 8, 2009. They were hosted by SNL head writer Seth Meyers, and the lifetime achievement award was given to Jimmy Fallon. The awards were judged by the 650-person International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, and winners were selected from among nearly 10,000 entries from 60 countries and all 50 United States. Voting by the public was available prior to April 30, and over 500,000 votes were cast. The awards ceremony was made available for viewers via the official Webby YouTube channel.

The 14th annual 2010 Webby Awards were held in New York City on June 14, 2010. They were hosted by comedian B. J. Novak, and the lifetime achievement award was given to Vinton Cerf. The awards were judged by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.

The 16th annual Webby Awards for 2012 were held at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City on May 21, 2012, and hosted by comedian Patton Oswalt. Winners were selected from among roughly 10,000 entries and voting by the public for the People's Choice Award was available prior to April 26. The awards ceremony was streamed live in HD on its website.

The 18th annual Webby Awards for 2014 was held at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City on May 19, 2014, which was hosted by comedian and actor Patton Oswalt. The awards ceremony was streamed live at the Webby Awards website.

The 19th annual Webby Awards for 2015 was held at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City on May 19, 2015, which was hosted by comedian and actor Hannibal Buress. The awards ceremony was streamed live at the Webby Awards webpage. Judges from the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences picked the over one hundred winners, which may or may not match the people's choice.

The 20th annual Webby Awards for 2016 was held at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City on May 16, 2016, which was hosted by comedian and actor Nick Offerman. The awards ceremony was streamed live on the Webby Awards website. Judges from the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences picked the over one hundred winners, which may or may not match the people's choice. The Webby for Lifetime Achievement was awarded to The Onion, having earned over 39 Webbys for its humor over the past 20 years.

References

Winners and nominees are generally named according to the organization or website winning the award, although the recipient is, technically, the web design firm or internal department that created the winning site and in the case of corporate websites, the designer's client. Web links are provided for informational purposes, both in the most recently available archive.org version before the awards ceremony and, where available, the current website. Many older websites no longer exist, are redirected, or have been substantially redesigned.

  1. "The Best of the Web: The 1998 Webby Award Winners". PC World. 1998-03-31. Archived from the original on 2012-09-11.
  2. Glenn McDonald (1998-03-10). "1998 Webby Awards: Like the Oscars, Only Funny:San Francisco awards show honors the best Web sites in 19 categories". PC World. Archived from the original on September 5, 2012.
  3. Carolyn Said (1998-07-30). "The Woman Behind the Webbies:S.F., N.Y. woo Web award impresario Tiffany Shlain". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  4. Webby Winners 1998 [ permanent dead link ] March 1998