Congratulations to the winners of the 2002 Third Coast Festival Competition. The recipient of the 2002 Lifetime Achievement Award was Pulitizer Prize-winning radio veteran and historian Studs Terkel
Best Documentary: Gold Award

  Yes, There is a Baby by Jonathan Goldstein, Alex Blumberg and Ira Glass

In the 1940's, when he was 16 years old, Myron Jones was allowed to stay up late any night of the week and to hang out at bars or where ever he pleased. Their mother barely let his older sister Carol out of the house at all. So the siblings devised a plan - they invented an imaginary family that required Carol's babysitting services late into the night and sometimes for entire weekends. Through Myron’s and Carol’s remembrances of this time in their lives, it becomes clear that the imaginary family is everything that their actual family was not: happy, whole and innocent of the layers of deception that separated the children from their mother. Yes, There is a Baby aired on This American Life, on January 5, 2001. (24:47)
Best Documentary: Silver Award

  If by Sherre DeLys and John Jacobs

A young patient, reinvents his experience of being in the hospital through metaphor and allusion. Responding to "what if" questions, Andrew exemplifies the transformative qualities of fantasy, empathy and humor. The "New Children's Hospital at Westmead," (Sydney, Australia) with its extraordinary art collection, gardens and aviary, and even its own radio station, was the initial inspiration for this piece. Made for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, If aired on Deutschland Radio, Berlin, on June 15, 2001. (7:24)
Best Documentary: Bronze Award

  My So-Called Lungs by Joe Richman and Laura Rothenberg

Laura Rothenberg is 21 years old, but likes to say that she’s already had her mid-life crisis. Laura has cystic fibrosis, a genetic disorder that affects the lungs and other organs. People with CF live an average of 30 years. Two years ago, Laura was given a tape recorder and since that time she has been keeping an audio diary of her battle with the disease and her attempts to lead a normal life with lungs than often betray her. My So-Called Lungs aired on NPR on August 5, 2002. (21:52)
Best Documentary: Honorable Mention

  Grey Ghostby Allan Coukell

Grey Ghost is the story of one man and a bird --or possibly just of one man. It is also the story of an obsession. The man is Rhys Buckingham, a "freelance ornithologist" from New Zealand. The bird is the South Island Kokako, a grey, crow-sized songbird which, most experts agree, is now extinct. Mr. Buckingham has spent a lifetime in the forest listening for the bird and is determined with proving its existence. However, his search has been dogged by almost unbelievable reversals and bad luck. Grey Ghost aired on Radio New Zealand, on July 21, 2002. (24:27) [Image courtesy of StirlingImages.co.nz]
Best Documentary: Honorable Mention

  Remembering Kent State, 1970 by Mark Urycki

When thirteen students were shot by Ohio National Guard Troops during a war demonstration on the Kent State University Campus in May, 1970, four young lives were ended and a nation was stunned. More than 30 years later, the world at war is a different place, but that incident remains scorched into an Ohio hillside. Through archival tape and interviews, Remembering Kent State tracks the events that led up to the shootings. Aired on WKSU-FM on May 5, 2002. (59:10)

Best Documentary: Director's Choice

  Annapurna: Memories in Sound by Aaron and Bronwyn Ximm

Annapurna: Memories in Sound is an impressionistic sound portrait of the Ximms' trek through the Annapurna Circuit, a popular three-week hiking trip through the Himalayas to Nepal. It was posted at quietamerican.org, starting July 2002. (38:00)

Best New Artist

  Affairs of the Mind by Kyla Brettle

Affairs of the Mind is a personal and confrontational story exploring the nature of jealousy and the parameters of infidelity. The documentary follows a private detective, Steve Murray, through the process of a marital investigation that tracks his client's transition from doubt to certainty. Along the way we examine why Murray himself is drawn to this line of work and discover what his vengeful and mostly female clients are really getting for their money. Affairs of the Mind aired on ABC – Radio National on July 27, 2002. (48:04)
Public Service Award

  Corrections, Inc. by John Biewen of American RadioWorks

The corrections industry has become a $50-billion-a-year business and one of the strongest influences on criminal justice policy in America. In Corrections, Inc., American RadioWorks correspondent John Biewen investigates how unions, corporations and law enforcement agencies all benefit from a full and expanding prison system, and how some of these vested interests work to influence sentencing and other law enforcement policies. Aired on NPR member stations on April 23, 2002. (50:31)
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