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2000 Webby Awards

US internet awards ceremony


Summary

US internet awards ceremony

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.

The attendant ceremony and surrounding events were described in the press as "Hollywood-style" Guerrilla marketers from companies that did not get into the event stood on the sidewalk outside to attract attention.

The 27 award winners received a prize of $30,000 each, a first for the event. As in years past, award speeches were limited to five words.

The afterparty took place in nearby Grace Cathedral and in Huntington Park across the street, which had been covered with tents and served food and alcohol donated by restaurants throughout the city. Held on top of Nob Hill, one of the town's largest enclaves of old money, the event took a year to plan and several months of permits. Despite extensive community outreach, and a promise by organizers to pay for restoration of the Fontana delle Tartarughe, a dilapidated fountain in the park as a goodwill gesture, some local residents were vocal in their resentment of the brashness of the Internet industry, and canvassed the neighborhood with protest leaflets.

Future award events were more somber. By the next year's event, one fifth of the 2000 nominees were out of business, and more than half of the winners had been sold, suffered layoffs, or failed. By 2002, there was not enough money available to pay for a live event.

Nominees and winners

:(from http://www.webbyawards.com/webbys/current.php?season=4)

CategoryWinnerPeople's Voice winnerOther nominees
ActivismAd Busters
The Hunger Site
American Civil Liberties Union
Protest Net
The Action Network
ArtWeb Stalker
SFMOMA Presents Bill Viola
EasyLife.Org
netomat
PHON:E:ME
BroadbandVIDEO FARM
Atom Films
Congo Trek
IFILM
WireBreak
CommerceBabyCenter
Amazon
eToys
Gear.com
MobShop
CommunityCafe Utne
Slashdot
ConsumerREVIEW.com's MtbREVIEW
Craigslist
ICQ
EducationMerriam-Webster Word Central
A Science Odyssey
Culture Shock
DNA from the Beginning
Getty ArtsEdNet
FashionPaul Smith
toddoldham.com
FashionUK
Hint Fashion Magazine
Solemates: The Century in Shoes
GamesGameSpy Industries
Shockwave.com
Gamasutra
Happy Puppy
The Station
Movie & FilmAtom Films
Internet Movie Database
Drew's Scripts-O-Rama
IFILM
ProteinTV

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.

References

  1. Dan Fost. (2004-05-13). "Party's gone, but the Webby awards go on:Winners of best Internet sites receive e-mail notification". San Francisco Chronicle.
  2. Evelyn Nieves. (2001-07-20). "After Last Year's Bacchanal, a Quieter Webby Party". New York Times.
  3. Rachel Rosmarin. (2006-06-09). "Webbys 2.0". Forbes.
  4. Dan Levy. (2000-05-10). "Squabble on the hill:Takeovers of S.F. park by Web awards show distresses some neighbors". San Francisco Chronicle.
  5. "Movie & Film".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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