duPont Awards

Director Malachy Browne on the January 6th “Day of Rage”

“We understood the magnitude of the event fairly early on and the need to start collecting evidence…That's how we think of this. As evidence, not just cover or B-roll.”

— New York Times Visual Investigations Lead Malachy Browne on the January 6 Capitol riots.

“Day of Rage” is a New York Times visual investigation of the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol. Co-director Malachy Browne explains what it was like to organize and dissect thousands of hours of footage from “one of the most documented acts of political violence ever.”


Revisiting Ira Glass Behind the Scenes at This American Life

In 2019, This American Life founder, host, and producer Ira Glass gave his special brand of insight into how he crafts “This American Life,” from story inception, to reporting, writing, and production. We revisit his preeminent editorial style that paved the way for generations of narrative docu-style podcasters.

Director Loira Limbal’s Heartfelt Homage to Working Mothers

“I felt like I don't have to tell you how brutal racial capitalism is in the United States if I am showing you. I wanted capitalism to indict itself in the film.”

--- director and producer Loira Limbal

In her 2022 duPont Award-winning documentary “Through the Night,” filmmaker Loira Limbal intimately captured the burdens on working mothers and puts a mirror to America’s daycare system, reflecting back the darker sides of capitalism.

Nanfu Wang’s Brave COVID Doc Draws Dramatic Parallels

“Finding people who praise the government is easy. Finding people who are critical of the government is easy. What is the most difficult is convincing some people who are ordinary citizens who have information to come out and speak up. ”

--- director and producer Nanfu Wang

Filmmaker Nanfu Wang assumed a risk few dared during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic in China. In her 2022 duPont Award-winning documentary, “In the Same Breath,” Wang and her team take their cameras into Wuhan’s hospitals to reveal the disparities between the devastating reality of the pandemic versus the rosy depiction Chinese officials painted for the masses. She details the logistical and emotional difficulties of creating such a film inside an authoritarian country on strict crackdown against freedom of speech – all amid a deadly pandemic.

CBS News Anchor Norah O’Donnell On Her Toughest Story Yet: Sexual Assault in the U.S. Military

“For those of us that are in civilian life, if you were a victim of abuse or harassment, you would go to the police, right? In the military, it's handled internally…it's like a family. It's very difficult for the commander who is a parent to then want to kick a child out of the military for something they've done.”

--- CBS News Managing Editor and Anchor Norah O’Donnell

CBS News Anchor, reporter, and editor Norah O’Donnell exposes gross mishandling of sexual assault cases inside the U.S. military, in her 2022 duPont-Columbia award-winning broadcast, “Military Sexual Assault.”

Speaking to families of victims, government officials, and dozens of victims, she sheds a damning light on the abuse the military tried to keep quiet.

Tracing Trauma With WNYC’s KalaLea

“There were literally holes in the newspaper...that related to what happened during the Tulsa Race Massacre. That just stuck with me. I remember thinking, I have to go look into this and see if that is reality.”

--- WNYC host and reporter KalaLea, “Blindspot: Tulsa Burning”

WNYC’s KalaLea talks about how her 2022 duPont Award-winning podcast series immerses listeners in the past, while threading the impact of generational trauma through to the present.

NPR’s Laura Sullivan Talks Trash

“The most important thing that people need to understand when they're looking at plastic is that it is trash. It is not valuable. It cannot and will not be turned into something new without great expense that nobody's going to pay for.”

--- NPR correspondent Laura Sullivan, “Waste Land”

Reporting for NPR’s Planet Money, investigative correspondent Laura Sullivan found herself sifting through boxes of decades-old archives, and stumbled upon 50-year-old oil and gas industry trade notes. They led her to one compelling central source – a regretful oil “big whig” – and down a reporting path about the damning history and the questionable future of plastic recycling.

Ed Ou on his NBC News documentary about policing mental illness.

“I think it would be nice if this documentary was kind of like a road map for law enforcement to be the best versions of themselves as they can be.”

— Ed Ou, Co-Director "A Different Kind of Force: Policing Mental Illness”

In a candid conversation, video journalist Ed Ou reflects on his 2021 duPont Award-winning documentary, A Different Kind of Force—Policing Mental Illness, for which he embedded with a San Antonio police unit specifically geared to deal with mental health crises.

Ou discusses the ethics of covering the mentally ill, the challenge of telling stories with great moral complexity, and his own run in with police when he was assaulted covering a Minneapolis protest.

"Ear Hustle's" Earlonne Woods and Nigel Poor

“When a person goes to prison, the last image usually people have of them is in the courtroom... By the time we talk to a person it’s 15, 20 years later. And this is a totally different person.”

-- Ear Hustle co-creator, co-producer and co-host Earlonne Woods

Nigel Poor and Earlonne Woods reflect on their 2021 duPont-award winning project, “Ear Hustle,” a podcast series produced inside San Quentin State Prison in California. They discuss the project’s origins, the challenges of building trust and producing stories within a prison system, and their journalistic approach to telling difficult stories about complex and sometimes controversial subjects.

Isobel Yeung on her duPont Award-winning report “India Burning”

“I'm sometimes heartwarmed and sometimes I'm frustrated. Sometimes I'm reminded that, you know, the power of storytelling can be so amazing and that people really do care and people can empathize with cultures beyond their own. And then sometimes you see the frenzy of social media and what's going on in America and then you get really frustrated.“


VICE Senior Correspondent Isobel Yeung reflects on her 2021 duPont award-winning work, “India Burning.” She discusses the rise of anti-Muslim discrimination in India, the tension between spotlighting the oppressed and keeping them safe, and the broader challenge of making an American audience care about foreign news.

Nicole Newnham and Jim LeBrecht on their duPont Award-winning documentary Crip Camp

“Our lived, authentic experience is not only important... but it adds to the breadth of the kind of stories people are reading about. If we're a missing color in the landscape of journalism, it's just a little grayer without us.”

Crip Camp Directors Jim LeBrecht and Nicole Newnham discuss the importance of including unrecognized voices to the journalism landscape as they reflect on the six year challenge of melding dual roles as subject and filmmaker, of weaving civil rights history with human stories...and how Barack and Michelle Obama helped them figure it all out.


Radiolab's Jad Abumrad and OSM's Shima Oliaee on Reporting “The Flag and the Fury”

“Mississippi is very particular. It's the state with the most lynchings. It's a state that just holds so much hurt, national hurt. And so the flag is symbolic of that, right, because this was the last state in the Union that had the Confederate emblem on their flag.”

Radiolab Host and producer, Jad Abumrad, on the history and meaning of the Mississippi state flag, the subject of the 2021 duPont-Award winning podcast episode “The Flag and the Fury”

KSTP News Director Kirk Varner On Covering George Floyd’s Murder and a Summer of Protest

“She began to describe what was on the clip. And the first question was, are we going to put video on the air of someone being killed? That's obviously a very bright line, editorial decision that you don't make every day. And normally we wouldn't. But to understand the sequence of events and what happened, you needed to see all of it”

- KSTP News Director, Kirk Varner describing the 5am phone call that alerted him to the video of George Floyd’s murder.

David Ushery of WNBC on Covering Coronavirus from the Epicenter

“I remember my news director came to me and the weekend co-anchor and she said, ‘You know, I don't know that we'll get to this. But hypothetically, if we needed to broadcast from home, can we put a camera in your apartment?’”

WNBC News Anchor David Ushery on how the hypothetical became all too real, as he talks about covering the COVID pandemic in its early epicenter - New York, New York.

The Washington Post's Nadine Ajaka on the Value of Visual Forensics

“Any time you are dealing with an event that has so much scrutiny, the bar is really high. I think we all felt the pressure of, worrying about saying something that could be refuted. And so we really just focused on the visuals and what do the visual show, because that is kind of irrefutable.”

- 2021 duPont award winner Nadine Ajaka ofThe Washington Post on the challenges of reconstructing the violent clearing of Lafayette Square by federal officers.

Radiolab's Latif Nasser on Finding "The Other Latif"

“It's a story of a guy who was locked in a room and the key was thrown away 20 years ago. This guy never got charged. He never got a trial. That is medieval. That is not a thing that should happen in a modern country, especially a country that prides itself on life, liberty and due process and justice.” - Radiolab’s Latif Nasser on his podcast series, The Other Latif

Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Mark Whitaker on Reconstruction: America After the Civil War

“The greatest enemy of democracy is interference with the right to vote.” -- Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr.

On our latest episode of On Assignment, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. relates his 2020 duPont-winning documentary series Reconstruction: America After the Civil War to events of today with duPont juror Mark Whitaker.

Director John Ridley and his team on uncovering the stories of the 1992 Los Angeles Uprising

“John really insisted on using the word “uprising.” Because as I'm keenly aware, based on my background, one person's riot is another person's uprising, depending on which side of the equation you're sitting.” - ABC News Producer Jeanmarie Condon on the language used in “Let it Fall: Los Angeles 1982-1992.”

This month’s On Assignment podcast revisits the deep reporting behind the 2018 duPont-Award winning documentary, linking the decade up to the Rodney King beating with the 1992 uprising that followed. Director John Ridley and ABC News Producers Jeanmarie Condon, Melia Patria and Fatima Curry discuss the film’s ongoing relevance as America faces a racial reckoning after the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and so many others.