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May 1, 2007 12:49 PM PDT

Webby Award winners: Mentos, ninjas, and 'The Office'

by Caroline McCarthy
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The winners of the 11th Annual Webby Awards, which are devoted to "honoring excellence on the Internet," have been announced. Encompassing nearly 70 categories in Web sites, interactive advertising, mobile media, and online video, this year's winners ran the gamut from a site devoted to cute photos of baby animals to the hit NBC sitcom The Office.

Each category had five official nominees, and within each category there was a judge-picked winner as well as a "Peoples' Voice" winner chosen by a popular vote. (In some categories, the same site won both awards.) A full list of winners is available here.

There was a distinct emphasis on the media-sharing sites that have popped up over the past few years: the Yahoo-owned photo-sharing site Flickr won in three categories: Community, Best Practices, and Design-Function; and video blogging platform Blip.tv won in the "Broadband" category." Viral video, too, was also heavily recognized. Costumed video podcaster Ask A Ninja was selected for a "Best Actor" award in the Film & Video division, while "Lonelygirl15" actress Jessica Rose earned the "Best Actress" title. There was a separate award for the best in viral phenomena, which was won by The Extreme Diet Coke & Mentos Experiments video in which two guys in lab coats set off soda geysers.

The "Person of the Year" awards, appropriately enough, went to YouTube co-founders Steve Chen and Chad Hurley.

But not all of the winners fit the profile of user-generated online content: NBC's The Office won in the "Best Comedy" category for its short "webisodes." And in the awards presented for design, major corporations dominated: Sony.com earned a "Best Home/Welcome Page" award; Ikea Dream Kitchen was recognized for its navigation features; and Altoids won in the category for the best food or beverage site.

The Webby Awards, first held in 1996, are presented by the Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, a group that counts musician David Bowie (who was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award this year), The Simpsons creator Matt Groening, and Virgin Atlantic chair Richard Branson among its members. This year, the Academy says that it received over 8,000 nominations from 60 different countries.

Caroline McCarthy, a CNET News staff writer, is a downtown Manhattanite happily addicted to social-media tools and restaurant blogs. Her pre-CNET resume includes interning at an IT security firm and brewing cappuccinos. E-mail Caroline.
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Ninja!
by Solaris_User May 1, 2007 2:02 PM PDT
Ninja do not give there real names in award shows.
Reply to this comment
by SpyingForLying October 23, 2009 8:34 AM PDT
Has anyone else noticed how spot on the acting, body language, and gestures we are seeing in this season? I have been impressed with how every second of the show we are seeing clear expressions and gestures! Thanks to the people who give us this show. I write a little about it on my blog at http://www.spyingforlying.com/2009/10/office-season-6-ep7-lover.html
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