Complete list of 2011 Peabody Awards

March 31, 2011 at 4:57PM

This list includes comments by the Peabody judges.

Who Killed Doc? (KSTP-TV)

The St. Paul-Minneapolis station's investigation of a Minnesota sailor's ill-explained death in Iraq has the Armed Forces reexamining everything from shower safety to how families of the fallen are notified.

The Promised Land with Host Majora Carter (American Public Media)

If there's such a thing as eye-opening radio, Carter's series, devoted to helping her audience envision a more just, sustainable world, is it.

Justified (FX)

Part morality play, part character study, this engrossing modern-day Western drama sets its showdowns in the wild, wild east of Appalachian Kentucky.

Great Performances: Macbeth (PBS)

Director Rupert Goold takes Shakespeare's bloody tragedy on location to the countryside and the trenches to riveting effect.

Coverage of the Gulf Oil Spill (CNN)

The science, the economics, the politics, the toll on human livelihoods and animal lives - CNN's coverage of the Deepwater Horizon disaster defined comprehensive.

Radiolab (WNYC-FM)

Immersive and boundlessly imaginative, the series uses pithy prose and state-of-the-art sound to illuminate complicated scientific and philosophical subjects.

The Pacific (HBO)

The Pacific theater of World War II proves to be gripping theater indeed in this richly detailed miniseries.

Sherlock: A Study in Pink (PBS)

The venerable Victorian sleuth is audaciously updated for our high-tech times, and the game is afoot all the quicker.

Lucia's Letter (WGCU-FM)

A literal cautionary tale, the harrowing "letter" is a composite of several young Guatemalan women's enslavement by "coyotes" hired to smuggle them into the United States.

LennonNYC (PBS)

A portrait of John Lennon's life and work, after he chose to make New York his home, it's beautifully composed and lovingly rendered but not blind to his imperfections.

Burma VJ (HBO)

The documentary chronicles the heroic ingenuity of underground video journalists (VJs) who captured the 2007 Burmese human-rights protests - and the brutal government retaliation - on handy cams and smuggled the video out to the web and the world.

Men of a Certain Age (TNT)

A series about three longtime pals, "regular" guys, navigating middle age, it's comical, poignant and harrowing, sometimes all at once.

Bitter Lessons (WFAA-TV)

The Dallas station's investigation exposed abuses by government-funded "career" schools that provide poor training and sometimes leave desperate students deeper in debt than they started.

Trafficked: A Youth Radio Investigation (NPR/All Things Considered)

A wide-ranging expose of America's child-sex trade, it was made especially powerful by first-person accounts by teen victims.

Independent Lens: Reel Injun: On the Trail of the Hollywood Indian (PBS)

A Cree filmmaker takes an affectionate but nonetheless pointed look at how movies have portrayed and misrepresented Native Americans over many decades.

Magic & Bird: A Courtship of Rivals (HBO)

Not your average sports biography by a long jump shot, it examines the different cultures from whence these NBA legends sprang, their unusually long rivalry and their unlikely friendship.

Covering Pakistan: War, Flood and Social Issues (NPR )

Islamabad-based correspondent Julie McCarthy goes beyond the headline disasters, making the country vividly individual with reports on topics like child labor, blasphemy laws and the plight of war widows.

Wonders of the Solar System with Brian Cox (Science Channel)

In this amazing, simulated travelogue, the boyish physicist flies us to the moon and lets us play among the stars. And gawk.

Seeking Justice for Campus Rapes (NPR and npr.org)

With first-person interviews and computer-assisted records checks, an NPR investigative unit documented how perpetrators of sexual assaults on college campuses often face few or no consequences.

Degrassi: My Body Is a Cage (TeenNick)

True to its history, the durable high-school serial's two-parter about a transgender teen neither trivializes nor overdramatizes its subject

C-SPAN Video Library (cspan.org/videolibrary)

Every program C-SPAN has shown since 1987, from State of the Union addresses to budget hearings, is now available and searchable online - for free.

My Lai (PBS)

The worst atrocity in American military history is given new meaning and significance in the documentary enriched by fresh interviews and never-before-heard audio made by the original Pentagon investigators.

The Moth Radio Hour (Public Radio Stations)

Storytelling, likely the oldest art, is revered and reinvigorated by this weekly hour for everyday raconteurs.

For Neda (HBO)

A powerful portrait of Neda Agha-Soltan, martyr, and the larger Iranian struggle for freedom, this documentary was filmed on the sly and at great risk in Tehran.

Behind the Bail Bond System (NPR/All Things Considered and Morning)

Changes in the bail bond system are already underway as a result of this three-part expose of inequities and conflicts that penalize its poorest clients.

12th & Delaware (HBO)

A street corner in Ft. Pierce, Florida, where an abortion clinic and a pro-life center face each other, embodies the ongoing clash over reproductive rights in this thoughtful, fair documentary.

Elia Kazan: A Letter to Elia (PBS)

SDirector Martin Scorsese reflects on the nature of art's influence on artists and how the brilliant but controversial Kazan continues to inspire him.

If God Is Willing and da Creek Don't Rise (HBO)

Spike Lee's team checks up on New Orleans five years after Katrina hit and the levees broke and documents the city's successes and failures in a video patchwork by turns beautiful, depressing and optimistic.

Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children (BBC Four)

Filming undercover with great ingenuity and courage, Xoliswa Sithole and Jezza Newman documented the horrible conditions, especially for the young, in Zimbabwe.

William Kentridge: Anything Is Possible (PBS)

The multi-faceted Kentridge is creativity personified, a one-man seminar, and he gave filmmakers from ART21 a veritable all-access pass to his mind and work process.

30 for 30 (ESPN)

Commissioned for the sports channel's 30th anniversary, these 30 diverse documentaries about sports in America, well, they shoot, they score.

POV: The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers (PBS)

A fascinating true-life political thriller, Ellsberg's remembrance of his historic actions is made even more compelling by the inventive presentation.

Report on a New Generation of Migrant Workers in China (Phoenix InfoNews Channel)

The report by Hong Kong's Phoenix Satellite Television poses hard questions about the ramifications of China's continuing urban migration.

Reality Check: Where Are the Jobs? (WTHR-TV)

The Indianapolis station's digging revealed the Indiana Economic Development Corporation's job-creation claims were grossly overstated and that companies given tax-incentive to create employment had actually axed workers by the hundreds.

Temple Grandin (HBO)

Claire Danes is remarkable as the autistic animal-expert and author, and the biography is further enriched by visual creativity that lets viewer occasional glimpse the world as Grandin experiences it.

The Lord Is Not on Trial Here Today (WILL-TV)

A beautifully researched documentary by a Champaign, Illinois, station, it examines a First Amendment case critical to the establishment of separation of church and state in public schools.

The Cost of War: Traumatic Brain Injury; Coming Home a Different Person (www.washingtonpost.com)

A fascinating, poignant multimedia report, it details the experiences of five different wounded soldiers and the science behind their medical treatment.

The Wounded Patrol (PBS)

The documentary is a dark, troubling tale of a military health system overwhelmed by psychiatric casualties and of one platoon's post-traumatic nightmare.

The Good Wife (CBS)

In this densely layered dramatic series, the dutiful wife of a disgraced politician resumes her legal career and finds satisfaction, self-worth and moral quandaries of her own.

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