News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Cannabis Campaign - IOS Wins Unique Freedom Award |
Title: | UK: Cannabis Campaign - IOS Wins Unique Freedom Award |
Published On: | 1998-05-10 |
Source: | Independent, The (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 10:32:29 |
CANNABIS CAMPAIGN - IOS WINS UNIQUE FREEDOM AWARD
The Independent on Sunday has won a special award for "Commitment against
Censorship".
In a ceremony held at north London's Alexandra Palace to mark this year's
"18 Awards" for adult media and entertainment, the newspaper was praised for
its influential campaign to decriminalise cannabis use in Britain, which
began last September. Judges, from print and broadcast media, singled out
the IOS campaign as worthy of its own unique award.
The event was hosted byMark Lamarr and Ulrika Jonsson. The IOS award was
accepted by Real Life's Callum McGeoch.
Others awarded for helping to push back social boundaries included Time Out
magazine, former Independent columnist Helen Fielding, comedian Paul
Whitehouse and the controversial radio broadcaster Chris Morris. The Prodigy
won in the best music category, Crash as best film for 1997 and the Royal
Academy of Art's Sensation show was picked as best exhibition.
The awards, in their second year, are designed to encourage freedom of
expression. They are organised by Henry Cobbold and his company Wambam, the
same group behind the newly-launched national "Classification not
Censorship" campaign.
"This was the most important award of all," said Mr Cobbold, heir to the
Knebworth estate. "Papers are becoming more and more conservative, but of
all the broadsheets the IOS is the one that stands out."
In keeping with the Mardi Gras theme of the evening, the waiters and
waitresses wore only body paint and the walls of the palace were decorated
with nude living statues.
Checked-by: "Rolf Ernst"
The Independent on Sunday has won a special award for "Commitment against
Censorship".
In a ceremony held at north London's Alexandra Palace to mark this year's
"18 Awards" for adult media and entertainment, the newspaper was praised for
its influential campaign to decriminalise cannabis use in Britain, which
began last September. Judges, from print and broadcast media, singled out
the IOS campaign as worthy of its own unique award.
The event was hosted byMark Lamarr and Ulrika Jonsson. The IOS award was
accepted by Real Life's Callum McGeoch.
Others awarded for helping to push back social boundaries included Time Out
magazine, former Independent columnist Helen Fielding, comedian Paul
Whitehouse and the controversial radio broadcaster Chris Morris. The Prodigy
won in the best music category, Crash as best film for 1997 and the Royal
Academy of Art's Sensation show was picked as best exhibition.
The awards, in their second year, are designed to encourage freedom of
expression. They are organised by Henry Cobbold and his company Wambam, the
same group behind the newly-launched national "Classification not
Censorship" campaign.
"This was the most important award of all," said Mr Cobbold, heir to the
Knebworth estate. "Papers are becoming more and more conservative, but of
all the broadsheets the IOS is the one that stands out."
In keeping with the Mardi Gras theme of the evening, the waiters and
waitresses wore only body paint and the walls of the palace were decorated
with nude living statues.
Checked-by: "Rolf Ernst"
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