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WPBT2’S Changing Seas Wins National Academies Award CONTACT: Miami, FL- September 15, 2011 – “Sentinels of the Seas,” an episode of WPBT2’s original production, Changing Seas, is a winner of the 2011 Communications Awards in the Film/Radio/TV category presented by the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering and Institute of Medicine. Supported by the W.M. Keck Foundation since 2003 as part of the Keck Futures Initiative, these prestigious awards recognize excellence in reporting and communicating science, engineering and medicine to the general public. “Sentinel of the Seas” focused on the impacts legacy contaminants are having on Florida’s bottlenose dolphins. “This is a somewhat controversial topic, but we felt it was a very important story to be told,” says producer/writer Alexa Elliott, “few people are aware of the impact high levels of contaminants in the oceans are having not just on marine mammals but on human health as well.” The production team also included Kandra Velez and Veronique Koch, associate producers; Sean Hickey, editor and videographer; Jeremy Nicholson and Allan Farrell, videographers; and Ray Ratliff, graphic designer. The winners were selected from more than 300 print, broadcast and Internet entries. Other winners include Rebecca Skloot for The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks in the Book category, Amy Harmon for her New York Times’ article “Target: Cancer” in the Magazine/Newspaper category, and Andrew Revkin for his New York Times’ “Dot Earth” Blog in the Online category. All recipients will be honored during a ceremony on October 14 at the National Academies’ Keck Center in Washington, D.C. “Sentinels of the Seas” can be screened online at: http://video.wpbt2.org/video/1513526384. Major funding for Changing Seas was made possible by a generous grant from the Batchelor Foundation. About Changing Seas About WPBT2 ### View Sentinels of the Sea here.
PHOTOS: 01. The Changing Seas Team 02. Dolphins
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