Imperial Valley Press

NY’s Gov. Andrew Cuomo to receive Internatio­nal Emmy for virus briefings

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is set to soon receive an Internatio­nal Emmy award for his once-daily televised briefings on the coronaviru­s pandemic that killed tens of thousands of New Yorkers this spring.

The Internatio­nal Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, whose members include media and entertainm­ent figures from over 60 countries and 500 companies, announced Friday it plans to present the award to the Democratic governor in a live-streamed show Monday.

Internatio­nal Academy President & CEO Bruce L. Paisner said Cuomo is being honored with the academy’s Founders Award for using his briefings to inform and calm the public. Previous recipients include former Vice President Al Gore, Oprah Winfrey, and director Steven Spielberg.

“The governor’s 111 daily briefings worked so well because he e ectively created television shows, with characters, plot lines, and stories of success and failure,” he said. “People around the world tuned in to find out what was going on, and New York tough became a symbol of the determinat­ion to fight back.”

Cuomo used his more than 100 Powerpoint-driven slideshows and his sometimes emotional, sometimes acerbic style to provide daily updates and detail his administra­tion’s e orts to shutter the economy and avoid prediction­s of as many as 100,000 people hospitaliz­ed at once.

The pandemic peaked in early-to-mid April, when over 18,000 people were hospitaliz­ed at once and hospitals and nursing homes reported as many as 800 deaths in one day.

New York has reported at least 34,187 deaths of people due to COVID-19, according to data from John Hopkins University & Medicine. And at least 6,600 residents have died in nursing homes, according to state data, which doesn’t state how many nursing home residents died in hospitals.

The number of daily infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths plummeted as Cuomo slowly reopened the state’s economy this summer, when about 1% of tests were coming up positive.

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