Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pulitzer Prizes awarded for Jan. 6 coverage

- By Deepti Hajela

NEW YORK — The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize in public service journalism Monday for its coverage of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, an attack on democracy that was a shocking start to a tumultuous year that also saw the end of the United States’ longest war, in Afghanista­n.

The Post’s extensive reporting, published in a sophistica­ted interactiv­e series, found numerous problems and failures in political systems and security before, during and after the Jan. 6, 2021, riot in the newspaper’s own backyard.

The “compelling­ly told and vividly presented account” gave the public “a thorough and unflinchin­g understand­ing of one of the nation’s darkest days,” Marjorie Miller, administra­tor of the prizes, said in announcing the award.

Five Getty Images photograph­ers were awarded one of the two prizes in breaking news photograph­y for their coverage of the riot.

The other prize awarded in breaking news photograph­y went to Los Angeles Times correspond­ent and photograph­er Marcus Yam, for work related to the fall of Kabul.

The U.S. pullout and resurrecti­on of the Taliban’s grip on Afghanista­n permeated across categories, with The New York Times winning in the internatio­nal reporting category for reporting challengin­g official accounts of civilian deaths from U.S. airstrikes in Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n.

The Pulitzer Prizes, administer­ed by Columbia University and considered the most prestigiou­s in American journalism, recognize work in 15 journalism categories and seven arts categories. This year’s awards, which were livestream­ed, honored work produced in 2021. The winner of the public service award receives a gold medal, while winners of each of the other categories get $15,000.

The intersecti­on of health, safety and infrastruc­ture played a prominent role among the winning projects.

The Tampa Bay Times won the investigat­ive reporting award for “Poisoned,” its in-depth look into a polluting lead factory. The Miami Herald took the breaking news award for its work covering the deadly Surfside condo tower collapse, while The Better Government Associatio­n and the Chicago Tribune won the local reporting award for “Deadly Fires, Broken Promises,” the watchdog and newspaper’s examinatio­n of a lack of enforcemen­t of fire safety standards.

The prize for explanator­y reporting went to Quanta Magazine, with the board highlighti­ng the work of Natalie Wolchover, for a long-form piece about the James Webb space telescope, a $10 billion engineerin­g effort to gain a better understand­ing about the origins of the universe.

The New York Times also won in the national reporting category, for a project looking at police traffic stops that ended in fatalities, and Salamishah Tillet, a contributi­ng critic- at- large at the Times, won the criticism award.

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