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Congrats to the Koufax Liberal Blogging Award Winners

The Koufax Liberal Blogging Awards winners were announced today. Congrats to all the winners, particularly, Confined Spaces, a blog about the workplace health and safety issues, which won the best single issue category. TalkLeft came in second, and we proudly pass the crown, having won the category in 2002, 2003 and 2004. I'm grateful that TalkLeft did so well among the incredible competition. Thanks to everyone who voted for us.

Major congrats to winners Crooks and Liars (best blog, non professional), Daily Kos (best community blog), Digby (best writing), Firedoglake (best series writing for PlameGate) and Glenn Greenwald of Unclaimed Territory (best new blog.)

The full winner's list is below.

The winners list:

Best Blog -- Non Professional
Crooks & Liars

Best Blog -- Professional or Sponsored
Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo

Best Blog Community
Daily Kos

Most Deserving of Wider Recognition
Echidne of the Snakes

Best New Blog

Glenn Greenwald of Unclaimed Territory

Best Writing
Digby of Hullabaloo

Best Single Issue Blog
Jordan Barab of Confined Space

Best Expert Blog
Pharyngula by P.Z. Myers

Best Group Blog
Shakespear's Sister

Best Post
Bag News Notes for Katrina Aftermath: And Then I Saw These

Best Series
FireDogLake for Plame coverage

Most Humorous Blog
Jesus' General

Most Humorous Post
Dood Abides for The Wizard of Oil

Best State or Local Blog
Bluegrass Report and Tennessee Guerilla Women

Best Commenter
Georgia10

And a big thanks to Wampum for hosting the awards.

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  • Re: Congrats to the Koufax Liberal Blogging Award (none / 0) (#1)
    by squeaky on Mon Apr 03, 2006 at 11:49:01 AM EST
    TL is still the best blog period, in my book. Personally I do not see this blog as a single issue blog; its scope is much wider than legal defense issues. Also as much as the hard work bloggers do, deserves recognition I have a bit of a problem with the award thing in general. I see the blogosphere as collaborative effort which at its best provides many facets of the goings on in what we call the real world. No picture is complete from any one blog, in fact the nature of the blogosphere illuminates the fact that no picture is complete ever, just lots of facets reflecting what may be true. The blogosphere is way more accurate than the prior model of a single historical narrative (the victors) and the vanilla msm news reporting which is archaic at this point. The blogosphere is perhaps the most revealing aspect as to where we are as a culture today. Thanks to all the bloggers who make this possible. And I use the term bloggers to refer to all who participate, not just the creators of the individual blogs.