awards

logo 2nd Annual Sex Positive Journalism Awards Seeking Entries

Read anything in your local (or national) paper that reported on sex in a surprisingly informed, non-hysterical way? The Sex-Positive Journalism Awards want to know about it.

Last’s year’s winners were selected from over 100 entries submitted by both writers and readers, and they covered subjects from sex in nursing homes, prostitution, and sex in Iran to Kink.com and panics over Internet sex. The winning articles were published in a dozen states in all corners of the United States (and one Canadian province), and represent a range of genres, from news to advice columns.

What they all have in common, however, is that they succeed in embodying the Sex-Positive Journalism Award’s criteria for responsible sex journalism far better than the vast majority of their counterparts, helping to improve the quality of dialogue around sex and create a more well-informed reading public.

But there’s a long way to go. “Mainstream journalists are generally hopeless at covering sexuality. It’s not entirely their fault, but it would be great if this award managed to offer both support to journalists who’d like to do a better job, as well as some needed legitimacy for the subject matter,” wrote About.com’s Sexuality Guide Cory Silverberg when the awards were first announced.

“The media’s frequent failure to apply balanced journalistic standards to sex-related topics affects real people’s lives,” adds Carol Queen, PhD, co-founder of the Center for Sex and Culture.

The winners of the 2009 Sexies will be chosen by an outstanding panel of judges, who have expertise in both journalism and sex-positive advocacy: Dan Savage, author of the popular sex-advice column “Savage Love”; Carol Queen, PhD, writer, speaker, educator, and activist with a doctorate in sexology; Debby Herbenick, PhD, MPH a research scientist and associate director for the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Indiana University and sex columnist; and award-winning journalists Doug Henwood, Liza Featherstone, Amanda Robb, and Kai Wright. (See full bios).

The Sexies will be given for articles in four categories: news, feature, opinion, and regular column, plus “unsexy” (the most egregious violation of the Sexies’ criteria). Articles must have been published in 2008 (2009 articles can be submitted now for next year though) in an edited print or online publication in the U.S or Canada (personal blogs do not quality). Submissions are due by March 31, 2009. Both writers and readers can submit articles for consideration. For full guidelines. To make entries please use our entry form.

The Sexies board is composed of journalists Miriam Axel-Lute and Doug Henwood, The National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, The Center for Sex and Culture, and the Coalition for Positive Sexuality. We are sponsored by Babeland, UltraVirgo Creative and the David Weinbaum Memorial Foundation. We are seeking additional corporate sponsors and individual donations to support our mission. Donations can be made.

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The Sex-Positive Journalism Awards Criteria

We are seeking pieces of journalism that:
* touch on sex, sexual practice, health, or behavior–in some manner (stories just about sexual orientation do not qualify)
* are intended for a general audience
* meet high overall standards of reporting, fact-checking, and writing

and do at least one of the following:
* show evidence of fairness in seeking sex-positive sources to respond to sex-negative ones
* ask hard questions about the motivation and background of sources who rely on sex-negative soundbites
* avoid biased or sensationalistic language
* cover newsworthy topics, events, or issues that might tend to be swept under the rug because of controversial sexual content
* report accurately, respectfully and with nuance on sex research results
* contain fair, accurate, and non-sensational portrayals of sexual subcultures
* keep a clear separation between sex crimes, such as sexual assault or pedophilia, and things that merely make people uncomfortable, such as consensual kink, teen sexuality or gay priests; and help readers who may not be familiar with the issues make the distinction
* specifically challenge sex-negative assumptions or practices in society at large or in a specific community
* educate the public as to the diversity of sexual behavior without sensationalizing
* celebrate sexuality as a positive force in human lives

We are not looking for racy or sensationalistic stories. The awards will be something any traditional journalist should be proud to hang on his or her wall as a testament to journalistic standards of fairness and accuracy about a charged and controversial subject.

722474db Join Me for the Sexies Award Ceremony & Party  Saturday   NYC

Come and celebrate the awarding of the first Sex-Positive Journalism Awards! The awards will be MCed by Lolita Wolf.

The first 100 attendees will get a gift bag of goodies from the Sexies sponsors. There will also be a silent auction and raffle to support the awards, which will include fabulous prizes including original art by Julio Aguilera, Sophy Naess, and David Steinberg; signed copies of books by winners, judges, and supporters; sex toys; gift certificates for sexy pleasures; and more!

Meet the judges and the winners. Judith Levine will talk about her experiences with media coverage of sexual topics when Harmful to Minors was released. Carol Queen will be there. See a full list of winners, judges and more.

The party will be Saturday October. 4, 6:30-9:30pm, in the downstairs lounge of Splash, 50 W. 17th Street, NYC. $5 cover.

Would you like to volunteer and get in free and be guaranteed a goodie bag? Volunteer shifts are only one hour. Contact Susan Wright at wrightnyc at aol dot com

Support the Sexies!

by Viviane on 02/21/2025

in awards

(We’ve been nominated. Yes, I’m pleased. – Viviane)

Friends of sex-positive journalism everywhere hailed the launch of the first ever Sex-Positive Journalism Awards last fall. Now, as the March 23rd deadline for entries approaches, the Sexies board would like to remind all you wonderful sex- positive readers and writers that we can’t do it alone. The awards need to raise another $5,000 to cover their budget and properly award the winners, and we need more entries from mainstream sources (www.sexies.org/submit.php: it’s free to submit entries, and readers can submit as well as writers).“The entries, the encouragement, and the enthusiasm we’ve received tells me that the time was ripe for this award,” says co-founder journalist Miriam Axel-Lute. “But the fact that sex-positive journalism is so rare means we need the help of all of you readers out there to help us turn up those gems of good, objective, sex-positive reporting–especially in mainstream sources–and then to help us be able to afford to get the word out about them.”

The Sexies were launched by the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, the Center for Sex and Culture, Babeland, and Miriam Axel-Lute to promote fair, accurate, and non-sensationalized coverage of sexual topics. The awards are currently accepting entries that meet both high journalistic standards and the Sexies awards criteria.

Here are 10 ways to support sex-positive journalism and the Sexies:

  1. Give money! The Sexies are a labor of love. But love doesn’t pay the bills. If you can give $100, $50, or $25, it will help us promote the awards, cover our expenses, and honor our winners properly. Donate at www.sexies.org/support.html.
  2. Become a corporate sponsor of the Sexies – or connect us with your favorite sex- friendly business that might want to become one. E-mail info@sexies.org for more information.
  3. Submit entries. Yes, readers as well as writers can submit to the Sexies. Articles have to have been published in 2007 and meet high journalistic standards as well as our sex-positive criteria. Full guidelines, criteria, and a submission form are on our website: www.sexies.org. We especially need submissions even ones that
    were merely sex-neutral when everyone else was sex-negative – from mainstream daily newspapers!
  4. Mention the Sexies as a resource in a letter to the editor, especially our sex- positive journalism criteria (www.sexies.org/criteria.html) and resources for journalists (www.sexies.org/resources.html). If you’ve always been meaning to write in to your local paper about their sex-related coverage, good or bad, now’s a great time to do it! (And while you’re at it, write a thank you letter to your favorite sex-pos writer- they’re a lonely bunch!)
  5. Ask your favorite sex-positive publications, and your favorite mainstream ones as well, to cover the Sexies. We think we’re pretty unusual and would make a good story!
  6. Tell everyone you know. Blog about the awards, bring us up at opportune (or inopportune) times with family and friends and your local newspaper editorb&
  7. Make us popular. Join our LiveJournal community (sexposjawards), friend us on Myspace (www.myspace.com/sexposjournalism), post our site on Del.icio.us, Digg us.
  8. Sign up for our announcement list. If you don’t do LiveJournal or Myspace, sign up for our update mailing list, sexies_update@yahoogroups.com, to stay up to speed.
  9. Link to us. Even if you don’t want to make a big fanfare, a link helps us in search-engine rankings.
  10. Donate airline or Amtrak miles to get our winners to an awards ceremony, or to be raffled off for fundraising. You must have enough to redeem for a whole ticket. E- mail info@sexies.org if you’ve got a chunk to offer.

And whatever else you do, read skeptically, support sex-positive writers wherever they write, and stick up for your right to a sex-positive world!

xoxo
–The Sexies Board

finalists banner trans Weve been nominated for the Erotic Awards 2007I’m tardy in announcing this, but the Sex Carnival is a finalist in the British 2007 Erotic Awards!

The Erotic Awards are a project of the Leydig Trust. Its aims are to promote talented people, to act as a catalyst, and to promote pride and excellence in the sex world and to raise funds for the Outsiders charity: “Outsiders is a self-help group for disabled people to gain confidence and find partners. The Club offers members support in asserting their right to a private life, and seeking love in a society where status stems from good looks and money. Outsiders runs the Sex and Disability Helpline, a V-Group for disabled women with sexual problems, a LGBT network and the Sex and Disability Alliance.”

We’re nominated for the “Best Blog” category, that includes both Bitchy Jones and Mon Mouth. Congratulations, guys! I won’t be able to attend the Night of the Senses event at which the awards are given out, but perhaps I’ll give away the tickets, like Mon’s planning to do.

DSGroup DirtySpoke Awards | Gratitude
Gentle readers, thank you for voting! The Sex Carnival has won DirtySpoke’s award for Best Group Sex Blog!

Congratulations to all the winners. You can also view the voting breakdown. Please visit all the winners and show some love.

It’s been a very exciting week – to win both the DirtySpoke and Piper awards in the same week. Maintaining a blog is hard work, on top of the rest of our lives. It’s also much riskier, with the possibility of getting outed or having a blog hacked.

My satisfaction comes when you learn something here you might not have otherwise known about. It’s what I do.

This weekend, I’ll be celebrating this recognition with many of the East Coast based members of the Carnival, and the many members of the Perverts’ Saloon.

For me, it’s auspicious that this is announced today. One year ago, a group of NYC based bloggers, took risks, and met in person for the first time at my NYC apartment. One blogger said to me, “when we’re in a room together, it’s amazing to me how normal we are.” That’s exactly the point. Reading a blog and participating in online communities is just one aspect – there’s no equivalent for actually meeting someone in ‘meatspace.’ We each wear many hats and have many aspects to our lives. Blogging about our experiences helps us integrate it into everything else.

Founding the Carnival, and then the Saloon, has made it possible to transform this loose online community into a more cohesive real life one. There’s respect, friendship, support, and yes, even occasionally some sex, between some of its members. I’ve become real friends with many of them. It’s enriched and changed my life enormously. And for that, I am so grateful.

Thank you so for reading, and honoring all the contributors to the Carnival!