Blogs

  • News
  • |
  • Art
  • |
  • History
  • |
  • Food and Travel
  • |
  • Science
Dinosaur Tracking

Where paleontology meets pop culture

Hominid Hunting

Meet the members of the tangled human family tree

Innovations

How human ingenuity is changing the way we live

Surprising Science

Ideas, news and discoveries from the world of science


February 15, 2009

Dispatch from AAAS–Big Fish and other Award-Winning Stories

This weekend, fellow blogger Sarah and I are writing from the AAAS Annual Meeting in Chicago.

If you ever get a chance to attend an AAAS meeting, by all means, go. It’s basically a greatest hits of science conference. The scientists are under orders to make their talks comprehensible to a non-specialist audience (some are better at this than others), and the organizers pick some of the most charismatic, entertaining, and even sometimes hammy speakers. Smithsonian readers will be familiar with some of this year’s rock stars: Svante Paabo, Sean B. Carroll, Neil Shubin, Lene Vestergaard Hau, and many others.

The meeting draws hundreds of science writers from around the world. One of the highlights for us is the AAAS Science Journalism Awards ceremony. It’s always held at a great venue: when the meeting was in Seattle, they rented out the Music Experience Project; in St. Louis we partied at the Gateway Arch. This year’s event was held at the Art Institute of Chicago. (Well, in a tent out back–a heated tent. We did get to see their new Edvard Munch exhibit, though. That guy had some issues.)

Congratulations to this year’s winners! I highly recommend the broadcast winner, Judgment Day: Intelligent Design on Trial, about the Dover School Board “if we call creationism a ‘science,’ we can teach it in science class” case.

And do check out the online winner, Megafishes, even though it was produced by Smithsonian.com’s arch-nemesis, National Geographic News. (I’m not complaining–I was on the judging panel that recommended this package for the award.) It’s about some of the biggest and most utterly absurd fish in the world.



***

Sign up for our free email newsletter and receive the best stories from Smithsonian.com each week.

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free

Advertisement



Follow Us



Travel with Smithsonian






Advertisement