Rhode Island PBS Takes Home 2 Boston/New England Emmy Awards

Newsmagazine ‘Rhode Island PBS Weekly’ and Arts & Culture series ‘ART inc.’ honored for local storytelling

Share
Rhode Island PBS Takes Home 2 Boston/New England Emmy Awards
Copy

Rhode Island PBS Weekly’s “Anti-Graffiti Vigilantes” took home a Regional Emmy Award under the “Arts/Entertainment News” category on Saturday, June 8, 2024, at the 47th Annual Boston/New England Emmy Awards Ceremony. The story, created by reporter Pamela Watts, photographer Dewey Raposo, and executive producer Barbara Dury, chronicles the work of the dedicated volunteer group Anti-Graffiti Vigilantes. The Narragansett, Rhode Island, organization has developed an art method to combat graffiti on coastal rocks, promoting environmental restoration and preservation for two decades.

Arts & culture series “ART inc.” received the station’s second Regional Emmy Award in the “Societal Concerns - Short Form Content” category. The winning piece, titled “Forged in Fire,” was created by producer Lindsey Poole and executive producer Tracy MacDonald. Set at The Steel Yard, a nonprofit industrial art center in Providence, Rhode Island, “Forged in Fire” offers a unique perspective on the critical issue of gun violence. The story features the Metal Lab class, where students engage in open conversations about gun violence while transforming firearms into works of art.

These two wins come after Rhode Island PBS received 19 nominations on April 9, 2024.

You can watch the winning entries below:

ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: “Anti-Graffiti Vigilantes”

  • Pamela Watts, Reporter/Producer
  • Barbara Dury, Executive Producer
  • Dewey Raposo, Photographer

SOCIETAL CONCERNS - SHORT FORM CONTENT: “Forged in Fire”

  • Tracy MacDonald, Executive Producer
  • Lindsey Poole, Producer
From a world-premiere play in Woonsocket to a 12-hour music marathon at Brown and Rhode Island’s biggest Armenian food celebration — here are our top picks for things to do this weekend across the Ocean State
Airport spokesperson Bill Fischer: ‘We are working with every airline that services PVD to understand local impacts’
Dr. Rasha Alawieh remains in Lebanon with five-year ban on her return
Superintendent Dawn Bartz is on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of a legal review that the Smithfield school district hired to investigate the incident of senior football players hazing a Jewish freshman
An independent monitor says the district and RIDE have met the terms of a 2023 settlement that required faster evaluations and placement for 3- to 5-year-olds with disabilities, effectively closing the federal class action case