Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Nominees and winners  





2 References  





3 External links  














1999 Webby Awards







Add links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The 1999 Webby Awards were held on March 18, 1999, at the Herbst Theater (War memorial Opera House) in San Francisco, California. IDG, which still owned the awards organization, continued to retain Tiffany Shlain to produce the awards even though the magazine division she had been working for had been shut down. Mayor Rudy Giuliani had lobbied to move the ceremony to New York City, but San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown interceded with Schlain by promising the city's support, including hosting a post-award party at the newly remodeled City Hall.[1]

Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin arrived wearing rollerblades and metallic capes, and remained in the opera hall lobby to grant interviews while most guests were watching the awards in the theater. The event was noted for the famous incident in which a representative of Jodi.org, which had won in the arts category, called the event participants "Ugly corporate sons-of-bitches" in his acceptance speech and tossed his trophy to the audience.[2] The organizers asked PricewaterhouseCoopers to tabulate and ensure security for the "People's Voice" winners, chosen by online voting.[3]

Nominees and winners[edit]

(from http://www.webbyawards.com/webbys/winners-1999.php?y=1999)[permanent dead link]
Category Webby Award winner People's Voice winner Other nominees
Art jodi.org

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Doors of Perception

(Archived 9 February 1999 via Wayback)

Last Will and Testament

(Archived 8 February 1999 via Wayback)

SFMOMA Presents Bill Viola

(Archived 12 October 1999 via Wayback)

The multi-cultural Recycler

(Archived 17 January 1999 via Wayback)

Commerce Amazon.com

(Archived 18 February 1999 via Wayback)

eBay

(Archived 22 February 1999 via Wayback)

CDNOW

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

The Gap Online

(Archived 18 April 1999 via Wayback)

The Tire Rack

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Community SeniorNet

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

iVillage.com

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

MiningCo.com

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

Talk City

(Archived 24 April 1999 via Wayback)

Third Age

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

Education Journey North

(Archived 27 April 1999 via Wayback)

N/A Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators

(Archived 20 April 1999 via Wayback)

The Global Schoolhouse

(Archived 18 April 1999 via Wayback)

The Math Forum

(Archived 18 April 1999 via Wayback)

Web66

(Archived 23 April 1999 via Wayback)

Fashion PaperMag

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

London Fashion Week

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Hint Magazine

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

Lumiere

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

w.&l.t. online

(Archived 25 February 1999 via Wayback)

Financial Services The Motley Fool

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

ClearStation

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

E-Loan

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

Investor Home

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

The Wall Street Journal

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

Games Gamers Central

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

N/A Digital Addiction

(Archived 20 April 1999 via Wayback)

Java on the Brain

(Archived 18 April 1999 via Wayback)

Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

ShockRave

(Archived 17 April 1999 via Wayback)

Health InteliHealth

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Mayo Clinic Health Oasis

(Archived 18 April 1999 via Wayback)

mediconsult.com

(Archived 17 April 1999 via Wayback)

onhealth

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

thriveonline

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Humor The Onion

(Archived 17 April 1999 via Wayback)

Bezerk

(Archived 17 April 1999 via Wayback)

Red Meat

(Archived 8 February 1999 via Wayback)

Suck

(Archived 24 April 1999 via Wayback)

The Simpleton

(Archived 25 February 1999 via Wayback)

Living BabyCenter

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

Epicurious

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

Garden.com

(Archived 8 February 1999 via Wayback)

The Knot

(Archived 18 February 1999 via Wayback)

The Yuckiest Site on The Internet

(Archived 24 April 1999 via Wayback)

Movie and Film Internet Movie Database

(Archived 1 September 1999 via Wayback)

Coming Attractions

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

Dark Horizons

(http://www.darkhorizons.com)

Film.com

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

Ireland Film and Television Net

(Archived 23 February 1999 via Wayback)

Music SonicNet

(Archived 23 April 1999 via Wayback)

mp3

(Archived 21 April 1999 via Wayback)

bobdylan.com

(Archived 17 April 1999 via Wayback)

Spinner

(Archived 9 February 1999 via Wayback)

The Ultimate Band List

(Archived 18 April 1999 via Wayback)

News CNN Interactive

(Archived 20 June 2000 via Wayback)

BBC News Online

(Archived 21 April 1999 via Wayback)

MSNBC

(Archived 18 February 1999 via Wayback)

Rough & Tumble

(Archived 10 February 1999 via Wayback)

The New York Times

(Archived 23 February 1999 via Wayback)

Politics and Law The California Voter Foundation

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

Free! The Freedom Forum Online

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

FindLaw

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

OpenSecrets

(Archived 8 February 1999 via Wayback)

Web White & Blue

(Archived 19 March 1999 via Wayback)

Print and Zines Salon Magazine

(Archived 17 April 1999 via Wayback)

Smithsonian Magazine

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

Feed

(Archived 19 February 1999 via Wayback)

Nerve

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

Slate

(Archived 23 April 1999 via Wayback)

Radio Freespeech Internet Television

(Archived 25 February 1999 via Wayback)

Spinner

(Archived 9 February 1999 via Wayback)

ImagineRadio

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

Internet Underground Music Archive

(Archived 25 February 1999 via Wayback)

SonicNet

(Archived 23 April 1999 via Wayback)

Science Exploratorium

(Archived 25 February 1999 via Wayback)

NASA Space Science Laboratory

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

Scientific American

(Archived 18 February 1999 via Wayback)

The University of Arizona - The Biology Project

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

Union of Concerned Scientists

(Archived 19 February 1999 via Wayback)

Sports SportsPages.com

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

The Sporting News

(Archived 23 February 1999 via Wayback)

GolfWeb

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

Quokka Sports

(Archived 22 February 1999 via Wayback)

SoccerNet

(Archived 20 April 1999 via Wayback)

Television PBS Online

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

Comedy Central

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

Gist TV Listings

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

TVGen

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

UltimateTV

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

Travel biztravel.com

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Travelocity

(Archived 12 December 1998 via Wayback)

Expedia Travel

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

Lonely Planet On-line

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

TerraQuest

(Archived 2 March 1999 via Wayback)

Webby Technical Achievement Amazon.com

(Archived 18 February 1999 via Wayback)

My Yahoo!

(Archived 8 February 1999 via Wayback)

AltaVista Translation with Systran

(Archived 21 April 1999 via Wayback)

ConferenceTracker

(http://N/A)

FedEx

(Archived 24 February 1999 via Wayback)

Weird Superbad.com

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

Absurd.org

(Archived 20 February 1999 via Wayback)

Disinformation

(Archived 22 April 1999 via Wayback)

Trepan.com

(Archived 24 April 1999 via Wayback)

Unamerican Activities

(Archived 21 February 1999 via Wayback)

References[edit]

Winners and nominees are generally named according to the organization or website winning the award, although the recipient is, technically, the web design firm or internal department that created the winning site and in the case of corporate websites, the designer's client. Web links are provided for informational purposes, both in the most recently available archive.org version before the awards ceremony and, where available, the current website. Many older websites no longer exist, are redirected, or have been substantially redesigned.

  1. ^ "Glitz, goofiness mark Webby Awards ceremony". CNN. 2000-05-12. Archived from the original on 2007-12-30. Retrieved 2008-01-02.
  • ^ Rachel Chalmers (March 22, 1999). "Usual Suspects Takes Webbies in Five Words or Less". Computergram International. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.
  • ^ "PricewaterhouseCoopers Address On-Line Balloting Issues for Webby Awards". Business Wire. 1999-03-17. Retrieved 2008-01-03.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1999_Webby_Awards&oldid=1157551825"

    Categories: 
    Webby Awards
    1999 awards in the United States
    1999 in San Francisco
    March 1999 events in the United States
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles using small message boxes
    Incomplete lists from December 2014
    All articles with dead external links
    Articles with dead external links from March 2019
    Articles with permanently dead external links
     



    This page was last edited on 29 May 2023, at 10:58 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki