A-Mark Prizes

The A-Mark Prizes, a new series of awards recognizing outstanding investigative journalism, are set to expand from a successful pilot program with the Los Angeles Press Club in Southern California to press clubs and other partners around the United States. This expansion recognizes fearless journalism around the country.

The A-Mark Prize for Reporting on Misinformation and Disinformation, first administered by the Los Angeles Press Club in 2023, honors and encourages outstanding journalism. The first place winner receives $4,000 and second and third place winners receive $500 each. Click to view the winners from 2023 and 2024.

Details on the nationwide awards are forthcoming, promising to bring greater recognition and support to investigative journalists across the country.

2023 A-Mark Prize Recipients
2023 A-Mark Prize Recipients
Miranda Green, Mario Ariza, David Folkenflik

An investigative news story that revealed how power utilities in Alabama and Florida manipulated local news media won the first A-Mark Prize for Reporting on Misinformation and Disinformation.

The $4,000 prize went to Miranda Green and Mario Ariza of Floodlight and David Folkenflik of National Public Radio for, “In the Southeast, power company money flows to news sites that attack their critics.”

“This team of reporters painstakingly traced the financial connections, through documents and interviews, between a consulting firm and six news sites in Alabama and Florida to show how money influenced coverage to the detriment of Alabama electric utility customers,” wrote the judges, citing the audio report as, “a prime example of what makes the A-Mark Prize so important.”

The prize was announced at the Los Angeles Press Club’s Southern California Journalism Awards annual gala on June 25, 2023, at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, Calif.

Second prize went to James Rainey of the Los Angeles Times for, “His website skewers Stockton politicians and agencies. Then one gave him a cushy job.” Sam Kestenbaum received third prize for his Rolling Stone article, “‘I Think All the Christians Get Slaughtered’: Inside the MAGA Road Show Barnstorming America.” Second and third place winners received $500 each.

To produce the winning entry, NPR joined with Floodlight, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates the powerful interests stalling climate action.

The judges wrote that their work provided, “A bright shining light on misinformation leading to apparent corruption by those who are supposed to serve the public interest.”