Wilson da Silva: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] --> |
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| birth_place = [[Brazil]] |
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| nationality = Australian |
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In October 2009, da Silva created and hosted six Science in the Pub sessions for the Quantum to Cosmos festival at [[Perimeter Institute]] in [[Waterloo, Ontario|Waterloo]], Ontario, and also hosted two Quantum to Cosmos panels. In his opening panel, he asked nine physicists, "what keeps you awake at night?"<ref>{{cite web|title=''Speakers''|url=http://q2cfestival.com/speakers|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120120180231/http://q2cfestival.com/speakers|archivedate= 20 January 2012 |publisher=[[Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics]]|accessdate=2014-07-22}}</ref> After departing as editor-in-chief of ''Cosmos'' in 2013, he has stated that he plans to "sit back and either get back into films or maybe write some books."<ref>{{cite podcast | title = The Skeptic Zone #245| url = http://skepticzone.libsyn.com/the-skeptic-zone-244-23-june-2013 | publisher = [[Richard Saunders (skeptic)|Richard Saunders]] | date = 30 June 2013| accessdate = 2014-07-22}}</ref> |
In October 2009, da Silva created and hosted six Science in the Pub sessions for the Quantum to Cosmos festival at [[Perimeter Institute]] in [[Waterloo, Ontario|Waterloo]], Ontario, and also hosted two Quantum to Cosmos panels. In his opening panel, he asked nine physicists, "what keeps you awake at night?"<ref>{{cite web|title=''Speakers''|url=http://q2cfestival.com/speakers|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120120180231/http://q2cfestival.com/speakers|archivedate= 20 January 2012 |publisher=[[Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics]]|accessdate=2014-07-22}}</ref> After departing as editor-in-chief of ''Cosmos'' in 2013, he has stated that he plans to "sit back and either get back into films or maybe write some books."<ref>{{cite podcast | title = The Skeptic Zone #245| url = http://skepticzone.libsyn.com/the-skeptic-zone-244-23-june-2013 | publisher = [[Richard Saunders (skeptic)|Richard Saunders]] | date = 30 June 2013| accessdate = 2014-07-22}}</ref> |
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He makes frequent appearances on radio and television in Australia, including breakfast TV shows ''[[Sunrise (Australian TV program)|Sunrise]]'' and ''[[Today ( |
He makes frequent appearances on radio and television in Australia, including breakfast TV shows ''[[Sunrise (Australian TV program)|Sunrise]]'' and ''[[Today (1982 TV program)|Today]]'', and has spoken at many public lectures and conferences, among them the UNESCO [[World Science Forum]], the EuroScience Open Forum, and Japan's annual Science and Technology in Society Forum. Born in [[Brazil]] of Portuguese ancestry, he now lives in Sydney. |
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== Filmography == |
== Filmography == |
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== Awards == |
== Awards == |
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Latest revision as of 09:48, 15 March 2024
Wilson da Silva | |
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Born | Brazil |
Occupation | Feature Writer, Science Journalist and Editor |
Nationality | Australian, Portuguese, Brazilian |
Notable awards | AFI Best Documentary (2000) Publishers Australia Editor of the Year (2005, 2006) |
Wilson da Silva is an Australian feature writer, science journalist, editor and documentary filmmaker who has worked in magazines, newswires, newspapers, television and online. He is a co-founder and the long-serving former editor of Cosmos, an Australian science magazine.
Career
[edit]Da Silva has been an on-air science reporter and producer for Australian Broadcasting Corporation television, a staff journalist on The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald newspapers, a foreign correspondent for Reuters, science editor of ABC Online, a correspondent for London's New Scientist magazine, and served as managing editor of the science magazines Newton, 21C and Science Spectra.[1]
He was the founding Content Director of the Waterloo Global Science Initiative, and Moderator of Equinox Summit: Energy 2030, the inaugural meeting at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Canada, which sought to apply science and technology to global problems.[2] From 2006–09, he was editor-in-chief of the Green Lifestyle Magazine, an environmental consumer lifestyle title that was the country's first carbon neutral magazine and produced on 100% recycled paper.
He is the creator of HELLO FROM EARTH, a web-based initiative to send messages from the public, each just 160 characters in length, to Gliese 581d, the nearest Earth-like planet outside the Solar System. Created as a science communication exercise for 2009 National Science Week in Australia, it collected nearly 26,000 messages that were beamed by NASA's Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex on 28 August 2009.[3]
The winner of 32 awards, including Editor of the Year (twice – in 2005 and 2006, Publishers Australia Excellence Awards),[4] the 1997 Human Rights Award for Print Journalism and the 1996 Michael Daley Award for Science Journalism. He has also written and produced two prize-winning documentaries, including The Diplomat, the film that depicted Nobel Peace laureate José Ramos-Horta and his eventually successful struggle to win independence for East Timor. The film won da Silva and fellow producer Sally Browning the 2000 Australian Film Institute Award for Best Documentary[4].
Da Silva served as president of the World Federation of Science Journalists, the Australian Science Communicators, and The Australian Museum Society, and as a board member of the Australian Society of Authors. He is one of the founders of Science in the Pub, an innovative public communication initiative which was jointly awarded the 2000 Eureka Prize for the Promotion of Science.
In October 2009, da Silva created and hosted six Science in the Pub sessions for the Quantum to Cosmos festival at Perimeter Institute in Waterloo, Ontario, and also hosted two Quantum to Cosmos panels. In his opening panel, he asked nine physicists, "what keeps you awake at night?"[5] After departing as editor-in-chief of Cosmos in 2013, he has stated that he plans to "sit back and either get back into films or maybe write some books."[6]
He makes frequent appearances on radio and television in Australia, including breakfast TV shows Sunrise and Today, and has spoken at many public lectures and conferences, among them the UNESCO World Science Forum, the EuroScience Open Forum, and Japan's annual Science and Technology in Society Forum. Born in Brazil of Portuguese ancestry, he now lives in Sydney.
Filmography
[edit]Australian Broadcasting Corporation
[edit]Year | TV Show | Story | Role | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Catalyst | Baroness and the Brain | Reporter | 5:11 |
2000 | Quantum | Roman Theatre | Producer, writer, presenter | 4:41 |
2000 | Quantum | Mirror Matter | Producer, writer, presenter | 7:55 |
2000 | Quantum | Bomb Snooper | Producer, writer, presenter | 4:50 |
1999 | Quantum | The Computer CSIRAC | Producer, writer, presenter | 5:15 |
1999 | Quantum | Frog Killer | Producer, writer, presenter | 4:41 |
1999 | Quantum | Empty Pouches | Producer, writer, presenter | 6:48 |
1999 | Quantum | Mining the Deep | Producer, writer, presenter | 6:31 |
1999 | Quantum | Oils Ain't Oils | Reporter | 7:44 |
1999 | Quantum | Dying Eyes | Producer, writer, presenter | 7:18 |
1999 | Quantum | Baby Skin | Writer, presenter | 4:57 |
1999 | Quantum' | Malaria Vaccine | Co-Producer, writer, presenter | 5:03 |
1999 | Quantum | Requiem for the Toothfish | Producer, writer, presenter | 9:15 |
1999 | Quantum | Planet Hunters | Co-Producer, writer, presenter | 9:03 |
1999 | Quantum | Can You Catch a Heart Attack? | Co-Producer, writer, presenter | 7:38 |
1999 | Quantum | Electron Man | Writer, presenter | 7:54 |
1999 | Quantum | Cosmic Antigravity | Producer, writer, presenter | 9:07 |
1998 | Quantum | Troubled Waters | Producer, writer, presenter | 10:01 |
1998 | Quantum' | Girl Talk | Writer, presenter | 6:08 |
1998 | Quantum | Premature Concerns | Writer, presenter | 9:58 |
1998 | Quantum | Roman Lead | Producer, writer, presenter | 6:53 |
1998 | Quantum | Thorium Reactors | Writer, presenter | 7:17 |
1998 | Quantum | Male Contraceptive | Writer, presenter | 5:46 |
1998 | Quantum | Landscape Archaeology | Writer, presenter | 9:22 |
1998 | Quantum | Mind's Eye | Writer, presenter | 9:40 |
1998 | Quantum | Passing the Bug: The End of Antibiotics? | Co-Producer, writer, presenter | 27:30 |
Independent Documentaries
[edit]Year | Film | Role | Notes | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | The Diplomat | Producer & Writer | Documentary centred on Nobel Peace Prize-winner José Ramos-Horta and his 24-year struggle to liberate of East Timor from occupation by Indonesia. | Feature 81 mins, other 56 mins |
Awards
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (November 2021) |
Year | Category | Awards | Publication/Program | Result | Nominees |
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2020 | Higher Education Journalist of the Year | Universities Australia and National Press Club of Australia | "The Good Earth" in Australian Geographic | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
2017 | Single Article of the Year | Publish Awards | "The Quantum Gamble" in Ingenuity | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
2012 | Best App on Mobile or Tablet | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine – iPad edition | Runner-up | Heather Catchpole, Lucy Glover, Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2010 | Editor of the Year | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Highly Commended | Wilson da Silva |
2009 | Magazine of the Year | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2009 | Best Consumer Magazine | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2009 | Best Digital Engagement Strategy | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | HELLO FROM EARTH | Winner | Wilson da Silva, Dean Turnbull, John Pickerel and Heather Catchpole |
2008 | Lord Mayor's Sustainability Award | City of Sydney Business Awards | Cosmos Media Pty Ltd | Winner | Kylie Ahern and Wilson da Silva |
2008 | Environmental Business Award | City of Sydney Business Awards | Cosmos Media Pty Ltd | Winner | Kylie Ahern and Wilson da Silva |
2008 | Sustainability in Publishing | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | Cosmos Media Pty Ltd | Winner | Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2007 | Consumer Magazine of the Year | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | G: The Green Lifestyle Magazine | Winner | Sara Phillips, Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2006 | Editor of the Year | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
2006 | Best Opinion Series | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
2006 | Magazine of the Year | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2006 | Best Consumer Magazine | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva and Kylie Ahern |
2012 | Best Publisher | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | Cosmos Media Pty Ltd | Winner | Kylie Ahern, Wilson da Silva and Alan Finkel |
2005 | Editor of the Year | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
2005 | Best Consumer Magazine Cover | Publishers Australia Excellence Awards | COSMOS Magazine | Winner | Rodney Lochner, Frank Linden and Wilson da Silva |
2001 | Rudolf Vrba Award | One World Film Festival, Prague | The Diplomat | Winner | Sally Browning and Wilson da Silva |
2001 | Margrit & Robert Mondavi Prize | California Wine Country Film Festival | The Diplomat | Winner | Sally Browning and Wilson da Silva |
2000 | AFI Award for Best Documentary | Australian Film Institute | The Diplomat | Winner | Sally Browning and Wilson da Silva |
2000 | Eureka Prize for Promotion of Science | Australian Museum Eureka Prizes | Science in the Pub | Winner | Robyn Stutchbury, Michael Burton, Paul Willis and Wilson da Silva |
2000 | Austcare Media Award | Austcare Awards | The Diplomat | Winner | Sally Browning and Wilson da Silva |
2000 | Bronze Award | International Medical Film Competition | Passing the Bug: The End of Antibiotics? | Winner | Wilson da Silva and Richard Corfield |
2000 | Golden Maile Award | Hawaii International Film Festival | The Diplomat | Winner | Sally Browning and Wilson da Silva |
2000 | Award for Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking | Real Life on Film Festival | The Diplomat | Winner | Sally Browning and Wilson da Silva |
1998 | Medical Research Journalism Award | Australasian Medical Research Journalism Awards | Passing the Bug: The End of Antibiotics? | Highly Commended | Wilson da Silva and Richard Corfield |
1997 | Human Rights Award for Print Journalism | Human Rights Awards | Australian Financial Review Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
1996 | Michael Daley Award for Science Journalism | Michael Daley Awards for Science, Technology and Engineering Journalism | The Age | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
1996 | George Munster Award for Freelance Journalism | Australian Centre for Independent Journalism | The Age | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
1996 | Excellence in Biotechnology Journalism | Amgen Awards | 21C Magazine | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
1996 | Human Rights Award for Print Journalism | Human Rights Awards | The Age | Highly Commended | Wilson da Silva |
1992 | Journalism Award | Royal Australian Chemical Institute Awards | Reuters | Winner | Wilson da Silva |
References
[edit]- ^ da Silva, Wilson (February 2009). "Profile of a Science Journalist: Wilson da Silva, Editor of COSMOS". Cosmos. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
- ^ "The Equinox Summit: Energy 2030 Team". Waterloo Global Science Initiative. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
- ^ "About Us". Cosmos. Archived from the original on 17 September 2013. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
- ^ a b "Wilson da Silva | Cosmos". cosmosmagazine.com. Archived from the original on 11 August 2018. Retrieved 11 August 2018.
- ^ "Speakers". Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Archived from the original on 20 January 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
- ^ "The Skeptic Zone #245" (Podcast). Richard Saunders. 30 June 2013. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
External links
[edit]- Professional website of Wilson da Silva
- Selected articles by Wilson da Silva
- TV science stories, interviews and panels by Wilson da Silva
- Cosmos, the Australian popular science magazine
- Green Lifestyle Magazine in Australia.
- Science in the Pub
- World Federation of Science Journalists website
- Quantum to Cosmos
- Quantum to Cosmos Opening Panel
- Brazilian people of Portuguese descent
- Australian people of Portuguese descent
- Brazilian emigrants to Australia
- Naturalised citizens of Australia
- Living people
- Australian science writers
- Australian science journalists
- Australian magazine editors
- Australian documentary filmmakers
- Australian television journalists
- Australian people of Brazilian descent
- People from Santos, São Paulo
- The Sydney Morning Herald people