| Awards Nominations – BAFTA Television Awards 2009 |
CURRENT AFFAIRS
Omagh: What The Police Were Never Told (Panorama)
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young continued an already extensive working relationship with producer/director Leo Telling in the making of this documentary. Jonathan shot all location filming and drama reconstructions during the making of this programme. The original award winning film about Omagh for the BBC was also shot in part by Jonathan Young.
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| Guild of Television Cameramen Awards 2009 |
Nomination in Factual Camerawork section
"Explore – The Philippines"
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Guild of Television Cameraman Awards 2009 Nomination Extreme camera work |
Ross Kemp in Afghanistan
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| Royal Television Society Awards 2007-2008 |
| Home Current Affairs
Omagh: What The Police Were Never Told (Panorama)
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| Shortlisted for Grierson Arts Documentary Award |
| PAINTING PARADISE (BBC4 Jan 2007)
60 min. First film in 'Art of Eternity' a 3 part series on early Christian art presented by art historian & critic Andrew Graham-Dixon.
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| Banff World Television Award Nominee |
| Category: Information & Current Affair Programs
Iraq - Legacy Of Hate: The Death Squads
Produced by: QuickSilver Media for Channel 4
Banff World TV awards 2007 nominee
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| RTS Television Journalism Awards – 2005 - 2006 winner |
| Current Affairs - International
Iraq - The Death Squads Quicksilver Media Productions for Channel 4
Jury's comments:
"… brought real insight to bear on the sectarian murder campaign at the centre of Iraq’s civil war. The Jury called it revelatory and ahead of the curve, and its impact was all the greater for the cool and authoritative reporting of Deborah Davies and her team."
Jonathan Young was the lighting cameraman on location in Iraq, Jordan and the USA , working in close co-operation with the programmes producer / director Charlie Hawes and underscoring a long standing working relationship with reporter Deborah Davies.
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| RTS Television Journalism Awards - 2005 |
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Name of winner:
Detention Undercover - The Real Story. BBC Current Affairs for BBC One
Award: Current Affairs - Home
Jury's comments:
"This winning entry dealt with a difficult subject matter and the jury were particularly impressed by the exposure of some genuinely shocking aspects of the way this institution treated some of its inmates."
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young continued an already extensive working relationship with producer and director Jane Fellner in all areas of overt documentary filming and drama reconstructions during the making of this programme.
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| BAFTA TV Awards 2004 |
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Current Affairs nominee "The Secret Agent" for BBC1
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young worked alongside undercover journalist Jason Gwynne filming overt sequences investigating alleged racists in West Yorkshire. Jason and Jonathan have a ten year plus relationship starting on the Cook Report from Central TV and continuing with the BBC series "Hooligans"
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| RTS TV Journalism Awards 2003 - 2004 |
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Current Affairs - Home Nominee:
The Secret Agent
BBC Documentaries & Contemporary Factual for BBC ONE
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young worked alongside undercover journalist Jason Gwynne filming overt sequences investigating alleged racists in West Yorkshire. Jason and Jonathan have a ten year plus relationship starting on the Cook Report fro Central TV and continuing with the BBC series "Hooligans"
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| RTS Television Journalism Awards - 2003 |
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Name of winner:
In The Line of Fire - Panorama, BBC ONE
Award: Current Affairs - International
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young continued a close working relationship with producer Tom Giles. Jonathan worked as the post war incident cameraman in Iraq , investigating the incident some months later in 2003 for the resultant Panorama programme.
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| BAFTA Television Awards 2003 |
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Current Affairs Award winner "The Secret Policeman" for BBC1
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young worked very closely and continued a relationship with producer Toby Sculthorp and undercover reporter Mark Daley over the period of the filming. Filming included overt main camera and some undercover camera work.
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| Broadcast Awards 2001 |
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Winner Best News Programme "Panorama – England’s Shame" BBC 1
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young worked once again with producers Tom Giles and Sam Bagnall shooting many dramatic and overt scenes covering and investigating the 10 days of English football hooliganism that marred the Euro 2000 football championships in Belgium and Holland.
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| BAFTA Televison Awards 2001 |
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Jonathan Young worked as a lighting documentary cameraman on the following programmes that won awards and received nominations at the 2001 BAFTA TV awards
Richard Dimbleby Award For Best Factual / News Presenter Winner – Louis Theroux "Louis Theroux Meets … series" for BBC2
Flaherty Documentary Award Nominee – "Louis Meets The Hamiltons" from Louis Meets series for BBC 2
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| RTS Television Journalism Awards 2000 – 2001 |
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Current Affairs - Home Nominee
Sleepers: Undercover with the Racists, RDF TV for Channel 4
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young worked with the undercover journalist tasked with infiltrating a group of Nottinghamshire racists filming overt documentary scenes for the programme. This programme saw a continuation of a working relationship with Tom Anstiss.
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| RTS Television Journalism Awards 2000 |
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Current Affairs - Home Winner
Who Bombed Omagh? Panorama, BBC One
Programme of the Year
Winner
Who Bombed Omagh? Panorama, BBC One
Lighting cameraman Jonathan Young was to team up again with the successful producer / reporter team of John Ware and E H for this ground breaking programme. Documentary footage for this programme included the extraordinary denouement when the reporter challenged several members of the dissident movement on camera.
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| 1st International Ethnic Film & TV Festival 1997 |
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Highly Commended' camera work on 'The Thin Black Line' BBC Regional Documentary Entry from BBC Midlands
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