';

Mark Stanley, Pulitzer Center

The Pulitzer Center and YouTube recently hosted a film screening of the Project: Report winners' videos at George Washington University in Washington, DC. To date, the Project: Report channel has received over 1 million views, and the Project: Report videos have had over 2.5 million views. The five winners, aspiring journalists who received $10,000 travel grants from the Pulitzer Center for an international reporting project, spoke to the audience about their videos.

Without a Sound, Samantha Danis
Over 193,000 views

The World Mobility Problem, Alex Rozier
Over 250,000 views

For Higher Ground, Mark Jeeveratnam
Over 124,000 views

Florida's "Modern Day Slavery," Paul Franz
Over 320,000 views

Students Combat Violence with Community, Elan Gepner
Over 154,000 views

Project

Project: Report 2010 is a partnership between YouTube and the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, made possible by Sony and Intel. The contest invited aspiring reporters to share their stories with the world.
YouTube's homepage on December 28, 2010.
December 28, 2010 /
Summer Marion, Christina Maria Paschyn
The work of five Project: Report 2010 winners, whose international reporting projects are now underway, was featured on YouTube's December 28 homepage.
December 27, 2010 /
Elan Gepner
Elan Gepner, a winner of the 2010 Project Report contest, explores how several NGOs and activists in Brazil are steering the country's impoverished youth away from lives of crime and violence throu