Person of the Year
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Person of the Year is an annual issue of United States (U.S.) newsmagazine Time that features a profile on the man, woman, couple, group, idea, place, or machine that "for better or for worse, ...has done the most to influence the events of the year."[1]
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The tradition of selecting a Man of the Year began in 1927, when Time editors contemplated what they could write about during a slow news week. Primarily, they sought to remedy an editorial embarrassment from earlier that year when the magazine did not put aviator Charles Lindbergh on its cover following his historic trans-Atlantic flight.[2] At the end of the year, they came up with the idea of a cover story about Lindbergh being the "Man of the Year."
Since then, a person, group of people (either a team of select individuals or a demographic category), or in two special cases, an invention and the planet Earth, has been selected for a special issue at the end of every year. In 1999, the title was changed to Person of the Year in an effort to avoid sexism; however, the only women to win the renamed award so far were those in 2002 who were recognized as "The Whistleblowers" and, jointly with Bill Gates and Bono, Melinda Gates in 2005. Four women were awarded the title when it was still Man of the Year: Corazon Aquino in 1986, Queen Elizabeth II in 1952, Soong Mei-ling (Madame Chiang Kai-Shek) in 1937 and Wallis Simpson in 1936. Nevertheless, women would also be included in several groups, namely "Hungarian Freedom Fighter" in 1956, U.S. scientists in 1960, "Twenty-Five and Under" in 1966, "The Middle Americans" in 1969, "American Women" in 1974, "The American Soldier" in 2003, and "You" in 2006.
Since 1927, every serving President of the United States has been a Person of the Year at least once with the exceptions of Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover and Gerald Ford.
The December 31, 1999, issue of Time named Albert Einstein the Person of the Century. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Mahatma Gandhi were chosen as runners-up.[3]
The title is often regarded as being an honor, despite the magazine's frequent statements to the contrary.[4] Some speak of the position of "Person of the Year" as being a reward or prize, on the grounds that many admirable people have been given the title, and others such as Osama bin Laden have been ignored. Thus, journalists will frequently describe a new person of the year as having "joined the ranks" of past "winners" such as Martin Luther King. Yet people such as Adolf Hitler (in 1938) and Joseph Stalin (in 1939 and 1942) have also been granted the title.
There was a massive public backlash in the United States after Time named Ayatollah Khomeini as Man of the Year in 1979.[5] Since then, Time has generally shied away from choosing anti-American figures. Time's Person of the Year 2001 — immediately following the September 11, 2001 attacks — was New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani, although the rules of selection ("the individual or group of individuals who have had the biggest effect on the year's news") made Osama bin Laden a more likely choice. The issue which declared Giuliani as Person of the Year included an article that mentioned Time's earlier decision to make Ayatollah Khomeini as Man of the Year in 1979 and the 1999 rejection of Hitler as "Person of the Century." The article seemed to imply that Osama bin Laden was a stronger candidate than Giuliani for Person of the Year and Hitler was a stronger candidate than Albert Einstein for Person of the Century, but they were not ultimately selected due to what the magazine described as their "negative" influence on history. There was also some controversy during the 1998 poll, when wrestler Mick Foley dominated the vote, receiving over 50% of the vote, before his name was removed.
Another criticised choice was the 2006 selection of "You", representing most if not all people for advancing the information age by using the Internet (via blogs, YouTube and MySpace). The Daily Show's Jon Stewart referred to the selection as "a joke", and Slate labeled the selection as "just stupid." However, several other selections have contained large groups, if more discriminate. Stephen Colbert joked that when he received his copy of Time in the mail, he thought Time had picked him as the Man of the Year and sent him a personalized copy just for him.
The online poll for the 2006 person of the year results are as follows: Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez got a 35%. Second was Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at 21%. Then came Nancy Pelosi at 12%, The YouTube Guys 11%, George W. Bush 8%, Al Gore 8%, Condoleezza Rice 5% and Kim Jong-il 2%[6].
| Year | Choice | Lifetime | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1927 | 1902 – 1974 | First and youngest person chosen | |
| 1928 | 1875 – 1940 | ||
| 1929 | 1874 – 1962 | ||
| 1930 | 1869 – 1948 | First non-American person chosen | |
| 1931 | 1883 – 1945 | ||
| 1932 | 1882 – 1945 | First president-elect chosen | |
| 1933 | 1882 – 1942 | ||
| 1934 | 1882 – 1945 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1935 | 1892 – 1975 | First monarch chosen | |
| 1936 | 1896 – 1986 | First female chosen | |
| 1937 | First couple chosen | ||
| 1938 | 1889 – 1945 | The only issue where chosen individual was not pictured on cover | |
| 1939 | 1878 – 1953 | ||
| 1940 | 1874 – 1965 | ||
| 1941 | 1882 – 1945 | 3rd time chosen | |
| 1942 | 1878 – 1953 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1943 | 1880 – 1959 | ||
| 1944 | 1890 – 1969 | ||
| 1945 | 1884 – 1972 | ||
| 1946 | 1879 – 1972 | ||
| 1947 | 1880 – 1959 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1948 | 1884 – 1972 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1949 | 1874 – 1965 | "Man of the Half-Century"; 2nd time chosen | |
| 1950 | Representing Korean War troops; first abstract chosen | ||
| 1951 | 1882 – 1967 | ||
| 1952 | b. 1926 | ||
| 1953 | 1876 – 1967 | ||
| 1954 | 1888 – 1959 | ||
| 1955 | 1893 – 1962 | ||
| 1956 | Abstract choice | ||
| 1957 | 1894 – 1971 | ||
| 1958 | 1890 – 1970 | ||
| 1959 | 1890 – 1969 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1960 | Represented by Linus Pauling, Isidor Rabi, Edward Teller, Joshua Lederberg, Donald A. Glaser, Willard Libby, Robert Woodward, Charles Draper, William Shockley, Emilio Segrè, John Enders, Charles Townes, George Beadle, James Van Allen and Edward Purcell | ||
| 1961 | 1917 – 1963 | ||
| 1962 | 1881 – 1963 | First Pope chosen | |
| 1963 | 1929 – 1968 | ||
| 1964 | 1908 – 1973 | ||
| 1965 | 1914 – 2005 | ||
| 1966 | The Generation Twenty-Five and Under | Abstract choice | |
| 1967 | 1908 – 1973 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1968 | Represented by Frank Borman, Jim Lovell & William Anders | ||
| 1969 | Abstract choice | ||
| 1970 | 1913 – 1992 | ||
| 1971 | 1913 – 1994 | ||
| 1972 | 1913 – 1994 | 2nd time chosen | |
| b. 1923 | |||
| 1973 | 1904 – 1992 | ||
| 1974 | 1906 – 1975 | ||
| 1975 | 1776 – 1974 | Represented by Betty Ford, Carla Hills, Ella Grasso, Barbara Jordan, Susie Sharp, Jill Conway, Billie Jean King, Susan Brownmiller, Addie Wyatt, Kathleen Byerly, Carol Sutton and Alison Cheek | |
| 1976 | b. 1924 | ||
| 1977 | 1918 – 1981 | ||
| 1978 | 1904 – 1997 | ||
| 1979 | 1902 – 1989 | Leader of the Islamic Revolution that overthrew the Shah of Iran. | |
| 1980 | 1911 – 2004 | ||
| 1981 | b. 1943 | Leader of the "Solidarity" movement in Poland. | |
| 1982 | The Computer | "Machine of the Year"; first non-human abstract chosen | |
| 1983 | 1911 – 2004 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1914 – 1984 | |||
| 1984 | b. 1937 | ||
| 1985 | 1904 – 1997 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 1986 | b. 1933 | ||
| 1987 | b. 1931 | ||
| 1988 | Endangered Earth | "Planet of the Year"; abstract choice | |
| 1989 | b. 1931 | "Man of the Decade"; 2nd time chosen; | |
| 1990 | b. 1924 | Bush was referred to as "The Two George Bushes" — this is not a reference to George W. Bush but to how George H.W. Bush was complimented for international affairs and criticized for domestic affairs (including for his quote "Read my lips: no new taxes.")[7] | |
| 1991 | b. 1938 | ||
| 1992 | b. 1946 | ||
| 1993 | The Peacemakers | Represented by Nelson Mandela, F.W. de Klerk, Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin | |
| 1994 | 1920 – 2005 | 2nd Pope chosen | |
| 1995 | b. 1943 | ||
| 1996 | b. 1952 | ||
| 1997 | b. 1936 | ||
| 1998 | b. 1946 | 2nd time chosen | |
| b. 1946 | |||
| 1999 | b. 1964 | ||
| 2000 | b. 1946 | First relative of a former winner chosen | |
| 2001 | b. 1956 | ||
| 2002 | Represented by Cynthia Cooper of WorldCom, Sherron Watkins of Enron, and Coleen Rowley of the FBI | ||
| 2003 | 2nd time chosen; abstract choice | ||
| 2004 | b. 1946 | 2nd time chosen | |
| 2005 | Represented by Bono and Bill & Melinda Gates | ||
| 2006 | You | "You" control the Information Age |
- Canadian Newsmaker of the Year (Time), the magazine's equivalent for Canadians only
- ^ Time, Person of the Year: 75th Anniversary Celebration, Special Collector's Edition, Time Books, 2002. Quoted from the back of the book.
- ^ Time, Person of the Year: 75th Anniversary Celebration, Special Collector's Edition, p. 1.
- ^ Golden, Frederic. "Person of the Century: Albert Einstein", Time, 2000-01-03. (English)
- ^ Time, Person of the Year: 75th Anniversary Celebration, Special Collector's Edition, pp. 2, 79.
- ^ Time, Person of the Year: 75th Anniversary Celebration, Special Collector's Edition, p. 79.
- ^ http://www.time.com/time/personoftheyear/2006/walkup/
- ^ Time, Person of the Year: 75th Anniversary Celebration, Special Collector's Edition, p. 95.