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FYI

Mustafa's Ali Wins 2022 Prism Prize

The Toronto artist (pictured) won the $20K Grand Prize for Canadian music video of the year. Closer by Khanvict won the fan-voted Audience Award and $5K.

Mustafa's Ali Wins 2022 Prism Prize

By FYI Staff

The Prism Prize, an annual awards event that recognizes outstanding artistry in Canadian music video production, selected Ali, by Toronto artist Mustafa, who directed the clip, as the $20,000 Grand Prize winner for this year's award. Closer by Khanvict (directed by Anjali Nayar) won the fan-voted Audience Award and a $5,000 cash prize. The trophies were handed out last night (July 7) during a live screening and awards presentation at the TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto. The Grand Prize was selected by a jury of more than 130 music and visual arts industry professionals.


The 2022 Prism Prize screening and awards presentation was a celebration of homegrown Canadian talent and the Top 10 Canadian music videos of the year which explored complicated and compelling themes of racism, discrimination, religion, political justice, death, and challenging societal norms. The show was hosted by comedian Hoodo Hersi. 

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Along with the Grand Prize and Audience Award, the event recognized the 2022 Special Award recipients, a group of multi-talented Canadian creatives who are diversifying and elevating the music industry, both in Canada and abroad: 

Pop, R&B, soul and jazz band, Chiiild, was presented with the Hi-Fidelity Award (supported by FACTOR, the Government of Canada and Canada’s Private Radio Broadcasters), established to recognize recording artists who utilize music videos in innovative ways;

Toronto-based director Iris Kim was awarded the Lipsett Award, established to celebrate a unique approach to music video art;

Director and Digital Artist, Sammy Rawal, was granted the Special Achievement Award (supported by The Slaight Family Foundation) established to recognize an exceptional contribution to music video art on the world stage;

Singer/songwriter and winner of the Grand Prize, Mustafa, was given the Willie Dunn Award (supported by Telefilm Canada), presented to a Canadian trailblazer who has demonstrated excellence within the music, music video and/or film production communities. As the recipient of this award, Mustafa received a $2,500 honorarium and was asked to select an emerging Canadian creative to spotlight during the Prism Prize live screening and awards presentation and to be the beneficiary of $2,500; he selected Toronto-based rapper, Puffy L’z. 

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“In our tenth year of the Prism Prize, it is clearer than ever that Canadian creatives are continuing to take the art of music videos to new heights, offering compelling and emotional visuals for audiences everywhere,” said Louis Calabro, Interim CEO at the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television and the Founder of Prism Prize. “Mustafa’s Ali is no exception - the video is the perfect accompaniment to the deeply moving song, a beautiful tribute to Mustafa’s dear late friend, Ali Rizeig.” 

All other creative teams from the Top 10 will receive $1,000 courtesy of Patron Partner, The Slaight Family Foundation. All Prism Prize Award recipients, including the Grand Prize, Audience Award, and all Special Award winners, receive equipment rental grants in the amount of $2,500, courtesy of partners at William F. White International Inc.

To watch music video work from this year's Special Awards recipients and Top 10 finalists, as well as hundreds of other eligible videos from years past, visit PrismPrize.com.

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Tré Cool, Billie Joe Armstrong, and Mike Dirnt of Green Day attend the 2024 iHeartRadio Music Awards at Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, California on April 01, 2024.
Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

Tré Cool, Billie Joe Armstrong, and Mike Dirnt of Green Day attend the 2024 iHeartRadio Music Awards at Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, California on April 01, 2024.

Rock

Green Day Celebrate ‘Dookie’ Going Double-Diamond: ‘Thank You To Everyone Who Has Loved This Album’

The pop-punk trio's breakthrough 1994 album is just the 13th ever to be RIAA certified with more than 20 million units sold in the U.S.

Welcome to history, Green Day. The pop-punk trio celebrated a major career milestone this week when their breakthrough third studio album, 1994’s Dookie, was certified double-diamond. With that honorific, the group’s major label became just the 13th album ever to be RIAA certified for sales of more than 20 million units in the U.S., joining such iconic LPs as Michael Jackson’s Thriller, AC/DC’s Back in Black, Led Zeppelin IV, The Beatles, Pink Floyd’s The Wall and Shania Twain’s Come On Over, among others.

The group were presented with the award by label Warner Records and their team at Crush mgmt at their sold-out show at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, CA last Saturday. In an Instagram post earlier this week, singer Billie Joe Armstrong, bassist Mike Dirnt and drummer Tré Cool proudly showed off their Diamond awards backstage at Sofi and thanked their die-hards for helping them make history.

This article was originally published by Billboard U.S.

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