Emperor Has No Clothes Award Honors Public Figures for “Telling It Like It Is” about Religion
An award celebrating “plain speaking” on the shortcomings of religion by public figures was inaugurated by the Freedom From Religion Foundation in 1999.
The award is based on the folk tale, “The Emperor Has No Clothes,” by Hans Christian Andersen. In the story two weavers con a gullible emperor by selling him expensive cloth they claim is so exquisite only the very wise can see it. The emperor parades before his cowed subjects in his imaginary finery, until an astute child calls out:
“But the emperor has no clothes!”
Religion, the Foundation contends, has a similar imaginary base.
The award is reserved for public figures who take on the fabled role of the little child in the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale and “tell it like it is”--about religion. The premiere award went to Nobel Laureate and plain-spoken physicist Steven Weinberg in 1999.
The Emperor statue, an engaging, golden figure clad only in shoes and a fig leaf, and carrying a mirror and sceptre, was produced for the Foundation by the same firm that does the Oscars.
Recipients of the Emperor Has No Clothes Award:
2007 - Christopher Hitchens (coming soon)2006 - Julia Sweeney
2005 - Oliver Sacks
2004 - Anne Gaylor
2004 - Robyn Blumner
2004 - Peter Singer
2004 - Steven Pinker
2004 - Ron Reagan
2003 - Natalie Angier
2003 - Alan Dershowitz
2003 - Pat, Roger & Melody Cleveland
2003 - Penn & Teller
2002 - Steve Benson
2002 - Robert Sapolsky
2001 - Katha Pollitt
2001 - Richard Dawkins
2001 - Andy Rooney, Ted Turner, Janeane Garofalo, George Carlin, Jesse Ventura
1999 - Steven Weinberg
1998 - Clarence Reinders

