NASA’s Digital Outreach Earns New Recognition
NASA has won two Webby Awards and five Webby People’s Voice Awards, adding another round of recognition for the agency’s digital science communication work.
The awards, announced by the 30th Annual Webby Awards, cover several NASA projects across podcasts, social media and immersive software. The wins are not a scientific discovery or mission milestone, but they matter because NASA’s ability to explain complex space and Earth science to the public is now a major part of how missions build support, reach classrooms and maintain public visibility.
NASA said it has been nominated for more than 100 Webby Awards since 1998, winning 51 Webbys and 72 People’s Voice Awards over that period. The latest recognition includes both juried Webby Awards and public-voted People’s Voice Awards.
What NASA Won
The winning projects include NASA’s Curious Universe Podcast Earth Series, which received both a Webby Award and a People’s Voice Award in the podcasts category for health, science and education limited series and specials. NASA’s Webb Telescope and the Universe: Using Social Media to Connect Us All also won both a Webby and People’s Voice Award in social education and science.
Additional People’s Voice Awards went to NASA Astronauts Posts From Space, Hearing Hubble and an episode of Houston We Have a Podcast focused on Artemis II. The mix of winners shows the range of formats NASA now uses: narrative audio, astronaut social posts, telescope engagement, immersive educational tools and mission-specific podcasting.
The Webby Awards now honor work across eight major media types, including websites and mobile sites, video and film, advertising and public relations, podcasts, social and games, apps and immersive media, creators and, newly this year, AI. That expansion reflects how public-facing communication has moved well beyond static web pages.
Why This Is More Than Awards News
Space agencies have always depended on public communication. The difference now is that the channels are fragmented and interactive. A mission’s audience may encounter it through a short social post, a podcast episode, an app, a classroom clip or a scientist’s explanation shared across platforms. That means agencies must translate technical work into forms that are accurate, accessible and emotionally durable without reducing the science to slogans.
NASA’s recognized projects are also linked to some of the agency’s most important public-facing science and exploration brands: the Webb Space Telescope, Hubble, Artemis and astronaut life aboard spacecraft. Each carries a different communication challenge. Webb requires explaining deep space observations and infrared astronomy. Hubble carries a long legacy of public imagery. Artemis II involves human exploration planning. Astronaut posts provide a direct human perspective from space.
The People’s Voice wins are particularly relevant because they are chosen by the public. They suggest that NASA’s audience is not only receiving official communication but actively supporting it in competitive digital categories.
Science Communication as Infrastructure
The recognition also points to a broader institutional lesson for science and technology organizations. Public understanding is not an afterthought added after research is complete. It is part of the infrastructure that allows long-term programs to sustain attention, funding and trust.
For NASA, that is especially important because many missions unfold over years or decades. Telescopes are planned long before first light. Human exploration campaigns move through design, testing, launch readiness and post-flight analysis. Earth science data can require careful explanation before it becomes meaningful to non-specialists. Digital storytelling helps connect those timelines to daily public attention.
The agency’s latest Webby results therefore say something about the current space era: the public mission now includes podcasts, social platforms and interactive experiences alongside rockets, spacecraft and observatories. NASA’s technical work remains the foundation, but the ability to communicate that work clearly is increasingly part of the agency’s operating model.
This article is based on reporting by NASA. Read the original article.
Originally published on nasa.gov




