February 3, 2019 Gordon Parks Retrospective This short piece by Jeffrey Brown on Gordon Parks is well worth your time, especially if you are unfamiliar with Parks’ work. Now I need to get back up to Washington, D.C. … Categories Craft/Good Work/Photojournalism
December 10, 2018 Putting a Box Around the World Ted Koppel did a piece centered on the Bronx Documentary Center that really looks at the lives of Chris Hondros, Tim Hetherington and other photojournalists who have been killed while cover the world’s wars. Worth ten minutes of your time. Categories Advice & Learning/At Work/Business & Industry/Photojournalism
October 21, 2018 Inside the Canon EOS R Sometimes, I really want to take things apart … then I remember I would be responsible for putting them back together. Which makes me happy when Roger Cicala at LensRentals.com does it. They last camera I disassembled was an all-mechanical Nikon, things have changed. Categories Business & Industry/Tech Talk
October 2, 2018 Photo Editing and Senate Hearings Over at the Columbia Journalism Review, Darrel Frost takes a look at how last week’s supplemental Supreme Court hearings were handled visually. The dilemma is what can you or should you show in one frame when an event went on for more than that 1/250 of a second. My thinking has always been that you look for an image that... Categories Business & Industry/Ethics & Legal/Photojournalism
September 18, 2018 Calming Ways and Sharp Eyes Over at The New York Times Lens blog, David Gonzalez looks back at the first African-American woman to be a staff photographer there. Ruby Washington, a South Georgia native, died earlier this year. “The temperature would go down a couple of degrees because she had that nice, calming way and was nonthreatening with a ready smile,” Ms. (Nancy) Weinstock said,... Categories At Work/Business & Industry/Good Work/Photojournalism
September 18, 2018 The Story Goes On, the Story Goes Out There’s a tie between first responders and journalists – they’re the most likely to head towards trouble spots in communities. To be there, to bear witness, to document and explain so others can be informed or prepared, that’s what journalists do. When storms like Hurricane Florence hit, the best and worst of journalists comes out. The split between the visual... Categories Business & Industry/Ethics & Legal/Photojournalism
September 4, 2018 We’ve Lost Marc Riboud I don’t know when I first came across Marc Riboud’s work, but his book on China affected me deeply. It was a seemingly casual yet amazingly precise look at the country during a time when few had access to it. Riboud passed last week at the age of 93, Oliver Laurent at Time has a look at his work. Categories Business & Industry/Good Work/Photojournalism
August 30, 2018 Ways of Seeing At The Washington Post, David Nakamura takes a look at alternate ways of covering the mundane. Categories At Work/Business & Industry/Photojournalism
August 30, 2018 Colorado Journalist Detained by Police for Recording from a Public Place After stopping to investigate police activity, Susan Greene was told to stop recording because it would be a HIPAA violation. When she refused, she was handcuffed and put in the back seat of a police car and then released. Some things to unpack here … Greene was in a public place as were the police so there is no expectation... Categories At Work/Ethics & Legal/Photojournalism
August 30, 2018 College Photographer of the Year Call for Entries If you’re a college student, it’s time to get your portfolio together – the entry deadline for the 73rd College Photographer of the Year competition is September 23. There is no entry fee for this – why wouldn’t you enter? Categories Competitions/Good Work/Photojournalism