July 5, 2011 A Lunch-time Laugh Take with a grain of salt … but a photographer claims a bunch of black macaque monkeys started doing self-portraits with his camera gear. (Thanks to CNN’s Victor Hernandez for the lede.) Categories Photojournalism
July 5, 2011 When “New” Replaces “Good” Over at Black Star Rising, David Saxe wrote about how curators are now evaluating some work – and the only criteria seems to be whether it is “new.” So what we’ve seen is photographers making their photographs larger, changing the format from rectangular to square, and authoring more loquacious artist statements. This is the new “new.” The subject is as... Categories Craft
July 5, 2011 National Geographic iPad App Not new, but still pretty cool … National Geographic has an app that talks about how their 50 greatest photos were made. It’s $4.99 and reportedly also has ads in it (would rather one or the other), but if someone gives you a gift card, why not? Categories Advice & Learning/Good Work/Photojournalism
July 4, 2011 Best Camera Review Line Ever? Not journalism, but Zack Arias bought himself a Fuji X100 and has decided it’s the perfect camera. In his … well, it’s not a review … witnessing? I don’t know what to call it … he has this graf: No review of a camera is complete with out all of us having a thorough discussion of pixel density while looking... Categories Tech Talk
July 4, 2011 Over at the Gear Geek … I’m live over at The Gear Geek for the National Press Photographers Association today with a look at one of our favorites, the Kodak Zi8 pocket video camera. Categories Tech Talk
July 3, 2011 Why a Journalism Degree Doesn’t Matter in Journalism Back in 2003, after asking me to stick around and do a masters degree at Syracuse University, the college lost a program and, with it, the funding for my assistantship. Which lead to a very weird series of phone calls where my advisor/mentor/friend told me to call the University of Florida and ask about their assistantship. I did, had a... Categories Advice & Learning
July 3, 2011 The Hard Part of Photojournalism I have always said the hardest part of what we do is deciding where to point the camera and when to push the button … Categories Photojournalism/Tech Talk
July 1, 2011 Ricoh Buys Pentax Hoya, which bought the Pentax brand in 2008, has announced they are selling the camera brand to Ricoh for $128 million. While neither are major players in the photojournalism realm, this could have a cascading effect as other manufacturers decide to merge or buy out smaller, innovative companies. (Thanks to Jeff Snyder at Adorama for the link on Twitter.) Categories Business & Industry/Tech Talk
July 1, 2011 The Mountain Workshops Accepting Applications FYI … We are now accepting applications for the 2011 Mountain Workshops which will be held in Somerset, Ky Oct. 18-22. To apply go to http://www.mountainworkshops.org/ and the APPLY TO THE WORKSHOPS menu item. There are a limited number of spots available. • Photojournalism or Picture Editing Workshop – $625 prior to Sept. 15, $675 after Sept. 15 • Multimedia... Categories Advice & Learning
July 1, 2011 John Stanmeyer on the Long Term Story National Geographic shooter John Staneyer is starting a series of blog posts about working on in-depth pieces for the yellow-bordered magazine. From his first post, comes this bit of wisdom: Some stories visually speak for themselves — war/conflict, social revolutions, famine and other event driven stories are primarily (though not all) about recording the occurrence transpiring before us. Long term... Categories At Work/Business & Industry/Craft/Good Work/Photojournalism