July 16, 2020 Color in a Dark Time You can look at this post on the Leica blog two ways: with lust over the newest Leica rangefinder or with lusciousness at the images Huw John created with it. I, I choose both. Categories Good Work/Photojournalism/Tech Talk
June 4, 2020 Covering Protests Current and former students are now covering protests across the country. We spent some time in classes on spot news coverage, but nothing we did prepared them for the events of our times. Some thoughts on what to do before, during and after covering major protests, regardless of where they occur. BEFORE YOUR COVERAGE Assess your technology. How much gear... Categories At Work/Ethics & Legal/Photojournalism/Thoughts & Theory
April 16, 2020 Sinclair vs. Mashable and the Consequences of a Lack of Focus There are dangers to writing before finishing the morning coffee and I entered that realm today. I saw a link online to something that had been brewing, I tapped out an impassioned response with a call to action on Facebook and hit the post button. Within a few minutes, it had a couple of shares and likes. Then the phone... Categories Business & Industry/Ethics & Legal/Photojournalism
April 13, 2020 Dispsables The Washington Post sent disposable camera to 25 women and asked them to document their life. The set of images are at times refreshingly nostalgic and also annoyingly modern. The current fascination with photographing oneself is present, in either out-of-focus selfies (the minimum focusing distance on these cameras is larger than the average arm length) or they handed to camera... Categories Advice & Learning/Multimedia/Photojournalism
April 13, 2020 Polaroid at MIT Not that we can go, but if we could, we should: The collection was to be on display through June 21. Categories Business & Industry/Photojournalism/Tech Talk
March 19, 2020 Images With Value What is the purpose of a photograph? In our field, we have several standard answers – to tell a story, to inform our community, to evoke a response. To me, I use a camera not to make pictures but to share ideas, to raise questions and, hopefully, to answer some. I make pictures of things I don’t understand or haven’t... Categories Advice & Learning/Craft/Photojournalism
February 25, 2020 The Court House Press Corps Ever wonder who is covering a major news event? The Associated Press’ Mary Altaffer turned her cameras on her colleagues who have been working inside the Manhattan court house where Harvey Weinstein was tried. It not very glamorous but it is very important. Categories At Work/Journalism/Photojournalism
February 23, 2020 Looking Back at Joe Rosenthal’s Iwo Jima Photo Seventy five years ago today, Joe Rosenthal made made, perhaps, the most iconic photograph – the flag raising over Iwo Jima. There have been many stories written and told about what happened that day, from how he heard about the planned flag raising to whether he posed the photo (he didn’t, let’s be clear). I’ve talked about this photo almost... Categories Business & Industry/Good Work/Photojournalism
February 16, 2020 Dorothea Lange and Her Role Developing Modern Photojournalism Well worth reading: Alice Gregory at The New York Times’ Style Magazine takes a look at the role of Dorothea Lange in the growth of photojournalism as the Museum of Modern Art opens their second retrospective on her. Sigh … I may have to go to New York again … Her contemporary Ansel Adams called her pictures “both records of... Categories At Work/Craft/Good Work/Photojournalism
January 28, 2020 Stocking Canadians There are days I am so proud of my Canadian heritage. (Even if it’s phenomenally flimsy heritage.) Categories Advice & Learning/Business & Industry/Photojournalism