Photography podcast #118 is the first of two episodes dedicated to manipulation in photojournalism. This first episode features an interview with Carl Neustaedter who is the deputy editor of the Ottawa Citizen, the largest daily newspaper in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Carl is one of the people who decides on a daily basis what images make it into the newspaper.
In this interview we discuss how much manipulation is too much manipulation when it comes to news photography.
In particular, we talk about this year’s winning world press photo by Paul Hansen. We also talk about using Instagram and Hipstmatic style filters in news photography. We discuss some famously ‘over’ manipulated news images like the O.J. Simpson Cover on Time Magazine back in 1994. We also discuss more subtle modern ways in which digital news images are manipulated. Finally, we discuss the firing of the photojournalism staff at the Chicago Sun-Times.
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Links /resources mentioned in this podcast:
World Press Photo of the year (Large)
A Grunt’s Life — Damon Winter — The New York Times
From iPhone to printed page: The rise of Instagram in major publications
We Need Photojournalists — Article by SND.org
Carl Neustaedter on LinkedIN
A pet’s perspective — Low angled images — Photography.ca forum’s regular assignment — June 2013
f/16 or smaller — Photography.ca forum’s level 2 assignment — June 2013
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Thanks for the comments Jason, Juliet and Yisehaq!
Those are crazy low rates from your last post Jason!
Photo students and amateurs will likely be their main contract staff from now on as
10 bucks a photo is about what they are paying — I’m speechless
Just saw this posting on PetaPixel regarding what the Sun-Times will be paying the freelancers that are replacing the professional staff:
http://petapixel.com/2013/06/25/how-much-does-sun-times-media-pay-its-freelance-photographers/
Very enjoyable interview on an important topic. It all comes down to responsibility and ethics and it’s good to hear responsible and ethical people sharing their observations.
Marko, I really enjoyed this one. Certainly a topic that is viewed differently by many people. I thought the historical discussion was especially interesting. We are often quick to think this is a new phenomenon, but it certainly doesn’t seem to be the case! Anyhow, I still firmly believe there is not much room for manipulation when it comes to photojournalism, it’s a pretty slippery ethical slope.
Nice podcast Marko. I don’t think we can reach a consensus on this issue. All points raised are very interesting.