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The Internet helps or hinders photojournalism?

Posted by Robert Olsen on 2nd December 2007

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Photojournalists compare their photos during a political rally before sending them out across the wire.

The Internet has made it possible for photojournalists like these to spend less time in the office and more time in the field reporting. One photographer told me that he goes into their newsroom only two or three times a month now. When he first started about 15 years ago, he had to rush back to the office after every job in order to develop his photos in the darkroom. Now they rush to the nearest location with wireless Internet access, which is quite often any one of the coffee shops dotted around the city. You’ll often times see them hunched over a table, impatiently stabbing the keys of a laptop while a pricey Canon or Nikon camera sits nearby.

In talking to photojournalists in Hong Kong, most recognize that the Internet has created a larger market for the use of digital photos, which ensures a certain degree of job security. The Internet has also had some negative affects as well - most notably in making it easier to violate copyrights.

The newswire agencies do a good job of maintaining the security of the photographs they sell. They usually have long-term relationships with their customers and make sure those customers abide by the industry’s practices and standards. However, no system is foolproof. The moment a photo has been sent to a customer, they have to trust that customer to ensure it doesn’t get transmitted elsewhere.

The Internet has made sharing photos easier than ever; which can be good or bad depending on your perspective. The capacity to share photos with a wider audience has enabled some people to become professional photographers less than a year after picking up a new camera. They did this by posting their stuff on Flickr and then getting feedback from a virtual community of experts and pros that regularly browse the site. I don’t know if anybody has used Flickr to make the jump into press photography yet but it certainly seems likely.

Getting into press photography requires a body of work to demonstrate your photography skills are at the appropriate standard, a good reputation within the photojournalist fraternity, and most important of all - luck. The Internet has taken away the need to lug around a portfolio of 8×10 prints. Instead photographers have to maintain a professionally designed Web site to showcase their work. If a photographer doesn’t have a Web site listed on their business card then that photographer will have no credibility.

Another way to lose credibility is to ‘Photoshop’ your photos. The best example of this was a series of photos taken by Adnan Hajj, a freelance photographer. It was a blogger, named Charles Johnson, who highlighted the dishonesty, which eventually led to Reuters firing Mr Hajj and purging his photos from their archives. Blogs on the Internet have become the watchdog’s watchdog. If photojournalists become complacent, sloppy or even try to deceive the public they are supposed to serve then bloggers like Mr Johnson will take them to task and rightly so.

Press photography is and always will be a very competitive field and the pay is minimal compared to just about all other professions. But the buzz that comes from observing and reporting the news more than makes up for that. Photojournalism has been dramatically changed by the Internet and for the most part that change has been positive. As the Internet continues to evolve we can only hope that trend continues.

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Advancer Story Plan

Posted by Robert Olsen on 28th October 2007

For the candidates profile stories, I’m going to interview Paul Zimmerman from the Civic Party and Siu Ka Yi from the DAB. The Civic Party is a new pan-democratic party, whereas the DAB is the most organised and well established party from the pro-Bejing side.

I have already contacted Paul previously so I was planning to interview him and take some photos whilst he’s out canvassing in his constituency on Stubbs Road. I realise that he has been very active in promoting urban planning and development so getting pictures and quotes related to those topics would be most appropriate. Mr Zimmerman is convenor of the Designing Hong Kong Harbour District and has written numerous stories for SCMP.

Siu Ka Yi is from the DAB, which always has the most supporters and candidates. She is running in the Tung Wah constituency for the Central and Western District Council. Her profession according to her nomination information is community co-ordinator. The material I get will largely depend on what I find out during the interview. I hope to get some photos of her ‘in action’ in her community with some colourful soundbites to go along with it. I haven’t found many online sources of information on Ms Siu.

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The plucky protester needs police protection

Posted by Robert Olsen on 14th October 2007


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img_6566web.jpgThe rally for universal suffrage last Sunday, not only attracted those in favour of democracy but also this plucky individual, who was holding a banner stating that democracy resulted in people like Chen Shui-bian being elected.

The vast majority of the demonstrators read the banner, chuckled or shook their heads and simply continued on their way. A handful of people, however, stopped and began taunting the man. As more people marched by, the man and his banner developed into a congregation point and the taunts became more aggressive. At least two people tried to knock the banner down with their umbrellas

Fortunately the police resolved the problem by forming a cordon around the fellow and removed his banner. This defused the situation immediately and the crowd moved away.

Afterward I kept wondering to myself what in the world was this person thinking? Why mention Chen Shui-bian when he could have used George W. Bush instead? It just doesn’t make any sense.

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My conversation with Jojo

Posted by Robert Olsen on 8th October 2007

Today, I interviewed Jojo as part of the New Media class at the Journalism and Media Studies Centre at HKU. Here is the audio file: Jojo

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