Author: Trent

  • National Geographic Photographer Brings Her Kids to Work

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    Balancing work with a social life can be a challenge even for single photographers, but adding a husband and two kids to the mix can lead to disaster, or worse, a desk job.

    Annie Griffiths Belt found the perfect solution, bringing her family along for the ride. After 20 years of marriage and 18 years of parenting, the 55-year-old National Geographic photographer’s plan is a proven success. Her daughter Lily, 18, is about to begin her freshman year of college with plans to become a physician and Charlie, 15, is attending high school.

    Check it out here.

  • Justin Maxon named 2007 SportsShooter.com Student Photographer of the Year

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    “Truly, it feels surreal to win this award and others I have been fortunate enough to win,” said Maxon, after being notified that contest judged selected his portfolio for the top spot. “I have envisioned being a photographer since I was young. Even though I have a long road ahead with many twists and turns, it feels like I am starting to realize my aspirations.”

    Check it out here.

  • Football shooters’ favourite photographs

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    Photo by Monte Fresco MBE – Daily Mirror, England

    As Europe’s top footballing nations prepare to battle it out in the EURO 2008 tournament CPN’s John McDermott spoke to the world’s best football photographers to find out which pictures from their careers are their personal favourites and why. In part one of this two-part article seven top football shooters select the best images they’ve ever taken.

    Check it out here.

  • Earthquake in China – a view from Beijing

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    By 7 am, 61 pictures earthquake-hit Sichuan province had been sent and by 2:28 the next day, 24 hours after the shock, 100 Reuters pictures had moved to the World… And then our staff photographers also began filing from different spots.  

    So, that was the first day after the earthquake,  then the second, then the third – it was a sleepless fortnight until the story began to quieten down a bit…

    Check it out here.

  • IOL: The spooky games they play…

    A local pastor, who did not want to be named, said the two girls were particularly affected and were exorcised after they spoke in a “demonic-sounding voice” and showed “superhuman” strength.

    He said one of the girls, who is petite, had even assaulted a strapping security guard by grabbing him by his neck and pinning him against the wall.

    Check it out here.

  • Doctored Photo On Daily News Cover Causes Stir

    A photo printed on the front cover of the Philadelphia Daily News is causing a stir.
    The cover shows Jocelyn Kirsch, the “Bonnie” in the Philadelphia “Bonnie and Clyde” identity-theft ring, lounging in a bathing suit.
    However, the photo also shows a house-detention bracelet on Kirsch’s leg that was edited into the photo. In the original photo, Kirsch never wore an ankle bracelet.

    Check it out here.

  • The F STOP » Morgan Silk

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    Not everyone gets a second chance with a team of Navy Seals. But, for photographer Morgan Silk, inspiration is hard to shake. It wasn’t enough that he’d shot the special forces as they reenacted a hostage rescue scene. Silk wanted to get down from the director’s platform, away from the commercial constraints and create his own intense, individual portraits.

    Check it out here.

  • Wars: Chechnya and Iraq. A Magnum photo essay. – – Slate Magazine

    Photographs by Thomas Dworzak

    “I’m embedded with the Americans in Iraq. As a Westerner, there is no more access to the insurgents’ side. I don’t claim to have any overview. History made my choice—it’s fine!”

    Check it out here.

  • R.F.K., R.I.P., Revisited

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    In Paul Fusco’s photographs (here and at the gallery) of the people along the tracks, as the Kennedy funeral train passes, it is not only the faces and the clothes that catch the eye, it is the hands.

    Check it out here.

  • TV News Photographer Keeps Camera Rolling During Scuffle With Police Officer

    “I’m not putting the camera down until (inaudible).”

    Check it out here.

  • Photo Attorney: Photography Is/Not Allowed? – 7

    Fox 5 TV station in Washington DC interviewed Joel Lawson yesterday about harassment of photographers at Union Station. While an Amtrak spokesperson was explaining that photography is allowed in Union Station, a security guard interrupted to tell the journalist to stop filming the interview

    Check it out here.

  • Zeptonn – Josh Spear

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    Jan Willem Wennekes, also known as Stinger, crafts a killer monster. Well, “killer” in its most docile, endearing sense — because the creatures of this Netherlands-based designer have always had more success drawing aww’s than arghh’s!

    As founder of Zeptonn Lab, Stinger cranks out his unique style of design for clients like PlayStation, Scion, and Threadless, as well as a solid variety of art, design, and online publications. In between those projects, this eco-conscious designer spends his time creating some of the best books you’ve ever laid claws on, including one of our all-time favorites, Stingermania.

    Check it out here.

  • NPPA Rejects A New Name

    This week the National Press Photographers Association (NPPA) rejected a proposal to change its name to The Society for Visual Journalists (SVJ). The new name was proposed as a way to re-brand the organization to be more inclusive of videographers, multimedia people, etc.

    Check it out here.

  • Journalist's Journey To Iraq

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    By Robert Scheer, Indianapolis Star Visuals Dept

    In covering our guys in Iraq, we heard and saw a lot of things that they didn’t want us to publish — such as how fast they drive, where the commander generally is on a convoy. The key thing is to know what photo or story might jeopardize a life, and which won’t. If you embed, you’ll receive countless pieces of paper containing security concerns. They’re important, be sure to digest them.

    Early on, we sent some info out that we shouldn’t have. The folks at Q-West weren’t too pleased with us. At some point during the process of being scolded over and over for about two days, by everyone from Privates to Lt. Colonels, we were led into a dark room with gaudy oversized furniture and told in no uncertain terms that every story and every image we sent had to be scrutinized by the resident intel officer, at the other end of the base. This meant a two-mile walk every time we wanted to send to our editors. Back home, our editors were ready to start calling up various generals to read the riot act, but in Iraq, it was either “live with it, or go home.”

    Check it out here.

  • From boxes to hard drives: the importance of archiving your work

    By Greg Cooper

    Early on in my career I was working as an assistant for Horace Bristol (one of the original Life magazine staff photographers). Bristol and I hit it off right away and built a relationship that transcended more than just employer/employee. He became my friend and my mentor, a relationship that lasted until he died, about 10 years later.

    One of the things he bestowed upon me, several times during our friendship was the importance of organizing your work, sooner rather than later. One day he pulled open one of the dozen or so drawers in a wooden dresser he kept in his house. Inside were several rows of 2 1/4 negs, stacked one layer deep, filling the drawer. This was just one drawer of about 12 in the dresser, and there was yet another filled the same.

    Check it out here.

  • Emo kids are under attack. Are they scapegoats or sinners?

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    Should we be scared of emo? The Daily Mail says so. After the suicide of the 13-year-old emo schoolgirl Hannah Bond, who hanged herself in her bedroom in Essex last September, a series of headlines have screamed: “Why no child is safe from the sinister cult of emo”, while accusing the American emo band My Chemical Romance of encouraging suicide. Across Latin America it’s even worse. Emo kids are subject to violent attacks, prejudice and media abuse. This gloomy, gothic teenage rock cult, which began 20 years ago in America, has never been so controversial.

    Check it out here.

  • Negative Approach at WFMU

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    As far as first-wave HC goes, Negative Approach were among the most vicious feedback-pummel units going. Songs careened by in seconds, were pretty much politics-free, focusing on sheer vocal/instrumental destruction. They were inspired by not only their American peers, but UK groundbreakers like Discharge (who, like, NA, were big Stooges fans). In 2006 they returned to the stage at the Touch and Go label anniversary, with Brannon and original drummer Chris Moore augmented by Ron Sakowski on bass and Harold Richardson on guitar, reportedly wiped the place down. On the day of their recent Southpaw show, they amazingly agreed in a day’s notice to come down to my show on FMU, plugged in and turned us to mush with 16 songs in 25 minutes

    Check it out here.

  • Behind the Lens with Preston Gannaway

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    The photographic community is incredibly diverse, made up of photographers that shoot from the sky to the sea and everywhere in between. Each month we look at a different segment of the industry, interviewing top professional photographers about life, their careers, and what sets their piece of the photographic industry apart from the rest.

    This month we focus on Preston Gannaway, a staff photographer at the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, Colorado. While driving from New Hampshire to Colorado earlier this month, Gannaway learned that she had been named the recipient of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize in Feature Photography. The 30-year-old photographer was recognized for her picture story, “Remember Me,” which she created while on staff at the Concord Monitor. In April’s installment of “Behind the Lens,” Gannaway talks about her career as a newspaper photographer, and the hard work and dedication that went into her Pulitzer-winning picture story.

    Check it out here.

  • Far Sighted: Walking into the future….

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    Very cool graduation photo by LEXEY SWALL-BOBAY

    Check it out here.

  • NYC Street Photographer Bruce Gilden

    Bruce Gilden is an in your face sort of street photographer who specializes in street portraits. Watch him work in the video above.

    Check it out here.