The National Press Photographers Association president Tony Overman
publicly condemned the practices of
Toledo Blade photographer Allan Detrich. (
See examples and NPPA story)
Detrich, for whatever reason, cloned out a significant portion of a Page 1 photo. On
his blog, Detrich claims he did so to make a personal print for his wall and didn't intend to transmit the photo. Additionally, he claims it was a one-time occurrence.
Detrich states on his blog, "While transmitting on deadline, I sent the wrong photo, plain and simple. I made a huge mistake, and I have expressed my regrets to my editors at the Blade. It is something that will never happen again."
At least part of this is a truthful statement. Detrich resigned on Saturday, April 7, 2007.
At this point, we could let this issue drop. According to Detrich, he made a one-time mistake. He accepted responsibility for it and resigned. He's now moved on to chasing storms for a living.
Since his departure, all 50 of his images were removed from the AP archive. All of his images were removed from
www.toledoblade.com and access to his images were blocked internally.
Why such a reaction? Gosh, from the reaction we might think these images were contaminated with something deadly. Some are. Some are contaminated with the death of newspapers - lies.
Toledo Blade's executive editor Ron Royhab had his staff look through Detrich's older images. According to Royhab, "
dozens" of images had been manipulated.
Overman states the extent of this problem precisely, "
The Blade reports that a subsequent internal investigation of his work showed evidence of manipulations in 79 photos so far this year, an unprecedented amount of violations."
I really want to give a beaten photographer the benefit of the doubt. Possibly someone is counting typical (acceptable) spotting as "evidence of manipulation."
Unfortunately, the comparisons between the original files and those
in the system are kind of - you know -
outrageous.
"The changes Mr. Detrich made included erasing people, tree limbs, utility poles, electrical wires, electrical outlets, and other background elements from photographs. In other cases, he added elements such as tree branches and shrubbery," Royhab states. Royhab also states a puck and basketball were added to other images.
According to the
Blade, Detrich has won "hundreds of newspaper photography awards" over the years. He was also a Pulitzer finalist in 1998. This means literally hundreds of truthful stories were
not awarded because they had to compete against his questionable images.
It's injustice.
Reason for angerWhy am I so mad about one photographer at a different paper in a different state doing something unethical and just plain wrong?
I have 14.5 million reasons.
$14.5 million is the average difference between my annual income over the last 15 years and one of my university classmates. My classmate is a top full-time commercial photographer.
I have no problem with his profession. He does what he does better than most. He creates stunning visual fiction. He is handsomely paid to do so. I applaud him because that's his profession, and he doesn't claim to tell the truth.
I chose to tell the truth for a living.
When people in my profession produce fiction and pass it off as truth, I take issue. It's a lie. When a PJ's image lies, the public could think all of us are liars. Yes, it ticks me off.
I could have earned $14.5 million if I chose to make fictional images for a full-time living. I didn't because I
believe in telling the truth. It's not something I think is "nice" or "quaint."
It's a PJ's honor and duty.
So, the next time anyone debates whether they should Photoshop the truth, consider sending $14.5 million to each and every dedicated PJ who works their tails off to tell the truth.
If the price is too high, they need to ask themselves what they would pay $14.5 million to do. I've
already paid that much to
tell the truth. It's a high price. But I'll continue to pay it.
Enough for now,