Showing posts with label General PJ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General PJ. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2019

Hurricane Season Starts Tomorrow



Hurricane season starts tomorrow. If you know anyone in hurricane zones please check on them and ensure they have evacuation plans. I covered several hurricanes as a photojournalist. Although my advice in this post is mainly for other photojournalists, there's some good general information mixed in with the other info.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

iPhonography 101 – Camera

Almost all photos and video on my Instagram page and IG business page are made and edited on my iPhone.
Not everyone has the cash to invest in a full camera rig (camera body, lenses, flash, etc.). Even those of us with “serious” cameras don’t always have them handy. However, most of us can’t leave our homes without a cell phone with a camera feature (or three).

In 2011, I wrote a magazine piece about submitting photos for publication. It addressed the difference between professional cameras and iPhones. All cell phone manufacturers have stepped up their game since then. The difference between cell phone images and professional camera images have narrowed considerably.
Additionally, many newspapers pay a little extra over the assignment fee to get some "atmosphere" cell phone images before a major event to post online. It's enough of an incentive to have a decent cell phone camera and arrive early. 
So, let’s address some iPhone basics to maximize the use of the camera you have in your pocket rather than the camera that’s safely stored in your closet.

Just the basics
This post is only going to address a basic iPhone (i7 and below). The information should be useful on most cell phones, but there will be differences between brands.
I also understand there are many ways to attach cell phones to other gadgets and vice versa to make them do many beautiful tricks. I have a closet full of add-on lenses and gadgets too. They’re fun, but I’ll only address the basic as-is cell phone camera today.

Base Information
All photography composition rules apply to cell phone cameras.
A basic iPhone view roughly equates to a 28mm lens on a 35mm camera. It’s considered to be a wide-angle of view. “Normal” is 35mm to 50mm on a 35mm camera system.
This means there will be edge distortion and objects will appear farther away and smaller than normal on an iPhone. It also means the depth-of-field will be greater (more things in the photo will appear to be in focus). You will want to get very close to the main subject if you want it to dominate the frame.

Shooting Suggestions
This section will cover the basics of how to use the iPhone. Other brands of cell phones may have more or less of these features. Please check the user manual or online.

Swipe on lock screen
By the time someone wakes up the camera, unlocks the screen, finds the camera app and tries to make a photo, the moment is normally over. Here’s the fastest way to get shooting.
Wake up the camera with the wake/sleep button on the right side or the home button on the bottom of the screen face. Then, swipe left to open the camera screen without unlocking the screen.
You’re now ready to shoot without searching for the camera app.

Use volume as trigger
The two buttons on the left side of the iPhone control volume. Additionally, either of these buttons function as triggers while in camera mode. They also work in burst mode (see below).
In low-light situations, it’s best to use these buttons to minimize camera shake. You may still have rotation if you don’t stabilize the phone, but it rotates in fewer directions than pushing on the face of the phone.
To avoid any rotation, you can attach your EarPods (hardwire) to your iPhone, stabilize the phone (see below) and use the EarPod volume as a remote trigger. This ensures there is no camera rotation or shake from user interaction. This feature doesn’t work with AirPods (wireless).

Select focus and light balance
The iPhone is designed to “average” a scene for focus, color balance and exposure (amount of light included). It will ALWAYS BE WRONG with extreme scenes (white snow, black coal, monochromatic scenes of most colors, etc.). This can be corrected if you pay attention while you shoot.
You can select where focus will be by touching that area of the frame and holding your finger on the phone's screen. A yellow bounding box will appear to let you know the area where you have chosen for focus and exposure.

Adjust exposure
If the exposure is too light or dark due to the subject (snow or coal), you can adjust the exposure. When focus and exposure above are selected, a yellow dot with tiny radiating lines also appears. This is a sliding exposure scale. Change the exposure of the whole scene by sliding your finger up and down near the sunshine dot.

AF/AE lock
AF means Auto Focus and AE means Auto Exposure. These can be locked to a specific distance and exposure.
Choose the distance you want to focus and the exposure you want and press the screen where focus/exposure should be. The bounding box mentioned above will appear. Continue to hold until the box becomes larger and “AF/AE LOCK” appears in a yellow box at the top of the screen. Now, you can recompose your camera without affecting the focus or exposure.
It will remain locked until you put the screen to sleep or otherwise leave the camera mode. Every photo you make will be at the same focus distance, exposure and color balance. If you have an adjustable color-temperature and lumen desk light, you can easily see the difference it makes.

Trick color balance
When shooting some monochromatic scenes (detail shots of roses for instance), the phone will try to “correct” the color of the scene. It often ruins the entire photo beyond what can be repaired with iPhoto edits.
To avoid this, you can view a “normal toned scene” (typically something white) with the phone. Then, lock or rapidly recompose the scene on the desired location and immediately shoot. Both have the same effect of tricking the camera into using the previous color balance in the new location.
The major difference between the approaches is focus. If the AF/AE is locked, the subject needs to be focused at the same distance. If the rapid recomposition approach is used, the iPhone sets a new focus before shooting the new scene – however, it won’t have time to change the color balance to the new scene.

Shoot too many
If your best shot is the last frame, you should have shot more.
The basic rule is to always shoot three to get one (pro ruleis 10:1 minimum). Something will happen each time photos are made. Shutter lag, camera shake, subject movement, blinked eyes, wrong exposure, wrong focus, bad color balance and more can ruin a single frame. It’s best to make several alternatives to ensure one works.

Hold down for burst mode
iPhones are notorious for “shutter lag” (the time between trigger actuation and the camera response). It isn’t a big deal with a photo of your lunch, but it’s a huge issue with anything involving action.
To give us a fighting chance at a decent shot, the iPhone has a “burst mode.” This feature makes about 10 frames per second while the trigger is held down. It doesn’t guarantee that you’ll get a baseball on a bat, but you can get part of someone blowing out their birthday candles.
The vital part of this feature is selecting which frames to keep. Before you transfer and delete photos from your phone, you need to select which images you want to keep from the burst.
Tap the photo in your library. You will see a shadow box at the top-left of the screen that states, “Burst (7 photos)” or a different number. At the bottom of the screen, you will see an additional editorial feature labeled “Select…” Press that option.
You’ll be able to move left and right through the entire burst sequence. In the bottom-right corner of each photo is a small empty circle. Press that circle to select the images you want to keep. The circle will turn blue with a white check mark if it’s selected.
After you have selected images to keep from the burst, choose “Done” in the upper right-hand corner. It will give you the option to keep everything or only those selected. If “only selected” is chosen, all others will be deleted to save memory space.

“Chimp” before leaving
The term “chimp” means to look at your photos on the viewing screen after you shoot. While it has a negative connotation, it’s still a good idea to ensure you have more than one useful shot before you leave a scene (or eat your meal). Unless you checked each frame with a magnifier before you leave, you might have a bad surprise when you prepare images later.

Zoom to check focus
When you have a photo from your library displayed on your screen, you can touch it with your thumb and finger. As you increase the distance between those to points, the photo will zoom into more detail. As you decrease the distance between those points, the photo will zoom out to the full photo.
While you are zoomed in, you can look at the focus to ensure the image is sharp. If not, shoot it again. Then repeat.
If the shot will be vital, consider carrying a lupe in your car or bag. This will let you look at the image in minute detail to ensure it’s useful.

Stability
I’ve written an entire post about eliminating camera shake, so I won’t go over it again.
However, let’s address how to manage it with a phone that doesn’t have a post hole.
Love or hate them, everyone has seen “selfie sticks.” These are basically extra-long arms so more people can fit into a selfie or more of the background scene can be included in the frame. They are ubiquitous because they’re cheap.
While I’m too ugly for selfies, I still purchased a cheap, discontinued one to repurpose it. The part of the selfie stick that holds the camera also mounts on a tripod (or other ¼-20 screw). It holds the phone in a stable position while it is attached to any other regular camera mount screw (including flexpods and clamps).


Top Settings
Across the top of the photo screen are five additional buttons. The lightning bolt is flash, HDR is for high dynamic range, “live” records a tiny (.MOV) video rather than a still photo (.jpg), the clock is for delayed timer, and the triple balls are for different color filtration variations.

Flash
iPhones have a tiny light next to the camera lens. It’s typically used in dark forests to search for masked murderers in horror movies or to find keyholes in the dark by everyone else.
It can also discharge a brighter blast of illumination (flash of light) for photos in a dark area. It can be turned On, Off or Auto.
Before reaching for the flash, understand color quality is poor compared to camera flash units. It also can “blow out” (overexpose) parts of a subject or scene.
Leave it “Off” most of the time. The camera is fairly good in low light for casual uses.
Turn it “On” when you know the scene is too dark OR when the subject is backlit or in severe sunlight that casts bad shadows.
Use “Auto” while frequently moving from indoors to outdoors. While it hurts many images, it’s an effective safety net for extreme light situations.

HDR
HDR means “High Dynamic Range.” It has more stops than the normal 5-stop dynamic range. This setting is used when you want to add texture to the darkest shadows or the brightest highlights.
For simplicity, let’s say HDR photos are basically several photos superimposed on each other to utilize the best parts of each. It’s more complicated, but I don’t want to slow us down.
You will see in the HDR photo that there is detail in both the highlights and shadows, which wouldn’t be possible with a direct photo.
However, this magic comes with some tradeoffs. For instance, the contrast tends to be muted. Also, if there is any phone or subject motion while the camera is recording the frames, there will be “ghosting,” subjects may appear translucent in several places rather than solid in one place within the scene.

Timer
The primary purpose of the timer is to let the photographer frame the image, set the time, and race into the scene to be part of the photo. It functions fine in this mode as long as the phone is stabilized (on a tripod or leaning against something immobile).
The secondary use is to avoid camera shake (blur). It’s an image-saving technique during low-light situations. Camera and/or subject shake is most likely in low light because it takes longer for the camera to collect the correct amount of light to make a properly-exposed image.
Choose your scene, stabilize the camera, instead of pressing the shutter, use the timer on a reasonable time (3 second delay). This ensures the iPhone isn’t rotating or still vibrating from your touch while the image is recorded. It’s sharp.

Filter
I’m not a fan of specialty filters. If you’re into permanently destroying your originals, that’s your choice.
If you desperately want to use software filters on your images, send the original photo to yourself as an email, save the emailed photo (it will have a new name now), and apply after-filters to the second image. If you make images with a permanent filter, there’s no reasonable way to “undo” it.

Enough for now,

Please see Part 2: Editing 
             or Part 3: Storage

Monday, December 31, 2018

Quick Tips to Improve Photos Video


 video, narration, beats by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com
photos by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com, The Beaumont Enterprise and/or The Dallas Morning News

Please watch and share “Quick Tips to Improve Photos.”
The companion "cheat sheet" on this blog is located here: quick-tips-to-improve-your-photos.

This version is visual hot sauce to some. There is a slower version to savor each frame. It's located at "Savory Tips to Improve Photos."

Please share and subscribe to the NewsEagles YouTube channel (it’s free and easy). Please follow this link, sign in to YouTube (or create an account) and hit SUBSCRIBE at www.youtube.com/newseagles

Although I will do some additional work in the future, this is my Magnum Opus.

Enough for now,

Friday, February 16, 2018

Savory Tips to Improve Photos



video, narration, beats by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com
photos by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com, The Beaumont Enterprise and/or The Dallas Morning News

Please watch and share.

This is the long form of this video. It allows viewers more time to savor each image. For a spicier version of this same presentation, please see "Quick Tips to Improve Photos." It is only about 14 minutes long. Don't blink.

The companion "cheat sheet" on this blog is located here: quick-tips-to-improve-your-photos.

Please share and subscribe to the NewsEagles YouTube channel (it’s free and easy). Please follow this link, sign in to YouTube (or create an account) and hit SUBSCRIBE at www.youtube.com/newseagles

Although I will do some additional work in the future, this is my Magnum Opus.


Enough for now,

Saturday, February 03, 2018

Know Your Rights as a Citizen Photojournalist

video, narration, beats by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com
photos by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com, The Beaumont Enterprise and/or The Dallas Morning News

Do you know your rights as a photojournalist?
Please watch “Know Your Rights as a Citizen Photojournalist.”


Please share and subscribe to the NewsEagles YouTube channel (it’s free and easy). Please follow this link, sign in to YouTube (or create an account) and hit SUBSCRIBE at www.youtube.com/newseagles

Enough for now,

Saturday, January 20, 2018

What is a Photojournalist? (short video version)

video by Mark M. Hancock / © DFWmark.com

Have you ever wondered about the why, how or what of being a photojournalist?
Please watch “What is a Photojournalist?” – the shortened version.

Also, if you’re not a subscriber please subscribe to my YouTube channel (it’s free and easy). Please follow this link, sign in to YouTube (or create an account) and hit SUBSCRIBE at www.youtube.com/newseagles

Enough for now,

Sunday, February 21, 2016

What Is A Photojournalist?

video © Mark M. Hancock / DFWmark.com
photos © Mark M. Hancock, The Beaumont Enterprise or Mark M. Hancock and The Dallas Morning News

This presentation is an updated version of a speech given at the New York Press Association Annual Convention in 2008. This presentation is intended for non-photojournalists and especially students considering photojournalism as a career. To see more videos, please visit and subscribe to the NewsEagles channel on YouTube. More to come. 


Enough for now,

Thursday, May 29, 2008

PJ motivation

Many years ago I was a solo staff PJ at a twice-weekly newspaper. A close friend and talented photographer had recently graduated from an art institute and was willing to cover for me while I took a vacation.

He did a ride-along to see what the job entailed. We buzzed around town in my '68 Bug, chatted about the job and looked for features. Finally, I spotted a guy mowing his lawn. I pulled over, and we grabbed our gear.

As we got out of the Bug, my friend looked a little confused and asked, "What's my motivation?"

Motivation is an art term. Artists are encouraged to find their creative motivation and meaning of their work before they create.

In fictional writing, motivation partially explains a character’s thoughts, actions, behaviors or feelings. It defines the wants, needs, desires and beliefs driving a character. Psychologically, it partially explains a person's need to be understood and/or appreciated.

Basically, it's why people do what they do.

I understood what he meant, so I told him the truth. I said, "Deadline is in 30 minutes."

Motivation is personal
PJs have many motivations. While these may sound like purposes, they're not. Again, the difference is within the individual PJ. All PJs have the same general purpose - to tell visual stories. However, our motivation to complete this purpose varies.

Probably the strongest universal quality of a PJ is a strong work ethic. We want to work, work hard and work more.

This is the reason most PJs are PJs. Some could be sculptors or oil-on-canvas painters. However, there's no way to crank out the same volume and diversity of quality work every day.

Pseudo-motivations
Some PJs may say they're motivated to be a PJ because it "pays the bills." That's not a reason. Banking pays the bills much better and doesn't require a four-year degree and $20K of equipment.

Other PJs may say they like to make photos. This also isn't a valid rationale. There are many photography fields. Almost every other field pays more.

PJ motivations
Most PJs are driven by a combination of the following motivations. Each PJ's individual wants, needs and desires keep the PJ shooting.

To fulfill the obligation
PJs are obliged to present images to readers on time, every time. PJs could work at a monthly magazine or a daily newspaper. Either way, we have an obligation to deliver meaningful images on time to the readers.

Subscribers have paid to see these images. We must deliver what they paid to see and expect to see. This is why we're professionals. We go early, stay late and work every assignment to fulfill our obligation to readers.

Readers are our purpose while professionalism is our motivation.

To help people
This is the main reason I'm a PJ. I want to help people.

After a natural disaster or other crisis, people need help. While PJs can't afford to provide the help most people need, we can show images of need to readers. Those readers can help. They can donate time and/or money. They can get laws changed. They can help lift people out of really bad situations.

I've seen this many times in my years as a PJ. People care about other people they've never met. People want to help people they've never met. PJs connect people with needs to those who can help.

To answer "why?"
Curiosity is a hallmark of PJs. The subjects we document should answer the question "Why?" This question should also motivate us to document actions we see. Anyone could drive past a person doing some unusual action. PJs stop and try to find out why this is happening.

Coincidentally, we may answer an unknown future question with today's answer. We may wonder why people are working in a particular place. So, we document the construction workers on a project.

Ten years later, something good or bad could happen as a result of the question we answered before.

After a natural disaster, for example, we could learn a project saved the lives of thousands of people. We already documented the answer to "why" while it was happening.

To show the facts
Truth is somewhat relative. Each person sees the truth differently. All a PJ can do to reveal truth is show the actual facts.

Often the facts show a truth some can't believe. However, it's a fact. Because our images are considered facts, PJs must maintain an ethical level beyond reproach.

If we shoot commercial images or illustrations (fiction), we label them as commercial or illustrations. We aren't trying to fool viewers.

If a PJ tries to deceive readers with something other than fact, none of the PJ's images are believable. This alone is motivation to find only the facts.

To inform/educate
While most PJs consider themselves full-time students of life, the images function as teachers to readers. The facts we document can instruct readers about the good and bad aspects of life and our communities.

A still image immediately transmits volumes of information to a viewer. Everything from how to survive a bad situation to how to recognize tasty food is presented in a millisecond through our images.

We've already discussed how PJ affects the brain. We also need to understand other people expect to learn from our images.

To share the experience
Sometimes PJs feel a little guilty because we don't appear to have "real" jobs. We get to roam around town, view activities and make images while everyone else is chained to their desks.

PJs want to capture the essence of this experience and share it with readers. While the viewers of our images may not get to (or want to) experience what we do, we show them what it's like.

While the job involves us attending events because readers are too busy (think school board meetings), it also involves surviving dangerous situations as well as more enjoyable sideline observations (think concerts and sports).

PJs share all these experiences with our readers. Maybe they're too busy. Maybe there's limited seating. Maybe they can't afford admission. Either way, it's reason enough for us to be there and find the story-telling images.

To achieve
Achievements are relative to each person. Therefore, they're motivations. Graduating college, buying a home or raising a child are achievements. Each of these accomplishments require dedication.

Most PJs want to be known for their abilities and dedication. These include being able to get access, get "the" shot(s) and deliver on time.

Measurements of achievement can include volume, quality, rarity, danger, income and more. Again, it's a unique balance determined by each PJ.

To prove we existed
I'll admit this is a selfish motivation. However, all motivations are selfish to some degree because we're talking about what motivates an individual to do some action.

Once we're born, our only guaranty is death. If we live and die without a trace, did we really exist?

I have a detailed theory on this. I may explain it one day. For now, let's understand PJs have the ability to transcend life through our images. Otherwise the names William Fox Talbot, W. Eugene Smith, Gordon Parks or Eddie Adams would mean nothing to us.

Again, this can be considered "achievement" and creates a different level of motivation for each PJ.

Enough for now,

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

PJs have a "life wish"

This is my first contribution to the Black Star blog. They prefer contributors to include anecdotes to establish authenticity. I'm still in the air about this approach. I'd like to hear what y'all think.

Hurricane Rita was still blowing when I left the office. The streets were flooded. Those streets were located somewhere under the piles of trees, downed power lines, broken glass, misplaced roofs and twisted steel objects. I had recently returned from covering Hurricane Katrina, so I was trained and mentally prepared for what I might find. I had a first aid kit, food, water, gas, spare tires, an inflatable raft, emergency illuminators and a truck full of other possible needs.

I wasn't speeding, but I probably broke every other motor vehicle law in the department of public safety handbook. In one hour, I had driven the wrong way on freeways, driven in reverse up exit ramps and stopped on overpasses to make photos.

I was the only person on Interstate-10 for probably 100 miles in either direction. I knew the police and fire department weren't cleared to leave "safe" locations yet. I also knew I was on my own if something bad happened. There was no way to communicate, no tow trucks and no emergency workers. I needed to stay alive if I wanted to tell this story.

Dying Is Easy

Many people think photojournalists have a "death wish." The opposite is actually true. We have a "life wish." If anything, we're trying to cheat death as frequently as we can. We feel most alive after we've survived a harrowing experience.

Dying is easy. Living is the hard part.

Telling the story is our goal, but the process itself is the drug making us go into forest fires, ride out hurricanes and wade through gators and toxic sludge. We tell the story to our readers and the story of the process to our friends.

We're addicted to the speed of difficult situations. We think it's cool to see at f/22 and in slow motion when the adrenaline pumps. Otherwise, we wouldn't do this work.

However, we must live to tell the story. A dead photojournalist has failed.

Avoid Bad Decisions

Over the years, I've seen photojournalists make bad decisions. Some bad decisions cost people their lives. Most didn't. We can learn from both types.

A bad decision can lead to serious injury or death. A bad decision means a photojournalist isn't going to make deadline. They'll either be in jail, the hospital or the morgue. None of these options are good.

It takes training to avoid bad decisions. We must consider the options and choose the right one in advance. When the time comes, we'll only have one choice to consider:   the good option.

We should know exactly what to do, and how to do it, for any danger we're about to face. We must also decide what we're willing to do - and unwilling to do - to ensure we deliver the story. This often means erring on the side of caution rather than recklessness.

At other times, it means we might need to take an undesired action to ensure our own survival. The situation dictates this to us. We must have already considered our options before this moment to avoid a bad decision.

Think It Through

The key to surviving daring assignments is to consider as many dangers as possible before we're placed in those situations. If time allows, research everything there is to know about these dangers and ways to avoid being injured or killed.

If a photojournalist is covering a story about a particular kind of animal, for example, we need to know a lot. We need to know the animal's habits (particularly regarding food and reproduction). We need to know when and where they can be found. We also need to know how they attack, when they attack and how to avoid these attacks.

Furthermore, we might need to know how to survive in extreme cold or heat and how to keep our equipment functioning in these temperatures. We need to research heat stroke, frostbite, hypothermia, snow blindness and possibly simple things such as how to keep water from freezing or how to find water in a desert.

Once we know this information, we can tell stories without putting ourselves or our subjects in serious danger.

Train for the Event

Next, we should train for our assignments. If we're unsure about mountain climbing, scuba diving, surviving in a combat zone or other dangerous environments, we need to train before we go.

Not all assignments require training or allow training time. It's best to be in relatively good shape to handle most assignments without major fitness hurdles. Martial arts provide good fitness training with more practical benefits than spin aerobics. However, some assignments require additional work to ensure survival and image delivery.

Efficient photojournalists can make stories while they train. Most communities have clubs for everything from rock climbing to diving to paintball. The photojournalist can acquire needed skills while creating a publishable story about the club.

If anticipating a trip to a combat zone, it's better to have a few paintball bruises and a bruised ego, than a bullet lodged in a kidney.

Enough for now,

Please continue reading this series.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Apply General Orders to PJ work

There are many ways to determine a person's motivation and methods. While honor has always been a strong motivator for me, I was issued my primary operation orders in the Army.

Army recruits are expected to memorize the three General Orders. Every soldier must adhere to these orders without exception. Unlike the NPPA Code of Ethics or some similar goal, the General Orders come with specific punishments if they aren't followed. Consequently, soldiers must take these orders seriously.

They've added a few words (or maybe I forgot a few) in the last few years, but they're still something PJs should understand. Substitute PJ for I and newspaper or readers for military terms and it should make sense.

1st General Order

I will guard everything within the limits of my post and quit my post only when properly relieved.

I learned this as "I will quit my post only when properly relieved." This line is the single most ingrained and important sentence to my daily work ethic. To me, it means I'll report the news until A) full completion of assignment B) deadline C) I'm called off for some other reason (bigger news) or D) I'm injured to the point of hospitalization or death.

I consider this line a serious obligation to our readers. It means our readers won't be shortchanged when they need to know what's happening. It means I'll arrive early and stay late to understand the whole story. It means I'll keep looking for a better image until A, B, C or D happens.

In short, it means I care about what I'm reporting, why I'm reporting, for whom I report and I'll continue to do so until it's done.

The added part basically means I'm responsible for my company-issued equipment. It also means I'll keep an eye on my co-workers' equipment while I'm at the office or on assignment.

2nd General Order

I will obey my special orders and perform all my duties in a military manner.

The first half of this means I'll follow instructions of my employers (see 3rd order*). If they really want me to leave a fire to make a portrait elsewhere... well, that's what they want. I've been properly relieved from covering the fire. It normally won't happen, but the desk often has information I don't (again, see the 3rd order**).

The second part of this order states how I'll conduct myself in public and at the office. I'll be a pro PJ.

3rd General Order

I will report violations of my special orders, emergencies, and anything not covered in my instructions, to the commander of the relief.

In the military, this requires soldiers to say when another soldier breaks the law. It also requires them to report abnormalities to the commander of the relief.

For PJs, our readers are our ultimate commander. So, we could read this as "PJs will report violations of law, emergencies and any oddities to our readers." Most PJs should find this is a succinct job description.

* As long as it's legal and within the Code of Ethics.
** This implies we'll give proper feedback for the desk so it can make an informed decision during emergencies. We don't argue; we report.


Enough for now,

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Make lemonade

It's always hard to post images after interviews with Pulitzer Prize winners. I'll never have anything on hold to post that would compare to their work. Primarily because I tend to take "happy" photos while most competition award-winning photos aren't happy.

So, I'll do the opposite. I'll post some "making lemonade," "stone soup" or "silk purse" images. These are images from less-than-coveted assignments. Look at the image and then ask yourself about the assignment and why it was assigned.

Keep in mind that each photo assignment costs a newspapers anywhere from $200 to $400 or more (include PJ time, benefits, mileage, etc...). So, if the assignment is weak - for whatever reason - it cost the company the same amount as a quality assignment.

In all cases, PJs must remember the subjects aren't responsible for the assignment (most of the time). They are often simply thrilled they'll be in the newspaper. So, as both of this year's prize winners noted, every assignment deserves a PJ's full attention and ability. Each shoot must be done as well as possible. This work ethic shows the PJ's professionalism and creates good will with subjects and readers alike.

During the monthly meetings in Dallas, a standing joke was to say, "You get all the good assignments," to the senior PJs who squeezed coal into a diamond. It was an understood complement to the PJs' ability to do well under challenging conditions.

The nifty side effect of this experiment is that until I have an obviously cool assignment, both of you (regular blog readers) will think I'm making good photos out of these assignments, rather than bad photos at great assignments. :-)

Enough for now,
 

Monday, December 26, 2005

Art is frustrating

Technically, PJs are artists. As artists go, PJs are technical. We work with numerical calculations and mostly standard compositions to tell stories - other people's stories. But through it all, we tell the story of ourselves.

We tell stories through "art." The images we make are an extension of ourselves. These images show where we've been, how we work with other folks, what we've done, how we've survived and how we've grown - as storytellers, technicians and artists.

Often, our images tell about the mistakes we've made. Common mistakes include bad exposures, timing, focus and compositions. They also tell of wasted time and opportunities to tell stories differently. Or, more regrettably, they tell of time wasted when we should have told different stories altogether.

When I was in college, I lived in the art dorm. An intelligent, eccentric graffiti artist lived across the hall from me. He personified art. He had tattoos, piercings, dred locks, combat boots, a leather jacket and a kilt.

He was emotionally committed to his artwork. He cursed. He threw things across the studio. He cursed. He broke things. He cursed. He would dig through trash dumpsters for supplies. He cursed. He wrapped his hair around small branches to make paintbrushes to unleash his raging art. Did I mention he cursed ... often.

He was tortured by art. He worked on calculus problems to ease his mind from the hardship of art.

At the time, I focused on the technical aspects of photography. So, I didn't fully appreciate his struggles. While writing an upcoming post about composition, I've come to understand and even appreciate his torment. Calculus, which has a fixed answer, is much easier than art, which has no answers. Art only questions.

Furthermore, quality art is never correct. Quality art always has flaws. Art can always be better. At the same time, it can't. Quality art is synchronistic flaws. A technically perfect piece of art is boring. It takes mistakes to elevate art to perfect. Calculus is easier.

Each time we grasp a camera, we expect mistakes. Even if everything's perfect, bad chemistry or other problems can destroy what we've made. And, as we've determined, it destroys a part of us because we are the beginning and end of what we create as art.

A painter begins with a blank canvas and must fill it. A sculptor begins with metal, rock, clay or wood and must mold it into a shape. PJs begin with a blank sheet of film or a blank memory card. Our beginning is the same.

Instead of a painful, sudden birth of art, PJs experience an agonizing drawn-out gestation period. We struggle through the conceptual phase (finding story ideas), the development phase (getting access) and the growth phase (technical background). When the images are finally made, we're pleased if they have all the right parts. The art we create is a relief.

While other artists must labor within their own mind to create art, PJs explore the world outside ourselves (the uncontrollable world) and find scenes and compositions to fill our frame.

During the actual labor pains of art, PJs fixate on the elaborate mechanical apparatus upon which our art must perform. We let ourselves believe our work is nothing but hardware, math, experience and location.

To accept responsibility for artistic success would indicate we're artists using a tool. It means we're responsible for the entire process. This might be seen as a direct conflict with our prime mission:   tell the truth.

As such, we recoil from the title "artist." We prefer to call ourselves documentarians or technicians. However, we must eventually recognize others call our work "art." We must also address the aesthetics of our work. In other words, we must tell the truth and create art. To do so, we must understand some art basics.

Consequently, we must periodically step back and look inside ourselves instead of at the world around us. This is where art begins.

Inside PJs' minds exist the elaborate visual language by which we communicate with our viewers. Although this language is governed by classical rules, those rules are often in direct conflict with each other or the reality surrounding PJs. Additionally, new rules are introduced by each failure or success. The end results are the visual stories we collect upon blank sheets of film. This outward expression of our internal visual language is called art.

Art is confusing and frustrating. It's even harder to explain. But, we must all eventually confront it individually to understand it.

Enough for now,
 

Monday, August 08, 2005

Dissect imageless stories

Every PJ has heard Bill Garret's PJ solution is "f/8 and be there." This equation makes sense for spot news, but it doesn't seem to work for vaporous news stories or features.

The technical how-to is the easy part. Being there is more difficult. To be in the right place at the right time takes considerable thought.

Jodi Cobb, a National Geographic staffer told Nikon Net she prefers Louis Pasteur's quotation, "chance favors the prepared mind."

Cobb said,
"Photographers rely on serendipity for a lot of their best photographs, but you've got to know what you're looking at. You've got to do the research, and know where to go and at what time of day and what you're best chances are in order to get that moment. A huge amount of preparation goes into serendipity."

The challenge
For every news story there is one perfect image. Frequently, this image is impossible because it would involve a PJ's death. However, simple stories and deeper features are absolutely possible for PJs to capture IF they know enough about the story (and have some luck).

Today, I'll pose the challenge for everyone to read news stories like PJs do. First, understand what the story subjects are doing (or did). Then, understand who the primary people are. Lastly, imagine how to best document this story. When and where will answer themselves. Why is often a second sentence in the cutline.

If the story is a retrospective, ask how to best illuminate the story now. We can't go to Normandy Beach in 1945, but we could go now. Who (specific names) would we want to see there (must be a living person)? If they were there, what would we expect to see and how would we shoot it? What emotional barriers must we overcome in ourselves to get the shot we need to tell their story? How would we convince people to let us hang with them during this emotional time?

These are the challenges PJs face on every assignment each day. It becomes more difficult when the story isn't about anyone in particular, but a community-wide or global situation (global warming, famine or war as examples).

The point is to use your imagination to pre-visualize a single ideal image. Then, break down this ideal into achievable steps to get to where the ideal image actually might exist today.

When faced with a similar situation, and armed with pre-visualized images, a PJ knows where to go and what to do to try to find the ideal image for the story. Again, it may not be a possibility, but by considering what could be captured we have the "chance favors the prepared mind" part of the equation handled.

"Being there" becomes a logistical and economic factor once we know what we want. Once we are in the location and everything is right, the ideal image may never materialize. On the positive side, an even better image may happen once there with a prepared mind.

The exercise
Today, let's keep it simple. The next time we read a newspaper, we'll ignore the stories with images and focus on the stories without images. These stories are often written hastily because news broke near deadline or nobody thought to ask a PJ to tackle a complicated issue.

For new PJs, it's a good mental exercise to get in shape for showtime. For seasoned pros, it helps us prepare for the inevitable follow-up or localized stories. After this exercise, we can get something in the bag before they ask.

I'd suggest everyone turn off the computer, pick up their local paper and go through this exercise now. However, I know it wouldn't happen. So, I'll walk through a fictional example story. Then, y'all can go look at the hometown news to see the undocumented stories and mentally document them.

Information needed
Each image tells a story. Therefore, we must answer Who, What, When, Where, Why and How. Additionally, we need to know the specific name of a person or organization as well as all the contact information on this person or organization.

As we read a story without an accompanying image, we need to answer all these questions. Then we need to formulate a desired image to match the story. If the story is about urban decay, a pastoral scene doesn't work.

What - the Verb
For many news stories, what seems to be secondary to who. However, to understand the most complicated stories PJs face, we'll tackle the issue first. What is the "verb" of our visual story. Without understanding what's happening, we can't document it.

If someone asks, "What happening?" and others answer, "Dog," and possibly drool upon themselves then we get a creepy feeling and look for an exit. The answer to "what's happening?" is always a verb.

As an aside, when you arrive for a full day of hardcore PJ work and ask what's happening, the answer may be a noun. When a reporter says "school" or "new business," it's OK to imagine drool. It makes the day bearable.

The most difficult stories to document start with what and then move to who. For today's example, let's imagine a tax abatement bill passed and soon becomes a law. This new law benefits a particular industry while it creates difficulties for others.

Public relations firms are paid large fees to put positive spins on bad news. They frequently employ key terms such as "growth" or "gains" (in labor or service support businesses). However, the truth is the government (or the biz itself if it relocates for the abatement) took money from one person and handed it to another person. Good, bad or indifferent, this is what happens with tax abatements.

For this particular story, we'll say the abatement is contained within the community (rather than a new, out-of-state biz, which is good locally and bad elsewhere). We must understand how much money is about to leave a budget. We also need to know which specific services will be cut back or eliminated.

Our research shows the government has been helping support a not-for-profit day care center in our community. The amount the government contributes happens to be the same as the monthly abatement revenue lost by this community and they plan to cut all funding to this center (it's my story, I can make it convenient).

Now, we must document the results of this action in one to three frames. However, as PJs, we must document this in present tense for a past or future action.

Who - the Noun
As we dig through the story, we want to find the names of the primary people. It could be the person (or biz) named in the story or someone directly affected by the news. If it's slow-moving news, such as a new law, there's time to find people affected by the law and document the law's results.

In either case, we need to distil the story down to the people involved in the story. This doesn't mean "a poor person" or "a mother." This means we need to find a name and eventually a phone number and address. Then, we need to gain access.

Get help
When we're faced with larger issues, we need to get help from others to connect to the subjects. We know this new law affects poor people and mothers. Consequently, if we can locate a poor mother who uses this day care center, then we have someone who is most affected.

For other stories, we could search for community organizations that try to help those most affected. This requires a phone book, a deep business card file and some time searching the Internet for contacts.

Our goal is to document the story, but if we can help some people along the way it's best. The leaders of these organizations understand this aspect of "media" and are willing to help because they understand many newspaper readers want to help their neighbors with donations or petitions once they know what is needed.

We'll contact the center directly and ask for our specific ideal - a low-income mother with children at the center. The center may suggest a few folks who need the most help and give us names, phone numbers and/or addresses.

Make contact
With telephone numbers, we can contact the subjects and see what concerns they have. If we make contact before the money flow changes, we can document the "good times."

Now is when some of the other when, where and how questions are answered for our visual story. Where is dictated by the story. We need a specific address and phone number for the center. We'll also need to know when the subject arrives at the center. We'll talk some more and find out the best way to shoot the situation (how). Possibly the subject tells us something unusual about her day care experience. Then, we'll want to document a drop-off or pick-up ritual.

Seek the image
After asking the subjects many questions, we learn enough information to formulate some possible ideal images.

We know this mother picks up her excited child at a specific time on a specific day. We also know the child is a toddler who waits in a playpen until its mother arrives. We additionally know the mother lifts the child out of the playpen and carries the child to the car.

Now, what's the ideal image for this specific story?

The shooting window is very tight. So, we must know which equipment, lenses and angles tell this story best. What light should we expect? What background/foreground elements should we expect?

BTW, when you arrive at the center before the mother, the child is sleeping. Does this change your ideal image?

Publish the results
Not every story comes to a logical conclusion in a timely manner. Sometimes, PJs need to do what they can and get it to the press while the issue is still hot or while there's still enough time for readers to act and help someone.

This is why it's best to plan on finding the singular best image for a story. Although we would like to have the time and page space for a full-length photo story, it's not a reality at most daily newspapers. We get one crack at telling the story in one frame and move on to the next story. We can visit again later, but there's a hole in the paper waiting on an image.

Consequently, find the one frame to tell the entire story or at least compel readers to read the story. If a PJ plans on a three-image package and space gets cut, the package goes down to one image anyway. If the lead image tells the whole story, the message stays intact even after the cut. If the lead image only tells one-third of the story, the PJ hasn't accomplished the mission.

The entire point of this job is collecting stories and getting them onto a press.

Follow the story
Later, we should follow up with these folks periodically to see how situations have changed. If we later learn the center is closing, we'll want to be there for the final, likely tearful, day.

Possibly, the subject needed to find alternative child care or had to quit her job because her income wasn't more than new child care costs. Meanwhile, the subject could have won the lotto or perfected cold fusion, now lives in a mansion overlooking the lake district and created an endowment for the center (now there's a story).

When it doesn't work
Occasionally, a story implodes or turns out to be something other than expected. The resulting images don't tell the deep-issue story we hoped to have. Even then, the PJ has some nice shots documenting vignettes of someone's life. It can still be turned into a feature story about the person. It's fine. It happens. Run the feature story and work on the next issue.

Enough for now,
 

Tuesday, September 07, 2004

Give and get a critique

Since a PJ is only as good as the last shot, I should change my portfolio more often.

After saying this, I've recently had a few inquiries about giving critiques for newer PJs. I like to look at images and evaluate them. As anyone would, I evaluate them against images I've made and those I've seen (ie. in newspapers, magazines, online and as competition winners).

What is a critique?
A critique is a critical evaluation of a piece of work. It allows a non-involved observer to give improvement advice and ideas. The analysis can be positive (this was good) and/or negative (this needs work).

In both cases, it reverts images back to images rather than an emotional incident the PJ experienced. It's an evaluation of the image itself with detached fairness.

What is a cut?
Most pro PJs ask other PJs for a "cut" when preparing submissions for competitions or a job bid. A cut is a critique of a set of images to eliminate excess. It's a non-binding edit of a set of images. The strongest and weakest images are identified and explained.

Typically, the requesting PJ gives the reviewer a number to cut and a definition (contest, job, etc.). An example might be, "I need to cut 10 images for a Pictures of the Year portfolio." This lets the reviewer know to eliminate the 10 weakest images, and it also tells them the quality of the competition and the parameters of the contest.

Additionally, a cut may also include an order. Portfolios and photo stories/essays require the images to be presented in a sequential order. The PJ sets the order with typically the strongest image first and the second strongest image last. The remainder of the sequence is dictated by the story and occasionally by layout (depends on format). Often, the order can determine the winner of the contest or job bid.

Why get a critique
A critique is an important tool for a PJ. It lets PJs know how their images have progressed and what they must address to become better. A good critique often hurts newer PJs' feelings. Since the point of the critique is to highlight successes and failures, the newer PJs focus on the flaws. If they learn and correct the flaws, the critique was successful. If they ignore the feedback and take the information as personal, it was unsuccessful. Either way, the responsibility remains with the PJ getting the critique.

How to give a critique
Before I give anyone's images a major critique, I explain that my comments are about the images and not the photographer particularly. It keeps me from hurting people's feelings. Please consider this as the caution.

Be honest
If anyone likes an image, say so. If anyone doesn't like an image, say so. In both cases explain why. It does no good to comment about an image without explaining the reason for the comment. "This is cute," is a comment about the subject matter, not about the image. "This is out of focus," is a comment about the image. "The eye is out of focus, but the ear is in focus," is an exact, constructive critique.

Address concerns
Explain the areas of concern about a particular image: focus, exposure, timing, lens selection, lighting, composition, depth of field, shutter speed, tonal range, crop, balance, contrast/flatness, color balance, foreground/background, juxtaposition, mood, space, etc.

Subject matter can also be addressed, but images should be considered as assigned and the subject matter questions should be addressed as such. For example, a portrait is a given – the subject was assigned, the background is flexible. However, a large country fair or football game gives the PJ more options on subject matter.

Give constructive ideas
Without a constructive idea, a comment is simply an opinion. The PJ learns how to make better images by having flaws explained and getting information on how to make the image better.

For example, a tight portrait may be shot horizontally. I might suggest it would look better as a vertical shot if it only has one or two subjects. Likewise, if background items inadvertently dissect a person's head, I might suggest it would be better to find a neutral area in the background to place the person's head.

Evaluate the cutline
In photojournalism the cutline is an important part of the image. With very few exceptions, cutlines are displayed with the image. This is the PJ's opportunity to explain why the image was created in the first place. The question posed to all PJs is "who cares?" The answer should be found in the cutline. The answer should evoke "you care because..." (without saying these specific words).

Although the cutline helps explain the image, it shouldn't simply be a reiteration of the image. I've discussed cutlines several times, so it should be understood.

Understand personal preferences
I like images of people and/or animals. Personally, I think PJ work is about the struggles and accomplishments of living creatures (mostly humans). If the image has no people, there should be a darn good reason in my opinion. There are some truly beautiful news photographs without people, but they also tell stories of their own (often weather or seasonally related).

Similarly, different PJs have different opinions about light, mood, crops, and almost every other aspect of photography.

However, these are often issues of opinion and/or subject matter rather than image quality. So, I must clarify at least once during my critique if I take issue with a consistent lack of an element. The PJ being critiqued must know how this comment about subject matter relates to the overall image (and future images).

How to defend work
The defense of a piece is equally important as the critique. It's a rebuttal of the critic's comment. Often a defense is simply, "OK." However, sometimes the PJ may need to explain the reason for the photographic decisions made.

During a cut, the PJ is defending why an image should not be cut. Since the PJ is the final arbiter of a cut, they're often required to face their own emotional attachments to images during the cut. If the image can't be defended, cut it.

Some valid defense examples are:
  • Yes, the subject blurs, but it shows the action of the shark ripping his leg off.

  • The subject may initially look out of focus, but it was dead for several days and catchlights don't appear on dry eyes.

  • The red dot is important because it represents the Japanese flag. It's the reason this fish costs thousands of dollars more than the other fish.

  • I chose this angle because I didn't have a helicopter in my camera bag. (OK, maybe this is a little too defensive, but we all get the point).


  • Critiques speed improvement
    A critique isn't meant to hurt anyone's feelings. It's about improving images. If PJs only seek feedback from friendly sources (family members), the advance toward a desired goal is much slower.

    In college, the critiques in our Environmental Portraiture class were heated. Often voices would be raised over differences of opinion. Most of those students now shoot for national magazines, large newspapers and multi-national corporations. Our critiques were passionate because we were all passionate about the medium of photography.

    If nobody had anything to say – good or bad – about a set of images, the shoot was basically considered a failure and not worthy of a comment.

    Raw critiques are best
    Although a portfolio critique is useful, a raw take critique is best. Trust me, a frame-by-frame edit of a raw take by someone with four Pulitzers is NOT fun. But, it's an excellent learning experience and makes better images very quickly.

    How to get a critique
    NPPA critique program
    If you haven't had a real critique, then I'm probably not the right person as a starter. I'd suggest considering the NPPA critique program first. They hook PJs together for cooperative relationships. It may still sting, but they're probably less blunt.

    PhotoBlogs
    Another way to get critiques is to start your own (free) blog and list with PhotoBlogs.com. Then, PJs can get immediate feedback via a comment section from potential readers of newspapers and magazines. It's also a way to let others learn from the PJ's successes and difficulties. It'll also motivate PJs to find new images and display how they're improving.

    Here
    If a PJ wants a critique or cut, send me an e-mail with a Web site or blog and a level of critique desired (advanced amateur, pro) as well as a deadline. I'll list the site as a separate "Critique of the day" entry with a link and e-mail address (for sites without comments sections). Please title the e-mail "critique of the day" so I can handle it properly. Pro critique requests get to jump to the front of the line.

    For pro critiques, I need the following information:

    If you have an online resume, please send me a link. It would be the easiest way for other pros to evaluate your experience level before they start ripping your work apart their critique. If it's not in English and you have a preferred translation program, please let me know the Web site for the translator. Otherwise, I'll use Google.

    If you don't have an online resume, I'll need your full name (credit line name).

    I also need to know your primary source of income (magazine, newspaper or freelance). If you're staff, please list the publication, city and state as well as a Web site address for the publication. If freelance, please list a few of your clients. If you've already won any awards with the images presented, please let me know.

    I'd also like a short paragraph or two describing what you expect from a critique or why you want one. If you prefer, you could write a paragraph about your motivation to be a PJ (it's different for everyone).

    The point of the paragraphs is to convince other pros to analyze your images for a few hours and give you feedback. If I simply post links without any of the information above, meaningful critiques are unlikely.

    This site is visited by many outstanding PJs from around the globe. I hope they'll share their views with newer PJs who want guidance.

    Please limit submissions to photojournalism only. Although other branches of photography (art, commercial, wedding, etc.) are valid fields, the critiques PJs would give would not be appropriate (PJs might get very indignant at set-up commercial or wedding shots, and be under-impressed by a portfolio of "Doorknobs Across America").

    Enough for now,
     

    Monday, August 23, 2004

    Have one in the bag


    Haltom City municipal court judge Kyle Knapp reacts as organizers add a garbage can of ice to the dunking water during the city's National Night Out celebration at Haltom Road Park in Haltom City on Saturday, July 31, 2004.

    Mark M. Hancock / © The Dallas Morning News



    The above shot reminds me of three important lessons of photojournalism.

    Lesson No. 1
    I've already written about getting safe shots immediately upon arrival. The image above is an example. I was actually assigned to shoot the city's mayor. I got this shot in the first 15 minutes and expected it to go to publishing purgatory.

    However, a gasoline tanker flipped over and caught fire in another city. So, this image had to represent the event while I sped across the county to the fire. So, I'll again emphasize the importance of shooting what isn't on the assignment first to have something in the bag.

    Lesson No. 2
    Lesson two of this day was to get the scene first. The police blocked every possible approach to the fire. The truck was burning on the lawn of a gas station next to a highway. Since it was a big, potentially dangerous fire, it was logical and appropriate for police to keep people away and shut down the highway.

    When going to breaking news, have a map sitting on the passenger's seat. As roadblocks are encountered, find different approaches. I'll say it's amoeboid movement to get to the scene, but it's actually more like the situation the male RNA strand faces.

    Along this same line, the one who gets to the spot news first wins (particularly with fire). A freelancer got there first, got a great shot and the Metro page. I stayed for the clean-up phase, but knew I was smoked. Nonetheless, the competition didn't beat our paper and that's what really matters. Better luck next time.

    Lesson No. 3
    Good people should be honored.
    In the process of walking a few miles to get within shooting distance (the other media types were on the opposite side of the freeway), I lost my work ID and access badges. I didn't miss the badge until I arrived at a transmission location we had near the fire. Without the badge, I needed to go downtown.

    I made deadline, and searched the following day (in the sunlight on a day off) for the badge. No badge found.

    I'll cut the story short and get to the important part. Heather Miller, a young woman who lives near the fire, found my badge and was honorable enough to call the office and even mail it back to me. I had a print made for her of one of my favorite photos and mailed it (with permission) to her. She rocks!

    The lesson:   we all depend on the help of others. Also, honest people need to be rewarded and honored whenever possible. Lastly, even though it makes us look like nerds and gets tangled with the cameras, we should probably wear our credentials around our necks instead of on our hip (it can always be tucked in a shirt pocket).

    Enough for now,

    Tuesday, July 20, 2004

    Keep your focus


    Mark M. Hancock / © The Dallas Morning News

    A runner sprints toward the finish of the 5K Run In The Dark at Bear Creek Park in Keller on Saturday, August 23, 2003. Proceeds from the event provide school supplies and medical services to disadvantaged students.

    A lot of photographers can lose focus and take positions as writers, designers and any number of other (higher paying) jobs. Some people take "any" job at a newspaper in hopes of getting a foot in the door. It does help, but it might be the wrong foot. I caution PJs against taking different news-related jobs.

    A PJ does much better taking a PJ job at a smaller publication and honing her/his skills as a PJ rather than taking an unrelated job at a larger paper. Each job at a newspaper has a learning curve and demands total attention for competency.

    If a photographer overstretches her/his time, something eventually breaks. PJs make photographs. They're out in the real world. The rest of the office sedentarily sits in the office and works. Occasionally they get some coffee in the break room, but breaking news is unlikely to happen in the newsroom itself.

    Some might think it's best to be available for breaking news. According to this theory, being available is as good as getting the assignment. This would be possible if one isn't doing anything else. However, if a person becomes a writer, they can't drop the deadlined city zoning story to photograph a fire. Or, if they do, they'll be expected to write about the fire instead of photographing it.

    The really ambitious person might even think they can cover an event and photograph it at the same time. This is also unreasonable. It's like attempting to videotape and photograph the same event. One person can only do one thing at a time. I've tried to do both. Both suffer. Yes, a feature story can be done along with a portrait, but deadline breaking news is an entirely different game. PJs are lucky if they have time to write decent cutlines before time is up. Off to press everything goes.

    If someone wants to be a news photographer or PJ, priorities must be set. Photography is time intensive. Writing is time intensive. Editing is time intensive. Color correction is a time vacuum. Eventually, the two jobs clash (particularly during Friday night football). One wins, and one loses. The biggest loser is the person who lets someone down.

    Currently, I'm reading one of the Writer's Digest marketing books for novels and short stories. An interesting passage stopped me and made me think hard about what I'm considering. In an interview, author T.C. Boyle said the biggest problem for those who want to enter a field is to try without first immersing themselves in the field.

    This is true. As a PJ, I can easily rattle off the names of 50 other news photographers whose work I admire. Some of them I know personally. Some I do not. However, I'm familiar with their work. I can dissect their work and explain why I like it. I can also rip apart a bad example and not feel bad about it.

    Similarly, if I get a critique of my work from another pro, I can handle it because I understand the critique is about the work - not about me as a person. This is how we become better.

    Personally, I know backgrounds in my images can get a little cluttered. I also know I don't layer my images as much as I should. These are issues I'm dealing with each time I shoot. If I wasn't shooting every day, I wouldn't concentrate on repairing these problems in my vision. Instead, I'd worry about the basics.

    In writing, I face similar problems. I'm a professional writer in that my stories could be published in the newspaper after they've been beaten into shape by a talented copy editor. This doesn't mean someone should beg me to write for them. It merely means they publish a story if it meets minimum standards. I'm still paid for making images, not my stories.

    Writers bump into the same problem if they try to shoot their own photos. Yes, we publish a photo related to a story by one of our writers as long as the basics are sound.

    Does this mean the image is as cool as a staff photographer might have done? I doubt it. But, there are some writers with good eyes. They still get their paycheck. It still rewards them for writing. They just get a feeling of satisfaction from having done something extra.

    As I consider writing some freelance short stories for publication, I understand I'm not a pro novelist. I can promise illustration photos for my stories will be better than those shot by most other writers, but my story better have its own merits or there is no publication willing to touch it.

    In the meantime, I'll keep my focus on my camera. I'll read about writing and write about reading, but I know I'm best at shooting because I do it every day. If someone is considering taking a job as a writer to be a photographer, think hard about the consequences. Each job is a matter of experience and immersion.

    Enough for now,

    Saturday, July 10, 2004

    Photograph the notes


    Vinny, an 18-month-old Chihuahua, (top) tries to use telekinesis to get the last bite of Brooke Fossey's hot dog (bottom) at the 2004 Grand Prairie Road Shows at a private park in the Grand Peninsula neighborhood in Grand Prairie on Friday, June 25, 2004.

    Mark M. Hancock / © The Dallas Morning News



    Photojournalism is a set of mistakes. The more experience a PJ gets, the fewer mistakes they make (hopefully). We can either suffer through the mistakes firsthand or learn from each other's mistakes. I think the purpose of this blog is to explain some f-ups and try to prevent others from suffering the same. (Yes, I do know about the electrocuted monkey experiment.)

    In this spirit (not the monkeys), I again suggest PJs take photographs of their notes as they complete each page. Then the cutline information is clustered with the images in the permanent archive.

    They have been pushing us to start doing this instead of filing a CD and cutline info in the hard file. In our case, we have a yada-yada-yada terabyte jukebox platter archive system. So, they want all the information there and backed up.

    Having shot film for too many years, it's hard for me to "waste" frames. I'm over it now. Here's why (this is the I-get-to-suffer-while-you-learn part).

    I had a casual Friday shooting schedule. I shot a nice little parks and recreation informational carnival in Tarrant County and then shot the new, Metrosexual haught spot in Dallas.

    The PARD shoot eventually produced acceptable images. With some good shots in the bag, I headed off to my next shoot in Dallas.

    The club was too packed to move but interesting. Because of the club's darkness, I approached it as a "get the feel" assignment. I used a tripod for most of the frames and got the swirling mass of people and color from every angle.

    I took it a little further and did some rear-synch flash, slow exposure images on the packed dance floor as well to show how pretty everyone was (I believe "pretty" is the operative word for all genders in this club).

    I had my shots after two hours of work and a lot of sweat. I was shooting my way out (getting the exterior shots), and I realized my notepad had fallen out of my camera bag. I knew it was in the club because I used it. I knew to check for it before I left the shoot because I had already lost a notebook years before.

    I searched the crowded club for it, but I couldn't find it in the throng of gyrating bodies and perfume. Luckily neither shoot was on deadline.

    I left a biz card with the club manager and he told me to call back at 2 a.m. I did. He said call back at 2:30 a.m. I did. He said he would call me if he found it. I stressed the importance of the cutlines from my previous shoot. He said he would call back.
    At 4 a.m., he called back. No luck.

    Saturday I shot a Burn MLS game against D.C. United and AP wanted deadline shots (blog entry to come about Fox Sports' use of those shots). Then I had another shoot for deadline (yet another future blog entry). Afterward, still no notepad.

    So, Fayrouz and I went back to Tarrant County on Sunday (my day off) to find the people from the first shoot. It was a new subdivision and most of the event's attendees had walked to the park. I remembered the first names of two of the people I needed and the last name of another two. I also wanted to get the name of a Chihuahua.

    After three hours of going door to door with a laptop of images from one property developer to another, making phone calls for confirmation and knocking on a few neighborhood doors, I had cutline information for the people I really needed. I still didn't have the Chihuahua, but I could punt with an animal.

    Five hours after I started, I transmitted three images to the grid, got a spell check from the desk and could finally start my work-free day.

    On Monday (my other day off), the club dude called. He said he found my notepad, but he was tired. He said I could pick it up on Wednesday. Wow! What a relief. I thought I was going to be forced to pay for that expensive miniature spiral notepad out of my own pocket. Thank goodness I don't work for a big daily metro newspaper...

    So, my point is: If you want to have a stress-free day off, take photos of your notes as you complete each page. It will be good for the company too because then the information is always included with your take.

    Enough for now,

    Tuesday, July 06, 2004

    Riding the rocket is an uncomfortable rush


    Mark M. Hancock / © The Dallas Morning News
    Dallas firefighters battle a fire at the Fitzhugh Apartments near the intersection of Fitzhugh Avenue and Monarch Street in Dallas on Thursday, July 1, 2004.

    The worst day a photojournalist could have is when there are no assignments. Many might imagine this is a great situation. PJs could catch up on archive work, research story ideas, prep contest entries, turn in paperwork (mileage, etc.) maybe even get something to eat. At a smaller paper in a small town, this may be correct. At a metro daily, we call it “riding the rocket.” Yes, you can start doing the typical office things BUT...

    To an editor, a PJ without an assignment means s/he is available for the next crisis – anywhere on the planet.

    Imagine a huge rocket sitting outside the back door of the building. If something goes wrong, a PJ will run to the rocket, strap her/himself onto the side and blast off. Of course this is a fictional rocket and the actual rockets are our cars and trucks, but the feeling is similar.

    The PJ often has no idea what s/he is roaring toward, where it is or how long s/he will be there. The PJ is merely screaming away in a general direction and waiting for additional instructions. This is riding the rocket. It’s an uncomfortable-bowel-syndrome wait for something to go wrong.

    We hope everyone plays nice today, but expect something bad to happen. We are excited to cover something big, yet we know the bigger the assignment the bigger the potential failure. It’s often something tragic, which we wish on nobody. It’s a rush, but it isn’t for everyone.

    Editors expect definitive images in the system by deadline. This isn’t a “maybe” situation. Deliver compelling, definitive, story-telling images by deadline or don’t bother to come back.

    PJs without assignments are the first on the rocket. Those between assignments are next, followed by those who are closest to the event (this is why it’s important to get a shot of something/anything the second we arrive at a scheduled shoot). I’m not sure how it goes from here, but if it involves guns in less-desirable metro areas it seems to be mine.

    Additionally, vacation is subject to cancellation at any time. We must have our pager with us at all times (particularly while on vacation). A vacationing PJ can be reactivated and put on the rocket in their flip flops with a margarita hangover and sent who-knows-where. Laugh now, but wait until it happens to you.

    Sometimes there is absolutely nothing there. The event happened and the bodies were removed hours ago. One photographer said this is where photojournalism ends and documentary photography begins. You take a few images to document there wasn’t squat there. However, they better be compelling images of nothing in the middle of nowhere.

    Enough for now,

    Tuesday, June 22, 2004

    PJs must deliver

    If images aren't where they belong when they belong there, it's a huge problem. Delivery is the core of the PJ's reputation and reflects upon the photo department as a whole. I've already made an entry about newspaper deadlines, so let's discuss image delivery.

    Image delivery is different than shooting, editing or any of the other technical factors we tend to talk about in this biz. Image delivery is the only component of this job that matters to a publisher or assignment editor. Delivery (or lack thereof) is what makes mediocre PJs acceptable and great PJs worthless to editors.

    Editors don't want to be burned by a shooter. Think of editors as conductors of an orchestra. Each PJ delivers predictable notes when and where they're expected throughout the entire score. When everything is done properly, it's professional. If one PJ doesn't deliver properly, it's a sour note repeated over and over and over by an amateur. The entire orchestra suffers as a result of the actions of one.

    It isn't like a pebble disturbing the stillness of the water. It's a freaking cannonball through the side of the ship. Everyone must scramble to fix the problem. However, typically the problem comes near deadline and the only option is damage control rather than a reshoot. So, the hole is patched with text or whatever image or graphic might be similar.

    Redundancy is the key to delivery. There are multiple ways to get information and small items (film, disks) around the globe now. We must know how to use each of these and which ones to use first. We use the cheapest first and then work up to the fastest depending on the deadline.

    It costs a lot (ouch), but we can literally pay American Airlines to hand deliver something to another city the same day. Freelancers should measure the cost of potentially lost gigs (photo editors are all friends, and it's a tiny world) against the cost of making deadline and then make his/her decision after the last FedEx pick up was missed.

    Hopefully a PJ only needs to get some dit images to the editor. If the Wi-Fi location is down, there is always a hard wire or cell patch. If FTP doesn't work, there is always e-mail. Most publishers have their own hubs or at least some form of high speed connection. A six Meg file isn't a problem to get as an e-mail attachment anymore.

    Even if the file size is a problem, freelance PJs can set up a special area on a Web site to load images. Post the images there, let the client download the jpgs from the Web. Later, pull the image down, invoice the client, do the happy dance and eat a pizza.

    In a worst-case scenario, the PJ shot film and is working for a distant client. S/he should process the film, edit, scan (high resolution) and transmit the best six with an explanation. The editor won't be happy, but the editor is more concerned about making deadline with any image rather than having nothing and an excuse. You can always send the negs later for file images.

    If something happens late at night and the film must be souped, it could be a problem for those who don't have the knowledge, chemistry or equipment. This is where those who know how to process color film at home (or in a hotel toilet) keep the clients while others lose future gigs. When it comes to competitive situations, it doesn't matter who has the shots as much as who delivers the shots.

    As long as an image – any publishable image – is delivered on time to the right place, everything else becomes academic. Exposure, composition, timing, chemistry, pixels, etc. don't mean anything if there's no image in the system or in the basket at deadline. It's slightly understandable when the PJ runs late while in the midst of a hurricane, but a missing three-day-old mug shot is intolerable.

    We turn out (prepress into the system) most of our zone stuff two days ahead of deadline because of the press schedules. Only Main, Metro and Sports can think about real-time deadlines.

    Whatever the circumstances, have multiple back-up plans. Get an attachment to transmit with a cell phone in a pinch. If the traffic is dead, pull over and send one image. It's the best possible option. If the car breaks down, and there's no way to transmit from the car, expect to hitchhike to the closest Wi-Fi location with a laptop. Call the auto club or a tow truck on the way, but make deadline.

    Enough for now,