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The Demise of the Professional Photojournalist

Dan Gillmor has a piece up on his Center for Citizen Media blog about the coming decline in the venerable professions of photojournalism and videography. It's hard to fault Gillmor's argument that the ubiquity of Net-connected cameras and cell phones will mean that, for breaking news at least, a pro will rarely if ever be the ones who capture the shot or the footage that gets widely published and reprinted. The comments to Gillmor's post are worth reading. One reader pulls out the figure that a billion camera phones will be in use globally by 2008.

21 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. A place for the professional communicator... by BWJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One might make an argument for this, but I am not quite so sure this is the "demise of the professional photojournalist" for a number of reasons, not the least of which is the ability to effectively communicate. Sure a picture can tell a thousand words, but that photograph needs to be placed in context. I take lots of photos that describe what I see, do and where I go, but I would never think of myself as a professional journalist. These images for me are a means to communicate and keep in touch with family and friends (a blog, right?), not to disseminate the news to the rest of the world. The fact that sometimes images from my site do resonate with news agencies/institutions or individuals around the world is cool, but it is a rarity that I get requests for re-publication (one every three months or so) and it is not how I make my living.

    Additionally, there is also the issue of ethics that most professional publications usually get right, but there are the admitted occasional screw-ups. Usually however, there are issues of image/video provenance to deal with that may not always reflect reality ("I found it on the Internets, so it must be true!") that editorial boards put through a vetting process to filter out much of the fakery/deceipt.

    The Internet has enabled the ability to democratically (small "d") reach huge masses of people with relatively few resources and I expect that we will see more citizen reporting as the years go on. It may in some cases also challenge the mainstream media for particular stories, but the reality is that most folks have other jobs/things that keep them busy and they do not have the resources or time to become professional journalists. When they do obtain the appropriate resources/time/credibility, they have just crossed over into the world of the professional journalist.

    Technology will cause things to change and serve as a destabilizing influence for many established institutions, but I think we will always have and pay people who relate the news to us, bring us the wider world and tell stories. This will become especially more important as increasing percentages of societies become more specialized and fragment their time into narrowly defined regions of interest/study.

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    1. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by Sunburnt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree; camera phones will provide a new source of visual information, but only as a result of their ubiquity. This sort of media exposure for fortunately-placed amateur videography is not exactly new (think Zapruder film), and there will be a place for highly-produced news photography as long as there is any sort of professional media.

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    2. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is that stuff like newspapers don't use good quality printing, so you can get away with a lesser camera. Camcorder quality is improving, but more people are just using cell phone cameras to shoot photos or record video, and those cameras are still pretty bad. A lot of online stories by the news organizations don't have much by the way of photos either, the ones that I do see are very low res, whether or not it was taken by a good camera.

    3. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Camcorder quality is improving, but more people are just using cell phone cameras to shoot photos or record video, and those cameras are still pretty bad.

      I'm sorry, I believe you misspelled "complete crap" ;-)

    4. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Did you read the article (yeah, I know, stupid question). The thesis is that professional videographers and photographers who cover breaking news are going to find themselves unemployed.

      So when there's a choice between something and nothing, which do you choose? Something, obviously. But how does that mean the pros are going to be out of work? Amateur video will continue to be used as it is now, and always has been -- used when nothing better is available and even then usually as short clips preceding a pro's interpretation of the aftermath. You want a story about the war in Iraq? You send a pro and maybe supplement his work with some amateur footage... heavily edited by the pro.

      And we're not talking about gadget freaks and better resolution. There's more to shooting video or pictures than how many megapixels you've got. Most of the work happens AFTER the camera has done it's job.

    5. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Most of the work happens AFTER the camera has done it's job.

      I agree with everything else you said, but this I have to take issue with. Most of the work happens before the camera is pointed. Photojournalists put a lot of thought into the story they want to tell and the kind of images they need to tell that story. They spend a lot of time and money finding out what the story is and getting into position to be able to capture it, and then put a great deal of effort getting into the right place at the right time to produce the composition they want. After the shot, there's still a lot of work to be done, mostly selecting the right image from among the hundreds or thousands of photos shot, plus some effort in post-processing it to maximize its impact (though without altering the image -- photojournalists should not be doing that).

      I'd argue that pros put in the bulk of their work before the shot even for unplanned, opportunistic shots. Years of practice are required so that when that split-second opportunity comes, the photographer recognizes it and automatically grabs the perfect angle and composition to maximize the power and impact of the image, then snaps the shot with perfect focus, DOF and exposure, all without even thinking about it.

      Taking crappy pictures is easy. Anyone who happens to be in the right place at the right time can do it. Taking great photos, powerful images that resonate with viewers and say something important requires either extraordinary luck, or extraordinary skill, both artistic and technical.

      I'm an amateur who is working hard at learning to take good photos, and although my efforts have improved my photography, what I've really learned is just how large the gap is and how much there is to learn. My photos today are dramatically better than the snapshots I took even a year ago; I've learned a great deal about composition, lighting, color, form and all of the technical details that go into producing a high-quality image. I'm pretty happy with my pictures, but when I look at professional work it blows me away. Even shots that had to have been taken by pure reflex are technically perfect and composed with exquisite artistry. I'm sure I'll spend the rest of my life working toward that skill level, but never achieving it.

      Professional photographers of all sorts, including photojournalists, aren't going anywhere. People enjoy beautiful, artistic, emotionally powerful images that not only tell a story but do it with style and visual impact. You don't get many of those out of a crowd full of cellphone cameras.

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    6. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by racermd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I haven't seen all the comments below just yet, but here's reinforcement of the posts before mine: The availability (some might say ubiquity) of digital cameras is a near-perfect analog to the proverbial thousand-monkeys-in-a-room. Sure, we might see some amazing pictures of world, national, or local events, but it's not the quantity that makes the difference. It's the quality.

      As an amateur photographer myself, I know how difficult it is to communicate effectively in a purely visual medium. There's a number of factors that must be considered - color, light, framing, depth-of-field, etc. All of this is before we start to get into the actual camera settings required to effectively capture the image. It's definitely an art, and it's not going to go away any time soon. And don't give me any crap about how technology can take the guesswork out of it. Yes, you can make perfectly good snapshots (NOT photographs) with a point-and-shoot camera in automatic mode. Almost always, those settings are meant to give consistent results, not artistic results. (Although, one could make the argument that using the automatic mode itself can be a tool in the artist's kit. I digress..)

      Rather, what I see happening in the future is camera-phones, compact digital cameras, and fixed web-enabled security-style cameras (among others) will bring us the most current images of breaking news while actual journalists will arrive later (if deemed newsworthy) and provide a higher quality product for the public to consume. It's not very much different than the situation today.

      After all, most of the people I know aren't actively looking for events to submit to news agencies. Most of the photos and videos they take are newsworthy only to themselves and perhaps their family and friends. Only if something major happens will it wind up on someone's sensor or film. I seriously doubt people are going to change all that much in the near future.

      That's my take on it, anyway.

      --
      My sources are unreliable, but their information is fascinating. -- Ashleigh Brilliant
    7. Re:A place for the professional communicator... by Spackler · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a photojournalist myself, I see the continued need. Sure, right place at the right time is great for cameraphones and pocket digital cameras, HOWEVER, the photo editor of any paper above podunk town status will still need pros to go out and shoot news or sports. It is the experience and the ability to know that they will get a usable shot under any circumstance that they pay for. If they send you somewhere, and you come back with junk, you tend to not last long. If you show up with a pocket camera as your main gear, they pretty much know you are not a photographer, and won't even look at your stuff.

      Spot stuff, sure, it is great to have the help. Scheduled stuff (90% of the paper) needs real photographers.

  2. New Legislation by Thunderstruck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A good headline like this should always be followed with a call for new legislation. We need to protect the industry. Perhaps we could ban trafficking in illicit news-related photographs, or the use of technologies that allow unrestricted sharing of such photographs on the internet.

    On the other hand, the few photojournalists I know can usually take vastly better pictures of a newsworthy event with a disposable camera than I can with a phone/camera of any kind. Maybe talent will save the industry instead.

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  3. Re:Eh, not so soon by rubberpaw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Additionally, professionals are much, much better at documentary photojournalism as well as photojournalism for pre-organized events, such as sporting events and political events.

    I suspect that amateur photography will continue to push the professionals to do yet better. This can only be a good thing.

  4. Footballs are now cheap - No need for pro athletes by nick_davison · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mmm...

    1 billion poorly lit, poorly framed, grainy images from cameras where people believed mega pixels === quality.

    How did we ever live with slightly less timely clear images that were composed well?!

    Besides, it's challenging enough to get alleged photo professionals whose careers depend on it not to add smoke to Lebanese buildings. How much is your reputation as a news agency going to be worth after your fiftieth photoshopping scandal because no on has a career to put in jeopardy but their odds of selling the single shot go up massively if it's more impressive?

    Sure, some of the less valid photographers will face competition and things may get a little tighter for the great ones - but there'll always be a need for reliable quality backed by a scandal proof reputation.

  5. Internet Enabling Amateurs by mandelbr0t · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't think that journalism is the only profession that has been radically changed by the introduction of the Internet as a distribution medium. The same argument about distribution being within the reach of the unwashed masses still applies to pretty much anything that involves distributing some kind of content to an end-user. We were worried about indie artists obsoleting the Big Music Industry, amateur filmmakers taking money away from Hollywood, traditional news sources becoming obsolete, FOSS obsoleting commercial software development. And yet, none of this has happened.

    To some degree, the work of amateurs has been more widely viewed and accepted due to things like blogging, YouTube, online photo galleries and more. And FOSS is a serious competitor for all kinds of business applications. In the end, however, there's a few things that keep the pros in business, and likely will continue to do so. Professional content creators (just to keep things generic) have experience, reputation and capital. Most amateurs are lacking in at least one of those areas. In the rare and brilliant case where an amateur lacks none of the above, they remain an amateur because they've chosen to commit the bulk of their time to some other profession.

    Only when experience, reputation and capital have nothing to do with successfully creating unique and interesting content do I see the pro's job in danger. The Internet has enabled more amateurs by reducing the capital required to enter the market, allowing for one to gain reputation in a myriad of online communities, and experience by contributing freely and easily to the public domain. All of this free content is simply competition for the pros, who are pros (presumably) because they are one of the best. Conclusion: The Internet does enable amateur content creators to succeed, but the pros will continue to succeed by improving the quality of their work.

    mandelbr0t

    --
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  6. Not "demise." More like "eclipsed." by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good news photogs are still going to get the shots they've always been there for. They also get access to places and events that other people don't get access to. Being part of the press corps does give you that chance to capture Gerald Ford tripping down the stairs, or Bill Clinton ginning up some Oscar-worthy tears, etc. But to the extent that a lot people are more interested in stuff that happens to normal people, even cheesy low-res MPGs are more relevent because they exist.

    The other thing, here, is the presence of more enthusiasts' cameras in and around events/scenes that would normally never rate the presence of a professional. Not the county fair, etc., but oddball sports/leagues, minor-league political events, that sort of thing. I've found that some of my own special-interest events (outdoorsy stuff among the bird dog crowd) has been bone dry of any media coverage that doesn't come from within. Um, except when the vice president accidentally peppers a lawyer while quail hunting - then all the sudden everyone wants images from that world... for exactly a week, anyway.

    But when I shoot stuff at an event, there can be twenty other people there with their cell-phone-cams, and it's the nerd with the heavy duty DSLR that produces the images people actually want. Most folks simply won't carry around enough glass to produce the sort of images that a pro or an insane amateur can produce, since it's just too inconvenient. Doesn't matter how many pixels a cell phone's sensor can pack in - the laws of physics are still in the way of those tiny lenses producing really good workable images, especially of active subjects in mediocre light.

    I've also found that carrying a macho camera and strobes gets you in places. It's sort of like all of those times that I used a mic cable and got around college bar cover charges saying, "I'm with the band."

    But the sheer number of images produced by all of those portables (say, the stuff from the Madrid train bombings) will certainly result in lots of web/broadcast coverage that an assigned pro would never produce. But what a professional (with his/her practiced eye, journalistic sensibilities, better gear, and credentialed access) can produce will never be replaced by the ubiquitous phone-cam. These things are complimentary, not mutually exclusive. But look at how the Michael Richards video clip circulated... that stuff will certainly eclipse other material's airtime when it's compelling enough.

    --
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  7. Move along, nothing to see here by meta-monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This article is retarded. I am a professional photographer, although not a photojournalist (while my wife is).

    Go pick up a copy of your local newspaper. Or the USA Today. Look at the images that accompany the stories. Now see how many of them are "news as it happens" images, besides planned events like sports or political functions. Very, very few. Pictures of traumatic events, captured as they happen, make up about 1% of a professional photojournalist does. Most of it is either:

    • Feature stories photography. These are either portraits of people being profiled in articles, or images that illustrate a story. The paper hires a photographer ahead of time and arranges the photo shoot. There is not a job an amateur with a camera phone is going to do well.
    • Sports photography. High school sports, college sports, whatever. This is a field for which your greatest assets are connections to get you on the field, a strong knowledge of the sport, and, oh, yeah, a $4,000+ high fps camera body and a $3,000 - $7,000 400mm or 600mm f2.8 lens so you can crank your shutter speed up high enough to freeze action, and open your aperture wide enough to blow out the distractions in the background. Not a job for an amateur with a camera phone.
    • News coverage of planned events. Political rallies, parades, community events, etc etc. An experience professional with a good eye and professional equipment is going to do a much better job than, again, a schlep with a camera phone.

    These are the things photojournalists actually do, none of which are going to be replaced by random amateurs with point and shoot cameras. So, according to the author, photojournalists are going to be put out of a job by people doing something that photojournalists don't actually do. What's next? Are vending machines going to put gourmet chefs out of business? They're everywhere, and get you fed for a lot less!
    --
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  8. home depot exists, so do carpenters by ribond · · Score: 3, Insightful
    the ubiquity of the technology does not in any way detract from the usefulness/worth of professional people to run it.



    Visual Studio express free downloads from MS has not resulted in management writing their own code
    Hammers & paint @ home depot has not caused massive layoffs of contractors
    Everyone has a pocketknife but surgeons are still employed.
    Many many crappy cameras in the wild does not mean that people will start liking crappy pictures



    I like nice pictures. Blogging hasn't (yet) killed journalism/professional writing. I expect photogs will survive.

  9. The luck factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some photographers are famous and produce pictures that form the rememberance of our times or even lead to change by altering public opinion. I can think of three pictures that went a long way to souring the public on our wars in Viet Nam and Cambodia.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_State_shootings "John Filo's Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of Mary Ann Vecchio, a fourteen year-old runaway, kneeling over the dead or dying body of Jeffrey Miller, shot in the mouth by an unknown Ohio National Guardsman."

    http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0410/faas.ht ml "The 12 or 14 negatives on that single roll of film, culminating in the moment of death for a Viet Cong, propelled Eddie Adams into lifelong fame. The photo of the execution at the hands of Vietnam's police chief, Lt. Colonel Nguyen Ngoc Loan, at noon on Feb. 1, 1968 has reached beyond the history of the Indochina War - it stands today for the brutality of our last century."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Th%E1%BB%8B_Kim_ Ph%C3%BAc ". Associated Press photographer Nick Út earned a Pulitzer Prize for the photograph."

    As far as I know, these photographs were the high point of otherwise unremarkable careers. By luck, the photographer was in the right place at the right time.

    On the other hand, through skill, there were photographers who always managed to be in the right place at the right time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Eisenstaedt There will always be jobs for photographers like him no matter how many cell phone cameras there are.

  10. Parallel to graphic design by JanneM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Take a look at graphic design. I think it's a pretty good parallel to what's happening in photography (my SO is a graphic designer, so I have some insight into this).

    There used to be a lot of graphic designers and it used to be that a lot of them made it their bread-and-butter business to do restaurant menus, business cards, leaflets - any kind of small scale, frequently revised job like that. It wasn't glamorous, but it paid the bills between the big jobs.

    Then DTP happened. And when people could start churning out the simple stuff on their own, that marked gradually dried up. The truth is, while a menu for a neighbourhood joint designed and set by the owner and cranked out on a badly trimmed Kinko's machine is clearly inferior to what a professional will do, it is good enough. The price premium a professional will charge (and has to, to stay in business) just isn't worth it, no matter how much better the results.

    For a lot of graphic design like that, the cost of entry - and the baseline quality you get - for interested amateurs is compelling enough that there is no price point at which you can make a living churning out the stuff anymore. The market for "pro" work has shrunk substantially even as the total amount of work has increased. The high-end jobs are still there, naturally, but those were a pretty small proportion of the whole job market.

    I suspect it is the case with stock photography and some news and feature photography as well. There's enough people doing decent enough work and selling it through cheap stock agencies - or licensing it completely for free, just for bragging rights - that the bottom will fall out of those markets as well. Just as for graphic design, the high-end stuff will still be there of course - and is arguably even more important than before - but not that many people will be able to make a living on doing it. The top, the cream of the crop, will be just fine. The journeyman base, however, will probably not be very large anymore.

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    1. Re:Parallel to graphic design by meta-monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're right, the stock photography market is completely in the toilet. Getty made sure of that. You can't make much a living when the web-based stock clearing houses charge $1 for an image, regardless of use, and pay the photographer $0.15. You better hope your image gets bought A LOT.

      In terms of professional photography in general (wedding, portrait, commercial), the whole industry is in a very strange place right now in the aftermath of the digital revolution. Digital has given the illusion that photography is now easier, so everybody who ever thought, "Hey, I like taking pictures...I could be a photographer!" has set up a website. True, it's easier to learn the fundamentals of photography now, since you don't have to pay for film or wait for developing, but in fact getting a quality image from a digital camera is much harder than film! The exposure latitude of digital is much smaller than that of film. With film you could be off by 2 stops either way and the lab would fix it perfectly. With digital you get a half a stop under and a third a stop over. After that it's never the same. Color is another big issue. Professional processing labs would adjust your images depending on the color of the light under which they were exposed, and their experts knew what they were doing. Now people are doing their own color, and, simply put, not everybody has an eye for it. Before, even a crappy photographer could deliver an image that was at least well exposed and color-correct, just because the lab did those last two parts for them. Today, not so much.

      On the flip side, the quality of high-end professional photography is MUCH better today that it ever has been before. Digital gave creative and talented professionals a whole new set of tools, and the results have been amazing. The result is that the quality of good photography has gotten better. Bad photography has gotten worse, and now there's much, much more of it.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    2. Re:Parallel to graphic design by meta-monkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, I was talking about "latitude" as in "forgiveness." That makes it easier to get an acceptable image from film than from digital.

      And yes, you can still have a pro lab color correct your files. You can even pay people to process your RAW images. My point was about the glut of new "professional" photographers who don't understand these issues, don't understand color, and don't even have an eye for it, but like taking pictures, so they've put up a website and started calling themselves professional photographers. They're doing their own color, poorly, because it's cheaper.

      Color is not easy. My wife is one of those people who just sees it naturally. It took me years of experience to get as good as she is. For the record, I am a full-time professional photographer.

      By the way, you have some beautiful images on your website. I especially like your landscapes.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  11. Citizen journalism is only a contributing factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    the real danger to photojournalism is the cost pressures on news providers. The fact is that the profession has already changed markedly in the last 20 years. Digital's first effect is to make the talented (but foolish) art college grad that little bit better. For Photojournalism that has already been enough to persuade media outlets to cut experienced staff and only hire new, fresh meat. And then 3-4 years later, they go through the same cycle again.

    Sure, feature photography survives, but the profession is losing the structure which allows talent to really develop. Further, there are less feature photogs than there used to be and as HD video improves, there will soon be even less.

    This is, of course, progress. But it is still a bit sad and the leveling down of a communication form is worth mourning at least a little.

    Oh and if this is happening in every sector, the economy is going to have to grow a lot faster to soak up all these people... to be honest I'm not sure we've begun to come to terms with that yet.

  12. Why amateur stuff will win out by cdrguru · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The web caters to people that think "everyman should be able to do this", even when they can't. So, "citizen journalists" will eventually overwhelm paid profressionals just because people have no way to determine the difference.

    It all comes down to what are people looking for. Quality? Or just quantity. Or just a low price? A newspaper or web news site can "afford" far more when publishing freely contributed content vs. professional content they have to pay for. So, we're more likely to see free stuff. Not only that, but the difference between professional and amateur may not mean much for tiny, cropped down images on a web site.

    The other thing the web can't stand is the idea that material isn't being published because it isn't "appropriate". Would a newspaper or TV news program show a picture of a person "believed to be a rapist?" However, if someone has a cell phone camera picture of someone leaving the scene of a rape, you can bet some web site will put it up with the caption "He did it!!!!" What does this do to the idea of a fair trial?

    The idea of the "citizen journalist" pushes this over to a distributed model. Authority is a difficult problem in distributed systems and the "democratic" nature of the web seems to abhore the idea of any authority at all. This makes it very difficult to tell if you are looking at a clever fake or the truth. Sure, you might get different web sites with different material. OK, what is truth? Majority wins? Or is there something else that we can judge this stuff by? Right now, I would say it is unlikely there will be a standard and people will be left on their own. Truth could be a very slippery concept.