| Let me share some thoughts very near to my own heart, the capture and delivery of news images. If I asked you to bring to mind a classic news image; the collapsing towers in New York; the little girl running for her life from a napalm strike in South Vietnam; the baby falling through the air from a high rise building in flames; or the images of a baby whale and its mother killed and winched aboard a Japanese whaling mother ship in the southern waters of Antarctica what would you say?
Each and every day brave men and women risk their lives and reputation to bring you news images. But it doesn't stop there. You too have the opportunity to contribute to the news media. News happens everywhere and gives you a fighting chance to shoot classic images that not only hit the headlines but puts nice neat dollars in your pocket. You don't need highly fancy cameras either. I would wager if you captured Bin Laden in his lair with a cheap disposal camera, fitted with a glass milk bottle lens, you would have the major TV networks and news agencies around the world offering you a fortune for your images. That is an extreme example I admit, but it does serves to remind you of the window of opportunity news photography offers.
Oh yes, there is catch. You need to understand how the news media operates and their image expectations. You have to do your homework. That was one of the reasons I wrote my new eBook, "The Camera on the Frontline," as a practical guide to would-be news photographers in a part time or career role imbued with the urge to shoot news photos.
News photojournalists live and work in a condition of intense competition, danger and discord, risk life and limb and face the wrath of their illustration editors and you the viewing public. By the way, I'm not talking about the paparazzi here, the leeches of the image industry; that is another story. News photographers are much more than picture takers. They are photojournalists, visual reporters, who record our social fabric, history and relate visually to the moment; any given moment I might add, of the day. If you take a small leaf out of their book you are well on the way to becoming something to be reckoned with when you get behind your camera.
Memorable news images are powered by a range of visual elements, but far ahead of the rest is the element of emotion. Emotion plays a huge part in the acceptance and rejection of a news image in the media. Without emotion in some shape of form, humorous, sad, anger or anguish whatever, a news image will likely fall into the news room's rubbish bin like a spent autumn leaf. |