Archive for the 'Photographers’ Rights' Category



Is Photography Sexy?

011Photo by discarted

Along with baristas and personal trainers, photographers are sexy – at least according to this article on MSN Careers detailing “10 Sexy Careers You Never Thought Of”:

Artsy types get a boost in the sexy department for having a strong sense of style and a unique perspective on the world. Even among artists, photographers stand out because they stay behind the camera, finding beauty in unconventional and overlooked places. Their willingness to stay out of the spotlight and focus their attention on someone else is endearing.

The logic on the list is totally ridiculous – mail carriers’ “legs look nice in those signature navy blue shorts”? But…whatever, take it where you can get it.

Article via MSN Careers

Oakland Schools Police Chief Outta There

Oakland School District Police Chief Art Michel, who was involved in a nasty confrontation with an Oakland Tribune photojournalist in November, will resign this week. A school district spokesperson wouldn’t give a reason, and an article on InsideBayArea.com said it’s likely due to a compensation and benefits issue and not the incident, but please. This man’s behavior is totally unacceptable and an embarrassment. Enjoy the private sector, Art.

To see our previous post on the topic, go here.

Article via InsideBayArea.com

Chilly Reception for English Photographers

From the Independent, this article details the increasingly fraught environment for photography in England where police, using the all-encompassing Anti-Terrorism Act, regularly harass and detain photographers who they believe to be a threat.

Reuben Powell was jailed for five hours for taking photos of a public building in London last week. (He was ultimately released, but they did take his DNA for good measure.) The article also points to the now constant problems for railroad enthusiasts and the case of Jess Hurd, which we posted on last month.

And while the police do have a clear-cut policy on how to handle public photography, the officers in the streets seem to wantonly enforce the law whichever way they please.

Jeremy Dear, the general secretary of the NUJ, said:

Even the police’s own guidance makes it clear that there’s nothing in the Terrorism Act that can be used to prohibit the taking of photos in a public place. The authorities have got to do more to ensure that those people charged with upholding the law don’t keep on contravening it by trampling over well-established civil liberties.

Article via The Independent

Photo of the Year: Part 3

lil-flip1

Photo by cinemafia

For my photo of the year I decided to pick an image of a traffic accident that occurred on Highland Avenue, right off the 101 in the early part of October. It’s a spot that I cross at least two times a day, five days a week, on my way to and from work. More importantly, it’s notorious for staging traffic accidents due to the confusing lane structure and light patterns.

What was different this time is that I decided to stop and document the accident. Most people just rested their heads on their shoulders and bitched about having to be diverted from the northbound Highland lanes to the southbound 101, and some may have even snapped a pic of the flipped car with their cellphone. But I decided in an instant to find somewhere to park, which was by no means easy, and get as close as possible to the crash.

Stowing my car on Cahuenga on the other side of the highway, I ran full speed under the 101, through bushes and to the scene of the crash. Out of breath, I dodged cars being directed to the detour, and finally got withing a stone’s throw of the car, resting silently on its top. Something about seeing this car on its back, like some kind of giant, dead beetle, felt at the same time alarming and amusing. It was something so familiar, only upside-down, and still mostly intact.

The first responders to the accident were two men from AAA, and I asked one of them, Sam, if I could take some photos of the scene from the perimeter that had been marked off by orange cones. He asked me if the shots would be in the paper, and I told them they would. He asked me which paper, and I told him the Times…a lie, but in the end it got me the shot.

Sam motioned for me to come closer and told me to hurry up because the cops were on their way and they were a bunch of assholes who would give me a hard time. I quickly crouched down on the ground right next to one of the cones circling the wreck and began shooting from a low angle. Seeing the scene from this close, without the chaos of the cars being detoured and the human elements involved, it felt serene, like any quiet urban landscape with the surrealist, overturned car thrown in for a gag.

After I took some shots, Sam asked if I’d take a few more of him next to the wreck. He told me that no one ever showed them (AAA workers) any appreciation, and he asked me to mention them and how they helped the victims involved in my article for the paper. I obliged and then thanked him and went on my way, feeling something like any journalist must when they nail the story they’ve been put to.

JPG Magazine Closes

In a further sign of these woeful times, JPG Magazine, the user-generated photography glossy and web site, will close down as of January 5. In an email to members (and on the blog), editor in chief Laura Brunow Miner said:

We’ve spent the last few months trying to make the business behind JPG sustain itself, and we’ve reached the end of the line. We all deeply believe in everything JPG represents, but we just weren’t able to raise the money needed to keep JPG alive in these extraordinary economic times. We sought out buyers, spoke with numerous potential investors, and pitched several last-ditch creative efforts, all without success.

While JPG’s concept was clever – users submit and vote on the photos that ultimately make it into the print installment – it’s execution frequently left much to be desired. At first the photography was original and exciting, but when the selection devolves into a Jonas Brother fan (on page 54 of issue 14), you have to wonder.  

An update on the site today said that with the outpouring of support they’ve received from the communitythere have also been some viable leads, so it’s possible JPG may continue in some form or another. At least for fans, JPG’s archives will remain, and there’s always the flickr group.

Our Photos of the Year

 observatory-web

We here at the Discarted blog decided to post our favorite photos of the year – that we ourselves took. I’m not in the same league as discarted or cinemafia, but I like to pull out the point-and-shoot once in awhile. Or as a certain someone calls it, the point-and-miss-it.

For me, it was a tie. I took this one in Griffith Park in Los Angeles. Despite there being practically no visibility on most days up in those hills due to smog and pollution, the light and colors at the Observatory are gorgeous.

I also like this one I took in Utah in September on the return leg of my six-week-long cross-country road trip. I was overall pretty amazed with Utah and now think you haven’t really lived until you visit there.

dewey-bridge-web1

It is the remains of the Dewey Bridge, built in 1916, located on the Upper Colorado River Scenic Byway – one of the most beautiful drives in the country. In April, a fire, accidentally set at a nearby campground, destroyed it.

No Photos in Long Beach Port

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Photo by Thomas Hawk

Thomas Hawk, a blogger and photographer from San Francisco, was stopped by police for shooting photos in Long Beach Harbor this past weekend. He writes about the incident here. Since he was approached two times by security, and a third time by law enforcement who told him he needed a permit to photograph the harbor, Hawk sought clarification from the Port of Long Beach. And today he posts the response, from spokesperson Art Wong.

In the [sic] Sunday night it seems that the officer thought you were trying to enter a private area and you were a commercial photographer. You, and other photographers, have a right a take pictures from public right-aways. But for your own safety, and for the security of the Port, we have asked our officers to be as vigilant as possible.

Hawk takes issue with Wong’s explanation that the officer claimed Hawk and his friend were trying to enter a restricted private area. Hawk is insistent, and has the photos to prove it, that he was on an overpass, on a public sidewalk.

This is typical of officers who err on the side of overzealous enforcement; they always claim a restricted area – totally irregardless of the law – was being breached when they’re called out.

To voice your complaints contact:

Art Wong, Assistant Director of Communications/PIO, (562) 590-4123, (562) 619-5665 (cell) or wong@polb.com

For Photojournalist, Pen a Concealed Weapon

Also in London, also from Dec. 10, a photojournalist named Jesse Oldershaw was stopped and searched while covering protests in front of the Greek Embassy where people had gathered in reaction to the unrest in Greece.

At 4:25 of the video, a police officer, rather preposterously, asks if Oldershaw has a knife in his back pocket. As he is being directed off to the side, Oldershaw is screaming out, “Why am I being stopped and searched by the police for a yellow pen in my bag? Everybody can see the yellow pen!” and “I’m press, why am I being stopped and searched by the police at a demonstration?”

Oldershaw continues to give a play-by-play of the incident and at one point asks the police straight out their reasoning when he is protected by law to be doing what he’s doing. They largely ignore him, but one does seem to give him a ticket.

Wedding Photographer Threat to National Security?

Jess Hurd, a photographer for the Guardian, was detained for 45 minutes by Metropolitan police Dec. 10 for taking video and stills at a Ramada Hotel in east London. Hurd was working on a story about weddings within an itinerent community known as travellers, but police felt she might be doing reconnaissance as a terrorist.

The police justified their actions by saying they are within their rights if they see suspicious activity, especially if it’s in close proximity to a sensitive sight. Apparently the Ramada was close to both the airport and a wharf. It is unclear what is suspicious about a credentialed press photographer outside a wedding reception.

The National Union of Journalists released a statement today that says, in part, “This is yet another absurd misuse of the s44 powers which are designed to allow the police to detain those actively involved in carrying out a terrorist activity not to stop press photographers carrying out their legitimate business.”

The Amateur Photograher blog says Hurd is considering legal action.

Just Another Day “At Work”

rolling-stone-cover

Annie Leibovitz/Rolling Stone – January 22, 1981

If you haven’t seen it, Annie Leibovitz’s latest book “At Work” is a good read and an interesting look behind the scenes with one of the world’s most famous photographers. In it, she tells the stories of some of her iconic shots, including Rolling Stone covers of John and Yoko and the Blues Brothers, as well as Vanity Fair portraits of everyone from Arnold Schwarzenegger to George W. Bush’s cabinet (a classic mafioso family shot if there ever was one).   

What’s amazing about her story is, her talent notwithstanding, she was also fortunate enough to start out in a much simpler era – when a novice photographer could just call up Rolling Stone’s art director and show him her shots of anti-war rallies in San Francisco. (Granted, Rolling Stone was truly a fringe, counter-culture magazine back then.) She describes getting the plum assignment of tagging alongside notorious gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson this way: “So I just jumped in the car and went along with him for a while.” That just doesn’t happen anymore.

Leibovitz is also the subject of this week’s Time magazine’s reader-generated feature “10 Questions.”


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