Archive Page 29

Film to Fizzle Out By End Of Decade

From this depressing article from the AP:

At the turn of the 21st century, American shutterbugs were buying close to a billion rolls of film per year. This year, they might buy a mere 20 million, plus 31 million single-use cameras — the beach-resort staple vacationers turn to in a pinch, according to the Photo Marketing Association.

Equally startling has been the plunge in film camera sales over the last decade. Domestic purchases have tumbled from 19.7 million cameras in 2000 to 280,000 in 2009 and might dip below 100,000 this year, says Yukihiko Matsumoto, the Jackson, Mich.-based association’s chief researcher.

For InfoTrends imaging analyst Ed Lee, film’s fade-out is moving sharply into focus: “If I extrapolate the trend for film sales and retirements of film cameras, it looks like film will be mostly gone in the U.S. by the end of the decade.”

So who’s still buying this relic from another era? Really good amateurs and a few pros who shoot “nature, travel, scientific, documentary, museum, fine art and forensic photography.”

It’s just the natural order of things, I realize that. Technology will continue to render things obsolete. But are some things more nostalgic than others? Surely, it’s sadder to lose film and all it represents than, say, the VCR player, right?

Innocent Until Proven Guilty

For more info visit the Bradley Manning Support Network

Bigwigs in the NYT Newsroom

The above shot, from New York Times photographer Todd Heisler, is a somewhat rare look at the New York Times behind the scenes (that’s Editor Bill Keller and Managing Editor John Geddes talking something over)….

Source: mediabistro

Where Are The Women Photographers?

Photo by Helen Levitt

So asks Ludmilla Morais in Street Reverb Magazine:

So, where the fuck are you women street photographers? Are you a figment of my imagination, a manifestation of my awkwardness in bonding with female figures? Should I look at the results of my initial search, read between the lines of that insipid message and give it a rest? Or are you out there, working the streets quietly, unnoticed and unpublicized, like Vivian Maier?

Stern Sidekick Gets Summons For Photos

Howard Stern’s sidekick, Joseph “Joey Boots” Bassolino, was issued a criminal summons for taking photos of National Guardsman in New York’s Penn Station this past week. NYPD charged him with interfering with traffic.

“I was keeping my distance to not interfere,” said Bassolino, who goes around the city photographing and documenting “all the interesting things I see about the city.”

MTA spokesman Salvatore Arena said photography is allowed in the station, “but you are not allowed to pursue your subject in an harassing manner.”

Source: New York Daily News

Bathing Suit Season Is Here

Photo: US National Archives

Have a good weekend.

NYSE Restricts Photos

The New York Stock Exchange is lame.

From TPM:

The New York Stock Exchange now claims that you have to get their permission (express or implicit) before you use images connected to the New York Stock Exchange.  So if you find a wire photo of the trading floor and use it to illustrate a story on Wall Street, you’re violating the NYSE’s trademark because they’ve trademarked the trading floor itself. 

TPM is represented on Media and IP matters by extremely capable specialist outside counsel.  And we’ve been advised that the NYSE’s claims are baseless and ridiculous on their face.  But this is yet another example of how many large corporations have given way to IP-mania, trying to bully smaller companies into submission with inane and legally specious claims of intellectual property rights. 

Rock Paper Photo’s Pop Culture Archives

Photo by Andrew Kent/Rock Paper Photo

Last week saw the launch of Rock Paper Photo, an archival site of classic pop culture photography. Co-founded by Guy Oseary (best known as Madonna’s manager) and featuring top photographers shooting top stars, RPP does have a lot of rarely seen, cool shots — including David Bowie by Andrew Kent, Marilyn Monroe by Bernie Abramson and James Brown by Richard E. Aaron. The whole idea is that prints are for sale, from a couple hundred dollars to a couple thousand.

Meanwhile, over at Cool Hunting, photographer Tom Murray talks about why he allowed his classic color collection of Beatles photographs to be featured on the site.

War … On Cameras (What Is It Good For?)

Absolutely nothing.

Reason.tv takes on photography and the police in this great video, “The Government’s War on Cameras.” (I particularly like all the clips of misinformed and/or rights-trampling authorities.) We finally get to see Antonio Musumeci, he of NYCLU lawsuit against the government fame, and the main message is hammered home — photography is your right, but not even the authorities know that sometimes.

Photography Link Roundup

Jack Kerouac, 1953  Photo: Allen Ginsberg LLC

•  An exhibition made up of photos taken by poet Allen Ginsberg, a sort of “Beat family album,” is now at the National Gallery in Washington. [Smithsonian]

•  Terror alert: Washington University was shut down for four hours after security found a suspicious DIY pinhole camera. [Gizmodo]

•  Striking before and after satellite photos show the Joplin tornado’s destructive path. [Daily Mail]

•  360-degree photos with an iPhone app? It’s coming. [USA Today]

•  Canon and director Ron Howard are collaborating on “Long Live Imagination,” a photography contest built around movie theme categories. [mediabistro]


Spam Blocked