Hard News: Photoshocks
20 Responses
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Thanks for posting this Russell. You've very indirectly touched on an aspect of Western media coverage of China, especially in imagery, that tends to bug me at this time of year, and how that imagery is used to reinforce certain predetermined narratives.
I especially like the Wired cover. Very arresting.
Too early in the morning for me to say anything more coherent, just thought I'd express my appreciation for this post.
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Blade runner and murder accused Oscar Pistorius made the cover of Time magazine last week, if for all the wrong reasons
And like so such of the Pistorious porn, the most interesting thing is what’s not there: Reeva Steenkamp – not “Pistorious’ girlfriend.” You know, the woman that “superman gunman” shot to death.
This isn't the fucking cover of L’Uomo Vogue and Oscar Pistorious isn't a sociological data point. He’s been charged with murder. Please strike a visual tone that remembers that.
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Bag News on the Pistorius cover.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
Bag News on the Pistorius cover.
It's interesting to speculate how much of the killer-cyborg vibe is context. The pic, by Peiter Hugo, originally appeared in the New York Times last year to, it seems, no controversy at all.
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Morgan Nichol, in reply to
For everyone in the world that didn't know her, who killed her is the more important detail than who she was. Arguing otherwise seems futile. If she'd been killed in a car crash, or murdered by some unknown scumbag, we'd never have heard about her passing at all, named or otherwise.
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Richard Aston, in reply to
And like so such of the Pistorious porn, the most interesting thing is what’s not there: Reeva Steenkamp – not “Pistorious’ girlfriend.” You know, the woman that “superman gunman” shot to death.
+1 Craig
Yeah what the hell is happening when the (alleged) murderer gets all the media space including glossy , sexy even, pics . Reeva Steenkamp was brutally murdered in her own home, cowering in her bathroom.
I reckon he's got one hell of a PR machine behind him and the media have been suckered by it. -
Craig Ranapia, in reply to
It’s interesting to speculate how much of the killer-cyborg vibe is context.
A hell of a lot, I'd say. If they'd cropped the bottom of that O.J. Simpson mug-shot, it would have been pretty much indistinguishable from a million pretty anodyne 'candid' photos of Simpson taken over the years. IIRC (and I don't have a key to the paywall to check), the picture of Pistorious was part of a portfolio of Olympians in the glossy New York Times Sunday magazine where he was "inspirational high-tech paralympian sex bomb" not "dude facing murder charges - as well as a lot of rumours that he's a paranoid, abusive control freak."
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I think this talks to a really interesting piece of psychology. I remember during the 'teapot' scandal with Banks and Key how the media started publishing stories about the Government - and Key - with really unflattering images of our Prime Minister. Shadowy, looking tired etc.
The way the image influences our perspective of a story fascinates me, and I'm not we fully understand it.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
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Craig Ranapia, in reply to
I think this talks to a really interesting piece of psychology. I remember during the ‘teapot’ scandal with Banks and Key how the media started publishing stories about the Government – and Key – with really unflattering images of our Prime Minister. Shadowy, looking tired etc.
During the PAS thread on the British general election and it’s aftermath, it was interesting to compare and contrast the photo selections. The right-wing tabloids went for photos of Gordon Brown looking like the dour Scouse dwarf who got kicked off The Hobbit hikoi for being a buzz-kill. (Not exactly a hard get, to be fair.) And when the coalition was signed, the photo editor of The Guardian excelled with a spectacularly icky "candid" shot of David Cameron louring behind a half-open door. (IIRC, it was half the front page of the print edition that day.) I’m sure the whole ‘creepy clown playing hide and seek at a kid’s birthday party’ vibe was totally unintentional.
There’s a fine art to photo editing, and you can do a hell of a lot of editorializing without saying a word.
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I was talking to a university class the other day (among other things) about photo adjustment with computers, and how you need to be very careful about what is an acceptable level of manipulation to your audience.
I cited the disqualified winner of the 2012 National Geographic Photo Contest. -
I was talking to a university class the other day (among other things) about photo adjustment with computers, and how you need to be very careful about what is an acceptable level of manipulation to your audience.
An audience that’s a lot more sophisticated (and cynical, both for better and worse) that it used to be. in another thread, Russell mentioned David Byrne’s How Music Works and it makes a fascinating bookend to Errol Morris’ Believing is Seeing (Observations on the Mysteries of Photography). They’re two men who, in their own vastly entertaining and insightful ways, have thought a lot about our ambiguous and complex relationships to technology, art and how it can all obscure as much as it reveals.
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George Darroch, in reply to
An audience that’s a lot more sophisticated (and cynical, both for better and worse) that it used to be.
People say that. I don't believe them. Our brains operate on a base pattern-dependent level, and going up and beyond that takes work, and requires deliberate engagement. Being informed protects you somewhat, but most people don't have that information readily to hand. Those who do must see past what their brains compile for them.
It's really hard work to think past a made-up and photographed celebrity on the side of a bus-shelter.
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Richard Aston, in reply to
Not quite all ... the New York tabloids followed the Sun's lead pretty closely too.
Oh god I despair , its even worse
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Richard Aston, in reply to
It’s really hard work to think past a made-up and photographed celebrity on the side of a bus-shelter
Even harder thinking past a made up and well presented ideology . I think the image thing is the tip of the iceberg in terms of the attempts to manipulate our minds.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
It's interesting to speculate how much of the killer-cyborg vibe is context. The pic, by Peiter Hugo, originally appeared in the New York Times last year to, it seems, no controversy at all.
It's certainly interesting how the image gained a whole new life once the context changed. Its original message seems to be the kind of thing that fits well with corporate mythology, with all those implications about overcoming adversity being down to motivation, with a little help from technology.
I remember a prominently displayed hoarding in similar style that was all over Sydney in the late 90s. A men's basketball team, all disabled athletes, were featured in a lavishly lit studio shot, with as much emphasis on their gleaming protheses as on their almost psychotic eyeballing of the viewer. Paid for by the bank who happened to be the team's sponsor,
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There is a benefit to getting the "news" from radio..
The Time cover makes me "uncomfortable" - an illustration of how tabloid and low print media has sunk.
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Euan Mason, in reply to
I cited the disqualified winner of the 2012 National Geographic Photo Contest
National Geographic has an interesting policy and an understandable aversion to image manipulation that creates unreal images, but I think it has to change somewhat. NG bought and published this image which is as it came out of the camera, but did want this one even though the latter required far more talent to produce than the former. The latter image wasn't even considered because in order to show that level of detail from the nebula 60 images were needed, with various images at different exposures and with unsharp masking to bring out the dust clouds. It seems manipulation of camera settings is ok, but manipulation post camera is not, even if everything in the image is real.
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BenWilson, in reply to
I still think those are some fantastic shots. I guess astrophotography is pretty much screwed on those rules, the shot averaging being vital. Mind you, that's what the hardware is doing in an interpolated zoom...
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Sj,
who killed her is the more important detail than who she was
This can never be true.
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