Category: Saving Storytelling

Cross Roads

December 18th, 2009 Permalink

Had an old friend in town last night. Scott was up from Statesboro for a relative’s graduation from the university, got in a little bit of time with him over beer and pizza downtown. After 17 years of on-and-off friendship, it’s easy for us to do a lot of reminiscing. Old people, the old paper we worked at. (True story – Scott was the first guy to give me a real full-time job in the newspaper industry. I lasted a little over a month before having it out with his boss and getting myself fired. She felt I was arrogant, I felt her copy desk should know not to run a headline that read, “School Bored Votes on Education Standards.”)

As we were wrapping up outside the restaurant I saw this little intersection of mortar and glass and made a few frames. It’s been stuck in my mind all day now and I’m applying symbolism to it that really isn’t there. (Students – see, I’m practicing apophenia.)

Scott and another co-worker/colleague/conspirator were huge influences on my early work. We were all passionate and hated to get beat. The darkroom we worked out of only had two enlargers, so one of us was almost always waiting … and peeking into the fixer tray to see what bit of genius the others had pulled out of a strip of Tri-X that week. Then pretending not to be jealous of what was there.

After an entertaining year in the Washington, D.C., area, I left and went back to Massachusetts. With a stronger portfolio from my time working alongside Scott, my freelance client list grew quickly. Scott headed deeper south and landed in Savannah, along with our other friend Adam. When an opening came up, they put in a good word for me. But their boss was overwhelmed and by the time he got around to calling me, I was unpacking for a new job in North Carolina.

Being a recovering Catholic, I would have felt guilty quitting that job before I’d even started, so I turned down the Georgia job. One of the very few regrets in my life as the job turned into a nightmare quickly and I started searching for the fastest route out of the south I could find.

Maybe that was an almost-crossing of paths, but it renewed a dormant friendship for a while. A few years later, I headed south for a visit and spent a great weekend listening to Adam rock a few shows and eating crabcake sandwiches and mashed, fried plantains out on Tybee Island.

When I got down here a few years ago, we got back in touch. He was up in Athens last year for a football game and I paired one of my students with him for a project this past semester. He teaches an occasional class on photojournalism, so we trade teaching tips and resources.

All of that would have been great fodder for a few hours over beers, but it took up maybe 30 minutes. The rest of our conversation wandered around what’s going on in journalism, how can we make sure the important stuff is getting shot and seen. He’s at a small paper now, almost the same size as where we started decades ago. But he’s happy there. He’s doing community journalism – and doing it well. Reaching out to his audience through every means he can.

Another meeting, another crossroads.

Canon EOS 5D Mark II, EF 35 mm f/1.4 L USM, ISO 1000, 1/125, f/1.4

Canon EOS 5D Mark II, EF 35 mm f/1.4 L USM, ISO 1000, 1/125, f/1.4

How prophetic.

Check out this television report from 1981 about reading your newspaper on your computer …

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Pondering

January 23rd, 2009 Permalink

The last week has been filled with a lot of thinking and conversations. It started last Thursday when I headed up to the University of Tennessee for the founders’ meeting of the Intercollegiate Online News Network.

I wasn’t sure what ICONN was, or what it would become, and, to be honest, I’m still not. But we talked a lot about online journalism, we practiced some micro-blogging via Twitter and we agreed that building a coalition of the willing, so to speak, was what we needed. Where it goes from there, I’m just not sure. But it’s going to be cool.

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I’m in Tennessee for a two day meeting of the Intercollegiate Online News Network. They met once before last year, so I’m still catching up. 

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Disuse

December 16th, 2008 Permalink

Photography, like almost everything else, goes away when you abandon it. And it’s not just about the pictures fading (or or discs degrading), it’s the skill that goes away. Vision is something you may be born with, but it’s also something you must practice. 

I am out of practice.

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So when does the government step in to bail out the Fourth Estate? How does the industry extricate itself from Wall Street? Perhaps go into non-profit status. Well, legally. They’re already claiming to be there fiscally …

(Thoughts prompted by the 1,400 layoffs across the Gannett chain this week.)

An old newspaper friend, worried about the death of his industry, has been dragged onto a committee to deal with survival. (Boy, that sounds optimistic, eh?) He occasionally thinks of himself as being a funny guy (which is why we get along so well, I think of myself as a funny guy even though I know I’m not) and forwarded me his list of semi-tongue-in-cheek ideas.

I read it a few times, then started thinking … you know, there’s something here …

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