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Here's a comment from bladevent.com, which has blogged heavily on the situation:
"I’m just curious as to why this is such a big deal. He removed a pair of legs from the photo. So what? Is it a big deal just because it was against the paper’s policy?"
But some of the worse were from Detrich's own blog, many from people who claimed to be photographers themselves:
"Your apology is unnecessary, and it is unfortunate that you feel compelled to offer it. You made a beautiful and sensitive picture in the highest tradition of photojournalism. You took out an extraneous and unrelated distraction, a distraction that any observer of that scene would have automatically edited from his memory of the event...The Blade owes you an apology. Please accept mine it its stead."
"Nothing you did to the image in any way altered its intent or meaning, which should IMHO, be the yardstick by which "alterations" to news photos should be judged."
In the highest tradition of photojournalism? The yardstick alterations should be judged? Have our industry's ethical standards become some arbitrary set of guidelines that have no meaning outside of the newsroom? It is just so endlessly discouraging.
So to offset the legs cloned out of Deitrich's photo, I have cloned legs into a photo I shot today, hopefully resetting photojournalism's delicate ethical equilibrium.
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4 comments:
hahahaha.
i agree.
Me thinks photojournalists need to 'get with the times'
Most normal people can understand the difference between the legs he removed, and the legs you added.
When the old farts retire, this sort of thing won't be an issue.
Coit's the kind of person who enjoys TV shows named "Ow! My Balls!".
It's seriously sad though that someone looks forward to a day where "this sort of thing (the truth/journalistic integrity) won't be an issue".
Coit,
Me thinks people like you don't understand what PRECEDENT means. If you want to make alterations become a commercial photographer. The lines are very clear in photojournalism. Once readers question the truth a photo, they'll never trust you again.
Also, if you're trying to sound "with the times" maybe you shouldn't use 17th century phrases like "me thinks"
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