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Podcast: Photojournalists Have a Heated Ethics Debate & Black Photographers Create the VogueChallenge
As photographers responded to the controversial Poynter article entitled “Photographers are being called on to stop showing protesters’ face. S...
As photographers responded to the controversial Poynter article entitled “Photographers are being called on to stop showing protesters’ face. Should they?” PhotoShelter co-founder Allen Murabayashi published a series of pieces that intensified the conversation around the First Amendment and the well-being of protesters and vulnerable populations.
Allen and co-host Sarah Jacobs also discuss Michael Christopher Brown’s response to criticism of his NY Mag cover, Michael Santiago takes a buyout, Apple gets a patent for “socially distanced selfies” and BIPOC photographers create the viral #VogueChallenge.
We mention the following photographers, articles, and websites in this episode:
- Photographers are being called on to stop showing protesters’ faces. Should they? (via Poytner)
- No, Photojournalists Aren’t Advocating the Blurring of Faces at Protests
- Yunghi Kim: “Is agreeing NOT to show a person’s face against the ethics of journalism?”
- On Ethics, The First Amendment, and Photographing Protestors’ Faces
- Taylor Glascock tweets
- Michael P. King tweets
- Hanna Wondmagegn tweets
- The Implicit Bias in Photojournalism (via Dame)
- Michael Christopher Brown responds to his NY Mag Cover
- Michael Santiago leaves the Pittsburg Post-Gazette
- Apple Gets Patent for Socially-Distanced Group Selfies (via Yahoo! Finance)
- Salma Noor starts the #VogueChallenge
- The #VogueChallenge Is More Than a Hashtag (via Vogue)
- Anna Wintour Isn’t Going to Cancel Herself (via BuzzFeed News)
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