Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/10/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dan Post opinned, relative to Gates and god: >I may be missing something, but why all the razzing on ole Bill? I have better things to worry about! We all do! SNIP > Most of what we take for granted now is the result of man's efforts in the last few centuries, and I don't think in the long run that a man like Bill Gates, or Bill Clinton will make all that much difference in what we can and will become! Dan, Those of us who work to make a living at commercial and editorial photography DO have to worry. Those of you who appreciate what photography does in recording history should be worrying too. But bottom line of the "New" economic model is to discourage photographers from making a living. I can no longer recommend, unless a person is independently wealthy, a carrer in photography. It comes down to this: Publications, including newspapers and magazines (and book publishers, too) used to be run by people with a passion for what they did. Their decisions were balanced between making money and doing service. My father was a case in point. He mostly worked on small newspapers. He said he believed that small towns deserved the same quality of journalism as large ones, and he lived his beliefs. Today, most publications are owned by corporations whose moral direction is governed by attorneys and accountants and boards of directors responsible not to readers, but to stockholders and other corporations in the conglomerate. The same conditions have taken over the stock photo business. I've seen the attitudes of editors at stock agencies change dramatically over the last few years. Most agencies (according to what I read and numerous conversations with photographers) now consider photographers a bit of a bother, and make editorial decisions that can make or break careers on what seems like whimsy, and care little for the photographers except as they are sheep for the slaughter, only caring for the agency and the stockholders. The commercial agency behavior won't affect the lives of most people, but the effect on editorial photography affects us all. The agencies, with brutally lopsided contracts they are trying to strong arm photographers into signing, will leave few photographers with the wherewithall or incentive to do what they do best: record history, confronting all of us with the consequences of our actions (good and bad) and creating work that is more than just the commercial-like assignments promoting pop culture or other business interests. ol' Bill doesn't have a social conscience. Do you want him in charge of the information flow? The irony for me is that what the corporate agencies are doing may not be in their own best long term interests. Do you save money by not putting enough oil in the car?? How smart is that? The deeper fear, of course, is that we are developing eccentially a corporate-run media. In some ways this is even more dangerous than something like TASS or other state-run media, in that the appearance is of a free press with a free flow of information. Corbis and Getty that now have merged commercial and editorial identies, mimicing the merger of entertainment, news and corporate corporate interests in the media and blurring the line between news gathering and advertising. Am I crying wolf? I think we should be crying Tyrantasaurus-Rex. Either way, we are being eaten like sheep. On the other hand, you can just go along, entertained by all those generic eye-candy pictures, and say, "what, me worry?" donal __________ Donal Philby San Diego www.donalphilby.com