Press Review
US press review by Paul Melcher

Msnbc.com Free Syrian Army members fire on a man they suspect to be from the pro-government forces during a combing operation in Harem town, Idlib Governorate. (Asmaa Waguih / Reuters)

ny daily news : Lance Armstrong tweeted this photo on Nov. 10, with the caption "Back in Austin and just layin' around." (LANCE ARMSTRONG/TWITTER)

Craked. A puppy stays by the remains of a dog who local residents say is its mother on Nov. 6 (above), days after it was killed in an area burned in violence at East Pikesake ward in Kyaukphyu, Myanmar. The exact circumstances of the dog's death are unknown. Reuters

nbcsport.com : Germany's Nelli Zhiganshina and Alexander Gazsi perform during the ice dance free program at the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Rostelecom Cup in Moscow on Saturday, Nov. 10. (Grigory Dukor / Reuters)

Vice Magazine : Once upon a time, before people, Majorca was just an island. It was a paradise adorned with golden sandy beaches and placid beasts who roamed around thinking: "My word, isn't this a wonderful and quiet place? Mostly quiet. It's a very quiet place." And then people came along—mostly people from the UK, Ireland, Germany, and Scandinavia, invited by the native Spaniards—and provided human traffic for thousands of nightclubs and bars. And in these nightclubs and bars, they danced and binge drank, and then that spilled over onto the beaches, and that's when people started puking and pissing on the animals, and fucking in front of them. (Javier Izquierdo)

NY Times : Workers cleaned out a Key Food store in the Rockaways in Queens. Photo by Robert Stolarik for The New York times

slate.com Howard Schatz’s 19th book, At The Fights, is a 224-page opus on professional boxers, or as he puts it “rare and unusual individuals” shot both in studio and on location at gyms and stadiums around the country. (Howard Schatz.)

the atlantic :A man and woman swim in flooded Piazza San Marco (St. Mark's Square) in Venice, Italy, on November 11, 2012. High tides have flooded Venice, leading Venetians and tourists to don high boots and use wooden walkways to cross Piazza San Marco and other areas under water. (AP Photo/Luigi Costantini)

la times: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil — A social worker in Rio de Janeiro carries a woman during an operation to get crack addicts off the streets. (CHRISTOPHE SIMON / AFP)

Msnbc.com Israelis react and run for cover as a siren sounds warning of incoming rockets in Kiryat Malachi on Nov. 15. Interactive (Nir Elias / Reuters)

Agnostica.com Campari to Kiss Superstition Goodbye in 2013 Calendar 13th November, 2012 Taking the lead in this year’s Calendar is beautiful Oscar winning actress, Penelope Cruz, whilst noted fashion photographer, Kristian Schuller, shot the intense imagery.
Msnbc.com Free Syrian Army members fire on a man they suspect to be from the pro-government forces during a combing operation in Harem town, Idlib Governorate. (Asmaa Waguih / Reuters)
It’s not so much the volume of photographs being taken that is an issue but rather the quality of those being displayed. With traditional media looking to cut cost while their readership is dwindling, they have found no better measure than to reduce their photographic expenditure. Instead they turn to the mass produced and cheep ( read free) production of the so-called citizen journalists, convinced that volume will reap accidental quality, applying the “1000 monkeys in front of typewriters will eventually write a Shakespeare play” principle to photography. Except people are not monkeys.
The common man do not take pictures randomly. Instead, they will only take pictures of what directly affects him, assuming that his viewers know his background. They shoot with friends, family, co-workers in mind. People that already possess all necessary information to understand the context. Thus, they will take many images of fallen trees in their backyard, because that is what is relevant and important to them. They illustrate their lives, not the lives of others.
In other words, they will never be a replacement of the pro photojournalist by the masses of citizen journalist because the approach is completely different . One illustrate, documents, the other explains. One wants to reach his immediate acquaintances, the other, the world. One is living it, the other is describing it. Same event, different photography.
Sure, the citizen photojournalist will always have the advantage immediacy, of being there at the right place, at the right time. But that never goes beyond the accidental photography. In fact, sometimes, they even get beaten by automated security cameras. A machine.
So, it is not citizen photojournalisms that is to blame. People will take pictures, regardless. It is , rather, the poor judgement of the media who use those images in replacement of professional photography, assuming that the price they have paid justifies their poor quality. The result is an overwhelming indulgence for the “good enough” content that is plaguing our medias, forcing viewers to seek out, on their own, additional resources to satisfy their need of information. Maybe if you put 1,000 monkeys in front of typewriters for 1,000 years, they will eventually write a Shakespeare play, but a 1,000 monkeys for 1,000 years with a camera will never produce a Cartier Bresson.
Paul Melcher
Links
Contributors
Paul Melcher
