Expecially, I was thinking about the concept of clear and objective journalistic information on one hand, and the easy possibility to retouch and to manipulate images, by photographers and journalists themselves on the other. According to this, and to the fact the modern society is characterized by the massive presence of images, is it possible to use a photograph as a news itself, or the image will be always influenced by the need of show?
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Permalink Reply by Oerd Ulqini on April 8, 2011 at 19:13 Il fotogiornalismo secondo me e una cosa che non muore mai. Sempre un imagine puo restare indimenticabile nella nostra memoria, specialmente se quel tema rimane attuale. Nelle storie di miserie, drame, fame, ma anche nei momenti di grande gioia e l’imagine quello che trasmette le “5 famose domande W” del reporter. Fotogiornalismo dal mio parere e come i primi film di Clarlie Chaplin (che parlano tramite l’imagine). Secondo me non e vero che il fotogiornalismo diffetta nello Storytelling, ansi certe volte puo parlare piu di un intero articolo. Fotogiornalismo si trova in un metamorfosi profondo, dove e costretto sopravivere in un momento dove la media electronica ha fatto dei gigandi passi avanti, ma una cosa e certa questo tipo di giornalismo sopravivera e non verra consideratto un relitte del 20 secolo…
With kind regards Oerd Ulqini from Durres, Albania
Permalink Reply by David Aparicio on April 10, 2011 at 14:34 Unfortunately photojournalism is dead simply because it is impossible to consider a job. Publications no longer pay for a
photo essay, and in any case would not be a full-fledged story because usually we talk about an illustrated work.
The economic crisis is affecting the media, which suffer a drop in paper consumption of the product, while the new
generation of information consumers migrate to the Internet. Not Yet yet resolved how to make money online at the same scale took the paper, ie, charging for advertising or to read content. Therefore, the media experience, have less money
spend on producing their own information, and this, in turn, affects photojournalism. There are fewer assignments, less money for work and less security.
Permalink Reply by Denald Kazanxhi on April 12, 2011 at 12:34
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