Showing posts with label Toledo Blade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toledo Blade. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Intro to PJ class goes on field trip to news photo exhibit, news station

   The Intro to Photojournalism class at Owens Community College kicked off the month by going on a field trip Feb. 1.
   We first went to the Toledo School for the Arts Gallery to view the Blade Photos By... a month-long photo exhibit, which showcased 40 prints by eight photojournalists.
   Then we toured the newly renovated Channel 13abc news station. Our tour guide was Diane Larson, the evening WTVG news anchor, who is a former student of this class!
   There's nothing better than getting out of the classroom to view the work of employed photojournalists (in full disclosure, I'm one of them), and to get a glimpse of what goes on behind the scenes at a local television station.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Steller offers visual storytelling app (outdated)


   There's a cool app in Apple town, and I like it.
   As a photojournalism and multimedia instructor, I'm always searching for different ways to present and share visual storytelling content. It is certainly a challenge keeping up with the multitude of new multimedia tools constantly being developed. 
   This blog post is about just one of those tools, the Steller app for the iPhone and iPod Touch, released in 2014, and now it's available for the Android.
   This mobile-first digital storytelling app combines text, photos and videos in a clean, visually-appealing format. The story includes a title page, and up to a total of 20 pages that are taken directly from your iPhone photo collection. 
   Once you download the free app, you hit the + button in the bottom middle of the page, choose your first image or text page, select your design your story, and continue selecting each page one at a time. You can design the page as you go, or go back to it later to delete or add pages. Once you are finished, Preview and the Publish. You can then share to Twitter, Facebook or your blog. It is that simple.
   The beauty of this app is that you view the story like you're reading a book. The pages turn!
There are a few drawbacks, though:
  • Viewers not familiar with the app don't know that the story needs to be manually opened, and the pages turned by swiping the page or hitting the right or left computer arrows. 
  • You can't share the complete story on Instagram (at least that's how it used to be); only a single page selected from the story.
  • The videos loop, and viewers might not know to swipe out of them.
  • Shooting vertical video makes more sense here because you can fill the entire screen. If you shoot horizontal, there's too much white space top and bottom.
  • The archiving of these stories is worrisome. How long will this app survive? But this isn't a big problem because this app was chosen as one of the Best Apps of 2014 by Apple, and you still have the original images in your phone's photo gallery. 
  • Elements in stories published back in 2014 to at least 2016 are now outdated, thus you really shouldn't try editing them. You'll get this message: "You are editing an old story with outdated themes and features. Some functionality will be restricted.
  • And in 2019, your free themes are limited to two: classico and Noir.
   Photojournalists don't have a lot of input over how our photos are published on the web and in the newspaper. But this app gives us back a little power. 
   Consider the many ways visual stories can be told. Take, for example, at this high school basketball game I shot, there were four ways my photos were published:
Screen grab from Toledo Blade newspaper's front sports page.
  1. Instagram. I decided to start out by shooting from a high angle, so I went to the top of the bleachers, in a corner facing the basket. I took a panoramic photo with my cell and posted it on Instagram.
  2. Steller. Then I remembered the Steller app. To tell a different story, I avoided being redundant with images, shooting photos and videos with my phone that I wouldn't have shot with my two DSLRs. 
  3. Toledo Blade newspaper. Because we have an early deadline for the print version of the newspaper, I transmitted my best 12 photos from the first two periods via Photo Mechanic FTP using an air card. This caused me to miss the entire third period.
  4. Toledo Blade website. I continued shooting in the fourth period, and sent the rest of the images for a photo gallery on the website.
   This app can be a powerful way to get our social media savvy youth, who often turn to YouTube and Snapchat for their 'news,' to view real stories about real people, places and things. And it's a fun way for us veteran shooters to have fun, too!
   For these reasons, I'm think this storytelling app is worth using and teaching.
Here are a few links to stories and reviews on Steller (though these links are dated, as well):
JEA Digital Media article on Steller
Storybench story on Steller and mobile reporting
Tutorials on the VSCO Cam app 

Friday, July 31, 2015

Don't make excuses: Embrace photo stories if you want a job

Aaron Mora, 7, son of the Johnston's Fruit Farm owners, inspects his bees. This was taken on the second shoot. These three photos are a sampling of the photo story I am doing on the farm, which ran in October in the Toledo Blade magazine page.

Johnston's Fruit Farm customers pick their own blueberries. Taken on my third shoot.
   Shoot ‘em and leave ‘em. Don't make this your shooting style.
   Students no longer have the option of strictly shooting single assignments. You should be shooting a photo story at any given time.
   There is nothing wrong with being a daily shooter. However, shooting photos stories is important to be competitive among your peers and competitors. These are a few of the excuses that can prevent photographers from doing photo stories:
·      Don’t have enough spare time to dedicate to the project
·      Can’t find a story to like enough
·      The subjects don’t call back
·      Fearful of becoming a pest
·      Getting bored easily
·      It's been done already
   Don't let these excuses hold you back.
   A photo story is the use of multiple images shot over an extended period of time to tell a complete story. It can be as simple as a photo essay of a county fair, or as complex as a multimedia documentary on spousal abuse that includes the use of video and audio.
   These are two reasons I have been dedicating more time to shooting photo stories:
Johnston's Fruit Farm workers in the strawberry field. Taken on first shoot.
1.     I have never entered the Ohio News Photographer (ONPA) Photographer of the Year (POY) competition because one of the requirements is to include at least one photo story.
   Here are the contest rules regarding the George Smallsreed Jr. POY entry:
“Portfolios must contain a news picture, a sports picture, a picture story and pictures from at least two other categories of the entrants choosing.” 
   It’s the lack of a picture story that prevents me from having a chance to win. A friend of mine always tells me that to win you have to enter, and she’s right. So I can only blame myself for sitting back on the sidelines and watching my terrific Toledo Blade colleagues (Katie Rausch, Jeremy Wadsworth and Andy Morrison) win POY contests.
   Contests aren’t everything, and they don't always define your overall skills, but they certainly help get better jobs, better assignments and increased self esteem.
    2. This second reason is actually the driving force to me upping my game. It’s for the students!
   How can I teach students long-form visual storytelling when I hardly did it myself?     
   It is crucial for me to push students to do photo stories. Dig a little deeper into the story. Go back again and again. Develop a relationship with the subjects. Build trust.  
   Shooting photo stories will get them jobs. There is no doubt in my military mind that the photojournalism jobs and assignments will always go to those who do not have commitment issues.  Photo stories, Photo stories, Photo stories. 
   Photographers who can write stories, shoot stills and shoot/produce a video will be much more employable. Actually, if you don't do all of those things you might be unemployable in today's multimedia-cultured world.
    So, now I must make the time to find stories I care about so I don’t get bored and thus will pick up the phone to call the sources so that I can tell their stories. 
   Storytelling is good.
   Here is a story on Mich Fest I did this year. It's a week-long music festival for only women. It was a story I had to tell because it was the last festival, ending after 40 years. 
The video:
 
The written story:

Friday, May 9, 2014

Q&A #5: Tips from ONPA Photographer of the Year Katie Rausch: Edit tight, have clarity of purpose, get feedback

Vandercook Lake's senior Chad Marriott, is congratulated after his team's win of Thursday night's home game against East Jackson. The Jayhawks were able to overcome an early deficit to pull ahead and win a share of the Cascades Conference championship for the first time since their 1969-70 season. (Photos by Katie Rausch)
Surfers take advantage of high waves generated by a storm over Lake Michigan at Grand Haven State Park. Surfers who brave the Great Lakes often take to the water when the waves are higher during the winter months.  
   
Katie Rausch (Photo by Nick Dentamaro)
She has only been at the Toledo Blade since 2012, but already the Michigan State grad has made a name for herself.

   The Ohio News Photographers Association (ONPA) recently named Katie Rausch the Ohio News Photographer of the Year (POY) for 2013.
   This is a remarkable win, considering Katie, only 26, was up against powerhouses like The Plain Dealer and The Columbus Dispatch.
   Though Katie didn't place but once in the single categories, her well-rounded POY package showed she could shoot it all: sports, news, features and photo stories. As one of her prizes, Katie won a Canon 5D Mark III body, which retails around $3,000.
   It was rather fitting that she learned of her victory while attending The Image, Deconstructed workshop April 12 at the campus of The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Katie is always learning and striving to improve, which is why she is so deserving of this title.
   I can’t tell you how thrilled I am to share Katie’s inspirational words of advice and youthful wisdom. So, without further delay, meet Katie Rausch:
Q: How did you end up at the Toledo Blade?
A: First of all, I’d like to say thank you for your kind words and introduction.
I came to The Blade in July 2012 after spending six months living in my parents’ basement, trying to freelance locally. I was laid off from my full-time staff position with The Jackson Citizen-Patriot in Jackson, Mich. at the beginning of January 2012.
   In 2009 I graduated from Michigan State University and started my third and final internship in Jackson. I’d been interning with the paper for a semester when two positions opened up within the same month. They hired me just before New Years and I continued with the Cit Pat for the next two years. The paper was open to a lot of visual storytelling ideas, and the staff, my editor J. Scott Park and fellow photojournalist Nick Dentamaro, were fantastic to work with. Unfortunately, in the fall of 2012 we were told 71 out of the 100 people working in my building would be laid off together.
   It was a tough transition, and a great lesson about the importance of having a plan B. I will say, though, that in my six months away from full-time employment I was able to do a lot of soul searching. Having that time to really reflect on my life gave me a measure of clarity about the choices I had made. Specifically, my desire to work for newspapers was really solidified. In a way, I’m grateful I was able to get something productive out of such a difficult experience. I’ve always loved documenting the lives of the people around me visually, and I’ve loved working for newspapers from day one. My path here wasn’t exactly planned, but I am so thankful The Blade took a chance on me. It’s amazing to get up every day and go to a job I love.
Gale Hammett meets with her son at the Jackson County Jail.
Q: When you were putting your portfolio together for the ONPA, what was your thought processes on the images you selected?
A: Well, they always say, “Edit tight.” I felt that though I’d shot more than one longer piece over the course of 2013, I didn’t really have enough to put together two strong stories. It seems like every time I watched photo contest judging live, the weakest photograph or element of a portfolio pulls it down, so I made my selections with that in mind. I attempted to make each frame worthy of the one before and after. Apparently, the judges liked that approach to editing.
Q: As we all know, photography is so subjective. Winners and losers depend on the judges for any particular contest. What do you think the ONPA judges saw in your winning portfolio, which included a photo story of medical marijuana usage, and a portrait of a mother with her quadruplets?
A: Again, I think consistency is key. I really tried to make each picture count, and to exclude anything that didn’t fit or wasn’t as strong. There were single frames I really loved that I cut because they didn’t fit the flow or visual feel of the portfolio overall. My portfolio isn’t perfect by any means, but I do think it’s a good representation of where I am in my development as a shooter and what my abilities are now.
   I think it’s also noteworthy that with the exception of one single image, nothing else from my portfolio was recognized by the judges. In this case, I think that’s an endorsement of cohesion of style, purpose and content in a portfolio.  
Q: When you were attending the Image, Deconstructed workshop, what's the one thing that has stuck with you, even now?
A: The Image, Deconstructed was a really wonderful experience overall, so it’s difficult to choose one element that stood out. If I had to pick, I suppose I was really struck by the fact each one of the presenters emphasized clarity of purpose in one way or another. They each had a good gasp of their personal vision and went for it, even when doing that was hard or they were discouraged by outside forces. That common thread seemed present in the success of every one of the presenters, and it’s something I’ve given a lot of thought to since leaving the workshop.
   What is it that I’m trying to say with my work? What is it that I’m trying to accomplish? I imagine if I could answer those questions more fully I’d have a better path forward.
Q: Do you have any advice for photojournalists when it comes to submitting to contests?
A: First of all, I think it’s immensely important to remember that contests aren’t everything. So many wonderful photographers do work that goes unrecognized by contests every day and it doesn’t make any of it less significant or well done. I have had years where the work I was most proud of didn’t even get a second glance from judges and years where I’ve been astounded by what won. So, as you mentioned before Lori, it is really subjective.
   I’d definitely encourage anyone looking to apply to a contest or job to seek extensive feedback from editors and peers. Often times a fresh set of eyes can really help reshape work for the better. I’ve found criticism, while sometimes painful, to be the one of my best teachers. While not all criticism is constructive, being open to seeing something differently can really help you grow. I know that’s been the case for me. 
   But I think the most important thing to remember in any situation is that you need to try. Contests aren’t everything, but they can help your career and it is, of course, lovely to receive acknowledgment. This year I felt like my tight edit would either be very well or very negatively received. I tend to apply rather ambitiously for contests, and would encourage any photographer to do so. That’s the point: you never know until you try. I think that’s a philosophy that’s applicable whether that’s taking on a daunting personal project, tackling a challenging assignment, or applying for a grant.
   On a final note, I want to say thank you again for your time and consideration, Lori. It’s been a pleasure working with you, and the rest of my fellow staffers at The Blade.
Katie in Bogota, Columbia. (Photo by Monica Weeks)
To view her website, go to katierausch.com.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

The Owens Outlook to be taken off maintenance mode April 1

Screen grab of the countdown to the launch date of the Owens Outlook online newspaper:  http://www.owensoutlook.com/

   Mark your calendars!
   April 1 is the launch date for the debut of the new and improved Owens Outlook student online newspaper! 
   The website, currently in mainetenace mode, is going live that day, and the student staff is very excited, nervous and terrified, but definitely ready and able to once again report the news for the Owens Community College community.
   Unfortunately, not too many people on campus know Owens even has an online newspaper, or that The Outlook website was shut down for most of this semester. It's a sad fact that ever since the print edition ceased several years ago, the online edition eventually faded away to black.
   Shutting down the website early in the semester wasn't an easy decision for editor-in-chief Josh Widanka to make, but I still think it was the right one. He decided that his staff needed to be trained as scholastic journalists before representing the student newspaper. We also hired a new company, School Newspapers Online (SNO), to host our website.
   Why such extreme measures? Because Owens canned its journalism program about the same time the printed paper was put to rest. By cutting that class, most of the student Outlook staff didn't have any idea of what it takes to be responsible scholastic journalists. 
   To help solve that problem, I designed an 8-week News Academy training regime that ends March 27. During the 2-hour weekly training sessions, they learned the following skills, much of it from guest trainers from the Toledo Blade:
  • What news is, and how to cover a beat
  • Writing (how to interview subjects, take notes and craft stories)
  • Photography (how to use Photo Mechanic, upload photos and write captions)
  • Law and ethics
  • Copyrighting 
  • Social media
   In the beginning of the semester, during our very first meeting, I referred to The Outlook as a fail lab, meaning they will most assuredly make lots of mistakes during their on-the-job training. It's impossible to expect them to learn everything they need to know about journalism in 16 hours, but my philosophy as an adviser is not that they be punished for their mistakes, but that they be rewarded for learning from them. 
   I have confidence their mistakes will lesson as their own confidence grows! After all, a student newspaper is the perfect workplace to hone their writing, communication and critical thinking skills, which better prepares them for whatever profession they choose when they graduate.
   Nope, this is no April Fool's joke. April 1 is the day Owens gets their student newspaper back!

A big giant THANKS to the following Toledo Blade employees who donated their time and expertise during the News Academy training sessions this semester:
Alex Mester, animal welfare reporter; Dave Hackenberg, sports columnist; Don Emmons, sports reporter; copy editors Heather Denniss and Shannon Kolkedy; Perrysburg beat reporter Matt Thompson; photojournalist Katie Rausch; webmaster Nabil Shaheen and education reporter Nolan_Rosenkrans.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

On why PJ interns are a kick in the pants to veteran staffers


   Most photojournalism majors are required to intern at a newspaper during their scholastic careers.
   Internships are necessary for building strong portfolios, making employer contacts and gaining on-the-job experience. Internships are also their first paying gigs, though the pay is often below living wage. Some students intern multiple times, and even a year or two after graduation.
   When I was a PJ major at Kent State I did a yearlong internship my senior year at the Warren Tribune in Warren, Ohio. I was hired as a part-time staffer for $5 an hour, and worked 32 hours a week. I could have stayed there indefinitely since it wasn’t an official intern position, but after graduation I moved to Toledo and started stringing for the Associated Press.
This is a story/photo package I did in 1983 for the First Armored Div. newspaper, Ironsides.






   The Tribune was my first civilian news photographer job. Photo editor Rob Englehardt said he hired me for my military background. I had a weak photo portfolio, though I had a fair amount of writing clips that included my own photos, like the clip at left. 
   I wasn’t much of a threat to the full-timers at the Tribune. They were confident in their skills, considering they didn’t have to deal with any of the social media stuff and high tech equipment we use today. A photojournalist’s life was easier back then. Once you mastered those dinosaur film cameras, well, the average citizen couldn’t compete!
    Over the years the Toledo Blade has hired dozens of interns.  I don’t remember most of their names but I certainly remember the impact they’ve all made.
   Our current intern is Jeff Smith, a recent graduate from Central Michigan University. He is the epitome of the 21st Century photojournalist. He blogs, tweets and Instagrams.
   So why do I think interns are a kick in the pants to us old timers? Because they have a fire in their bellies that sometimes is only smoldering in many long-time staffers. They are hungry for a job; to make a difference; to be a part of a visual team that feeds off of each other for inspiration and story ideas.
   Interns are idealistic. They haven't yet been jaded, and everything is new and fresh to them because they haven't shot the same events year after year after year after year!
   The enthusiasm of interns can either be contagious or threatening. It's up to each veteran photographer to choose how they want to handle the new kid. Contagious or threatening? I've felt both ways.
   We should do our best to feed off of each other. We can't deny they inject enthusiasm into the workplace, while we teach them camera skills and ethical/legal values we've honed over the years. 
   Reciprocity at its best.