Dan Gillmor at the Center for Citizen Media: The demise of the professional photojournalist. (Video above: UCLA police taser a student.) Excerpt:
The pros have a problem. They can’t possibly compete in the
media-sphere of the future. We’re entering a world of ubiquitous media
creation and access. When the tools of creation and access are so
profoundly democratized, and when updated business models connect the
best creators with potential customers, many if not most of the pros
will fight a losing battle to save their careers. …In a world of ubiquitous media tools, which is almost here, someone will be on the spot every time.
And there will be business models and methods to support their work.
Today, YouTube is the site of choice for all kinds of videos, including newsworthy ones such as the recent abuse-by-taser of the student at the University of California, Los Angeles (more than 764,000 viewings as of today), and the racist nightclub rantings of Michael “Kramer” Richards (more than 1.2 million viewings). Both were captured by mobile-phone video cameras.
Others will make their way to sites like the newly announced projects such as YouWitness News (a joint project of Yahoo and Reuters), or operations like Scoopt or NowPublic. …
Is it so sad that the professionals will have more trouble making a
living this way in coming years? To them, it must be — and I have
friends in the business, which makes this painful to write in some
ways.To the rest of us, as long as we get the trustworthy news we need, the trend is more positive.
I agree. I, too, have many photojournalist friends in the news business. Their work will continue to be important, but increasingly, they will no longer be the first eyewitnesses on the scene of a news story.
JD Lasica, founder of Inside Social Media, is also a fiction author and the co-founder of the cruise discovery engine Cruiseable. See his About page, contact JD or follow him on Twitter.
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