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Archives: 2009 June

Archive for June, 2009

Flickr Introduces New Mobile and Twitter Features

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 No Commented

Flickr has just announced a new service that lets mobile phone users automatically send images to Flickr and broadcast a link on Twitter at the same time.

This incredibly useful feature puts the Yahoo!-owned photo sharing site into competition with TwitPic, which is probably the most common way Twitter users share pictures. During the post-election rallies in Iran, many demonstrators used Twitter to share photographs of the violence. (Related post.)

Learn more on the Flickr blog.


VIBE Media Group is Closing. Here are the Memos.

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 No Commented

As we reported on PDN, VIBE magazine and the VIBE Media Group are shutting down effective today. Here are two memos from VIBE managers explaining what happened, provided by a company spokesperson.

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On behalf the VIBE CONTENT staff (the best in this business), it is with great sadness, and with heads held high, that we leave the building today. We were assigning and editing a Michael Jackson tribute issue when we got the news. It’s a tragic week in overall, but as the doors of VIBE Media Group close, on the eve of the magazine’s sixteenth anniversary, it’s a sad day for music, for hip hop in particular, and for the millions of readers and users who have loved and who continue to love the VIBE brand. We thank you, we have served you with joy, pride and excellence, and we will miss you.

Danyel Smith
the former Chief Content Officer VIBE Media Group
& Editor in Chief, VIBE

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Dear VIBE Team:

It is with a heavy heart that I share some tough news, VMG is closing down effective today, June 30 due to lack of additional financial investments.

It’s been an 16 incredible years since VIBE’s inception. There are very few magazines with the richness of history and breadth of talented visionaries who created the powerful lens in which VIBE viewed and shaped urban music and culture.

Ever since I first set foot in this courageous company, I’ve regarded myself as incredibly fortunate to be be involved with this remarkable brand and group of individuals whose performance has never been nothing short of outstanding. We finished 2008 in an improved position versus the prior year, and accomplished so much, including:

  • Editorial Awards
  • Editorial transformation into content dept
  • New Ad accounts being broken
  • The Most Mag Launch
  • Award winning re-design
  • Profitable digital operation
  • VIBE.com growth and improvements and programs such as  Best Rapper Ever,  #1 Stan, etc
  • Mobile VIBE  launch
  • Micro-site development Mostmag.com to start off.       
  • V Sessions
  • Improved PR coverage

Unfortunately, over the last several months, a confluence of events has obviously posed VMG to exceedingly serious challenges.

  • The collapse of the capital markets has impacted us greatly.  Over the past several months, we have actively pursued investment resources while working intensively with our bank to find a solution. But the deal market right now remains very poor and at the end of the day, the lack of investment resources to restructure the huge debt on our small company has made this outcome become a reality.
  • The print advertising collapse hit VIBE hard, especially as key ad categories like automotive and fashion, which represented the bulk of our top 10 advertisers, have stopped advertising or gone out of business. It’s also unfortunate that in a recession many companies reduce the multi-cultural campaigns. These facts, coupled with the continuing decline of the music industry not to mention the newsstand wholesaler consolidation in early 2009 all negatively impacted our business in a significant way.
  •  The relentless economic situation has depressed our growth initiatives on the digital front. To be clear, VMG has made significant improvement in this part of our business, but not at the accelerated pace required to offset the devastating effects of the most severe recession in our lifetime and the accompanying print losses.

I want to thank you all for your hard work and commitment, and for all of the adventures along the way. I’ll miss this place a lot, but I’ll miss you all and the magic you create.

Vibe will be remembered as a shockingly brilliant content company that everyone can be proud of and I look forward with great excitement to all of future endeavors you all pursue.

With great affection and respect –

Steve

[Steve Aaron, CEO]

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Also: RapRadar has an image it says is the final cover of VIBE, which now will never see publication.


Learning the Micro Drill

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 No Commented

 

colordressskirtsmallquality

Micro stock pictures made into low cost legal images are easier than you think. Let’s work an exercise that reveals how much value and image potential can be mined out of one single photo, one well composed high resolution image file.

Use one complex image with a lot going on in it. Try a bunch of crops and edits with a good color image with some visual appeal. Photographs tend to entertain the eye when they contain items or objects people want. Doing these file editing and image cropping chores can keep a huge amount of media at your fingertips for micro stock or low cost legal sites vending.

I started with a photograph of a women’s dress shop near where I live. The stunning quality of the fine textiles, beaded creations, and amazing wedding dresses on the mannequins had caught my camera lens many times before. but this time I had learned that the museum photo setting grabbed the best detail when my balance was right and my focus taken care of. Since I now knew what I was capable of deriving in the desktop editing “room”, the key was to start out with a raw shot I could then process to my heart’s content.Many images came from one single high resolution image grab.

This time a few months ago I as left with grabbing video and using frame capture shots with artifacts and less visual interest thatn a static shot usually incorporates. This morning I took a shaded shot that protected the shot from the glare. But since the museum setting backed off on the flash, I wasn’t trapped in that high gloss plate glass window trap I have fallen into oh so many times before.

The museum setting drank in all the nice resolute color detail I wanted. The darker edges of the shop interior could be cropped away. The reflections in part of the window wouldn’t mess up the broad expanse of the image fiIe could use. And now, to the editing application with ye!

The image file was minimized as I must always do since my twelve mega pixel Kodak establishes a poster sized image of everything. Yeah, I know I could change the setting. But you never know just when that crazy lucky shot will come through. That’s a poor time to be thinking how unwise you were to reset the default specification on your digital camera’s memory and dimension settings.

There are some software packages with the miniature view riding in another window as you work.  This way I can see the “postage stamp” light box value, as it were. I always try and get a “square” or icon possibility out of any shot. This makes certain forum registrations fun because an eye catching avatar. The larger photos sort of took shape all by themselves.

But I don’t save the file at that size dimensions, I tend to take it down to about 20% magnification. Then I started cropping and copying dimensional rectangles from the larger magnified raw file. One shot features thedresses. One shot features the mannequin. One shot was cropped to show only the rich contrast in textures and colors on the row of dresses on the rack. By saving each file, I was able to make them available when uploading from the thumbnail view option in the file management browser. By starting each file name with the same combination of terms, I made the filenames search friendly. Instead of having to choose certain angles and margin crops, I did one image that featured the better defined patterns and color textures, and one that filled the square with the best perspective angle from the rack’s sideways slant in the photo frame.

Keeping the various microstock and low cost legal image uses makes cropping a forthright task. I could see that from various crops the value of the shot changed. One shot looked like a feature photo for textiles. One looked like an image to promote shopping. The color values for the clipped in shot of the dresses overlapping one another had a celluloid look for color advertising or design appeal. The beauty and fashion themes were consistent in almost every image view. Keywords like ‘retail sales” and ladies formal clothing” kept going through my head. By the time the matching content was ready, I would be able to work from the available images.

This method has become a routine to process work when I have a few moments between Youtubes, waiting for a conference call to begin, or during a tele-Skype meeting with the sound turned off. By working and cropping all the image files at once, the search by date function allows easy finding even if you can’t remember the keywords.

If I think of an online photo file image effect I need, the browser interface for upload can be sortd by latest date, giving me quick access to the range of files I need without lengthy date and directory searches. By applying these tools and online editing effects to a mass of photography files, the numbers for microstock success will stack up in my favor sooner.

 

 

 


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Mark Seliger’s Brüno Photos Offend School Superintendent

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 No Commented

Brunogq Brüno's movie doesn't open for another two weeks, but he's already nearing over-exposure. And we're not just talking about skin. Every time we check the news, there's another story about some kerfuffle he's caused.

The latest is over a GQ photo shoot by Mark Seliger of Brüno, one of the guises of comedian Sacha Baron Cohen.

True to the Brüno character, Seliger's shots are fashion parodies loaded with gay symbolism. Shock value and tastelessness are part of the gag. Go ahead and laugh, it's funny.

But honestly, was it necessary to involve a high school football team?

The Los Angeles Times reports that part of the GQ shoot featured students from Birmingham High School in L.A. The school superintendent is displeased:

"The stunt has added fuel to a debate over whether Birmingham should be allowed to convert to a charter school. The conversion is up for a school board vote Wednesday.

"'This recent GQ thing has not helped matters,' [Los Angeles Unified School District superintendent Ramon C. Cortines] said Monday. 'We've allowed our students to be used, and not in the most glamorous circumstances, either.'

"Cortines blamed Birmingham Principal Marcia Coates and athletic director Rick Prizant, and asked local district Supt. Jean Brown 'to take the appropriate action.' Both Coates and Prizant declined to comment."

Yuck. Are there any winners here? Of course: Brüno. Every time a school official reacts to Brüno with disgust, a studio executive somewhere hears cash registers ringing.


Arrested Subway Photographer Files Lawsuit

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 No Commented

RobertTaylorwebsmall Robert Taylor, the transit employee and subway photography buff who was arrested earlier this year for taking a picture a New York City subway train, is suing the city over the incident.

Both the city tabloids are reporting the lawsuit today. The Daily News reports:

"Gerald Cohen, Taylor's attorney, said he is asking for $1 million in the lawsuit, but would be pleased with a settlement similar to the $31,000 settlement the city gave to another subway photographer last year."

The Post has a different figure, calling it a "$2 million wrongful-arrest lawsuit." The charges against Taylor—which at one point included unauthorized photography, disorderly conduct/unreasonable voice and impeding traffic—were dismissed, both papers report.

PDN interviewed Taylor in February.

It's not unusual for photographers in Taylor's situation to get settlements from police departments. Photographer Duane Kerzic reportedly received a five-figure settlement after his arrest last year by Amtrak Police in New York Penn Station. Last year, New York City settled a lawsuit with Arun Wiita, a student who was arrested on a public sidewalk while working on a project to photograph every subway stop. In 2007, the New York Police Department paid a $14,000 settlement to filmmaker Rakesh Sharma, who was arrested filming on a public sidewalk near Grand Central Terminal. Wiita and Sharma had filed lawsuits with the help of the New York Civil Liberties Union.


This Month in Microstock – June 2009

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 No Commented

iStockphoto saved June from being a slow microstock news month.

Microstock News

iStockphoto changed how the quantity of downloads for both individual images and contributors are displayed on the website. Rather than displaying the exact figure, it now shows an approximated number. While they weren’t specific about the purpose of this move, they indicated it was intended to limit the ability of people and computers to extract and use the information.

The Photos.com and Jupiterimages Unlimited pipe was removed from StockXpert and connected to iStockphoto as announced last month.  The partner program was turned on and iStockphoto contributors were given the opportunity to opt in or out.

Towards the end of the month iStockphoto announced the Premium Collection was launching and with the new name: The Vetta Collection. They simultaneously announced the introduction of localized search results and their expectation to hit $200 million in revenue for 2009.

Veer Marketplace opened to contributors with lots of positive feedback about the interface. The new Corbis microstock venture is already open to buyers with content ported over from SnapVillage.

Ex-iStockphoto executive, Garth Johnson, was recruited by Fotolia to head up contributor relations as Senior Vice President of North America.

Polylooks logoGerman Telecom entered the microstock market with Polylooks, providing an interesting case study. Deutsche Telekom already have a buyer base and technology resources. If they can make a successful microstock agency out of Polylooks we may see other companies with the same assets enter the business.

David Mail, the programmer behind ProStockMaster, released his microstock agency Pixamba.

More portfolio milestones fell with iStockphoto passing 5 million and both Dreamstime and Fotolia passing 6 million.

PS: did you know that Crestock Stock Photos has the world’s fastest upload system?

Micro Story (Boarding)

Monday, June 29th, 2009 No Commented

upright

See the heavy camera case and long tripod this young videographer is carrying? That’s a lot of weight to schlep for a location shot or video grab. Because the technical considerations of film production are well known, film media production conventions use story boards to plot shots. This reduces the onsite work to the absolutely essential filming that needs to be done. Story boards help plan and anticipate everything from safety hazards in a scene to potential shadows and reflectors needed to light the shooting properly.

Manipulating image files has a lot of uses and utilities. Various media products conform to different saleable media product and skills. The online markets for this work might be Craigslist, Mandy.com, or personal contacts developed from independent microstock commissions. Availability is a key issue. Timing and delivery are optimum values when working with storyboard work.

Getting gigs for this work is easier (i.e., possible) with a story board portfolio. Manual drafting is often used for story boards but it can be costly and time consuming. Using digital photography techniques and the software available on any desktop and online, you can create a movie storyboard in comic book imagery from any screen capture video.

Some directors and screenwriters like the freedom to draw what they se in their mind’s eye as happening inside the story. But transforming the photo file to a storyboard solidifies detail better than any sketch could.

The types of scenes that usually need story boarding the most are ones with combined efforts of camera men, actors, special effects and other coordination. The visual shots help the director and actor plan the technical execution of the scene. The angles the shooting of the motion picture scenes will be is discussed to plan the blocking and visual enhancements.

 Story board production can be some very valuable expertise to have practiced if you find yourself in the midst of a creative project where the amplitude of return on a  series of images can be communicated in a  quick visual array. Story boarding is a marketable skill that can be used when pitching a movie or working with producer to edit scenes and conduct meetings when story content and scene shooting is at issue or in the planning stages.

That’s what storyboarding is. Communicating multiple layers of visual impact of video media using stills shots or sketches. Getting story boards framed and printed for meetings and screenplay pitching is only half the fun. Being able to contribute the story boarding chores for an independent movie production company could add unlimited opportunities to your social networking horizon.

Developing story board series of images is a good way to develop your image editing eye. As a case study, develop consecutive frames captured from a movie scene. bring up the color resolution and work with effects to get a “comic book” or manually drawn look. Being able to do with with quality results and attention to detail might open doors down the line.

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Photo of Protester Giving Ahmadinejad the Finger Almost Certainly Fake

Monday, June 29th, 2009 No Commented

Iranfingerhoax

The photo at left, which shows a protester giving the middle finger to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has been kicking around Twitter since about Friday. It's a popular image among opposition supporters; some people are calling the woman in the picture brave.

It's maddeningly difficult to check the validity of pictures people link to on Twitter. But in this case, we're reasonably sure this one has been faked. We found a similar copy of the same photo floating around that shows a woman gesturing, but not flipping the bird (at right). The version of the picture with the finger has been cropped slightly at the bottom to eliminate a credit to FARS, the state-backed Iranian news agency. We don't know when the original was published or anything else about it.

Also, the middle finger is a rude gesture use mainly in Western cultures (based on an article we just read on Wikipedia) so it probably doesn't make any sense in Iran.


How to succeed in today’s stock photography business

Monday, June 29th, 2009 No Commented

To succeed in today’s stock photography business requires dedication, creativity, awareness, a ton of elbow grease, and above all else, passion. This is John Lund speaking. I couldnot agree more. If I had not this passion for beauty and the drive to make timeless pictures of beauty I would not even think of stock photography. If I look back at this first year of stock photograpy for me…it has been a year of tremendous hard work, learning and harvesting is still far away. The only thing that keeps me going is this passion to shoot timeless beauties. Sometimes I feel pushed to have short term success and I start shooting for the money. But this does not work, I don’t like the images … and these images seldom really sell.

In his wonderful article Pianos, Passion and Stock Photography John Lund explains us what is necessary to succeed in today’s stock photography business. You will not be surprised when he talks about passion, passion and … passion.

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Fake Photo Essay Wins Paris Match Prize

Monday, June 29th, 2009 No Commented


Fakeparismatch
Here's some fresh ammo for anyone who thinks photo contests too often celebrate clichés.

Paris Match magazine recently awarded its annual grand prize for photo reportage to a pair of art students who admitted they staged the whole project.

Their photo essay is series of blurry, grainy, black-and-white images. They show French students in various states of despair: One is sleeping in a car, another rests his head on a desk, two pick up trash. 

When their cliché-ridden project actually won, the student photographers announced the hoax to the judges. They said they were trying to draw attention to student poverty and make a statement about the nature of visual information. 

"Before they received their trophy and €5,000 (£4,260) cheque at a ceremony on Wednesday, the prize-winners, Guillaume Chauvin and Rémi Hubert, read out a statement admitting to the hoax, stating that they had wanted to make a 'powerful artistic gesture' attacking the 'voyeurism' and gullibility of parts of the press. The prize jury looked crestfallen but managed to applaud all the same."

Needless to say this stunt is an embarrassment for Paris Match and its contest judges. The British Journal of Photography notes that Paris Match withdrew the prize and published a note to readers saying the images had been faked.

What's interesting about this project is the images by themselves communicate no facts, only feelings. When the photos are labeled as genuine and tied to a social concern—in this case, student poverty—they become important and affecting. We wonder if the students could have made this point without resorting to lying.