nalism/Photography i expert's guide to i art and craft of iking great news otos, every time Noted AP photographer and photo editor Brian Hoi the basics of lenses and exposure times to offer a r; on the art and craft of photojournalism. While he d instruction on technical considerations such as pick lighting a situation, his main concern is with the le: indispensable elements of content, style, and the cr "Reportinj Capturin others. Tr Photojour vT a ■3 O < 3 -n C/> to C CD O CO o -•4 a> w o —Brian Horton Using more than 200 photographs from the AP archives to illustrate his points, Horton analyzes what constitutes great news photos of every type, including portraits, tableaus, sports shots, battlefield JW>i)"~f .I!." SSiise scenes, and more. He offers unique jjyT^^ V«3L7i insights into composition and style, along with invaluable advice on to develop a style of your own. And, in a chapter new to this mi, he explores the pros and cons of digital photography and the : changes in digital processing. riting The Associated Press Guide to Photojournalism, Brian m 'conducted extensive interviews with other award-winning journalists, whose voices echo throughout the book, sharing -gettable war stories and hard-won insights into what it takes ;k and find memorable news photographs. n Horton is Senior Photo Editor for the Associated Press. An AP veteran of 30 years' experience, is covered the World Series, the Super Bowl, the Triple Crown, the Winter and Summer Olympics, d Cup soccer, the Indianapolis 500, the NBA Finals, and other major sports events. He also has red news events ranging from the Gulf War to coal mine disasters, presidential campaigns and cal conventions. Press ■; I Si 4> Associated Press I ! ■ f \ ..... ( ' Second Edition Also Available in the Associated Press series: Associated Press Broadcast News Handbook, Associated Press Reporting Handbook, and Associated Press Sports Writing Handbook 2.00 USA W 0-[]7-13b3fl7-M 80071"363877I VisJL us at; www.books.mcgniw-hill.com Cover Design: Dorothy Wachtenheim Cover Photos from the Archives of Associated. Press-. BRIAN HORTON 0639785323457 4240763901 Ústřední knihovna FSS MU Brno evropský sociálni 1 _ fold V ČR EVROPSKÁ UfílE INVESTICE DO ROZVOJE VZDELÁVANÍ 4240763901 . Associated Press Guide to Photojournalis Second Edition Brian Horton McGraw-Hill New York San Francisco Washington, D.C. Auckland Bogota Caracas Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Milan Montreal New Delhi San Juan Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto 4240763901 Michael Nash, Warsaw, mb Willie Mays makes spring training catch. Uncredited, Phoenix, 1956 Contents Foreword.......................................... Ahout the Author................................... From tHe Author.................................... 1.INTRODUCTION................................... 2. THE 100K: Composition, Style, Cropping............... 3. NEWS: Sensitivity, Thinking, instinct and Curiosity ........ 4. FEAT8RES AND PORTRAITS: Seeing the World Around Us 5. SPORTS: Peak Action and Telling Reaction.............. 6. LESSONS: Experience is the Best Teacher............... 7. LIGHTING: Using Light to Your Advantage ............... 8. ELECTRONIC PHOTOGRAPHY: Pictures Without Film .... Contributors .,..................................... 2 associated Press Guide To Photojournalism Associated Press Golde To Photojournalism McGraw-Hill___ A piDiBan c/TlurMdGnwffifl-Ct«ifiB&H________---—--■---- © Copyright 2001 The Associated Press Second Edition. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. , Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or ds- tributed in any form or by any means or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. ISBN: 0-07-136387-4 McGraw-Hill books are available at special quantity discounts to use as premiums and sales promotions or for use in corporate training programs. For more information, please write to the Director of Special Sales, McGraw-Hill, 2 Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121. Or contact your local bookstore. Book design by Loren Fisher Layout by Elf Multimedia, www.ElfMultimedia.com 8910 11 12 RMN/RMN 15 14 13 12 11 Other Titles in The Associated Press Series Associated Press Broadcast News Handbook Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism Foreword Information seekers demanding to "see" what others write about has made the role of pictures vital in the world's information flow of the 21st century. Driven by this need, the use of pictures as information is changing — more pictures are dramatically used, there is greater reliance on visual devices to tell stories and provide insight. This new, intense use of the visual boils down to photography. And that is what this book, the Associated Press Guide to Photojournalism, is all about. The author, Brian Horton, has a unique background for this volume. He is educated in journalism; he has worked as a photographer and has covered virtually every kind of story news people encounter; he has been a picture editor. In the latter capacity he has planned the work of photography and reviewed the work of photographers. He is young enough to recognize the good in the new, and old enough to save the best of the past. This book is not a manual. Much has been written elsewhere about the technology of photography, how to operate a camera, how to judge exposure, how to crop pictures and plan a printed page or a dot-com screen. This book is about the essence of photography, about the editor and photographer's minds at work seeking the most elusive of all journalistic ends, a fine picture that tells those who see it something about their world. To put it another way, this book is about content. I assure you, as a journalist who has coped with the challenges of technology and content, that content is more difficult. The precious skill — "seeing the story" and therefore providing meaningful content — is developed in a variety of ways. It requires education, experience, desire, knowledge, insight and that rarest factor of all, talent. And using all those factors in one instant to provide a picture that tells us more then we knew before. It takes a lifetime to learn to do that. No one ever masters it completely because there is always a bit of serendipity in every new situation the picture journalist faces. What this book does is take you into the minds of photographers who have dealt with a broad spectrum of assignments. The best of Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism 5 them will tell you that the old adage is true: Chance favors the prepared mind. To help the picture journalist meet the challenge of preparation, the Associated Press Guide to Photojournalism creates an opportunity few other books on photography offer. Horton, through his interviews, gives the reader the benefit of the years of experience, the hours and days of preparation, the grasp of insight and other skills fine photographers bring to each assignment. You will walk with photographers in Vietnam; chase a tornado with another cameraman; learn about the tedium of hours and days of waiting for the great picture that then comes in a cat's wink of time; you will move through the human debris of an air crash. Horton also offers the picture journalist a look at digital photography, both the good and the not so good aspects of film-less photos, and the challenge this technology brings to content and to credibility. In short, the careful reader of the Associated Press Guide to Photojournalism will have the opportunity to share the telescoped experience and talents of others who have done the job well and are willing to share their knowledge. H38 BuolE iLP Photo Editor (retired) associated Press Guide To Photoloiirnalism About the Author Brian Horton, Associated Press senior photo editor for sports, is a 29-year veteran of the news cooperative. His coverage resume, as a photographer and photo editor, includes the World Series, the Super Bowl, horse racing's Triple Crown, the Winter and Summer Olympics since 1984, World Cup soccer, the Indianapolis 500, the major golf tournaments, the Final Four, the NBA Finals and many other large sports events. He also has covered news events ranging from the Persian Gulf War in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to coal mine disasters, presidential campaigns and political conventions. Horton grew up in Indiana and attended Indiana University before joining the AP in Chicago in 1971 as a photo editor. He later had assignments as a staff photographer in Philadelphia and Cincinnati, was Ohio NewsPhoto Editor based in Columbus and transferred to New York in 1982 as Photo Enterprise Editor. Horton was named LaserPhoto Network Director in 1987 and was named Senior Photo Editor for Sports in 1992. In addition to his photo editing duties, Horton has lectured here and abroad on topics including color photo usage and reproduction, informational graphics and photojournalism. In 1986, Horton was honored by the National Press Photographers Association for his manual on improving color usage and also for the workshops he conducted on the topic. Horton is the author of an AP book, The Picture, the predecessor to this edition, published in 1989, which was extensively used as a text for college and young professional photographers. With his wife, Marilyn Dillon, he was the picture editor for another AP book, Moments in Sports, a compilation of noted sports photos from the AP's archive. In 2000, Horton was named winner of the Gramling Achievement Award, given for his significant contributions to the news report and the overall success of the AP. Horton and his wife live in suburban New Jersey. Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism from the Author This book has been an education for me. With a phone pressed to my ear as I made notes, I've listened to hours of wonderful, horrible, inspirational and thoughtful moments related by the photographers, photo editors, educators and journalists who are the contributors to this book. The stories they have told, the insights they have offered, the lessons they have shared have made me proud to be part of the fraternity of photojour-nalists. It has been an honor to be allowed inside their thought processes. To hear how they handled various situations. To hear about their triumphs and their failures. To marvel at how open they would all be to helping other photo-journalists get a step ahead in this business we are part of. More than ten years ago, I wrote the first edition of this book. At the time, I expressed the hope that the book would provide the basic building blocks for a photojournalist. I didn't promise suggestions on which lens to use, or what shutter speed to set a camera, but I did promise the book would provide a peek behind the scenes. The thought process of photography, as it were. Since that first book came out, I have gotten dozens of letters from students, young professionals, teachers and even a few more-seasoned professionals, and met photographers on assignments, who have read the book. They have been kind in their praise and compliments and one even told me he had inspirational quotes from the book on the wall of his darkroom. But it was the contributors to that book and to this new edition who deserve the praise. They had lived it and were willing to share. A book like this doesn't come together in a vacuum. Obviously, the people quoted gave so much of their time. But, even more, there were people behind the scenes who gave so willingly, too. My wife, Marilyn Dillon, offered suggestions and encouragement during the formative stages which made the book a lot better than it would have been. Her input is stamped throughout. For that, a simple thanks isn't enough. 8 Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism Chuck Zoeller of the AP's photo library pulled my bacon out of the fire more than once. Suggestions on content and help in tracking down an errant image or two were among the things he did. The AP's Sports Photo Desk crew (Paul Kazdan, Melissa Einberg, Tracy Gitnick and Dan Derella) covered for me while I had my head in the book and never let a thing drop through the cracks. For their vigilance, my thanks. Finally, I'd like to thank Hal Buell, my mentor, an inspiration, and a source for all things journalistic for so many years. He's the person who pushed American newspapers into the digital age, the person who is the walking history lesson of photojournalism in the latter stages of the 20th century. And, a dear friend who never says no when you need someone to talk with. For all of that, thanks. And, to all of my AP colleagues, and the photojournalists I've met and worked with from newspapers and magazines over the years, a thank you for allowing me to share a bench with you on the front row of history. Brian Morton long Beach Island, NJ. 2000 Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism Introduction It can be a picture of a trio of men fighting the elements as hurricane-whipped waves wash a home into the ocean. The fury of the storm captured in a picture by a photographer who isn't afraid to get wet doing his job. It can be a picture of a tiny youngster playfully trying to push back his hulking opponent, a Sumo wrestler. Not an earth-shaking moment of history, but a fun picture that makes you smile. It can be a picture of hundreds of flash bulbs going off at once as fans try to capture slugger Mark McGwire hitting a record home run. Thinking on the part of the photojournalist of a different way to tell a story. It can be a picture, an instant recording, Opposite page: David Longstreath, Calcutta, 1997 of a heavily armed government agent reaching for young Cuban immigrant Elian Gonzalez. The photo would elicit emotional responses from people on both sides of the political issue and fuel heated discussions about the government intervention, too. It can be a picture, a portrait really, of a young boy with a small bunch of flowers in his hand on his way to pay his respects to Mother Teresa. His eyes lock on to the viewer of the photo. It can be a picture of a lone bagpiper leaving his footsteps in the dew as he strides into the mists after an emotional memorial service for a popular golfer who has died tragically. The viewer can't help but feel the sadness of the moment. Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism 11 introduction It can be a picture, a portrait of sorts, of the inventor of the pink flamingo surrounded by his wares. A slice of Americana. It's all photojournalism. Telling a story with a picture, reporting with a camera, recording a moment in time, the fleeting instant when an image sums up a story. Henri Cartier-Bres-son called it the "decisive moment." Happiness, sadness, accomplishment, failure, relief, fear, death - the mosaic of our lives captured on film and on electronic disks. Photojournalism isn't just a spot news picture made in a war in an exotic location far away. Datelines don't change the quality of a picture. It's also the local city council meeting, or state legislature, where members are arguing about a tax increase or a new law. It's not just a national magazine cover picture showing the key play from the Super Bowl. It's also the local high school team, anywhere in America, playing for the town's glory. It's not just an essay on rafting down the Mekong River in Asia. It's also people keeping cool under a water spray on a hot day in your town. Photographers covering the president of the United States or the mayor of a small town have the same mission - to make an accurate reporting of the subject's activities. Photographers covering the Oklahoma t takes a special kind of passion for pho^ tojournalism to be successful. Passion that elevates one photographer above another. City bombing, which struck at the heart of America in the worst domestic terrorism case in its history, or a smoky house fire that displaces a family, have the same mission - to convey the enormity of the event in human terms. Photographers covering the last out of -, the World Series or the last seconds of a high school basketball game have the same mission - to capture the essence of the winner's happiness, and the lonely moments and despair of the losers. Moments that are part of our history - big and small. In each case, venues may be different, but the mission is the same - to inform, to report, to carry the scene to the readers, whether they are thousands of miles away or just down the street. To show them something they might not have had a chance to see themselves. To grab a moment of history and preserve it for the future. Most agree it takes a special kind of passion for photojournalism to be successful. Passion that elevates one photographer above another. "Technical ability aside, the difference is commitment," says Western Kentucky University photojournalism program director Mike Morse. "Some people look at whatever they do as a job and they want to be good craftsmen. Then there are people who do it as a passion. They really care about it, and it shows in their photographs." J. Bruce Baumann, the managing editor Introduction of The Courier and Press in Evansville, Ind., says it is important for the photojournalist to think first as a journalist, second as a photographer. Baumann believes photographers need to reach out more for excellence these days. "It seems to me that the real guts of journalism, the reason I got in this business, is to make a difference," he says, "to present the lives of people, their joys, their fears, their happiness and sadness. To tell the world what is going on around them." Baumann says photographers should be "looking for new ideas, new themes, breaking new ground, looking for things that are happening." From Matthew Brady's coverage of the Civil War to the social reporting of Lewis Hine and Jacob Riis at the turn of the century, from the documentary photography of Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange in the 1930s to the Life magazine photojour-nalists W. Eugene Smith and Alfred Eisen-staedt and today's avant-garde images of David LaChapelle and Nick Knight, there is a fine heritage of photography to look at and study. There are lessons to be learned from AP photographer Mark Humphrey looked for more than a news conference to illustrate the continuing story of a state legislative budget impasse in Nashville. His photo of two legislators meeting privately in a hallway is a good illustration of how deals are made in state politics. photographers who pioneered the photographic styles used today by countless newspaper and magazine photographers. And lessons to be learned by making pictures yourself. Several years ago, a newspaper group ran an ad showing a photographer in combat gear. The caption: "Be prepared for a few cold dinners." That's certainly true for a photo-journalist covering a war, but also true for a photographer covering the local scene. Long days are the rule, with the stress of a hundred decisions a part of the everyday life. Will I be in the right place? Will I make the picture I want? Will I select the right lens and exposure to tell the story? When the moment comes, will everything I've learned give me the tools to make the picture that will tell the story of the event I'm covering? Associated Press photographer Amy Sancetta explains: "You have to love this job because the schedules, the emotional ups and downs, the pressures would sometimes be too much if you didn't love it. It's a creative field. If you go to a game and make a good picture or shoot a nice por- 14 Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism IS Introduction Introduction A Kenyan woman weeps during a memorial service for victims of the 1998 terrorist bombing of the U.S. embassy in Nairobi. Photographer Jean-Marc Bouju, on assignment for the AP, used a wide angle lens and filled the frame. trait, you go home feeling great, but if you miss something, you go home feeling awful." J. Pat Carter likens it to the tightrope walker in the circus. "Everyone is waiting for you to fall, but when you make it across, they yell, 'Bravo. Encore,' and they applaud." Every photographer lives for that applause, those "bravos!," the Oklahoma City-based AP photographer says. The burden of the news you cover can be a heavy load. "With that camera," Carter says, "you are the eyes of your readers and your viewers and you have to take them there. Sometimes I am uncomfortable but I have a job to do. If you don't feel uncomfortable at times, if you don't share in the emotion, you are not going to have the heart and soul to do the job anyway. "You can't be the tough guy all the time. You can't be the guy who doesn't cry," he says. Laura Rauch, an AP photographer based in Las Vegas, was called on to help cover the Columbine High School shootings near Denver. Then she returned there a year later to assist in coverage of the first anniversary. Both times, there was an emotional toll. Rauch's family was from the area, so there was some family history, some familiarity, to figure in the equation. But this was bigger than that. "I don't think you 16 Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism had to have family from that area for it to hurt," she says. "I don't care who you are. That one is going to hurt, because it is such a tragedy." Covering the initial story and then the follow-up exposed Rauch to scenes of tremendous grief and sadness. "High school kids," she says, "who had lost their friends in what is supposed to be the most carefree time of their lives. Many, many photographers, including me, were overcome with the sadness of it all. "I would have to take a moment and cry a little. I would let it go for a minute, and then I'd suck it up and start shooting again," she says. Ed Reinke, an AP photographer, recalls a bus crash that killed more than two dozen teen-agers on their way home from an amusement park. After days of covering the emotional scenes at cemeteries, churches and funeral homes, "I had come to the end of my line on what I could take." Reinke's answer after the story wound down was to "take a few days off and hold my own kids and think about how fortunate I am." Years later, Reinke would be in Japan covering an Olympics, when he got word his wife and two sons had been injured in a A 15-year-old high school student leans on her mother during a candlelight vigil in Littleton, Colo., marking the one-year anniversary of the 1999 shooting deaths at Columbine High School. "Many, many photographers, including me, were overcome with the sadness of it all," says AP photographer Laura Rauch. head-on crash so violent that it totaled the family car. He was moved to tears as he thought of being on the other side of the world, on an assignment considered to be a bright point in his career, when his family needed him. The cost of that kind of commitment to the job can't be measured. Once, after going five weeks without fresh water while covering the conflict in Sarajevo, Paris AP staffer Jerome Delay called home to find out that the family washing machine was broken. It took him a moment, he says, to realize that to his family this was a serious situation. "Even though it might not be important to you at Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism 17 introduction the time," he says, "it is important to them, and you have to respect that and show your concern." David Longstreath, also an AP staffer, calls it a balancing act - the professional A family grieves over the body of their slain son in a makeshift morgue in Dili, East Timor. He died in a 1999 gun battle in the fight for independence there. AP photographer David Longstreath spent the day with the family as they identified the body, then took it home for burial. For the assignment, he said he had to be "sensitive to their needs, but still do the job." responsibilities and the personal turmoil. Longstreath covered the Oklahoma City federal building bombing while based in that city. He was at the scene minutes after the explosion crushed the building. He was exposed to a horrific scene. "One of the things that I learned after the Oklahoma City bombing," he says, "is that every situation is going to impact you and you have to just recognize that you are a human. You may put your feelings on hold while you finish the job, but at some point you have to allow yourself to feel, as well." And, that means keeping in touch with your feelings and the feelings of the people you are photographing. "Once you pull those cameras out," he says, "you're involved. You have to bear the weight of the comments and stares. You try to do it with a degree of sensitivity." The balance, he says, is to "be sensitive to their needs, but still do the job." Michel DuCille of the Washington Post says any photographer's approach should be about "treating subjects with dignity and losing your preconceived notions. Be a strong anticipator of human nature and be in the right place at the right time." Delay says you need to not only know when and where to make pictures, but just as important, you need to be sensitive to when you should pull away. "There are times when I say to myself, 'Leave these people alone,' but there is no rule," Delay says. He draws frequent assignments to tumultuous situations in the Balkans and other hot spots where people often are on the edge emotionally. introduction "You just know when it is right to go," he says. "You feel it. As you get older, the more experience you have, the fewer wrong calls you make. You can see when you are being intrusive. It's a little like dancing with wolves." AP photographer Elise Amendola says sometimes you have to draw from your emotional reservoir when you are dealing with a sensitive situation. "I think an important time to draw upon the emotional reservoir is during a one-on-one with someone who has lost a loved one in an accident, illness or war," she says. "It's a frequent assignment," says Amendola, describing a recent assignment where she photographed a woman who had lost her daughter in a teen car wreck. "It helped me to empathize with her. And I mean with genuine patience, eye contact and real conversation. Too often, we're in a rush. But in these instances, it's a must to take the time to establish rapport and a trust. This is when the ability to empathize puts heart into your photography." Amendola says if you're rushed or uninterested, "it just doesn't work. And that shows in your pictures." "When I started out," Rauch says, "I The effects of flash flooding after a storm in 1999 were captured by AP photographer Laura Rauch in her photo of an 85-year-old man in the yard of his Las Vegas home. Rauch thinks the role of the photojournalist is important, "but it is never more important than the people you photograph, ever." thought the role of the photojournalist was the most important thing in the world." The years have tempered those feelings a bit for her. "It is important," she says, "but it is never more important than the people you photograph, ever." Thought, planning and a good chunk of luck cut down the chances for failure, but photographers have to be prepared, whether on the biggest assignment of their career, or the pet of the week at the animal 18 Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism 19 Introduction Introduction shelter, to bring back the picture that really tells the story to the reader. Reinke says it is the art of being able to go with the flow, with some control. He explains, "I think it becomes a thinking Faced with a dramatic rescue during flooding after Hurricane Hortense hit Puerto Rico in 1996, AP photographer John McConnico sized up the scene and selected the right lens to capture the drama from the edge of the swollen stream. person's game. Anyone can stick a camera in the face of the obvious, but a truly good photojournalist will look at the situation and the light that is there, and the light you are carrying in your bag, and the cameras and lenses you have, and make the best possible picture out of what you have." "That is what separates a good photographer from a mediocre one, " Reinke says, "the ability to go with the flow, but also to have a general idea of how the flow goes." Longstreath describes that "flow" management another way. At a news scene, he says, "you throw your antenna out, you look, and you size it up. Pretty soon you see your opening, and you're in." "If you are not prepared when opportunity knocks," says J. Scott Applewhite of the AP's Washington bureau, "you'll only be left complaining about the noise." Or, as famed Green Bay Packers football coach Vince Lombardi used to tell his players, "Luck, that's where preparation meets opportunity." Great photographers come «Jak from a variety of backgrounds. As children, many began making pictures with a simple box camera, developing the film in crude darkrooms set up in the family's bathroom. They watched the contact prints develop in little trays balanced on the edge of the sink, while family members waited impatiently to use the facilities. For Kansas City AP staffer Cliff Schiap-pa, it was a different inconvenience for his | family members. Schiappa got a job making 20 Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism pictures for the local weekly before he got his driver's license. So, his mom and dad would drive him to his assignments and wait patiently in the car while he made his pictures. AP photographer Harry Cabluck began his photo career in high school when he raced to auto accidents, alerted by the dispatcher at his family's towing business, in hopes of making a picture. Then he'd try for a sale to the local newspaper or, perhaps, an insurance company. On weekend nights, he'd troop up and down the sidelines of high quarterback Bart Starr. AP's Bob Daugherty got his start on the high school newspaper and yearbook in Marion, Ind. But, at the tender age of 15, he moved to a full-time spot on the local During a 1992 debate between presidential candidates, photographer Marcy Nighswander, then with the AP, chose a position away from the other photographers. The result was this photo, part of the AP's Pulitzer Prize winning entry on the '92 campaign. school football games, making flash exposures powered by a homemade car battery setup. Sports Illustrated photographer John Biever also got his start covering football games, but at a slightly higher level. At the age of 14, he was working the sidelines with his dad, Green Bay Packers team photographer Vernon Biever, and even got a doubletruck spread in Look magazine that first season with a photo of famed Packers newspaper's staff. Before long, he was working at the state's largest paper. To learn about photography, Daugherty had studied the Indianapolis newspapers. One of the photographers was an expert in shooting in available-light situations, two others "could do wonders with a single light." Later, he would work beside many of the photographers he had studied so carefully when starting out. Others, like Reinke, took up the profes- Associated Press Guide To Photoioumaiism 21 Introduction Introduction sion after getting a camera as a high school graduation gift, asking friends for help in the basics of loading the camera and adjusting the aperture and shutter speeds. He credits his college photojournalism professor, Dr. Will Counts of Indiana University, for his direct, honest approach to photography. He says of his visual style: "The single thing that influenced me was 'Self Portrait: USA,' a book by David Douglas Duncan." Reinke says that book, a collection of Duncan's photographs from the tumultuous 1968 political conventions in Chicago and Miami, opened his eyes to a way of making pictures that he still aspires to today. AP photographer Mark Duncan went to college and drove an oil delivery truck for his family's business, making pictures in his spare time before moving into his first full-time staff job in the photo department of Photographer Mark Duncan drove a fuel-oil delivery truck for his family's business and worked part time making pictures before joining the Dayton Daily News. Now with the AP and based in Cleveland, Duncan's daily assignments include coverage like this 1999 WNBA game. the Dayton Daily News. "Go to college and get a degree in photojournalism," he tells prospective photographers, "and have the opportunity to have internships." Duncan studied computer science in college. "I am grateful for my computer background because of where the industry is going, but more journalism would have balanced that. The journalism part is important. My job is not just to take pictures, but to impart information." Some photographers, like Longstreath, learned the fine points of their craft in the military, starting with basic documentation tasks and advancing to elite camera groups and advanced studies. From a high school photo course, to a job as a "lab rat" for the FBI, he went on to the Navy and more formal training, before leaving the service and moving into daily photojournalism. Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism The military gave him great training and a chance to work with some excellent photographers, but, "after assignments in thirty-three countries, I had personally witnessed too many pier-side goodbyes," Longstreath said. Des Moines Register director of photography John Gaps HI got into photography after being the subject during his days as a prep football player. Gaps tells the story: "A photographer showed me some pictures that he had made of me playing football in high school. Later, I went to his darkroom and I thought that was pretty neat. And then one afternoon in college, I had a choice of going to football practice or finishing a project due in my photography class." "I gave up football for photography," Gaps says, laughing, "and the coach was real supportive." Gaps explains he wasn't NFL material on the football field. He did, however, get to the Super Bowl several times in his career. With his cameras. And, Gaps now has numerous regional and national awards, and top assignments, to his credit for his photography. Rusty Kennedy, an AP photographer, says working everyday with the veteran photographers at his first job, an internship on the photo staff of the former Philadelphia Bulletin, was really his education. "I AP's David Longstreath got his first taste of photography in high school, then on to advanced photo assignments in the military before joining theAP. His assignments have taken him all over the world, including Vietnam and that country's 2000 celebration marking the end of its civil war. was really lucky to have learned from them. Each had an area of expertise. One was good at fashion, one was good at studio, and so on. I could watch and learn so much, then try it myself." Kennedy says you can only get so much from a book or watching, though. "Photography is really such a hands-on thing that you have to do it yourself," he says. Longstreath believes you learn from everything you see, and you try to keep on learning. "You learn by looking at pictures, Associated Press Guide To Photojournalism 23 Bniroduction by asking how did they do that? You store it away for another day." He, too, feels you learn a lot by simply making pictures. "What worked once may work again with a new twist." And, you need to be critical of your V !'■»! U