Big Ten ticket wins IUSA election (redux)
2011.03.04
After I cobbled together the previous entry, I showed it to former IDS photographer and current Washington Post photo editor Michel du Cille during a critique yesterday morning. I went into the critique thinking that I had made something really good that sold my skills well and could set me on my way to a job in the very near future. After his critique, I learned that I had made something passable. Every bit of advice he gave me was pricelessly useful, so I went back and edited the series based on his advice and my own fresh eye. (Mainly his advice, admittedly.)
The seven photos in they story appear below. Hopefully they are less repetitious and they more faithfully follow du Cille's oft-said outline for a photo story: wide, medium, tight, panoramic, detail.
Continued...Big Ten ticket wins IUSA election
2011.03.03
This was a busy night. After having dinner with my girlfriend to celebrate six months together, and after bringing her to the Will Counts Memorial Lecture on Photojournalism at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater, I reported on the Big Ten ticket's results party for the IU Student Association election, held at Sigma Phi Epsilon. Far into the future, I hope to do the same (or better) coverage of a larger election celebration (like, say, for U.S. President), but for now, I'm satisfied.
Continued...Egypt: Not far from home
2011.02.10
Between the third and the sixth of February I interviewed five Egyptians about what was happening in their country and took portraits of them posed loosely like officeholders. Now that Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak has said he will not step down, the hopes of the people of Egypt to rule their own country look slightly perilous; however, the good nature and optimism of those I talked to make me think the movement will succeed, eventually.
The photos and brief story appeared in today's paper, and an audio slideshow was uploaded to the website.
Continued...