Monday, October 11, 2010

Photojournalism Washington DC trip



GALLERY


Day 1- NPR and the Washington Post


The trip kicked off Monday morning with a tour of the NPR building and meeting with the multimedia department there.  Seeing the inner workings of the building was pretty sweet, getting to see the stages and studios where they produce all of their work (they played us a song from when Dave came in and recorded with them which was awesome).  One really other cool thing was a design they had come up with for deaf or hard of hearing people to use when riding in the car with someone listening to their programs, where the on board screen would display the words for the passenger, but the driver would still see the screen normally.   The multimedia staff there was headed by Keith Jenkins who gave us some good insight as to how things work there and how their small department is different from other bigger media outlets.  The major thing that he stressed was being curious and not to limit ourselves to just photography, as none of them there were specializing that specifically (he had a degree in law).



The Washington Post provided some good insight into how an actual newsroom works.  Meeting one of the videographers there, Evelio Contraras, was inspiring just because he was so passionate about what he does and telling people’s stories.  He gave us some of the same advice, to be curious about everything and use all aspects of your life to your advantage in what you do- like watching movies and commercials to better understand video.  Oh and we saw Carol Guzy for the first time….awesome.



Day 2- National Geographic and the White House


Tuesday morning we met up at the National Geographic museum and headquarters downtown near farragut north.  The actual offices seemed quiet and empty throughout the building, but it was still a pretty cool place.  Ken Gieger, one of the senior photo editors there and one of the many RIT grads we met, gave us a tour and rundown on how they operate.  One thing that he said that made them stand out from the rest was that they championed the importance of the photographers, they would cut their budget for other areas so that the photographers could still do what they do, instead of the other way around like it seems most places are doing.  

Day 3- McClatchy Tribune and the AP


Day 4- USA Today and Education Week


Day 5- the Newseum and Party at the Hawk n Dove


Day 6- Labor Rally

No comments:

Post a Comment