Introduction to Editorial transmedia, why we need to move forward?

mars 8, 2011 by · Leave a Comment 

Photojournalism is struggling. Since almost a decade, professionals all around the world are wondering how they going to survive the biggest crisis that the industry ever encountered. Will the answer come from the rise of a new kind of business model? Will we find a solution by diversifying, by exploring new ways to tell story? Probably a little bit of both. A sustainable economic model will surely provide funds and opportunities to develop new story « species ». These new products will need a brand new market to evolve in, new places to be seen, and different techniques to generate revenues. But the core of this ecosystem, will always be « Storytelling » .

Photojournalism is about Storytelling.

J.P Pappis (Sortir du Cadre itw Series)

A new set of brushes is available to us. A new range of tools that will allow us to go further and conquer narrative spaces that we could have never reached 10 years ago. The emergence of HDSLR combined with the consolidation of Internet and the development of social networks in our lives, have allowed photojournalists to switch from a linear storytelling form to a nonlinear one. From Newspapers and Magazines, photography has gone digital and now will use Multimedia and interactive documentaries to finally extend its sphere of influence to an ultimate form which is Transmedia storytelling.

Photojournalists yet, must learn a series of new codes & rules. They must understand these new forms of expression that were exclusive to the world of Publishing or the Movie industry. The use of « motion » and sound requires that we learn to develop our stories and our subjects beyond the traditional dimensions inherited from our work with the press.

Short story long, as if we were in the elementary school, we need to think wider and stop pitching our stories – which demands conciseness and synthesis – and start learning how to write an essay – which involves contextualization and analysis.

Again, we must learn to tell stories, drawn from the limits of the photographic medium, and include motion & sound, interactivity and social networking , multi-platform and transversal narrative strategies. In short, embrace the broad spectrum of technologies opened before us and put them at the service of our productions. This is at  the price, by agreeing to this changing environment, that photojournalism will rise up again. It is obvious that the value of the work of hundreds of professionals around the world is not just to bear witness to what is happening in front of their camera, but to put these events into perspective, to connect with each other and add relevant content to improve the understanding of the public, to develop knowledge and maintain dialogue.

Context and Storytelling: the lead to Transmedia strategies

Photographic narration is sequential.  It brings us a series of events, which are supposed to be connected, but failed to create a bond between them. We loose track of the context in which the event happens.

Transmedia storytelling, whose theoretical definition is still very recent (between 1991 and 2003 according to the sources), implies that different parts of a story are told through different kind of platforms (web, film, novels, comics, exhibitions, Augmented Reality Games etc.) in a non-redundant and complementary manner. In short, Transmedia stories are built on the same type of structure than an interactive documentary but on a multi-platform scale. The “webdoc” takes place on a website where the story is delivered through video, sound, photography and enhanced by incorporated elements of interactivity. Transmedia storytelling implies that the web platform breaks out, and that all known materials potentially becomes a part of the Transmedia story. Therefore, a Transmedia story can start by a web documentary, then be prolonged with a TV documentary, then be extended through a book and finally be completed a little more through discussions on social networks, through an application iPhone or Android or by an exhibition.

This fancy way to tell stories must not be seen as an absolute method which can be applied to all editorial work (photojournalism, documentary and such). Good stories will keep strength and relevance through purely photographic medium. On the other hand, some stories will take advantage of a web documentary narrative style. Finally, for a fraction of them, TransMedia storytelling will bring particularly effective narrative mechanicals, enabling photojournalists to considerably enrich their work.

As a matter of fact, the revolution of TransMedia Storytelling has nothing to do with technology (even it’s largely based upon use of them), but instead largely depends of the appropriation of different narrative codes, through new practices and new collaborations..

In the next couple of month on this blog, I’ll try to analyse and develop strategies to adapt transmedia storytelling techniques (which, for the most part, are coming from the entertainment business) to our editorial world with a strong focus on photojournalism. Posts will be published both in French and English to remain connected to an international audience.Stay tuned,the transmedia journey only begins!

Google Showreel

novembre 30, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

WOoW! That is really cool! Give it a try.

Barnstorm Images & Multimedia – Eddie Adams Workshop

octobre 18, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

From October 8-11, 2010, a hundred students and dozens of faculty and volunteers attended the 23rd Eddie Adams Workshop, in Jeffersonville, NY. The Eddie Adams Workshop is an intense four-day gathering of the top photography professionals, along with 100 carefully selected students. The photography workshop is tuition-free, and the 100 students are chosen based on the merit of their portfolios.

Each student attending the workshop is given an assignment in the local community the cover over two days of shooting. Working with a team leader and editor, a selection of 10 images is created and integrated into a team slideshow that is presented on the last night of the Workshop.

A few students are selected to not only shoot still images, but record audio and video as well. Each photographer works intensively with their team leader and the multimedia team led by  Brian StormTom Kennedy and Rich Beckman to produce a multimedia piece within two days. View the projects by selecting a year below.

Haiti Schism, Morel vs. AFP

octobre 16, 2010 by · 7 Comments 

The case of Daniel Morel vs AFP goes unnoticed in France, yet its legal implications are vast, as are the various positions stated by different well known actors of photojournalism.
Make no doubt that Daniel Morel only had one thing in mind on January 12 of this year: witnessing the atrocities and rampages resulting from the devastating earthquake which struck Haiti. Morel, former AP photographer, stopped covering news a while ago to refocus his work on documentaries projects. But this time, it was a matter of History, his history, the history of thousands Haitians, friends, relatives, neighbors, all living together in the same city, sharing the same culture, the same destiny.

How would have he ignored that, how being a photographer and obliterate this major event? He had to alert the public; he had to transmit this information and to bear witness for generations to come. He did it for History, for his history and for ours.

For those who missed the whole story and the legal battle engaged in since then by AFP – who “STOLE” Morel’s pictures on Twipics and sold them without compensation – against D.Morel, take a look at BJP who made a great compilation work on this.

If the debate is getting tougher online, about legal questions, Terms of Service and what should be used as argument from both parties. If comments are uncertain about whether or not the Twitter & Twitpics ToS should be different or the uploading process more careful with embedded data, there’s a more subtle concern that nobody seems to care about. A question that would potentially reshape the way we’re looking our business and our practices.
Read more

The Dark Side of the Lens by Astray Films

octobre 15, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

DARK SIDE OF THE LENS from Astray Films on Vimeo.

I’ve discovered that beautifully crafted video created by photographer and bodyboarder Mickey Smith.
Smith  gives an insight view of his creative process and the world he is dealing with everyday: the ocean.
A very inspired piece where an subtle point of view is well served by an amazing light and a great picture.This video worth your time!
I have to say, I’m not sure whether or not I would have the courage to spend that amount of time in a freezing water to roll this movie, but this is always inspiring to see the result of passion and dedication for a craft turning in that kind of wonderfully done production.

More from Vimeo:

As well as documenting various voices and experiences across surf photography, Smith worked with Allan Wilson from the Astray Collective, who acted as Director of Photography on the project. Together they logged hours of footage across the Atlantic coastline, traveling around Ireland, Cornwall and Manchester. Shot in Super 16mm film, as well as groundbreaking work with Canon 5D mk11 Digital SLR, Smith also projected images of the huge walls of water within which he works, on to monster urban landscapes such as sky rises and castles in Manchester, as well as the cliff lines at his home of Ireland

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