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What Do You Want?
Richard
W. Adkins,
Chief Photographer, WRAL-TV Raleigh, NC
What do you want in a Chief Photographer? I try to be the type of Chief Photographer I
would want to work with. But at times I just dont understand what people expect out
of me.Here is what one photographer wrote, I want to
learn more!
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"Wednesday, during our weekly photog meeting, my
station's chief photographer asked, "What do you want from the chief
photographer?" I wanted to reply simply, "a raise and off weekends", but
instead I went for a more rhetorical approach. We discussed the difference between want
and need. The following is the little essay I wrote Wednesday night. Yesterday, he
suggested I post it here. After sleeping on it, I figured it would make for some
interesting banter here on the List.
It it not just a "tv thing" much of it applies to
still chiefs as well as television. I do not intend for it to become a chief bashing
session, but if it helps point out some strengths and weaknesses, then it did exactly what
I hoped.
WHAT I WANT/NEED FROM A CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER
I have had six chief photographers and 13 news directors,
there have been a lot of sins committed against me and on my behalf through the years,
this is their culmination.
What I NEED from a chief photographer:
First and foremost, I need an advocate. Far too often,
photographers live at the bottom of the newsroom food chain. They are the first people to
be blamed when everything goes to hell and the last people to receive praise when
everything works out perfectly. I need someone who will fight for that credit when it is
due and help disperse the blame a little more evenly over the other guilty parties when it
was not completely the photographer's fault. I need someone who believes photographers are
more than just overpaid gear schlepers and can convince management that there is an art
and science to what we do versus the point and shoot mentality that often runs rampant. I
need someone who will be my eyes and ears at meetings and pivotal moments when my fate is
decided and I had to shoot a city council meeting instead. Meaning, photographers cannot
be at every staff meeting, gathering with management or discussion session, yet what
happens there affects us as much as anyone in the newsroom. I need to be informed as to
what happened, what was said and suggested, and if need be, I may need someone to defend
me in my absence.
Secondly, I need a critic. It is easy to sit back and say,
"Hey, it made slot and had no black holes, whadda ya want?" I need someone who
challenges what I believe is good enough. I need someone who will not let me get away with
the years of lazy and bad habits I have developed by writing it off as, "you can't
teach a dumb dog new tricks". At the same time, I need someone who will take notice
of the good as well as the bad. It is easy to pick out bad shooting, it pretty much grabs
you by the throat. It can be tough to pick out good shooting, especially if the subject
was not very compelling. I am more flattered by compliments on a city council story that
could have really sucked, than a pat on the back for some plum feature that everyone
wanted to do.
Finally, I need a leader. I need a chief photographer who
is not afraid of the fire. Whether it be setting standards for how a story should be shot
to fighting management to put equipment in the budget, I need someone who will take the
heat head on. If there is something out there that would make my job easier, my shooting
better or improve on the things I already have, I need my chief photographer to hunt them
down and get them for all of us. I need a leader who believes and does their best to
enforce fairness (although we all know complete fairness impossible). Equipment, trips,
good shifts, as long as there is consistency to the guidelines as to how they are doled
out, I have no reason to complain other than entertaining myself.
What I DO NOT NEED from a chief photographer:
I do not need a chief photographer who hordes the best
equipment just because they can. I do not need a chief photographer who gives the best
trips and shifts to ass-kissers rather than to those with seniority or who have earned
them. I do not need a chief photographer who hires to fill quotas rather than hiring the
most qualified person: I need three female photogs, I need three Hispanic photogs, I need
to hire the managing editor's daughter's boyfriend. I do not need an invisible chief
photographer: they make a cold shadow in the hallway, they leave cruel e-mails, they call
your house on your day off to tell you to come in, but you will never actually see them. I
do not need a chief photographer who took the job just because they needed the power trip
of hiring and firing. I do not need a chief photographer who is afraid to criticize me
because I am a woman (if you can make me cry, the next round is on me.)
What I WANT from a chief photographer:
I want a chief photographer who loves what we do as much as
I do. I want a chief photographer who enjoys innovation. I want a chief photographer who
can be open-minded to unorthodox shooting if there is a reason for it. I want a chief
photographer who has paid some dues. I want a chief photographer who recognizes and
celebrates the differences between each member of the staff. I want a chief photographer
who has a sense of humor and is not afraid to use it." |