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Al's Morning Meeting

Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing > Al's Morning Meeting
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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.
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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


*1. StinkyJournalism.org's "Dubious Polling" Awards list is worth a read.

*2. Find out why a six-hour flight now takes seven. Airlines are "baking in" extra time to make up for long delays.

*3. Check out RTDNA's News and Terrorism workshop chat site.

4. BusinessWeek has highlighted big corporations that are pouring millions into Haiti relief.

5. Amazing: how phone apps helped save a man's life after he was buried by the Haiti earthquake.

6. The New York Times explains how cancer-treatment radiation saves lives, and ruins some.

*7. Here are some great databases that newsrooms have created to help connect people with their community.

8. A new study explores the media habits of teens.

9. The pros and cons of evangelizing on Facebook.

10. The FCC investigates the health and future of local news.

11. Brookings assesses Obama's first year in office

12. Why you better be careful when covering 100th birthdays!

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but relies on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Tips for Taking Better Pictures This Holiday Season
The holidays are a popular time for people to use their cameras. What you need are some tricks for taking better pictures.

You might consider asking your photo staff to produce a slideshow or video about how to take better holiday pictures. Here are a few of my favorite tricks:
  • The rule of thirds: Don't center the subject. If you are shooting a sunset, for example, the sun should not be in the middle. Position it within the frame to one side or the other. Have the horizon or the sky take up one-third of the image, not half.
  • Back to the light: Don't shoot into the light. Use the light to your advantage, shooting with the sun to your back and in the face of the subject. 
  • Compose with the background in mind: There is nothing worse than having a tree poking out from behind a person's head or having random people in the background who distract from the image. What does the background convey about the setting?
  • You need great light: Sunrise and sunset are what Kenny Irby, my Poynter visual journalism colleague, calls "the magic hours." The light is mellow and colorful during these hours. Get up early; you will not regret it.
  • Move closer: Snapshots are notorious for being too far away. Move in. Especially if you intend to post online, close-ups work better than medium or wide shots because images are usually very small online.
  • Look for "peak" action: The best pictures occur when the action is at its peak. When someone OPENS a box, the person has a surprised look. THAT is the picture you want -- not a picture of the person after he or she has opened the gift. Take a photo of the hostess delivering the Christmas turkey to the table, not a picture of the turkey.
  • Look for reaction: Reaction shots are nearly always the best shots. Anticipate what people will do when they're surprised.
  • Tripods: If you are shooting in low light, you need a tripod to steady your camera or you will get a blurry mess. I recently read in  David Pogue's New York Times technology blog that the top of a lamp where the lampshade screws on is the same diameter as camera tripod mounts. In a pinch, he says, you can screw your camera onto a lamp to get a steady, even-lit shot. 
A word about video
Do not zoom or pan unless you're dealing with a motivated movement. If you are following action, then a pan makes sense, but otherwise don't do it. Zooming is something amateurs do; give kids a camera and they will zoom. Zoom with your feet, not with your lens. Great video with crappy sound is not fun to watch. Move closer, and pay attention to ambient sound that will wipe out the audio you are really trying to capture.

It is usually best to use video cameras that allow for external microphones instead of using built-in condenser mics. Shoot sequences that you can edit together (wide, medium, close-up, super close-up.) Again, shoot actions and reactions. The photographer/videographer should not talk much. Viewers want to hear the subject of the video, not you.

PC World offers some additional tips for taking holiday photos, as does USA Today.

Photographer Tracey Clark also offers some pointers, including:
  • Pack the camera -- Goes without saying? I forgot mine last year in the rush to get the car packed.
  • Make sure your batteries are charged and you have extras and/or the recharge packed.
  • Pack extra memory cards -- Have them empty and ready to fill up.
  • Put someone "on photos" -- Our family has someone on drinks, main course, dessert. Why not put someone on photos so that in the craziness of the day they don't get forgotten?
Posted at 1:31 PM on Dec. 23, 2008
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photo very nice article thanks http://www.google.com More.
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