Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/08/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]According to TV News, cameramen and photographers are the lowest paid staffers on the roster of most local TV stations. My daughter and son-in-law verify that this is the case on their own TV station in an affluent, near NYC, market. Most of the photographers and videographers receive so little salary that they qualify for food stamps. Here is a New York Times article that describes another way of putting even more of them out of work. Larry Z This month's collection of New York Times digital innovations begins with a contraption. Maybe there's a more technical term for the double-decker photographic device that NYT shooter Doug Mills deployed recently, but contraption feels right, too. Kerri McDonald, a writer for the Lens blog, explains the innovation in some depth in this post, but here's the boiled-down version: Doug was looking for a way to shoot still photos AND video. After finding a micro-ball head on a hot-shoe mount, he was able to bolt an SLR-like video camera atop a conventional digital still camera. When he used the device to cover the beginning of the Roger Clemens trial, he was able to let the video camera run, while firing the shutter of the still camera. In the process, he was able to satisfy the multiple needs of the printed newspaper as well as NYTimes.com. If you listen carefully to the video, which is at the bottom of Kerri's post, you can hear the shutter of the still camera. >Check out the post; the comments are worth reading as well: >http://nyti.ms/pjG9XG ><http://email.newyorktimes.com/19880bd52layfousbaf6rnfyaaaaaax5jntuanxyoqyyaaaaa>