• No categories

Rise of the camera-phone photographer

January 20, 2010 No Comments


Used to be when you wanted to “make a picture” (as they say down South) you had to send it in to be developed into a Space Station 13-type pod at the Kodak store or local pharmacy. That is, if you didn’t have your own developing room, a pitch-black room illuminated with a scary red light and consumed with the smell of old bread and skunk pee.
But that’s what it took to be a photographer, an art form that paid off big time in the form of magazines, posters and photo albums.
But with the rise of the do-it-all camera, photography is being set back a 100 years. Not only are people not interested in the “science” and “art” of photo-taking (quick, what does aperture mean?) but people are snapping photos with the phone in them.
It’s become so common place that the art of photography as we know it is slowly dying. Curse you, Internet!

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Related posts:

Fail: Glamor mugshot
In Atlanta, Freaknik Will Never Truly Die
Getting Married in a Recession: Feasible?
Tags: , , , , fail, myspace, twitter
No Comments to “Rise of the camera-phone photographer”
  1. Ms. Bar B: says:

    Lol. True. Seems like EVERYTHING as we know it is dying due to technology. Kinda makes the thought process behind the movie The Happening not so dumb after all.

Leave a Reply

(required)

(required)


Katy Perry: “My boobs are real”

The Skittle-wigged superstar Katy Perry was recently interviewed by Youtube.  The Santa Barbara, California native shared some very insightful...

Pink Mending After Stage Fall, Thanks Fans (video)

Singer Pink is doing okay this weekend after a nasty fall on stage during a performance in Germany. She...

When is Lola Monroe Going to Blow?

When entertainers change their name it is done usually to make a statement or get out of a contract...

Some of the Hottest Concerts of 2010 (videos)

There’s been a lot of cool music in 2010, and some hot performances have as well. Here’s a list...

The return of Foxy Brown (video)

In the late 1990s, after simmering under the surface of New York City rap for a few years, Foxy...

Your Ad Here