This is the first in a series of posts I will write about my assignments as a photographer at The Daily Pennsylvanian. The Daily Pennsylvanian, also known as the DP, is the local college newspaper run by Penn students and funded purely by ad revenue. You can check out the newspaper here: The Daily Pennsylvanian
I joined the photography team on September of 2007 shortly after I fell in love with Photography. At first it was difficult taking photographs that my editors liked. I was frequently told that I had a ‘pretty’ photograph but not a usable one. It took a long time for me to learn what ‘take a photo that tells the story’ really meant and how to do it without hesitation. Hopefully any of you photographers thinking of taking a foray into photojournalism or even sports photography will find these posts useful and insightful.
The assignment was for a meeting of a group at Penn called the Civic Scholars with Penn president Amy Gutmann. A couple of things made this assignemnt somewaht difficult. First, I had to make sure that I didn’t disturb the meeting at all. In fact I was directly told by my editor and one of the Civic Scholar’s faculty leaders to be as quiet as possible. This was easier said than done. The Nikon D200 I was using was NOT a quiet camera (most DSLRs aren’t) and one of the lenses I was using to get portraits was enourmous (the 70-200mm 2.8). Add to this the fact that I was in a room the size of jail cell and you get a great reason to freak out about your first assignment.
Here’s the first photo I ever took for the DP.
But I gritted my teeth and with the help of Pres. Gutman’s handler (she was very eager to get good press for Gutmann in the DP) I clicked away and with minor irritation on the faculty leader I got my photos. I took so many that day that I thought I had to have a good one in there somewhere. It turns out I was right.
This was the one that was eventually published.
And even though the editors liked this photo they still told me that I needed to get closer to my subjects. One of them even told me to get in the space in the middle of the square table and snap photos from there. That’s not disruptive at all right?
So what do you take home from this as a rookie photog?
- Be bold. A timid photographer never gets good shots.
- Don’t be affraid to get close.
- Get plenty of angles and make sure your photos tell the story. In other words, imagine your photo in the paper next to the article and ask yourself: Does that make sense there?
Happy shooting!

