monkey44 said:
.... Sometimes, editors will crop, manipulate minor corrections, but generally it's always assumed that the image in any journal or newspaper, magazine is direct from the camera, a recording of history. Journalists have been fired for changing an image -- one in particular in the news last year - cropped (or cut) a piece of his assistant's camera out of the corner of an image shot in Afghanistan during a conflict -- and he was immediately fired.
I have difficulty being sympathetic with this amount of political correctness re. photography "rules"
The subject matter of the image presumably was NOT the assistant's camera (or existence).
The assistant's camera could contribute nothing to the intended visual communication other than distraction.
Had the photographer used a slightly longer lens, or "zoomed" by lens or foot a bit closer, the assistant's camera would not have shown.
Instead he zoomed by cropping (one possibility mentioned, or by cutting) and simply offered less (not DIFFERENT!) content than he might have included by using an even wider lens, etc.)
So, patently extraneous material was excluded from the image with nothing "changed" regarding the intended subject.
The result, still an accurate recording of history, less all the other surrounding "history" that might have been/could have been/ thank heavens was not (confusingly) shown.
Who cares?
Fired? Nose-in-the-air hall monitor mentality, ..."It's against the rule!"
Sheese! :
Question authority.