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In the latest episode of “10 Frames per Second,” host Molly & Joe interview legendary American photojournalist Stephen Shames. Over a 50‑year career, Shames has documented everything from the Black Panther Party to child poverty in America, testifying before the U.S. Senate and publishing twelve monographs.
If you’re a photographer, journalist, activist, or anyone who cares about visual storytelling, this interview is a goldmine. Below we break down the most actionable takeaways, organize them into easy‑to‑read sections, and show you how to apply Shames’s methods to your own work.
“I just wanted to look at the big picture and try and move people with photography.”
Build trust by aligning with a group’s mission, not merely your identity.
“Journalism is two‑dimensional; you need to experience the culture you want to document.”
“If you’re honest, people will accept you, even if you’re a ‘liberal New York Jew.’”
“The camera is a much better weapon because it puts the story directly in front of the world.”
Stephen Shames’s career shows that powerful photography comes from empathy, rigorous research, and deep community ties. Whether you’re documenting the modern Black Lives Matter movement, child poverty, or any social issue, the principles he shares—exit your bubble, build trust, and let the camera speak—remain timeless.
Ready to start your own documentary project? Apply the checklist above, stay authentic, and remember: your camera can change policy just as much as any courtroom testimony.
Steve is represented by:
_____
child poverty, Black Panther Party, civil rights movement, Vietnam War, documentary photography, social justice, racism, university protests, student government, activism, police brutality, COINTELPRO, gun control, media ownership, AI-generated deepfakes, fake news, community immersion, research methodology, cultural immersion, trust building, ethics in photography, hunger crisis, farm crisis, poverty in America, Senate testimony, camera as weapon, Rainbow Coalition, Young Lords, political coalitions, storytelling through images
The post Episode 175: Stephen Shames (Documentary Photography) Part 1 first appeared on 10FPS A Photojournalism Podcast for Everyone.
By The 10FPS TeamIn the latest episode of “10 Frames per Second,” host Molly & Joe interview legendary American photojournalist Stephen Shames. Over a 50‑year career, Shames has documented everything from the Black Panther Party to child poverty in America, testifying before the U.S. Senate and publishing twelve monographs.
If you’re a photographer, journalist, activist, or anyone who cares about visual storytelling, this interview is a goldmine. Below we break down the most actionable takeaways, organize them into easy‑to‑read sections, and show you how to apply Shames’s methods to your own work.
“I just wanted to look at the big picture and try and move people with photography.”
Build trust by aligning with a group’s mission, not merely your identity.
“Journalism is two‑dimensional; you need to experience the culture you want to document.”
“If you’re honest, people will accept you, even if you’re a ‘liberal New York Jew.’”
“The camera is a much better weapon because it puts the story directly in front of the world.”
Stephen Shames’s career shows that powerful photography comes from empathy, rigorous research, and deep community ties. Whether you’re documenting the modern Black Lives Matter movement, child poverty, or any social issue, the principles he shares—exit your bubble, build trust, and let the camera speak—remain timeless.
Ready to start your own documentary project? Apply the checklist above, stay authentic, and remember: your camera can change policy just as much as any courtroom testimony.
Steve is represented by:
_____
child poverty, Black Panther Party, civil rights movement, Vietnam War, documentary photography, social justice, racism, university protests, student government, activism, police brutality, COINTELPRO, gun control, media ownership, AI-generated deepfakes, fake news, community immersion, research methodology, cultural immersion, trust building, ethics in photography, hunger crisis, farm crisis, poverty in America, Senate testimony, camera as weapon, Rainbow Coalition, Young Lords, political coalitions, storytelling through images
The post Episode 175: Stephen Shames (Documentary Photography) Part 1 first appeared on 10FPS A Photojournalism Podcast for Everyone.