4.6 • 2K Ratings
🗓️ 18 January 2024
⏱️ 75 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Press photographers have faced tough workplace challenges for quite some time. Yet, according to recent headlines, their job is about to get even tougher, due to current plans by many law enforcement agencies—particularly the NYPD—to encrypt radio calls, making live transmissions of breaking news inaccessible to common citizens and members of the press.
Besides being a devastating blow to meddling old biddies and law enforcement buffs, this change has huge implications for photojournalists and news outlets, who depend on such communications as part of their workflow.
Joining us to shed light on this matter, as well as to provide a general update on newspaper photojournalism today, are two generations of accredited newspaper photographers, Todd Maisel and Lloyd Mitchell. As a current board member and past vice president of the New York Press Photographers Association, Maisel has worked tirelessly to investigate and mediate the NYPD’s encryption plans.
Among the many topics raised in our discussion are a shift in press accreditation from the NYPD to the Mayor’s Office of Media & Entertainment, competing interests within news organizations that prevent broadcasters from taking law enforcement to task, distinctions between police and fire departments when it comes to radio encryption, details about radio encryption rollouts in other US cities, and much more.
Towards the end of our chat, Todd Maisel offers a compelling insight into his mission as a photojournalist, which speaks to the high stakes involving the matter at hand. “What I’m doing as a journalist is a sacred obligation. It’s a God-given right to do it, and to continue to do it, and to do a great job at it. And so, I made a promise to protect it, to protect freedom of the press.”
Guests: Todd Maisel and Lloyd Mitchell
Above photograph © Todd Maisel
For more information on our guests and the gear they use, see:
https://blogd7.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/holding-to-truth-radio-encryption-the-press-with-todd-maisel-lloyd-mitchell
Stay Connected:
Todd Maisel Website: https://www.toddmaiselvisualjournalism.com/
Todd Maisel on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/toddmaisel/
Todd Maisel on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/
Todd Maisel on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ToddMaisel
Lloyd Mitchell Website: https://lloydmitchell43.photoshelter.com/
Lloyd Mitchell on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lloydmitchellphotography/
https://www.instagram.com/urbanfirefightingportfolio/
Lloyd Mitchell on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/randymitchellwritesandphotographs/
Lloyd Mitchell on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Lloydphoto
NYPPA Website: https:// www.nyppa.org
Todd Maisel on the Deadline for Newspaper Photojournalism Episode: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/podcast-a-deadline-for-newspaper-photojournalism
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0:00.0 | This week's episode is sponsored by Panasonic. |
0:05.0 | You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast. |
0:08.0 | For 50 years, P&H has been the professional source for photography, video, audio, and more. |
0:14.6 | For your favorite gear and news and reviews, |
0:16.6 | visit us at B&H.com or download the B&H app |
0:20.1 | to your iPhone or Android device. |
0:22.3 | Now here's your host, Alan Whites. |
0:26.4 | Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast. My name is Alan Whites. |
0:30.9 | And I'm Jill Waterman. |
0:32.9 | And fear not, our audio engineer Mike Weinstein will no doubt raise a question to two somewhere |
0:37.9 | along the line. |
0:39.5 | For the longest time, both reporters and common citizens looking to keep tabs on noteworthy activities, |
0:45.2 | especially questionable ones in their local community have relied on police scanners |
0:50.7 | for up-to-date reports on newsworthy events within their |
0:53.8 | neighborhoods. Scanner Chatter Chatter Chatter was both free and available to the |
0:57.6 | public. Yet according to recent headlines, the ability to listen in on |
1:01.4 | unedited police scanner Chatter will soon become a thing of the past at least in New York City. |
1:07.0 | The reason? |
1:08.0 | The NYPD plans to encrypt their radio calls making them inaccessible for public listening. |
1:14.8 | Beyond being a devastating blow to meddling old biddies and law enforcement buffs alike, |
1:19.6 | this change will have huge implications for photojournalists and press photographers who have long |
1:24.4 | depended on such communications as part of their workflow. |
... |
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