One last look at 2021
Post Reports
The Washington Post
4.4 • 5.1K Ratings
🗓️ 30 December 2021
⏱️ 28 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
A farewell to 2021 from us here at Post Reports and the photojournalists who witnessed the year’s biggest stories.
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The Washington Post photography editors combed through thousands of images to find the most memorable from 2021. Accompanying the photos this year are interviews with the photojournalists who took them. The team at Post Reports felt inspired by the interviews and images to look back on the past year.
The images of 2021 tell a complex yet dramatic story. It was a year of the angry and the rebellious scaling walls, tearing down barriers, rising up to reverse reality. But it was also a year of carefully considered verdicts and hurriedly ended war, of mass migration and candlelight vigils, a year when millions of people decided to take a shot, venture forth and return to life, together.
There was, perhaps above all, the terror of lethal disease, a second year of a pandemic that unraveled the fabric of daily life and managed to set people against each other in ways that defied reason. The usual questions born of insecurity — Will we be okay? How can we help each other? — were joined by new uncertainties: Is this real? What should I believe? Why don’t people around me believe what I see is true?
If you valued the journalism on this podcast and in this newspaper this year, subscribe to The Washington Post. Right now you can get the best deal we’ve ever offered on a subscription to The Washington Post – a year for just $9.99. Go to washingtonpost.com/subscribe.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | What are the images of 2021 that are burned into your mind? |
| 0:06.0 | I want to hear your comments on the program, for the older. |
| 0:09.0 | I'm Steve, the tornado ravage community of Kentucky. |
| 0:13.0 | New Year, 2021, and from an empty town square. |
| 0:18.0 | Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. |
| 0:20.0 | Good going through, it's on. |
| 0:22.0 | The volcano is struggling to recover from the pandemic. |
| 0:26.0 | It's something that I've been thinking about as the year comes to a close. |
| 0:31.0 | Thinking about the work that I made in my little closet. |
| 0:34.0 | Thinking about the changes in my life. |
| 0:37.0 | Seeing the faces of colleagues and friends and loved ones that I was finally able to reconnect with in real life. |
| 0:44.0 | The shows that I watched, the music that I listened to while cooking. |
| 0:56.0 | The way that I kind of cackled to myself when I heard that, yes, JLo and Ben Affleck are in fact back together. |
| 1:04.0 | I remember the underlying anxiety all the way through. |
| 1:09.0 | And the selfie I took when I got my first vaccine shot. |
| 1:16.0 | And then my second. |
| 1:18.0 | And then my third. |
| 1:25.0 | As we thought about how to take a look back, we were moved by the stories of our colleagues who took the images of 2021. |
| 1:34.0 | These photojournalists managed to capture and define the year. |
| 1:38.0 | And today, we're going to spend time and give you space to look back at this year through their eyes. |
| 1:44.0 | It was a strange but beautiful moment. |
| 1:47.0 | At light behind her just, you know, makes her shine and makes her glow. |
... |
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