on retouching to save their ass.[/QUOTE]but in general most pros I know, and I'm talking advertising, editorial and fashion photography here, were knowledgeable and truly professional.
early riser, I know it's not so much luck now, although once I got a start at a magazine say 15 years ago, music etc,... and it seemed like a great begining, all access passes etc,... I filled up one issue before the magazine folded. Timing may have something to do with it. Had that magazine been rolling stone circa 1967, I might be shooting for vanity fair by now. It's probably worse now for people interested in music photography because of napster type situations where people can download music for free, hence a bands bread and butter might come from touring now, so the band would lose what is left of their revenue by handing out a pass to a photographer. I can not remember the last time I got in free to a show.
A friend of mine who is a pro photographer, suplimented her work buy doing photoshop touch up work. Now she's an authority on the touch up trade. I'm sure she'd rather work behind a camera more. So what will happen to the industry when it only accepts images made by digital photography. Will Irving Penn be stuck on the corner with a paper cup asking for handouts? I suppose a good metaphor for what will be with photography can be what has happened to print media in the wake of television. Magazines and photographs were replaced by videos. It's too bad. Magazines used to expend lavish sums on photographers to provide extensive coverage and promote creative development of photographers, Now it's more often than not that a weekend photographer, wall street broker on holliday etc,... will get the credit if he or she captured the photograph of the highschool massacre in the middle of a hurricane than would the local stringer or assignment photographer. When the pros can't compete with the hobbyists, work suffers. It's not so much a case of when the going gets wierd the wierd turn pro as hunter thompson put it but more at, the blind leading the blind. There's always or so it seems a pendulum swinging. Photographic craftsmanship may be deleted in the digital world, but there's always a backlash of luddites geared up to chain whip the upstarts into analog submission. I'm kinda loosing focus. It all started out as a bad attitude. When the next depression occurs I wonder if there will be another FSA documentary! and if all the out of work photographers will be able to use the medium of their choice?