There are many of us who still strive to maintain photography as what it was created to do, capture a moment of reality without the biased perception of an artist.
I don't recall that as what it was created to do at all. Wasn't it initially begun while looking for a way to make the creation of
decorative patterns more economical?
Your definition kind of tosses out the whole "pencil of nature" idea too.
Sorry, but I ain't biting. You're really trying to equate a thing with a photograph of that thing, which is a very serious fallacy. At
best a photo is a tracing of an event. But that doesn't mean that it
is the event as it was perceived, much less as it "is." While you claim to be attempting to bypass the "biased perception of an artist" you seem to be carrying some extremely strong biases about the nature of photography (much less photographic history)!
You go to a place, you see a thing, you make: a picture. Flat, no motion, limited range of colors, one point a view, no smells, silent. Why would you call this "true"?
If you were hired by the venue's insurance company, you may want narrow documentation. But for an emotional event, where you are there in service of those specific people having a strong emotional moment, the desired photos are not merely to show noun, noun, noun, but rather to show verb, verb, verb -- the experience, the feeling, the connections between people. These perceptions often don't connect in a 30th of a second (or a 10,0000th with strobe) without some coaxing but they are the core of the job. "Photojournalistic style" (your quotes!) isn't newspaper work, it's a
style, and it imposes some iconographic ideas onto the material -- but the underlying essence of the material is still there. Think about the origins of that style in the first place -- it's
still a fairytale illusion, the bride is after the illusion of photos that have the appearance of society-page shots (mixed with some advertising artifice). She's
not after front-page coverage.
The best wedding photos, imo, show the bride why the groom thinks she's beautiful, and show the groom how much she loves him for it. Emotion. Connection. Validation of what they hope is the Great Love of Their Lives.
Servicing the values of the wedding should be the primary interest in the "integrity" of the wedding shooter. Trying to make some unseen picture editor happy is... well, grotesque and sounds dismissive of the reason these people were gathered in the first place.
(PS: I'm off in a couple of hours to the local NPPA chapter mtg, where some folks from the local Papers will be lecturing on manipulation. Hope they're not equally blind to the idea that a photo can't EVER be fully honest in its description)