Do you remember when photojournalism and photographic stories used to be a more central part of the news reading experience? Granted, those were the days when print publishing reigned supreme and photo-centric news magazines represented some of the highest circulation periodicals in American publishing. There's no better example of this than Life Magazine, which sold 13.5 million copies per week at its peak. Yet,
Life slowly sputtered out of existence over the years (finally closing the doors of its print operations in 2007 after a number of re-starts), and just as digital technology has forced publishers and media organizations to alter their approach to the distribution and monetization of their content, photojournalism, too, seems in desperate need of a shot in the arm.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/0Gc6rZ1fyDM/
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