Archive
Reuters blog archive
from Photographers Blog:
Nude without the nudity
WARNING: SOME IMAGES CONTAIN NUDITY
San Francisco, California
By Beck Diefenbach
Photographing the nude body in America presents many challenges. So when Reuters editor Mike Fiala asked me to shoot the latest chapter in the public nudity ban in San Francisco, I knew I would have a lot of factors to consider.
GALLERY: SAN FRANCISCO'S NO TO NUDE
Different parts of the world react differently to nudity in the news. In America, it is often considered taboo to print a photo of frontal nudity even if it is considered newsworthy.
If you are unaware, San Francisco does not have a city ordinance banning nudity in public. It is just one of those San Francisco-ism everyone else in the country likes to joke about. Until the last year or two, this clothing optional lifestyle never really caused much of a kerfuffle. But recently, store merchants in the city's Castro district have requested that the city put a stop to bare skin.
Castro District Supervisor Scott Wiener has been trying to change the city code to eliminate the daily nudist activity. He proposed a ban that would prohibit nudity in most public places, but would still allow it in particular parades and street festivals (we are in San Francisco after all). The final vote by the 11 city supervisors was set for Tuesday and I was assigned to photograph it for Reuters.
from Photographers Blog:
The femen phenomenon
By Gleb Garanich
I have been shooting Femen protests for five years and the girls have become a real Ukrainian brand now, like Chernobyl, the Klitschko brothers, footballer Andriy Shevchenko and Chicken Kiev. Colleagues in the office were always jealous when we left to cover the protests and many of my acquaintances from abroad were willing to go and watch them. Before taking pictures of the girls' regular lives outside the protests, I asked myself: what do I know about them? I only knew their names. The public has two ideas of them, "funny girls" or "damn prostitutes, I wonder who's paying them". I personally do not care if their actions are moral or immoral, wrong or right. They do not kill or steal or promise to make voters' lives better. Shooting their protests is much more interesting than, say, covering a briefing by the prime minister. These girls at least appear honest. Who pays for that is a question for the Financial Times, not me.
I chose the three most prominent Femen activists, Oleksandra Shevchenko, Inna Shevchenko and Oksana Shachko, and decided to spend a few hours with each one on a regular day. Two problems I faced were a queue of foreign reporters waiting to meet them and the flu, which brought the girls down. But once they recovered, I paid them a visit.
from Photographers Blog:
Naturism: These images contain nudity
By Mark Blinch
When you’re a photographer, every day brings the unexpected.
(Video best viewed in full screen mode)
Case in point: My assignment at the Bare Oaks Family Naturist Park.
Imagine a campground where people perform everyday tasks but without a stitch of clothing on.
Mowing the lawn, coffee with friends, dinnertime with family members, even board meetings with colleagues -- at this camp, there were no exceptions to the no clothes rule.
from Oddly Enough Blog:
Lookit the Nasdaqs on that chick!
If you're like most guys, hearing about the global financial meltdown makes you think about naked chicks. Then again, if you're like most guys, hearing about tapioca pudding make you think about pretty much the same thing.
From my Department of Bad Taste, a famous cabaret in Paris offers a number called "Crisis," where women lose their shirts, and nearly everything else, in the market plunge.
from Fan Fare:
No more nudity for Kate Winslet?
Kate Winslet, who is nominated for an Oscar for best actress in "The Reader," has been happy to take her clothes off for the sake of her art.
But those days may be over.
"I think I won't do it again: a) I can't keep getting away with it, and b) I don't want to become 'that actress who always gets her kit off,'" Winslet told Time magazine, in a profile that ran on its website on Thursday.
from UK News:
Are lads’ mags really THAT bad?
Conservative Shadow Children's Secretary Michael Gove has accused lads' magazines like Nuts and Zoo of promoting a shallow attitude towards women which in turn, he says, has contributed to Britain's high teenage pregnancy rate.
"Titles such as Nuts and Zoo paint a picture of women as permanently, lasciviously, uncomplicatedly available," he says.









