Denying the Man in the Mirror behind Social Media Photoshops
I
|
t is rather sad that people have not brought themselves to reconciling
with the man in the mirror. Clever editing and photo manipulation that pass for
retouch are rampant on Instagram. Others on Facebook and Twitter use celebrity portraits
you would be forgiven that they do not have a head themselves. Or the head and
shoulders are too ugly to show off?
By
MUSYOKA NGUI
Social media is
interactive, fun and cool. It is the next frontier for long lost friends
meeting and sharing their experiences. It is where tech savvy businesses meet
customised niche markets in various groups, online chat rooms and assured youthful
population who make up the most number of social media users.
As a media professional I
love working with amateurs and non-journalist professionals who upload both grainy
and crisp photos. Thanks to their smartphones they can upload pictures in real
time for immediate consumption by their friends.
The beauty of being a
freelancer or an amateur is that you are not tied by bureaucratic media house
rules and equally boring sharing policies which also risks denying you the much
needed credit for your 15 seconds of fame in the virtual space. The photo is
yours. It is your scoop. No one can take it away from you even if they
plagiarize your fans still know where to go to.
MAKE MISTAKES
Another sweet side of
free publishing is that there are millions of rooms for us to make mistakes. I don’t
care if my follower’s profile photo is posted sideways, upside down or zigzag. There
is no tradition, precedence or conformity. Creativity means trying, failing and
eventually learning the best practices of lighting, cropping, white balance and
expert editing.
Readers are a lazy lot. They
require telling photos which don’t need a caption to explain. They don’t want
loooong and sophisticated descriptions. After all they are the judges and
customers who eventually turn their adoration to comments, likes and cult-like following.
Speak to their preferences and balance that with freedom vs responsibility of expression,
media and thought.
It is rather sad that
people have not brought themselves to reconciling with the man in the mirror.
Clever editing and photo manipulation that pass for retouch are rampant on
Instagram. Others on Facebook and Twitter use celebrity portraits you would be
forgiven that they do not have a head themselves. Or the head and shoulders are
too ugly to show off? Bare your fundamentals. Your assets. Get me right, I did not say nudity that
leaves to nothing imagination. Exception to this rule: socialites, I understand
the desperation.
Social media is the new
addiction. The notifications cigarette, the attention drug and the ultimate hook
that hopelessly grips us. Moderation please. For now, let me “eat” those data bundles.
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