Posts Tagged ‘Daniel’

Internship at The New York Times

By Daniel Woolfolk

Since November, I had interned at Lens, the photojournalism blog of The New York Times. I just finished this week.  It was a web production internship where I did audio (here and here) and a lot of crowdsourcing.  I was part of the team that did “A Moment in Time,” a crowdsourcing event that had more than 12,000 participants worldwide.

Graduated

Chasen Marshall and me. The cord is for being a veteran. Photo by Joel Meares.

This week, I graduated from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in New York City.  I have a few career options I am weighing and will update soon, hopefully.

New York Times Institute in Tucson

Mine are the Mohawk and Mirror images. Main image by Diego Robles.

The first two weeks of January, I was at the New York Times Institute in Tucson with some excellent journalists from around the country. I got to shoot a lot with one of the Times editors and compete with other skilled photographers.

Here is an audio slideshow fellow student Sal Rodriguez produced of my photos.

New Site

Brandon Reynolds in the 2009 Fiesta de los Vaqueros. Tucson.

Brandon Reynolds in the 2009 Fiesta de los Vaqueros. Tucson.

Hi,

I just started this multimedia site as a supplement to my photo website.  I appreciate any constructive criticism.  :)

Daniel

Candid picture of me

Deanna took this candid of me at the orphanage.  And remember, it was only pure coincidence that I wore my best shirt when I was aware that she’d probably take my picture. :^P

Funny thing happened

I was writing a story for the Aztec Press on bike safety in Tucson. It took all day to get all the elements right for the shot I had in my head. I saw a girl waiting caddy corner from me at a red light.

I ran across and set up where I wanted to be.

Right after I shot, she came back steamed, “Why did you just take my picture?”

I explained who I was and what I was doing, then I asked her if she was a Pima student. She was and ended up being a significant part of the story aside from being the photo for it.

It’s just great when things fall into place.