Bad photographers Podcast

Bad photographers

Welcome to Bad Photographers, the podcast where your hosts, Chris Griffin and Janiqua Robinson, drag the myths, melt the egos, and shine a very questionable light on the world of photography. This isn’t a masterclass. It’s not a gentle critique. It’s a seat at the table with two working photographers who’ve seen too much, argued too often, and still show up with cameras in our hands because we can’t help ourselves. If you’re here for honesty, humor, hard truths, and the stories that only surface when the mics are on and the guard is down... you’re in the right place. Welcome to the show!

Episodes

  1. The Trials and Tribulations of the Unemployed Photographer

    2D AGO

    The Trials and Tribulations of the Unemployed Photographer

    In this episode of Bad Photographers, Griff reflects on the current state of the photography industry and the lived reality of the unemployed photographer. This isn’t a story about failure—or a search for sympathy. It’s an honest look at how talent, experience, and even accolades don’t always translate into stability, and how luck, timing, and network often shape opportunity more than we’d like to admit. Through personal experience—from major publications to leadership roles in the industry—this conversation explores rejection, silence, and the slow grind of uncertainty. The emails that say “we’re moving in another direction.” The applications that disappear into nothing. The quiet pressure of trying to protect your creative identity while still paying the bills. This episode is about endurance, perspective, and staying in the work when the path forward isn’t clear. A reminder that looking back at your own growth isn’t denial—it’s evidence. That your voice still matters. That your work still counts. And that even in a brutal industry, there is a way forward for photographers and creatives who keep showing up. 🧭 Chapters / Timestamps 00:00 The Quiet Weight of Being Unemployed06:12 Talent, Timing, and the Myth of Stability12:40 Endurance, Identity, and a Way Forward #BadPhotographers #PhotographyLife #UnemployedPhotographer #CreativeCareers #FreelanceLife #PhotoIndustry #CreativeBurnout #ArtistLife #Photojournalism #StillShowingUp

    7 min
  2. Exposed - AI, Photography, and the Collapse of Trust (Part 2)

    FEB 3

    Exposed - AI, Photography, and the Collapse of Trust (Part 2)

    If Part 1 asked how trust collapsed, Part 2 asks the harder question: how do we prove reality when images can no longer speak for themselves? In Episode 2 of this two-part Bad Photographers series, we move from history into the front lines of verification, forensics, and ethics. We step inside the world of visual investigations, where photographs are treated not as content, but as evidence—cross-checked against metadata, satellite imagery, CCTV footage, weather data, and digital fingerprints. We break down how AI image models actually learn to fake reality, why detection is falling behind generation, and what it means when synthetic images begin training future systems instead of the real world. As deepfakes grow cleaner and harder to trace, truth becomes diagnostic rather than obvious. The episode then turns to the industry’s first serious attempt at rebuilding trust: the Content Provenance and Authenticity Initiative (C2PA). We explain how cryptographic metadata, edit histories, and chain-of-custody systems could allow cameras to embed proof directly into images—and why those same tools raise life-or-death concerns for journalists, whistleblowers, and people documenting abuse. From World Press Photo’s introduction of “Synthetic Narratives,” to evolving legal standards around AI authorship, disclosure, and political manipulation, this episode explores the uneasy future where photography splits into two parallel paths: verification and imagination. As AI becomes normalized as a creative medium, photographers are no longer just image-makers. They are fact-checkers, ethicists, and translators of truth. The question is no longer whether AI belongs in photography—but whether audiences will know what kind of truth an image is asking them to believe. Photography isn’t dying.It’s renegotiating its contract with reality. 00:00 The Last Trusted Image02:14 Photographs as Evidence05:36 How Visual Investigations Verify Reality08:41 How AI Learns to Fake the World12:02 Why Detection Is Falling Behind15:34 C2PA and the Chain of Custody for Images20:18 Provenance vs Privacy24:41 Transparency as the New Truth28:09 The Split Future of Photography33:22 Law, Copyright, and Synthetic Media38:10 The New Role of the Photographer41:56 Rebuilding Trust After the Collapse ChaptersKey Reference List The New York Times — Visual Investigations Teamhttps://www.nytimes.com/spotlight/visual-investigations Dr. Hany Farid (UC Berkeley) — Digital image forensics, deepfakes, and AI detectionhttps://farid.berkeley.edu/ MIT Media Lab Study — False News Spreads Faster Than the Truthhttps://news.mit.edu/2018/study-twitter-false-news-travels-faster-true-stories-0308 Content Provenance and Authenticity Initiative (C2PA) — Technical frameworkhttps://c2pa.org/ Adobe Content Authenticity Initiative — Industry adoption and standardshttps://contentauthenticity.org/ World Press Photo — Introduction of “Synthetic Narratives”https://www.worldpressphoto.org/ Fred Ritchin — Bending the Frame: Photojournalism, Documentary, and the Citizenhttps://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262026843/bending-the-frame/ Ian Goodfellow — Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs)https://papers.nips.cc/paper/5423-generative-adversarial-nets Stability AI — Stable Diffusion research papers and documentationhttps://stability.ai/research U.S. Copyright Office (2023) — Policy on AI-generated works and authorshiphttps://www.copyright.gov/rulings-filings/review-board/ European Union AI Act — Regulatory framework and disclosure requirementshttps://artificialintelligenceact.eu/ REAL Political Ads Act (U.S.) — Disclosure requirements for AI-generated political mediahttps://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/senate-bill/1596

    25 min
  3. Exposed - AI, Photography, and the Collapse of Trust (Part 1)

    JAN 27

    Exposed - AI, Photography, and the Collapse of Trust (Part 1)

    “A single AI image of the Pope in a designer puffer jacket didn’t just go viral — it revealed something worse…” A single AI image of the Pope in a designer puffer jacket didn’t just go viral — it exposed how quickly authenticity can collapse when the internet is flooded with convincing fakes. In the age of AI photography, “seeing” isn’t believing anymore. It’s step one of verification. In Part 1 of this two-part series, Bad Photographers traces the long history of image manipulation — from spirit photography and staged “fairies,” to propaganda erasures and Photoshop — and explains why today’s synthetic media is fundamentally different. This isn’t only editing reality. It’s manufacturing photo, video, and audio from scratch, at scale — powering deepfakes, identity hijacking, and misinformation / disinformation that can outrun corrections. We break down what this means for photojournalism, public trust, and the role of images as credibility / evidence — because when audiences assume everything could be fake, the real danger isn’t that we can’t spot the lie. It’s that we stop trusting the truth. Part 2 explores what comes next: provenance, standards, and the tools (and ethics) required to rebuild trust after the collapse. Chapters 00:00 The Evolution of Photography and Trust 04:24 Historical Deceptions in Photography 06:06 The Impact of AI on Visual Truth 07:57 The Consequences of Misinformation 10:13 The Collapse of Trust in Imagery 11:13 The Future of Visual Media 15:59 The Ethical Dilemmas of AI 18:14 The Role of Photography in Society 20:02 The Fight for Authenticity 21:54 The Personal Impact of Manipulated Images 23:18 The Call to Action for Change Key Reference Links Durham, M. G. “‘Napalm Girl’ at 50: The story of the Vietnam War’s defining photo.” 2023. URL:⁠ https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/download/20175/4204 IJOC⁠ “The Terror of War (Napalm Girl) Photographed by Nick Ut.” Yale University Press. 2021. URL:⁠ https://yalebooks.yale.edu/2021/09/20/napalm-girl/ Yale University Press⁠ Maizland, L. “Photographers’ Moral Responsibility to Document Injustice in … (Kevin Carter case).” 2022. URL:⁠ https://edspace.american.edu/atrium/wp-content/uploads/sites/1901/2022/05/Maizland-Lindsay.pdf EdSpace⁠ “The Vulture and the Little Girl” (Kevin Carter photograph). Wikipedia entry. URL:⁠ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Vulture_and_the_Little_Girl Wikipedia⁠ Al-Jazeera Institute. “Ethical Dilemmas of Photo Editing in Media.” March 26, 2024. URL:⁠ https://institute.aljazeera.net/en/ajr/article/2614 Al Jazeera Institute⁠ Reuters. “Reuters toughens rules after altered photo affair.” August 9 2007. URL:⁠ https://www.reuters.com/article/economy/reuters-toughens-rules-after-altered-photo-affair-idUSL18678707/ Reuters⁠ Adobe Blog. “Insights from Reuters on Capturing Images People Can Trust.” June 23 2017. URL: https://blog.adobe.com/en/publish/2017/06/23/insights-from-reuters-on-capturing-images-people-can-trust.html⁠ Adobe Blog⁠ Quill Magazine. “Photo Unrealism: Doctoring pics is becoming easier — and harder to detect.” June 20 2024. URL:⁠ https://www.quillmag.com/2024/06/20/photo-unrealism-doctoring-pics-is-becoming-easier-and-harder-to-detect/ Quill⁠ Faculty at Georgia Tech. “Photo Tampering Throughout History.” URL:⁠ https://faculty.cc.gatech.edu/~beki/cs4001/history.pdf Georgia Tech Faculty⁠ Aesthetic Investigations. “The Atrocity of Representing Atrocity: Watching Kevin Carter’s Photograph.” 2015. URL:⁠ https://aestheticinvestigations.eu/article/download/12001/13563 Aesthetic Investigations⁠ Arielle Lorre calls out AI-generated fake beauty ad:⁠ https://www.indy100.com/tiktok/ai-video-trending-arielle-lore-skincare-skaind-lawsuit⁠ WIRED: “Companies Are Stealing Influencers’ Faces”:⁠ https://www.wired.com/story/youtube-instagram-influencers-stolen-faces/⁠

    26 min
  4. Photo Therapy - Love & Loss

    JAN 20

    Photo Therapy - Love & Loss

    What happens when you fall out of love with photography—and don’t know how to come back? In this photo therapy episode of Bad Photographers, Griff explores the quiet side of creativity: love, loss, burnout, and the moments that reshape our relationship with the camera. Through personal reflection and lived experience, this episode looks at photography not as output or achievement, but as presence—what it means to see, feel, and stay human even when the spark fades. This conversation sits at the intersection of photography and mental health, examining creative numbness, identity beyond the camera, and why falling out of love with your work doesn’t mean you’re done. It often means the relationship is changing. When assignments feel heavy, edits feel mechanical, and motivation disappears, photography can become less about making images and more about finding your way back to yourself. This episode is for photographers and creatives navigating burnout, loss, or creative doubt. A reminder that photography is a long relationship—one we return to again and again through stillness, reflection, and the unremarkable moments that quietly restore meaning. Refined Takeaways Falling out of love with photography doesn’t mean failurePhotography can be a tool for emotional processing and healingCreative burnout is a signal, not an endingLetting go of validation can restore intimacy with the workPhoto therapy begins with presence, not perfection 00:00 Love, Loss, and the Images We Carry05:42 Creative Burnout and Losing the Spark11:30 Photo Therapy and Finding Your Way Back

    7 min
  5. BTS: Jon Cherry on Photographing January 6th and Living With the Aftermath

    JAN 5

    BTS: Jon Cherry on Photographing January 6th and Living With the Aftermath

    Pulitzer Prize–winning photojournalist Jon Cherry joins Bad Photographers for an unfiltered, long-form conversation about documenting the January 6th Capitol Riot and living with the images that followed. Cherry takes us inside the chaos of that day, reflecting on what it meant to photograph history as it unfolded, the weight of responsibility that comes with bearing witness, and the emotional toll of covering political violence. He opens up about freelancing under pressure, the long road to healing after trauma, and how his career and personal life, were reshaped in the aftermath. This 2-hour episode goes beyond the headlines, pairing deep reflection with visual context from the day itself, to explore what happens after the photographs are made — when the cameras are down, the adrenaline fades, and photographers are left to process what they’ve seen. Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Background 01:22 The Impact of January 6th 04:45 Finding a Voice in Photojournalism 08:47 Reflections on Personal Connections 09:41 The Journey to January 6th 12:58 The Build-Up to the Capitol Riot 16:30 The Day of the Capitol Riot 21:40 Experiences at the Capitol 24:58 Documenting the Unfolding Events 26:42 Confrontation and Tension at the Riot 30:46 Preparation and Equipment Challenges 38:31 The March Towards the Capitol 42:50 Chaos at the Inaugural Platform 49:04 Moments of Acceptance and Fear 49:59 Breaking Windows and Capturing Chaos 52:58 The Aftermath of January 6th 55:52 Navigating the Challenges of Freelancing 59:57 The Pulitzer Prize and Personal Reflection 01:05:59 The Sticky Pulitzer and Community Support 01:09:57 Processing Trauma and Building Resilience 01:21:08 The Weight of Experience 01:24:49 Healing Through Reflection 01:30:02 The Journey of Self-Discovery 01:35:35 The Role of a Photographer 01:41:45 Curiosity and Responsibility in Photography Jon's Website: https://jonpcherry.com Jon's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jonpcherry/ Bad Photographers Website: https://bad-photographers.com Keywords Elements In This Episode John Cherry, January 6th, Capitol Riot, photojournalism, documentary photography, storytelling, emotions, chaos, experience, insights, January 6th, Capitol Riot, Pulitzer Prize, photojournalism, trauma, community support, personal growth, freelance photography, emotional processing, storytelling

    1h 26m
  6. Holiday Episode! Bad Photographers Christmas Playlist

    12/15/2025

    Holiday Episode! Bad Photographers Christmas Playlist

    The holidays are weird. And loud. And emotional. And somehow always involve music, drinks, and family dynamics you forgot you signed up for. In this holiday episode of Bad Photographers, Griff and Janiqua kick back and talk through their favorite holiday traditions, Christmas music hot takes, and the festive drinks that get them through family gatherings. From playlists that set the mood to the reality of navigating awkward conversations around the table, this episode leans into humor, honesty, and the chaos that comes with the season. It’s lighthearted, a little unhinged, and meant to feel like hanging out with friends who get it. We also share holiday playlists so you can steal our taste in music and soundtrack your own celebrations. The Playlist Low-Fi Christmas Cozy beats, soft crackle, perfect for editing or escaping family chaos. Link: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1DWYK8AUzwi00m?si=f483d5eff7d44faf Songs that make Janiqua feel the holiday spirit.  Link: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLj8xv8uWNnAXe3_Ve5fTHcPiVeDXKvPWL&si=rcDLSeL9aJs8DYYZ  Warm, classy, candlelit piano versions of holiday favorites. Link: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1DXbPHTEEyQ6Hv?si=xBNxQrdDRWGuuAKtHOHjqA Smooth holiday jazz — the “I’m pretending I'm in a cozy NYC café” mood. Link: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1DWU0r6G8OGirN?si=0t5-84UDTy2bXe2u2W28Tg Peak chaotic holiday energy. Track: Mr. Hankey the Christmas Poo (Early '50s recording by Cowboy Timmy) Link: https://open.spotify.com/track/0SjKnhnPFrJ1PslS7AP7Ef  13 Horror Christmas Stories Spooky, eerie, perfect if you like your holidays a little cursed. Link: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4CfdsIjG8FnQz9H5llJVUC?si=zE1a14nhQBiZCnSpOZuSuw A fun explainer of how the holiday traditions actually came together. Link: https://open.spotify.com/episode/57KNiC48du7T88MoBcS3o8?si=c554cb52b5c74c23 Backstory: Santa Claus Where the Santa myth came from, plus the history behind the character we know now. Link: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4ZW0Xg1tsiR1EyPL6mQJgt?si=InDGuQ9BQgu6jRBubU2zJA Key Themes Holiday traditions look different for everyone Music plays a huge role in shaping the holiday mood Family gatherings are meaningful… and complicated Humor is a survival skill during the holidays Festive drinks can make everything better Sharing recipes and playlists brings people together It’s okay if your holidays don’t look like the movies Some topics are better avoided at the dinner table Weird holiday stories are half the fun Leaning into the season beats fighting it #holidaypodcast #christmasvibes #badphotographers #holidaytraditions #podcastclips

    6 min
  7. Photo Therapy - The Art of Lying

    12/09/2025

    Photo Therapy - The Art of Lying

    What if the stories we tell ourselves are the very thing that keep us moving? In this episode of Bad Photographers, Griff gets real about the lies we use to survive the creative grind, not to deceive others, but to convince ourselves we’re capable long enough to step into the moment. We start in the quiet collapse of 2020, the grounded flights, frozen campaigns, and the blurry days when creative identity felt like it evaporated overnight. But everything shifts when Griff finds unexpected fuel in The Last Dance, and the psychological games Michael Jordan played on himself to perform at the highest level. From there, the episode dives into how photographers use the same mental tricks in their own careers — including a story about documentary photographer César Rodríguez, whose career is lined with awards and high-risk reporting. Early on, César stretched the truth just enough to step into an opportunity he wasn’t sure he was ready for. Not out of deception, but out of belief that he could rise to the moment. And he did. Today, he’s a Picture of the Year International winner, a 2024 Paris Photo–Aperture photobook finalist, a 2025 Alexia Foundation Grant runner-up, a Hefat hostile-environment–trained photojournalist, and a MoMA-recognized photobook author — proof that sometimes the story you tell yourself is the bridge to the career you’re meant for. Chapters 00:00 The Art of Self-Deception 02:01 Navigating the Pandemic's Impact 04:20 Michael Jordan's Mindset 06:38 Borrowing Belief and Overcoming Doubt 08:49 Making It Personal Takeaways Sometimes faking it isn't about fraud, it's about faith.The internet became our window during isolation.Self-deception can provide the edge needed to succeed.We often tell ourselves stories to move forward.The best truths may start as exaggerations.Believing in ourselves is a form of bravery.Aligning our thoughts can make our experiences personal.It's okay to borrow belief from our narratives.Self-deception can be a survival mechanism.Creating a personal narrative can empower us. If you’ve ever felt unprepared, underqualified, or stuck inside your own head, this episode is your permission slip.A conversation about impostor syndrome, creative psychology, documentary work, and the quiet mind games that help us keep going. Listen in. Lie a little. Become a lot. Bad Photog's Website: ⁠bad-photographers.com⁠ Instagram: ⁠@badphotographers⁠ Cesar's Website: ⁠cesarrodriguezb.com⁠⁠⁠

    10 min
  8. Thunderbirds Crash: The Unbelievable Story Behind Photographer Bennie Davis & the Air Force’s Most Famous Ejection Photo

    12/04/2025

    Thunderbirds Crash: The Unbelievable Story Behind Photographer Bennie Davis & the Air Force’s Most Famous Ejection Photo

    In this episode of The Bad Photographers Podcast, we sit down with Bennie J. Davis III—the Air Force photographer behind one of the most dramatic and widely recognized air show jet-crash photos ever captured. Bennie walks us through the day that changed everything: the moments leading up to the Thunderbirds jet crash, what he saw through the viewfinder, and how a split second of instinct turned into an iconic aviation image that would spark investigations, questions of photo ownership, and a career-defining wave of public attention. This conversation dives deep into the world of military photography, including the pressure of documenting high-risk aviation events, the fallout of a leaked military photograph, and the emotional toll of capturing traumatic moments. Bennie shares candid insights about the technical preparation required to photograph fast-moving aircraft, the responsibility of documenting incidents for public accountability, and the psychological weight that follows photographers long after the moment is over. We also explore the broader impact of this photograph—how attribution, public perception, and recognition from senior military leadership shaped Bennie’s path, and why open conversations about trauma, mental health, and resilience in photography are essential for the next generation. Whether you’re interested in aviation, Air Force history, crash investigations, photography under pressure, or the human story behind an image, this episode offers a rare behind-the-scenes look at one of the most unforgettable moments ever captured at an air show. 🔑 Key Takeaways Bennie J. Davis III is a photographer and public servant with more than 30 years of experience. He photographed a dramatic air show jet crash, producing one of the most recognized ejection images in aviation. Preparedness and understanding your camera settings are critical in high-pressure environments. Military photographers face unique challenges around documentation, ownership, and protocol. A single image can trigger investigations and unexpected career consequences. The blend of luck, timing, and skill often defines iconic aviation images. Mentorship and maturity are crucial for long-term success in high-stakes photography. Understanding aviation mechanics helps photographers anticipate dangerous situations. Traumatic events leave lasting psychological effects—an important part of the conversation in military and news photography. The impact of a photograph can reach far beyond the moment it’s captured, shaping careers and public perception. 🎙️ Chapters 00:00 — Introduction: Bad Photographers x Bennie J. Davis III02:57 — Bennie’s Start in Photography05:54 — The Day of the Air Show08:46 — Inside the Air Traffic Control Tower11:53 — When the Incident Began14:56 — Capturing the Jet Crash Moment17:40 — Aftermath, Reactions & Investigation24:06 — Breaking Down the Incident34:26 — Navigating Air Force Protocols49:26 — Understanding the Aviation Mishap52:32 — Trauma, Memory & Growth54:41 — Revisiting the Kyle Incident58:43 — How One Photo Transformed a Career01:00:49 — Carrying the Weight of Experience01:04:39 — Vulnerability & Lessons Learned01:11:40 — Risk, Responsibility & the Photographer’s Dilemma Additional Things to check out Bad Photographers Website Instagram: www.instagram.com/badphotographers‘ Air Force Elite: Thunderbirds’ Netflix Review: Stream It Or Skip It? Video Shows F-16 Thunderbird Crash in California - Newsweek 1982 Thunderbirds Indian Springs diamond crash - Wikipedia Keywords military photography, Thunderbirds crash, air show incident, jet crash photo, aviation mishap, pilot ejection, Air Force photographer, Air Force investigation, behind the photo, iconic aviation image, military trauma, photography under pressure, documenting aviation incidents, mental health in photography, combat camera, public perception, crash documentation, photographer interview

    1h 15m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Welcome to Bad Photographers, the podcast where your hosts, Chris Griffin and Janiqua Robinson, drag the myths, melt the egos, and shine a very questionable light on the world of photography. This isn’t a masterclass. It’s not a gentle critique. It’s a seat at the table with two working photographers who’ve seen too much, argued too often, and still show up with cameras in our hands because we can’t help ourselves. If you’re here for honesty, humor, hard truths, and the stories that only surface when the mics are on and the guard is down... you’re in the right place. Welcome to the show!