How to Lose a Job with Getty Images

Well, not me.  But another photographer messed up big time.

According to this article in Photo District News, photographer Marc Feldman provided Getty Images with a fantastic shot of golfer Marc Bettencourt from a recent tournament, as the golfer held up his golf ball for all to see.  It was a great shot, and Getty ran the photograph.

What Feldman didn’t tell Getty Images was that the photo was doctored.  Specifically, Feldman used digital editing software to remove the caddy from  behind Bettencourt’s arm, recropped the photograph, and re-submitted it.

Slick.

And he would have gotten away with it, had it not been for Dallas Morning News photo editor Guy Reynolds, who found what he thought were two different images of Bettencourt.

Here’s the first one.

Matt Bettencourt photo. Getty Images. From photographyblog.dallasnews.com.

And here’s the second one.

Matt Bettencourt altered photo. Getty Images. From photographyblog.dallasnews.com.

You can see the “editing” done behind Bettencourt’s left shoulder.  And not a very good job of editing, I must say.

Needless to say, Getty Images was not impressed.  They first had to send this out to everyone –

The "Mandatory Kill" of Bettencourt photo. From Photo District News website.

And then they did their own digital editing – that is, they cut Feldman from their roster of photographers.

Now someone can say, oh big deal, he trimmed a caddy out of the picture to make for a more visually appealing image. And it’s not like this hasn’t happened before.  The iconic picture of the girl crying over the dead body during the Kent State massacre was altered because the poor girl had the audacity to actually stand in front of a pole, which made it look as if she was crying from being impaled in the head.  That photo, both edited and unedited, still circulate today.

You want to edit a photo for artistic purposes?  Great.  But don’t turn around and submit it as an actual event to a news or photography source.  You think editing a golfer’s caddy out of a picture is such a crime – think about this.  What if that photographer edited a photo so that someone at a murder scene was digitally ” removed” or “added”?  Accuracy is compromised.  You just can’t do it.  Ever.

Sources of information:

Photo District News – http://pdnedu.blogs.com/

Dallas Morning News – http://photographyblog.dallasnews.com/