Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

'Going Deep' with Sports Illustrated's Gary Smith
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars
Home > Visual Journalism
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, e-mail, Permalink, Share
5:58 AM  Apr. 20, 2007
Photographing the Shootings
By Pat Walters (More articles by this author)
Freelance Journalist
Contributors: Kenneth Irby

More in this series

Mondays are usually pretty slow for Alan Kim.

By 8 a.m. on April 16, he had delivered his three sons to school.

Within an hour, he was on the phone with Shay Barnhart, an assistant news editor at The Roanoke (Va.) Times' New River bureau.

Poynter Podcasts
Photographing the Shooting: Alan Kim with Kenny Irby
The two photojournalists discuss uncertainty, staying clear of crime scenes and decision-making in the heat of the moment.

10 minutes, 21 seconds
Listen | Download
Drag to iTunes
Kim, 52, is a part-time staff photographer for the newspaper. He finished high school in Roanoke and graduated from Virginia Tech in 1980. He's the guy who made the pictures that ran big across the front pages of nearly every American newspaper Tuesday.

"I had no idea what to expect," Kim said in an interview with Poynter photojournalism group leader Kenny Irby on Tuesday afternoon.

Click on the link at right to hear some excerpts of the conversation.

And to see the pictures Irby and Kim discussed, click here.

In all, Kim said he was on campus for less than an hour. He made approximately 200 frames. The most widely distributed of those pictures -- the two that appeared on most front pages Tuesday -- were shot from the opposite side of the drill field, roughly 200 yards from Norris Hall.

To catch those moments, Kim used a 500mm f4 manual-focus Nikon on a tripod. He said the lens had been gathering dust in his kitchen, but he grabbed it on the way out the door. Good move.

Even still, the wind, among other things, made for a tough environment to photograph in. "I kept losing my hat," Kim said. And he admitted that his pictures weren't quite as sharp as he would've liked.

"But that's what we had to go with," he said.

Has he done anything that might have prepared him for what he encountered on Monday? Not exactly. "I've been on crime scenes before," he said.

"It still hasn't quite settled in on me actually."

Read More In This Series:
Tools: Print, e-mail, Permalink, Comment On This Article, Share
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers