Smile You Are on Camera
Kids as young as toddlers love the camera. It just dawned on me that it’s not the camera they see, but the photographer. Familiarity. They know the photographer. They trust him or her.
Photographers are not appreciated until you break the law and the police shove you to a wall for the mug shot. The outcome is bad, not because you don’t have any make-up. It is your relationship with the photographer, who represents a certain situation, law enforcement in this case.
There are many photographers within the home. Pictures expose the relationship between the photographer and the family member in front of the lens. The camera captures love lost before 2020, the pandemic year. It captures part-time parents kids do not love.
Home photographers ignore the signs, that he or she doesn’t want to be in the picture, but playfully go ahead and click. Such photos should not end up online but they do, resulting in comments like ‘he looks angry.’
Followers notice because the internet is an ‘all is well’ platform. It is escapism. We go online for good news, for happiness we don’t have at home.
That is why we want photos taken by photographers with a good rapport with family members in front of the camera.
By: Nonqaba waka Msimang.
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