Bad photographers Podcast â Details, episodes & analysis
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10/12/2025#100đşđ¸ USA - visualArts
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03/12/2025#92
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Photo Therapy - Reflections
lundi 1 dÊcembre 2025 ⢠Duration 11:27
Ever stopped to breathe and ask yourself what all those years behind the lens really meant? In this episode of Bad Photographers, Griff steps out of uniform and into the quite after-action. After 20 years with the Air Force, hundreds of assignments, and thousands of shutterâclicks, heâs doing something rare: looking back.
Heâll share a single moment from his career, one that didnât look like a win at the time but changed everything. Itâs a story of pressure, pride, egoâŚand a humbling reminder that when you think you know enough⌠you probably donât know shit.
This isnât a heroâs tale. Itâs not a perfectionistâs highlight reel. Itâs an honest reflection on what we build, what we lose, and what remains. If youâve ever felt stuck, burnt out, or too worn to care.... press play. Maybe this time, the most valuable shot wonât be the one you took. It will be the one that makes you stop.
Take a seat. Keep your shutter open. This conversation might just change how you see your path.
Follow us on IG: badphotographers
Website: Coming Soon!
Welcome to Bad Photographers
Season 1 ¡ Episode 1
samedi 29 novembre 2025 ⢠Duration 10:19
Welcome to Bad Photographers â 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.
Every episode cracks open the stuff nobody wants to say out loud: the behind-the-scenes chaos, the bad habits we all pretend we donât have, and the moments that made us who we are (even if they shouldnât have). Weâre talking photo therapy with a twist, deep-dive reporting on the debates everyone argues about in group chats, and the strange, brilliant, messy corners of this craft that make us love it anyway.
This isnât a masterclass. Itâs not a gentle critique. Itâs a seat at the table with two working photographers whoâve seen too much, argued too often, and still show up with cameras in our hands because we canât help ourselves.
If youâre here for honesty, humor, hard truths, and the stories that only surface when the mics are on and the guard is down..... youâre in the right place.
Welcome to the show.
Weâre all bad photographers here.
Thunderbirds Crash: The Unbelievable Story Behind Photographer Bennie Davis & the Air Forceâs Most Famous Ejection Photo
jeudi 4 dÊcembre 2025 ⢠Duration 01:15:01
In this episode of The Bad Photographers Podcast, we sit down with Bennie J. Davis IIIâthe 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 photographâhow attribution, public perception, and recognition from senior military leadership shaped Bennieâs path, and why open conversations about trauma, mental health, and resilience in photography are essential for the next generation.
Whether youâre 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.
đ 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 effectsâan important part of the conversation in military and news photography.
The impact of a photograph can reach far beyond the moment itâs captured, shaping careers and public perception.
đď¸ Chapters
00:00 â Introduction: Bad Photographers x Bennie J. Davis III
02:57 â Bennieâs Start in Photography
05:54 â The Day of the Air Show
08:46 â Inside the Air Traffic Control Tower
11:53 â When the Incident Began
14:56 â Capturing the Jet Crash Moment
17:40 â Aftermath, Reactions & Investigation
24:06 â Breaking Down the Incident
34:26 â Navigating Air Force Protocols
49:26 â Understanding the Aviation Mishap
52:32 â Trauma, Memory & Growth
54:41 â Revisiting the Kyle Incident
58:43 â How One Photo Transformed a Career
01:00:49 â Carrying the Weight of Experience
01:04:39 â Vulnerability & Lessons Learned
01:11:40 â Risk, Responsibility & the Photographerâs Dilemma
Additional Things to check out
Instagram: www.instagram.com/badphotographersâ
Air Force Elite: Thunderbirdsâ 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
Photo Therapy - The Art of Lying
mardi 9 dÊcembre 2025 ⢠Duration 09:34
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 weâre 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 â including a story about documentary photographer CĂŠsar RodrĂguez, whose career is lined with awards and high-risk reporting. Early on, CĂŠsar stretched the truth just enough to step into an opportunity he wasnât sure he was ready for. Not out of deception, but out of belief that he could rise to the moment. And he did. Today, heâs a Picture of the Year International winner, a 2024 Paris PhotoâAperture photobook finalist, a 2025 Alexia Foundation Grant runner-up, a Hefat hostile-environmentâtrained photojournalist, and a MoMA-recognized photobook author â proof that sometimes the story you tell yourself is the bridge to the career youâre 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 youâve 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: â bad-photographers.comâ
Instagram: â @badphotographersâ
Cesar's Website: â cesarrodriguezb.comâ â â
