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David Schonauer

Trending: Renee Good, Woman Killed by ICE, Traveled to N.Y.C. to Feed, Photograph Homeless People

People   Monday January 12, 2026

A professional photographer who worked alongside Renee Nicole Good before the 37-year-old was shot and killed by an ICE officer in Minneapolis last week, remembers the mother of three for her compassion and kindness. Charles Willie Winslow II tells People magazine that Good was "an angel" and "a perfect person." Winslow, 61, who was born and raised in New York, regularly travels to New York City with a group of non-professional photographers to take pictures across the five boroughs. Good's trip to New York with Winslow was her first time in the city, and "it was so emotional for her," he recalls.   Read the full Story >>

What We're Reading: The Great AI Hype Correction of 2025, and More

By David Schonauer   Monday January 12, 2026

When OpenAI released a free web app called ChatGPT in late 2022, it changed the course of an entire industry-and several world economies. Humans seemed enchanted by the new technology, and they wanted more. But, noted the MIT Technology Review recently, 2025 was a year of reckoning, when the promises of AI kept seeming more like promises that weren't being kept. Example: The botched …   Read the full Story >>

What We're Reading: 'My Visual Impairment Spurred My Photography Career'

BBC   Friday January 9, 2026

"If you put your camera out of focus, that's what it looks like with my left eye," says William Hickie. The 23-year-old tells the BBC that having limited vision due to a condition called amblyopia has not stopped him from pursuing his dream as a professional photographer. "A camera only has one lens and one sensor, rather than two lenses and one sensor. So only being able to see out of one eye might actually benefit me," says Hickie, whose passion for photography started when he was 14.   Read the full Story >>

Spotlight: Migration Photographer Olivia Vivanco

Latina Republic   Friday January 9, 2026

“I am not interested in exposing, but in accompanying. For me, trust is invaluable,” says Mexico City-born photographer Olivia Vivanco, whose work focuses on migration. In the late 1990s, while working on projects about childhood, she began visiting schools attended by the children of migrant farmworkers—families from Guerrero, Oaxaca, or Chiapas who traveled north to Nayarit or Sinaloa following the agricultural seasons, notes Latina Republic. Vivanco found “an everyday life where bonds are built.”   Read the full Story >>

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