The One Time You Should Never Use A Filter On Instagram
Where there's smoke, there's fire. Where there's a weather advisory, there's tweets.
Such is the case today. With a tornado warning in effect until 5pm in New York City, tweets have poured in like rain (see what I did there?).
Along with tweets, photos. And when everyone is focused on the weather, everyone tends to retweet the images onto their own timelines.
Here's a photo from Brian Stelter of the New York Times:
- Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) October 7, 2013
This is all well and good. It is a clear photo and, to my knowledge, no filter was used.
But here's where I take issue (apparently, because I tweeted this just a few minutes ago):
- Caroline Moss (@socarolinesays) October 7, 2013
Here's why:
Filters make photos look different. They make things look exaggerated. You can switch up the contrast to make photos look darker or lighter.
This is the same photo using two different filters:
Screenshot/Brian Stelter
Screenshot/Brian Stelter
Essentially, you can completely change what something looks like with the touch of a button.
This is fine for your brunch or for your selfie, but not if you're looked at as a source for news (or tornado updates).
Joe Weisenthal, Executive Editor of Business Insider, told me that "Instagram is for art". While the definition of art may be one to discuss on another day, the idea of putting filters on a photo of a storm is essentially the same as photoshopping.
Lessons to be learned? Never alter a photo of weather (if people are looking to you for an honest portrayal of weather), and never tweet anything your boss will make you explain in a blog post.
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