Pete Souza (Professional Photographer) | Page 6

TRADITION OF DOCUMENTING HISTORY Souza would end up returning to the venerated position of official White House photographer. “Before Kennedy, there would be photographers from the Department of the Interior assigned to photograph ceremonial events at the White House,” Souza says, adding that Yoichi Okamoto was eventually awarded the first permanent gig. “With Kennedy, there were just two military guys that were assigned to the White House. After the assassination, Lyndon B. Johnson hired Okamoto to document his presidency. LBJ was really the first president to officially appoint a photographer to document his history, and Okamoto set the bar so high that everybody’s been trying to reach his level since then. If you look at Okamoto’s photographs, that’s most certainly the bar that I try to meet. “I’m documenting for history,” he adds. “I have a window to Obama’s world that nobody else does. I’m trying to make the most of it, making pictures for the archives that hopefully people in 50 years will be able to go back to and study and get a good sense of what this president was like.” WORKING THROUGH CONTROVERSY Not everyone views the president and his policies in a positive light—and that includes a number of news photographers on the White House beat who’ve accused the administration of shutting them out of important presidential events. Described by The New York Times as a “mutiny” in response to a “Sovietstyle news service,” the long-simmering dispute came to its denouement when the White House Correspondents’ Association and 37 news organizations sent a protest letter to White House Press Secretary Jay Carney, which read in part: “Journalists are routinely being denied April 2014 • Professional Photographer • 77