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词条 Paparazzi
释义

  1. Description

  2. Famous paparazzi

  3. Etymology

      In other languages  

  4. Legality

      Injunctions  

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Other uses}}{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2016}}

Paparazzi ({{IPAc-en|US|ˌ|p|ɑː|p|ə|ˈ|r|ɑː|t|s|i}}, {{IPAc-en|UK|ˌ|p|æ|p|ə|ˈ|r|æ|t|s|i}}; {{IPA-it|papaˈrattsi|lang}}; singular: masculine paparazzo or feminine paparazza) are independent photographers who take pictures of high-profile people, such as athletes, entertainers, politicians, and other celebrities, typically while subjects go about their usual life routines. Paparazzi tend to make a living by selling their photographs to media outlets focusing on tabloid journalism and sensationalism (such as gossip magazines).

Description

Paparazzi tend to be independent contractors, unaffiliated with mainstream media organizations, and photos taken are usually done so by taking advantage of opportunities when they have sightings of high-profile people they are tracking.[1] Some experts have described the behavior of paparazzi as synonymous with stalking, and anti-stalking bills in many countries address the issue by reducing harassment of public figures and celebrities, especially with their children.[2] Some public figures and celebrities have expressed concern at the extent to which paparazzi go to invade their personal space.[3] The filing and receiving of judicial support for restraining orders against paparazzi has increased, as have lawsuits with judgments against them.[4]{{when|date=December 2015}}{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}

Famous paparazzi

Walter Santesso, known as the original Paparazzo in the 1960 film La Dolce Vita directed by Federico Fellini, he is the eponym of the word paparazzi.

Derek Shook, is a World Renown Celebrity, News, Sports and Entertainment Paparazzo featured in the movie The Legend of Shep Gordon. Mr. Shook's work can be found all over the Internet as well as the pages of Star Magazine (Oct 2009), Us Weekly (Dec. 2009), The National Enquirer (Dec. 2009), People Magazine (June 2010). Life and Style (June 2010), Rolling Stone Magazine (Sept 2010), The Globe (2010), Hello Magazine (2011), Daily Mail (Dec 2017) Vogue (Dec 2017) and many more. Shook's Iconic photos have helped define a new generation of celebrity photographer through his persuasive and candid use of the lens.

Ron Galella most known for suing Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis after the former First Lady ordered her Secret Service agents to destroy Galella’s camera and film following an encounter in New York City's Central Park in the early 1970s.

Etymology

A news photographer named Paparazzo (played by Walter Santesso in the 1960 film La Dolce Vita directed by Federico Fellini) is the eponym of the word paparazzi.[5] {{cn span|In his book Word and Phrase, Robert Hendrickson writes that Fellini took the name from an Italian dialect word that describes a particularly annoying noise, that of a buzzing mosquito.|date=December 2018}} As Fellini said in his interview to Time magazine, "Paparazzo ... suggests to me a buzzing insect, hovering, darting, stinging."[6] Those versions of the word's origin are sometimes contested. For example, in the Abruzzo dialect spoken by Ennio Flaiano, co-scriptwriter of La Dolce Vita, the term paparazzo refers to the local clam, Venerupis decussata, and is also used as a metaphor for the shutter of a camera lens.

Further, in an interview with Fellini's screenwriter Flaiano, he said the name came from the book Sulla riva dello Jonio (1957),[7] a translation by Italian poet Margherita Guidacci of By the Ionian Sea,[8] a 1901 travel narrative in southern Italy by Victorian writer George Gissing. He further states that either Fellini or Flaiano opened the book at random, saw the name of a restaurant owner, Coriolano Paparazzo, and decided to use it for the photographer. This story is further documented by a variety of Gissing scholars[9] and in the book A Sweet and Glorious Land. Revisiting the Ionian Sea.[10]

By the late 1960s, the word, usually in the Italian plural form paparazzi, had entered English as a generic term for intrusive photographers.[11] A person who has been photographed by the paparazzi is said to have been "papped".[12]

In other languages

A transliteration of paparazzi is used in several languages that do not use the Latin alphabet, including Japanese, Korean, Ukrainian, Russian, Thai and Hebrew. Chinese uses {{linktext|狗|仔|隊}}, meaning "puppy squad". Khmer uses {{lang|km|អ្នកប្រមាញ់រូប}} (anak bramanh roub).

Legality

Due to the reputation of paparazzi as a nuisance, several states and countries restrict their activities by passing laws and curfews,{{citation needed|date=September 2014}} and by staging events in which paparazzi are specifically not allowed to take photographs.[13][14][15][16] In the United States, celebrity news organizations are protected by the First Amendment.[17]

To protect the children of celebrities, California passed a new bill in September 2013. The purpose of the bill is to stop paparazzi from taking pictures of children in a harassing manner, regardless of who their parents are. This law increased the penalty on harassment and the penalty for harassment of children.[18]

Injunctions

In 1972, paparazzo photographer Ron Galella sued Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis after the former First Lady ordered her Secret Service agents to destroy Galella's camera and film following an encounter in New York City's Central Park. Kennedy counter-sued claiming harassment. The trial lasted three weeks and became a groundbreaking case regarding photojournalism and the role of paparazzi. In Galella v. Onassis, Kennedy obtained a restraining order to keep Galella {{convert|150|ft|m}} away from her and her children. The restriction later was dropped to {{convert|25|ft|m}}. The trial is a focal point in Smash His Camera, a 2010 documentary film by director Leon Gast.

In 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales and Dodi Fayed were killed in a limousine crash as their driver was speeding, trying to escape paparazzi.[19][20] An inquest jury investigated the involvement of paparazzi in the incident, and although several paparazzi were taken into custody, no one was convicted.{{citation needed|date=July 2018}} The official inquests into the accident attributed the causes to the speed and manner of driving of the Mercedes, as well as the following vehicles, and the impairment of the judgment of the Mercedes driver, Henri Paul, through alcohol.[21]

In 1999, the Oriental Daily News of Hong Kong was found guilty of "scandalizing the court", an extremely rare law that the newspaper's conduct would undermine confidence in the administration of justice.[22] The charge was brought after the newspaper had published abusive articles challenging the judiciary's integrity and accusing it of bias in a lawsuit the paper had instigated over a photo of a pregnant Faye Wong. The paper had also arranged for a "dog team" (slang for paparazzi in the Chinese language) to track a judge for 72 hours, to provide the judge with first-hand experience of what paparazzi do.[23]

Time magazine's Style & Design special issue in 2005 ran a story entitled "Shooting Star", in which Mel Bouzad, one of the top paparazzi in Los Angeles at the time, claimed to have made US$150,000 for a picture of Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez in Georgia after their breakup. "If I get a picture of Britney and her baby," Bouzad claimed, "I'll be able to buy a house in those hills (above Sunset Boulevard)."[24] Paparazzi author Peter Howe told Time that "celebrities need a higher level of exposure than the rest of us so it is a two-way street. The celebrities manipulate."

In 2006, Daniella Cicarelli went through a scandal when a paparazzo caught video footage of her having sex with her boyfriend on a beach in Spain, which was posted on YouTube.[25] After fighting in the court, it was decided in her favor, causing YouTube to be blocked in Brazil. This caused major havoc among Brazilians, including threatening a boycott against MTV Brasil unless Cicarelli was fired from that company.{{Citation needed|date=September 2010}} The block only lasted a few days, and Cicarelli was not dismissed. The legal action backfired as the court decided she had no expectation of privacy by having sex in a public location.{{Citation needed|date=September 2010}}

The E! network program Celebrities Uncensored used often-confrontational footage of celebrities made by paparazzi.

Following the publication of photographs showing Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge sunbathing whilst topless at her husband's cousin's (Viscount Linley's) holiday home in France, it was announced on September 14, 2012, that the Royal couple were to launch legal action against the French edition of Closer magazine. It was the first time that a senior royal has sued in a court outside the UK. The reason cited for the legal action is that the Duchess had a right of privacy whilst at the home—the magazine responded that the pictures had been taken from the public highway. The injunction was granted September 18, 2012 and the publishers of the magazine were ordered not to publish the photographs in France and not to sell the images. The publishers were also ordered to hand over the original material of the published pictures under threat of a €10,000 fine for every day delay in doing so.[26]

In the United Kingdom, Sienna Miller, Amy Winehouse, and Lily Allen won injunctions that prevent the paparazzi from following them and gathering outside their houses. Miller was awarded £53,000.[27]

In 2013, rapper Kanye West, facing assault charges for attacking a photojournalist, said he would fight to get the law changed so celebrities can profit from the paparazzi's work.[28][29]

References

1. ^{{cite news |url= http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=2325 |title= Is Everyone a Journalist? |work= American Journalism Review |date= October 1997}}
2. ^{{Cite web|url=http://articles.latimes.com/2013/sep/24/local/la-me-pc-gov-brown-signs-law-protecting-children-of-public-figures-20130924|title=Gov. Jerry Brown signs law protecting children of public figures|last=McGreevy|first=Patrick|date=September 24, 2013|website=LA Times|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}
3. ^{{cite news |url= http://edition.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/Movies/05/09/sunshine.access/index.html |title= Why Paparazzi Are Wrong |date= March 13, 2006 |publisher= CNN |accessdate= April 24, 2016}}
4. ^{{Cite journal|last=M.|first=Locke, Christina|last2=Carnley|first2=Murrhee, Kara|date=2011|title=Is Driving with the Intent to Gather News a Crime? The Chilling Effects of California’s Anti-Paparazzi Legislation|url=https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/elr/vol31/iss2/1/|journal=Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review|language=en|volume=31|issue=2}}
5. ^{{it icon}} {{cite encyclopaedia |url=http://www.treccani.it/vocabolario/paparazzo/ |title=Paparazzo |encyclopaedia= Treccani}}
6. ^{{cite news |url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,872287-1,00.html |title= The Press: Paparazzi on the Prowl |work= Time |date= April 14, 1961 |volume=77 |issue=16 |accessdate= October 5, 2009}}
7. ^{{it icon}} {{cite book |last=Gissing |first=George Robert |authorlink=George Gissing |title=Sulla riva dello Ionio. Appunti di viaggio nell'Italia meridionale |url=https://books.google.com/?id=3-0QcgAACAAJ |others=transl. by Margherita Guidacci |year=1957 |publisher=Capelli |location=Bologna}}
8. ^{{cite book |last=Gissing |first=George |title=By the Ionian Sea. Notes of a Ramble in Southern Italy |url=https://books.google.com/?id=CjrJ6aUWOrwC&printsec=frontcover |year=2004 |origyear=1901 |publisher=Signal Books |location=Oxford |edition=illustrated, reprint, revised |isbn=1-90266967-3 |id={{ISBN|9781902669670}} |page=[https://books.google.com/?id=CjrJ6aUWOrwC&pg=PA145 145]}}
9. ^{{cite book |last=Coustillas |first=Pierre |authorlink=Pierre Coustillas |chapter=Gissing and the Paparazzi (pp. 256–266) |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=uxDlXxc_8TUC&pg=PA256 |editor-first= Francesco |editor-last=Badolato |title=George Gissing, romanziere del tardo periodo vittoriano |year=2005 |publisher=Rubbettino Editore |location=Soveria Mannelli |isbn=8-84981193-4 |id={{ISBN|978-8-849-81193-3}}}}
10. ^{{cite book |last=Keahey |first=John |title=A Sweet and Glorious Land. Revisiting the Ionian Sea |url=https://books.google.com/?id=-w-jAwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |year=2014 |origyear=[https://books.google.com/books?id=j2zOAwAAQBAJ 2000] |publisher=Macmillan |location=London |isbn=1-46687603-4 |id={{ISBN|978-1-466-87603-3}} |page=[https://books.google.com/?id=-w-jAwAAQBAJ&pg=PT184 184]}}
11. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.word-origins.com/definition/paparazzi.html |work= Word Origins and History |title= Paparazzi |deadurl= yes |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20101220005135/http://www.word-origins.com/definition/paparazzi.html |archivedate= December 20, 2010 |df= mdy-all }}
12. ^{{Cite web|url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/pap|title=pap - definition of pap in English {{!}} Oxford Dictionaries|website=Oxford Dictionaries {{!}} English|accessdate=2017-07-27}}
13. ^{{cite web |title= AB 2479 Bill Analysis |first= Ellen M. |last= Corbett |url= http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/asm/ab_2451-2500/ab_2479_cfa_20100628_125856_sen_comm.html |access-date= September 30, 2014}}
14. ^{{cite web |title= SB 465 Summary |url= http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2013/Bills/SB465_.HTM |access-date= September 30, 2014}}
15. ^{{cite news |title= How Princess Diana Changed the Way Paparazzi Pursue Kate Middleton |first= Danna |last= Harman |url= http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2011/0429/How-Princess-Diana-changed-the-way-paparazzi-pursue-Kate-Middleton |work= Christian Science Monitor |access-date= September 30, 2014}}
16. ^{{cite web |title= French Paparazzi Laws Favor Celebrities: Jolie, Pitt Latest Couple to Benefit |first= Angela |last= Doland |url= http://seattletimes.com/html/nationworld/2004470054_brangelina11.html |work= Seattle Times |access-date= September 30, 2014}}
17. ^{{cite journal |title= Taking a Shot at Paparazzi |last= Lowry |first= Brian |date= August 6, 2013 |url= https://search.proquest.com/docview/1429233078|work= Variety |volume= 320 |issue= 17 |pages= |access-date= September 30, 2013 |registration= yes}}
18. ^{{cite news |last= McGreevy |first= Patrick |title= Gov. Brown Signs Bills Aimed at Paparazzi, Family Leave and Quakes |url= http://articles.latimes.com/2013/sep/24/local/la-me-brown-bills-paparazzi-20130925 |access-date= April 19, 2014 |work= Los Angeles Times |date= September 24, 2013}}
19. ^{{cite news |url= http://www.express.co.uk/news/royal/504736/Princess-Diana-Security-DIY-Car-Crash-Paris |title= Policeman who Spoke to Dying Princess Diana Blasts 'DIY' Security who Failed to Stop Crash |access-date= November 11, 2014 |last1= Allen |first1= Peter |date= August 29, 2014 |work= Express |location= London}}
20. ^{{cite news |url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/august/31/newsid_2510000/2510615.stm |publisher= BBC |title= 1997: Princess Diana Dies in Paris Crash |access-date= November 11, 2014}}
21. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.scottbaker_inquests.gov.uk/evidence/docs/inquisition_diana.pdf |title=Jury verdict - Inquisition forms: Princess Diana of Wales |website=Coroner's Inquests into the Deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales and Mr Dodi Al Fayed |archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20090607230257/http://www.scottbaker-inquests.gov.uk/evidence/docs/inquisition_diana.pdf |archive-date=June 7, 2009}}
22. ^{{cite court | |litigants= Wong Yeung Ng v. Secretary for Justice |reporter= ICHRL |opinion= 12 |date= February 9, 1999 |url= http://www.worldlii.org/int/cases/ICHRL/1999/12.html |access-date=August 20, 2006 }}
23. ^{{cite journal |first= Tim |last= Hamlett |date= July–December 2011 |title= Scandalising the Scumbags: The Secretary for Justice vs the Oriental Press Group |url= http://www.uow.edu.au/crearts/journalism/APME/contents11/TimHamlett.pdf |format= PDF |journal= AsiaPacific MediaEducator |volume= |issue= 11 |pages= 20–33 |access-date= August 20, 2006 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060518072905/http://www.uow.edu.au/crearts/journalism/APME/contents11/TimHamlett.pdf |archive-date= May 18, 2006}}
24. ^{{cite news |title= Shooting Stars |url= http://www.time.com/time/2005/style/091305/shooting_stars_paparazz39a.html |access-date= June 16, 2006 |work= Time |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20051226032035/http://www.time.com/time/2005/style/091305/shooting_stars_paparazz39a.html |archive-date= December 26, 2005}}
25. ^Justiça mantém liminar que obriga sites a tirar vídeo de Cicarelli com namorado do ar {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080308025739/http://oglobo.globo.com/cultura/mat/2006/09/28/285875345.asp |date=March 8, 2008 }}
26. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.mrpaparazzi.com |title= mrpaparazzi.com |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080216110716/http://www.mrpaparazzi.com/ |archive-date= February 16, 2008 |deadurl= yes |df= mdy-all }}
27. ^{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/media/2009/may/04/celebrities-paparazzi |title= Have Celebrities Finally Snapped? |newspaper= The Guardian |location= London |date= May 4, 2009}}
28. ^{{cite news |url= http://www.3news.co.nz/Kanye-West-demands-money-from-paparazzi/tabid/418/articleID/314523/Default.aspx |title= Kanye West Demands Money from Paparazzi |publisher= 3 News NZ |date= September 25, 2013}}
29. ^{{cite news |url= https://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/kanye-west-paparazzi-should-pay-2296723 |title= Kanye West: 'The Paparazzi Should Pay Me' |work= The Mirror |location= London |date= September 24, 2013}}

External links

  • {{Commonscat-inline|Paparazzi}}
  • {{Wiktionary-inline}}
  • [https://www.aenigma-images.com/2018/03/the-paparazzi/ The paparazzi] at [https://www.aenigma-images.com/ aenigma]
{{Federico Fellini|state=collapsed}}{{Authority control}}

7 : Photojournalism|Journalism ethics|Criticism of journalism|Celebrity|Media bias controversies|Federico Fellini|Words coined in the 1960s

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