Read an artical from a local newspaper online. I found it very interesting.
Rony jumped up and ran down the block, snapping photos of her as she walked toward him. Trying to blend into the crowd, he followed her - to the grocery store, then the dry cleaner, through an outdoor market and down to South Street Seaport - taking pictures the entire time. She appeared natural and beautiful in the photos, exactly what she wanted.
Rony was hired to take these pictures by his subject, Kaiama Glover, a 35-year-old professor at Barnard College. And he's been hired by many others like her - mostly female New Yorkers in their early 20s to late 40s - who are looking for paparazzi-inspired photographs of themselves captured as they go about their daily lives.
"It could be a horrible, invasive thing, like a stalker," says Glover, who gave birth to a baby girl, Salone, on April 11. "But instead he is really capturing you as you are."
And Rony, 23, isn't alone in providing such services.
"We all have an image to protect nowadays," says Rony, citing social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook as driving forces in this new industry. "Someone needs to polish that image."
But polishing one's image is not cheap. Rony's services start at $600 for a full photo shoot plus consultations.
Despite the price, Wantagh native Janet Shelley, a 37-year-old project manager at a historic restoration firm, says she plans to book Rony once the weather gets warmer, having read about MethodIzaz
"My clients know that they want to capture something that is important to them, to leave a memory of who they are and what they stand for," says Rony.
Another soon-to-be client, Kristin Savage of Riverhead, will hire Rony this summer. She'll send him her schedule for an entire week, which includes stops in Riverhead and the North Fork
"He's put being a paparazzi in a new light," says Savage, 23. The photos "aren't necessarily candid, but they're more natural. It's everyday life."
Calling star-like attention to yourself
Long Islanders dreaming about having their own moment on the red carpet will soon be able to pay for a celebrity-like paparazzi encounter - complete with flashing cameras, publicists, bodyguards and coverage in tabloid magazines.
Celeb-4-A-Day
"Everyone likes a little bit of attention and to feel special," says founder Tania Cowher. "Everyday people should get just as much attention, if not more, than celebrities."
Among the offerings:
"The A-List" ($250) - Four paparazzi photographers trailing the subject for half an hour snapping photos and shouting questions (subjects fill out a questionnaire ahead of time about their hobbies, occupation and interests). Includes an 8-by-10 print of a faux magazine cover with realistic headlines.
"The Megastar" ($1,500) - Six paparazzi photographers, plus a publicist and a bodyguard for up to two hours. Optional limousine service, plus a faux magazine cover and CD with images.
Everything can be customized. The "paparazzi," "publicists" and "bodyguards," who are either amateur or professional photographers, never go out of character. They wear press passes and dress accordingly. Details at celeb4aday.com
Here's the link.
http://www.newsday.com …9483apr23,0,3679418.story![]()
- Stu
