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An AP photographer expresses the simplicity of Pope Francis in one eternal frame
An AP photographer expresses the simplicity of Pope Francis in one eternal frame

Associated Press

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Associated Press

An AP photographer expresses the simplicity of Pope Francis in one eternal frame

ROME (AP) — Bernat Armangué has spent nearly 20 years working for The Associated Press, where he has held correspondent posts in the Middle East, South Asia and, currently, Spain. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 2023 for his coverage of the war in Ukraine. Other notable honors include a World Press Photo award, the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award and Overseas Press Club this photo? This photograph is part of AP's photo coverage of Pope Francis's funeral. I arrived in Rome just hours after the announcement of his death and have since been documenting most of the developments surrounding the funeral: faithful queuing to pay their respects, rosary prayers, heightened security measures, waves of tourists and pilgrims taking snapshots with their cell phones or live-streaming whatever was in front of them and, finally, the funeral of a Pope who chose to be buried in a basilica outside St. Peter's Square – the location where this photo was taken. How I made this photo Some pictures take hours of walking around looking for the right moment, place, frame and light. Other photos just show up. This one, is the second kind. … All day long, thousands of faithful walked past the tomb and, like the rest of them, I was allowed just few seconds in front of it. I knew I wouldn't have a second chance, so I made sure all my camera presets were correct. Once there, I saw a white rose atop a tomb only with the word 'Franciscus' engraved on it. It was easy to decide that this was the frame I wanted. I pressed the button and walked away. Why this photo works Probably because of its simplicity – like the tomb itself – and, to some extent, because it also reflects the pontificate of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, a Jesuit who rose to become the highest authority in the Catholic Church and chose to break away from the omnipresent opulence of the Vatican. For more extraordinary AP photography, click here.

Detroit news legend Al Allen has died
Detroit news legend Al Allen has died

Yahoo

time06-02-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Detroit news legend Al Allen has died

(CBS DETROIT) - Al Allen, a Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame honoree who worked in broadcast news in Detroit for over 50 years, died Tuesday. He was 79. He was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, and moved to Detroit with his family. His first reporting was at Mumford High School for its student broadcast program. He returned to Little Rock in 1969 to be the news director at KOKY radio, then two years moved back to Detroit. While in Michigan, he worked as a reporter and news director at WCXI-AM and WGPR-FM, then worked as news and public affairs director at WJLB-FM. In 1984, Allen joined WJBK-TV2, which was then a CBS affiliate and is now Fox 2. He retired from that station in 2012. During his career, Allen won honors from the United Press International, Associated, Press, Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award. He was also nominated for an Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Wayne State University's journalism faculty honored him in 2019 with the Working in the Spirit of Diversity Award. In 2021, he was named to the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame, which was established to recognize Michigan journalists with extraordinary careers. Allen's memoir, "We're Standing By," was published in 2018. He was married to Alfreda Long. They had a son, Andrew Long Jr.; daughter-in-law, Yolanda; and two grandchildren. He was the uncle of CBS News Detroit vice president of news, Kennan Oliphant. Concern DOGE could stop Social Security, Medicare payments Hubble Telescope captures cosmic collision from 50 million years ago Latest news on federal worker buyout proposal, Trump's shocking Gaza plans

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