Ever since I was a kid, I would gaze over the images for hours (my mother collected them) and feel astonished at how much wonder and beauty this world holds that the majority of us never even get to experience. I remember many years ago, I saw an image on the cover of the magazine of a woman/child with striking haunting green eyes that looked like they had a story to tell, but that were fearful.
I was very young, but the image left an impression on me I never forgot. Well, now, some 20 years later, I saw the image again on the cover of National Geographic, for a Collector's edition, and felt inclined to purchase the magazine. Upon reading inside, I discovered that this image was taken of a frightened young woman in a refugee camp in Pakistan. The photo, upon release, incited curiousity, this image provokes questioning...and as a result, this woman's plight, or cause, was brought to light.
This is how media can be positive, and good, and can redeem itself. If we could stray away from the Star Magazines and the Cosmopolitans, Vogues, Allures, and look at how much inspiration comes from abroad, perhaps journalism could be restored to something virtuous and honorable.
A fund that National Geographic raised inspired by this woman's visual story raised over a million dollars. I hope that our current state of obsession with pulchritude is a phase, and that the rebellion, or antithesis of such will bring a resiliant passion for our fellow man that can redeem us and take us to a place as a society where we can improve the world, not dwell on the promiscuity of celebrities or other such trivialities.