• You Don’t Own The Street: Photographers vs The Public
    Jun 7 2026

    Photographers are getting furious at members of the public “ruining” their shoots… but have parts of photography culture become completely entitled in public spaces?


    In this episode of The Loud Lens, Khandie dives into the growing tension between photographers, creators, influencers, and the general public — from viral rage-bait clips and public shaming videos to people deliberately interrupting shoots for attention.


    We talk about:

    • photographers acting territorial in public
    • influencers filming EVERYTHING
    • the rise of photography rage bait content
    • members of the public intentionally interfering with shoots
    • how social media rewards conflict on BOTH sides
    • why photographers are starting to face backlash
    • and the uncomfortable truth that bringing tripods, assistants, BTS videographers and lighting setups into public spaces changes how much space we take up


    This isn’t a “photographers bad” episode.

    And it’s not defending people sabotaging shoots either.


    This is a brutally honest conversation about creator culture, professionalism, public perception, and whether social media has completely changed the relationship between photographers and the public.


    Because maybe the biggest question is this:

    Can you build your entire brand around public visibility… then get angry when the public reacts?


    Expect blunt opinions, real talk, uncomfortable truths, and a balanced discussion the photography industry desperately needs.


    #PhotographyPodcast #StreetPhotography #Photographers #ContentCreators #InfluencerCulture #PhotographyIndustry #TheLoudLens #PhotographyDrama

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    17 mins
  • You’re Not Burnt Out… You’re Probably Lonely
    May 31 2026

    Most photographers think burnout is the problem. It’s not.

    In this episode, we’re talking about something far more uncomfortable — loneliness in photography and creative careers.

    Because you can be fully booked, constantly busy, surrounded by clients and still feel completely disconnected.

    This isn’t just a mindset issue.

    It’s built into how this industry works.


    We break down:

    • Why photographers and creatives are more prone to loneliness
    • The difference between being alone vs actually feeling lonely
    • How social media is making it worse (not better)
    • The impact of personality types, introversion, and neurodivergence
    • Signs you might be lonely without even realising it
    • And how to build connection without sacrificing your independence

    We also talk about something most people ignore:

    👉 Being alone isn’t always a bad thing

    👉 In fact, it’s where your best creative work comes from


    The goal isn’t to avoid being alone.

    It’s to stop loneliness from quietly taking over your life.

    📞 If this episode hits a bit close to home… You’re not on your own, even if it feels like it.


    In the UK, you can reach out to:

    Samaritans – call 116 123 (free, 24/7)

    Mind – 0300 123 3393 or text 86463

    Shout – text SHOUT to 85258

    NHS – speak to your GP or access mental health services

    💬 Let’s keep this conversation real:


    Have you experienced loneliness in your photography journey?

    Or are you someone who genuinely thrives working alone?


    Share this episode, start the conversation, and let’s stop pretending this isn’t part of the industry.


    #photography #photographer #loneliness

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    15 mins
  • Point and Shoot: The Ethics Crisis Nobody Wants to Talk About
    May 25 2026

    From photographers on the London Underground to drone operators over nature reserves, public filming has become one of the most contested,and least honestly discussed, issues in creative culture right now.

    This episode gets into all of it: what UK law actually says (and where people get it wrong), the auditor industry built on manufactured confrontations, content farming and how digest culture is shaping public opinion, the blurry line between amateur and commercial, and why social media can make a career and destroy a person before anyone's checked the facts.

    Informed, balanced, and genuinely controversial. This is the conversation the photography community keeps avoiding.

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    35 mins
  • Photographers Broke the Industry—Now They’re Playing Victim
    May 17 2026

    Have we as photographers, allowed social media to slowly destroy photography as we push for more validation. I am talking bad behaviour and conduct in the pursuit of THAT shot. Are we then crying wolf and playing the victim when that risk doesnt pay off and we are called out on it?

    With the increase in photographers being named and shamed on platforms, are we guilty of ruining it for ourselves as more restricitons and constraints are put on us and this industry?


    #photography #photographer

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    14 mins
  • The ‘Lowest Form of Photography’? Let’s Talk About Wedding Snobbery
    May 10 2026

    A photographer once told me wedding photography was the lowest form of photography.

    Yeah… we need to talk about that.

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, we’re breaking down:

    • Why wedding photography gets looked down on
    • The ego and hierarchy problem in the photography industry
    • The truth about skill, pressure, and responsibility in weddings
    • Why poor-quality saturation is damaging perception
    • And what ALL photographers can learn from this

    Because if you think wedding photography is “easy”… you’ve clearly never shot one.

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    22 mins
  • Engagement Pods are SNAKE OIL IMO. Lets sort that issue.
    May 4 2026

    If you’re a photographer struggling with Instagram engagement, low reach, or posting consistently without getting bookings—this episode is going to hit.

    We’re breaking down the truth about engagement pods, comment groups, and “support threads” in the photography industry—and why they might be the reason your content isn’t converting into paying clients.

    This isn’t just a rant. This is a deep dive into how Instagram actually works, including:

    • How the algorithm learns who to show your content to
    • Why engagement from other photographers can limit your growth
    • The difference between likes and real client conversion
    • How audience targeting impacts your bookings
    • More importantly—we get into what to do instead.

    You’ll learn how to:

    • Create content that attracts real clients, not just photographers
    • Improve your Instagram reach the right way
    • Build engagement that actually leads to enquiries
    • Shift your messaging to connect with your ideal audience

    If your content is getting likes but not bookings, or you feel stuck talking to the same people over and over again—this episode will show you exactly where you’re going wrong and how to fix it.

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    24 mins
  • No One Knows What Photography Is Anymore (And That’s The Problem)
    Apr 26 2026

    Photography isn’t dying, but it is confused.

    Between trends, social media, client expectations, and shifting ethics, no one seems to agree on what photography actually is anymore… or what it’s supposed to do.

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, we’re going deeper than surface-level debates. This is about the loss of clarity in the industry—why clients are confused, why photographers are copying each other, and why “just take good photos” isn’t enough anymore.

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    20 mins
  • The ‘Free Trip’ That Would’ve Cost Me Two Weeks of Work
    Apr 19 2026

    Photographers hear this all the time: "It’s unpaid… but you’ll get an amazing experience."

    In this episode of The Loud Lens, Khandie breaks down a real situation she faced this week — being offered a five-day overseas photography job with no pay.

    On the surface it sounded incredible: travel, a beautiful location, and an exciting retreat.

    But when you look closer?

    Five days of shooting quickly becomes two weeks of work once editing, delivery, preparation, and travel are factored in.

    And when the photography is being used to help a business attract paying clients, the question becomes unavoidable:

    Why is the photographer the only one expected to work for free?

    This episode dives into the mindset shift photographers must make when moving from hobbyist to business owner, including:

    • Why “exposure” is rarely real payment• The hidden workload behind destination photography jobs• Why international work involves more responsibility than people realise (insurance, experience, logistics)• The uncomfortable reaction you sometimes get when you say no• How to recognise when an opportunity benefits you… and when it’s simply unpaid labour

    If you’ve ever been offered a “great opportunity” that didn’t include a pay cheque, this episode is for you.

    Because sometimes the most professional thing a photographer can say is:

    No.

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    17 mins