GEOFF BENNETT
And you can see the Lou Reed caught between the twisted stars exhibit at the New York Public Library through March 4, 2023. For many students Picture Day is a rite of passage. For parents, it's a way to hold on to memories of their children through the years. But for one New York City School the day almost didn't happen until one photographer stepped in. Correspondent Ali Rogin has the story.
ALI ROGIN
For Raven B. Varona, photographing the world's biggest artists it's just another day at the office. RAVEN B. VARONA,
Celebrity Photographer
A lot of times with celebrities, you know, that's their job, they're ready to get in front of the camera. They know what they're setting themselves up for. They know their best angles.
ALI ROGIN
A recent assignment with a much younger cohort took her out of her comfort zone. Public School 25 in Brooklyn, New York was about to cancel Picture Day. KARLIE HUSTLE,
Parent
We didn't have the money in the PTA coffers, so to speak to fund that.
ALI ROGIN
It's a Title One school meaning 40 percent of families qualify as low income. Karlie Hustle's daughter Harp went to PS25 for kindergarten.
KARLIE HUSTLE
Photos are keepsakes. These are moments that you get to crystallize in time. It happens very fast. Kids grow up. Things happen. People change.
ALI ROGIN
Hustle new Varona because of her work in the music industry. She saw an opportunity when Verona posted a tweet saying she still takes small jobs.
KARLIE HUSTLE
It just like clicked it was like, you know, a god wink or something to think that, you know, that might be a year where those kids didn't have photos. It just didn't sit right. with me and, and my daughter's father. So we sought out Raven, and we got it done.
RAVEN B. VARONA
I grew up in the Bronx, my whole life went to a Title One school from K to eight, like I have certain years of picture day that I don't have the photo because we couldn't afford it. Even though my mom, you know, made sure to try to get it every year. We forget as adults that when we were kids, these moments are so monumental for the day.
ALI ROGIN
How did you go about empowering them to really express themselves when they got in front of your lens?
RAVEN B. VARONA
Yes, so I really believe and I believe this to be true for everybody, especially any of my subjects that you should have your own agency to, like, you know, express who you are. So the first thing we did was that we had monitors all around the portrait setup so that the kids could actually see themselves as they were taking pictures. We encourage all the kids to just be like, how do you feel? What are you feeling right now? Like, obviously, we would tell them to smile at first because, you know, parents want to see a happy kid. But there were kids that were like, I don't want to smile. We'd like OK, what do you want to do? And like one kid was like, Can I hold my stuffed animal and we were like, Sure, or can I give a thumbs up or whatever poses they wanted to do that they felt represented them.
KARLIE HUSTLE
And each little child got to be celebrated in their own way through having their image captured. I think it's you know affirming and it's good for kids self-esteem.
ALI ROGIN
Each student was able to take their photo home with print donated by Canon.
RAVEN B. VARONA
It made me really emotional to just reminded how just creativity of photography is like a privilege. You know, like the idea of Photo Day and this memory for children in a school being a privilege that so many can't afford, or they can't look back on and like 10 years see themselves in school was really disheartening to me.
ALI ROGIN
Through her Best Side Foundation, Varona is inviting other Title One public schools in New York to apply for their own Picture Day.
RAVEN B. VARONA
So instead of doing one school, I can do 10 schools, and then I can get all my photographer friends to do them. And then we can do 100 schools. And then like, maybe in five years, we can cover the whole country.
ALI ROGIN
Giving families and kids a little happiness. One click at a time. For "PBS News Weekend," I'm Ali Rogin.
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