You’re Not Just a Photographer Anymore (And That’s the Problem)
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At some point, being “just a photographer” stopped being enough.
Now you’re expected to show up online, share constantly, build a following, stay relevant, and somehow keep your creativity intact — all while trying to attract clients, brands, and viewers who are quietly judging your legitimacy by your numbers.
In this episode of The Loud Lens, Khandie gets brutally honest about the reality of sharing your work online. From the dopamine hit of likes and validation, to the burnout that follows, the pressure to perform creativity, and the emotional cost of visibility — this is a no-nonsense conversation for photographers who feel stuck between making work they love and playing the social media game.
We talk about trolling, copycats, influencer culture, why having a following has become a weird form of credibility, and how marketing photography has fundamentally changed — for better and worse.
If you’re new to photography and already overwhelmed, or you’ve been doing this long enough to feel jaded by ever-changing platforms, this episode is your reminder that you’re not imagining it — the pressure is real.
And you’re not failing. You’re just navigating a system that was never built for artists.