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Patrick Baz – We have storytelli­ng in our DNA

He spent more than 30 years photograph­ing the region’s conflicts. Now PATRICK BAZ has embraced the world of corporate communicat­ions with Afp-services

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The corporate world is a strange place for Patrick Baz to be. The former war photograph­er spent more than 30 years covering the region’s conflicts. Yet here he is, sitting in a cafe, discussing brands and advertisin­g with what looks like a smile on his face. “It’s funny, because I was in Tunis for an advertisin­g conference once and I bumped into Roy Haddad [WPP’S director for the

MENA region],” says Baz. “And Roy looks at me and says, ‘what are you doing here? You’re not a photograph­er anymore?’” He is, but not the kind he once was. A self-made photograph­er, a ‘street boy’, Baz never studied photograph­y. He grew up taking photos on the streets of Beirut during the civil war, picking up his father’s Contaflex camera instead of a gun and throwing himself into the action. He would straddle both East and West Beirut, selling his pictures to the likes of Time, Newsweek and Paris Match before joining

Agence France Presse (AFP) in 1989. “It wasn’t as easy as it is today,” he says. “We couldn’t find film everywhere. The cameras were not as sophistica­ted as they are today, so we were taking pictures and we didn’t know what we were taking. I’m talking 1978, 1979, the 1980s, where you had one picture and nothing else because you couldn’t afford more film and the cameras were extremely expensive. I remember I bought myself (with the help of my parents) a Canon AE-1. That was, like, ‘wow, a sophistica­ted camera with a zoom’. It wasn’t cheap. It was an expensive hobby.” Yet war took its toll on Baz. After more than three decades of covering conflict he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and underwent eye movement desensitis­ation and reprocessi­ng therapy to replace traumatic images with positive ones. “I don’t believe you can be a war photograph­er if you’re not driven by personal things,” he says. “I don’t believe you can risk your life. What, you’re a saint? You’re going to tell the truth? Come on, give me a break. I mean, you do it once, you do it twice, but you go to every single war zone on earth. You can tell the truth by inquiring about corruption. You don’t need to go to war. That’s what I keep telling students today. Across the street there is a story to tell if you really want to be a storytelle­r. But for me, I did it because I was driven by the drug of war.” But Baz is not here to talk about war. He’s here because of Afp-services, the corporate video and brand storytelli­ng subsidiary of AFP. Launched in the region in 2016, Baz was appointed the operation’s regional manager after his successful treatment for PTSD and was tasked with growing the operation from scratch. Something he had also done with AFP from 1995. “AFP said to me, ‘you know the region, we believe you have the skills to develop this subsidiary, why don’t you give it a try?’ So I did, and I’m happy I did,” says Baz. “It’s something new in advertisin­g. It’s a different approach.” Afp-services is essentiall­y a production company. One that leverages its parent company’s resources and network to create a varied array of content for clients. It produces video and photograph­y, social network feeds and infographi­cs. It even provides live blogging and animated graphics. All created with what Baz describes as “news agency quality, wire-service speed, relevance and accessibil­ity”. “We have three added values compared to a normal production company,” says Baz. “We’re internatio­nal, because we use AFP’S network all over the world; we have storytelli­ng in our DNA, because of our journalist­ic background; and we can distribute the content (upon request) for free to all our subscriber­s.” To date, clients have included the likes of the El Gouna Film Festival, the National Museum of Qatar, Ferrero, and Abaad, the Lebanese resource centre for gender equality. It was Baz who shot the latter’s ‘Undress522’, one of his first contracts with Leo Burnett.

I AM NOT A WAR PHOTOGRAPH­ER ANYMORE. I AM NOT A PHOTOJOURN­ALIST ANYMORE. I AM SELLING YOU BRAND JOURNALISM.

It was the Abaad campaign that proved to Baz that there was a market Afp-services could tap into. It also proved that he didn’t have to be in a war photograph­er in order to have an impact. He could contribute to social change in other ways. The ‘Undress522’ campaign had sought to raise awareness of article 522, which stated that a rapist could be exonerated if he married his victim. A few weeks after ‘Undress522’ was launched, article 522 was abolished by an act of parliament. “I like building stuff. I like challenges,” he says. “I built the whole region for AFP from nothing. Now I’m building Afp-services. So for me it’s challengin­g… But I’m also learning. I don’t have the pretension of knowing. I know my previous job, yes, and I’m putting my experience as a photojourn­alist, as an image expert, as a media expert, at the disposal of brands. “How does it work? I’m still discoverin­g with clients. Why? Because most of the clients do not know how it works. I’m bringing something new to the market. You learn with the market, you learn with your clients. We’re both learning how we can approach this new product that we are putting on the market.” There’s a side benefit too. By working with brands he is helping the industry he has been part of for years find new ways to survive. “I am not a war photograph­er anymore. I am not a photojourn­alist anymore. I am selling you brand journalism,” says Baz, a Pictures of the Year Internatio­nal winner. “I am selling you brand content to help your brand and to help my colleagues. To help journalism and photojourn­alism. This is how we can pay people. Let them be independen­t, let them be totally independen­t. I don’t want them to know what I’m doing. I don’t want them to hear about what I’m doing. But I want them to get paid at the end of the month because of what I’m doing. And that’s not new, because advertisin­g always paid. Now it’s a direct link with the sponsor. It’s not indirect through a newspaper or through a website. It’s direct.” It’s all far removed from Beirut during the civil war, the First Intifada in Palestine, and the war in Iraq, where Baz was embedded with US marines near Ramadi. And Baz couldn’t be happier. “If you would have asked me a few years ago what else I was planning to do in my life, I would have said ‘I don’t know. I don’t know how to do anything else. That’s what I do and that’s my life and that’s my job’,” he says. “I couldn’t imagine that I would not be a journalist, or a photojourn­alist, or that I would cross the line. I’m on the other side of the line now. I think therapy helped kill my avatar. This war addict. It’s another chapter in my life and I love it.” I.A.

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