Robert King | |
Birth Name: | Robert Whitfield King[1] |
Birth Date: | May 25, 1969 |
Birth Place: | Memphis, Tennessee, USA |
Occupation: | War correspondent Photojournalist filmmaker Creative Director art director |
Website: | http://www.fotoking.com |
Robert King (born May 25, 1969) is an American independent photo and video journalist. He has covered conflict areas and war zones since 1991. King was the subject of the 2008 documentary Blood Trail, re-released in 2009 as Shooting Robert King.
King was born in Memphis, the son of music promoter and record company executive John King. His childhood was shaped by "a household of drug addiction and alcoholism," as well as dyslexia, which resulted in him repeating multiple grades in school.
While a student at the Hyde School in Bath, Maine, he ran away to Boston and fell deeper into drug use. His grandmother encouraged him to return to the school and focus on his photography, which he did, graduating in 1989. He then attended the Pratt Institute, where he got his first photo publication in the New York Times as a junior.
After graduation from the Pratt Institute, King became a war photojournalist in Iraq, with later work in Sarajevo, Chechnya, Afghanistan, Albania, Rwanda, and Syria.[2] [3] [4] His first newspaper cover photo was for The Guardian in 1993.[5] He was the only photojournalist on the ground during the fall of Grozny. His photographs were used for covers of Newsweek, Life, and Time.
In 2008, a documentary covering his activities over the course of 15 years was released. Blood Trail, later known as Shooting Robert King, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.[6]
In 2012, King became the director of photography for Vice Media.[7] His work at Vice is most closely associated with his coverage of software pioneer and fugitive John McAfee, which has been criticized as being too friendly and inadvertently aiding in McAfee's arrest in Guatemala, an allegation King denies.[8] [9] [10] [11] In 2015, BuzzFeed News reporting placed the blame for McAfee's capture on Vice editor-in-chief, Jonathan Smith, and found that King had not been responsible.[12]
In 2014, King moved to Berlin, Germany and became the creative director of video for Bild.de[1]
As of June 2018, he operates a farm in Tennessee and was serving as McAfee's official documentarian prior to McAfee's death. His work is extensively featured in the 2022 documentary .