TOTIM Exposures

David Simon-Martret / Paul Geddis - "Krokodil" Podcast

26 min · 22. apr. 2026
episode David Simon-Martret / Paul Geddis - "Krokodil" Podcast cover

Description

To Experience “Krokodil” DOWNLOAD TOTIM APP [https://app.totim.org/] In episode 20 of Exposures, David Simon-Martret speaks with Paul Geddis about the slow, deliberate process behind his and partner Blanca Galindo’s photographic work and the making of Krokodil [https://app.totim.org/s/5740877414662144]. The conversation centers on reporting within situations marked by addiction, vulnerability, and fear, and on the ethical demands of photographing people whose lives are shaped by legal risk and social stigma. The episode follows how a work ethic rooted in time and trust expanded into later work, moving from the specific realities of drug use toward larger questions of addiction, social systems, and ecological loss. In discussing their more recent focus on coral reefs, biodiversity and climate, David reflects on the challenge of finding a visual language for slow-moving crisis’ without relying on over-dramatization. The result is a thoughtful conversation between old friends about photographic ethics, visual form, and how documentary work can continue to make people look carefully at difficult subjects. David Simon / Leafhopper David Simon and Blanca Galindo ( Leafhopper [https://leafhopper.eu/]) are visual artists working in photography and film based between Barcelona, Spain and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. David studied philosophy at UB and photography at IEFC. Blanca obtained her Media degree at UAB and University of California SB.Their work takes in photojournalism, art photography, fashion, music, NGO commissions and commercial projects. In 2012 David and Blanca co-created Leafhopper, an image based project taking its name from the common cicada, and focused on concept driven long form stories that combine philosophical criteria with powerful aesthetic images creating a reflection on the human and the natural world. In their work as Leafhopper, culture, people, fauna and flora are seen as equal expressions of the natural sublime, creating a common thread across subject matter as seemingly disparate as LGBTQ communities in Malaysia, narco-iconography, coral bleaching and a global study in addiction published in 2019 titled ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ [https://ivorypress.com/en/product/its-a-wonderful-life/]. Paul Geddis Paul Geddis [https://www.psgcontent.com/] is a Barcelona-based journalist, editor, and communications professional whose work spans media, music, culture, and tech. After spending 2007–2015 at VICE Spain, including time as Editor in Chief, he went on to lead content at Sónar Festival, serve as EU Content Lead for Patreon EMEA, and later move into PR. Across those roles, his work has focused on original storytelling, cultural communication, youth audiences, emerging talent, and content-led campaigns that connect strong ideas with wider publics. TOTIM [https://totim.org/] is a new, nonprofit initiative built to support and amplify a global and diverse community of visual storytellers. We rely on your support to bring under-reported stories to light and sustain vital, independent documentary photography. Please consider a charitable, tax-deductible gift. [https://totim-corp.fundjournalism.org/contribute/] Get full access to TOTIM at totim.substack.com/subscribe [https://totim.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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22 episodes

episode Scott Wallace / Eros Hoagland "Covering El Salvador's Civil War" Podcast artwork

Scott Wallace / Eros Hoagland "Covering El Salvador's Civil War" Podcast

In this episode 022 of Exposures [https://totim.substack.com/podcast], Scott Wallace speaks with Eros Hoagland about El Salvador, Central America, and the changing conditions of conflict reporting across the last four decades. The discussion moves through the practical and ethical conditions of reporting during the Salvadoran civil war: access to guerrilla forces and army commanders and the constant pressure of working in a country shaped by surveillance, death squads, intelligence operations, and contested territory. The conversation then broadens to the transformation of journalism itself, including the shift from analog to digital photography, the collapse of older media structures, the rise of the internet, and the new risks created when images from conflict zones can circulate instantly and endanger their subjects. It closes by connecting Wallace’s early Central America reporting to his current work on environmental issues, Indigenous struggles, rainforest protection, organized crime in the Amazon, and his teaching at the University of Connecticut in environmental journalism and global press freedom. To Experience “Covering El Salvador’s Civil War” DOWNLOAD TOTIM APP [https://app.totim.org/] Scott Wallace Scott Wallace is an American journalist, writer, producer, educator, and photojournalist whose work has focused on armed conflict, international crime, Indigenous affairs, conservation, and the environment. He began his career in Central America in 1983, reporting from El Salvador as a freelance stringer for CBS News/CBS Radio and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution before expanding his work across Nicaragua and Guatemala for outlets including Newsweek, The Independent, and The Guardian. From 1983 to 1989, he covered the region’s U.S.-backed wars and counterinsurgencies, later serving as Central America correspondent for The Guardian. Wallace’s reporting, photography, and television work have since appeared across National Geographic, Smithsonian, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Harper’s, The Nation, Newsweek, CNN, and the National Geographic Channel. He is an associate professor of journalism at the University of Connecticut and the author of The Unconquered: In Search of the Amazon’s Last Uncontacted Tribes [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/185137/the-unconquered-by-scott-wallace/] and Central America in the Crosshairs of War: On the Road from Vietnam to Iraq [https://gftpublishing.square.site/product/wallace-scott-central-america-in-the-crosshairs-of-war-on-the-road-from-vietnam-to-iraq/BDHNVEW247J2ZHTI57J2HQ5F?cp=true&sa=false&sbp=false&q=true]. [https://gftpublishing.square.site/product/wallace-scott-central-america-in-the-crosshairs-of-war-on-the-road-from-vietnam-to-iraq/BDHNVEW247J2ZHTI57J2HQ5F?cp=true&sa=false&sbp=false&q=true] Eros Hoagland Eros Hoagland [https://www.eroshoagland.com/] is a Los Angeles–based visual storyteller, photojournalist, and cinematographer. Hoagland began his career documenting communities and countries shaped by cycles of violence, working for more than fifteen years across North and South America, the Middle East, and Asia. In 2014, he expanded into film and entertainment photography after being invited to work with acclaimed directors Michael Mann and Alejandro Iñárritu. His clients include The New York Times, Netflix, HBO, National Geographic, Apple TV, TIME, Legendary Pictures, The New Yorker, Smithsonian Magazine, ESPN, Der Spiegel, the Los Angeles Times, and the American Red Cross. A California native, he spends his time outside of work surfing and diving in the Pacific Ocean. TOTIM [https://totim.org/] is a new, nonprofit initiative built to support and amplify a global and diverse community of visual storytellers. We rely on your support to bring under-reported stories to light and sustain vital, independent documentary photography. Please consider a charitable, tax-deductible gift. [https://totim-corp.fundjournalism.org/contribute/] Get full access to TOTIM at totim.substack.com/subscribe [https://totim.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

28. maj 202645 min
episode Kris Graves / "LONG SUN DOWN" Podcast artwork

Kris Graves / "LONG SUN DOWN" Podcast

To Experience “LONG SUN DOWN” DOWNLOAD TOTIM APP [https://app.totim.org/] In episode 021 of Exposures, photographer and publisher Kris Graves discusses Long Sun Down as well as his daily practice across photography, publishing, bookmaking, and art documentation. He also explores the long-term concerns that shape his work: the American landscape, structural discrimination, and the visible and less visible systems that organize land, power, and exclusion. Graves describes his background as a New Yorker with family roots in Montgomery, Alabama, and how repeated childhood trips to the South helped form an early awareness of the differences between regions, histories, and lived environments. Exposures 021 is Hosted by TOTIM Founder/ Director Luke Mertz Kris Graves Kris Graves [https://krisgraves.com/] is an artist and publisher [https://www.krisgravesprojects.com/?srsltid=AfmBOoqoRFUF_FfAH44OT4sH24TGFZulwmjDmLyP7Px1gFxLLPu57IUL] based in New York and California. Graves creates artwork that deals with societal problems and aims to use art as a means to inform people about cultural issues. Using a mix of conceptual and documentary practices, Graves photographs the subtleties of societal power and its impact on the built environment. He explores how capitalism and power have shaped countries -- and how that can be seen and experienced in everyday life. Graves also works to elevate the representation of people of color in the fine art canon; and to create opportunities for conversation about race, representation, and urban life. He photographs to preserve memory. TOTIM [https://totim.org/] is a new, nonprofit initiative built to support and amplify a global and diverse community of visual storytellers. We rely on your support to bring under-reported stories to light and sustain vital, independent documentary photography. Please consider a charitable, tax-deductible gift. [https://totim-corp.fundjournalism.org/contribute/] Get full access to TOTIM at totim.substack.com/subscribe [https://totim.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

7. maj 202635 min
episode David Simon-Martret / Paul Geddis - "Krokodil" Podcast artwork

David Simon-Martret / Paul Geddis - "Krokodil" Podcast

To Experience “Krokodil” DOWNLOAD TOTIM APP [https://app.totim.org/] In episode 20 of Exposures, David Simon-Martret speaks with Paul Geddis about the slow, deliberate process behind his and partner Blanca Galindo’s photographic work and the making of Krokodil [https://app.totim.org/s/5740877414662144]. The conversation centers on reporting within situations marked by addiction, vulnerability, and fear, and on the ethical demands of photographing people whose lives are shaped by legal risk and social stigma. The episode follows how a work ethic rooted in time and trust expanded into later work, moving from the specific realities of drug use toward larger questions of addiction, social systems, and ecological loss. In discussing their more recent focus on coral reefs, biodiversity and climate, David reflects on the challenge of finding a visual language for slow-moving crisis’ without relying on over-dramatization. The result is a thoughtful conversation between old friends about photographic ethics, visual form, and how documentary work can continue to make people look carefully at difficult subjects. David Simon / Leafhopper David Simon and Blanca Galindo ( Leafhopper [https://leafhopper.eu/]) are visual artists working in photography and film based between Barcelona, Spain and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. David studied philosophy at UB and photography at IEFC. Blanca obtained her Media degree at UAB and University of California SB.Their work takes in photojournalism, art photography, fashion, music, NGO commissions and commercial projects. In 2012 David and Blanca co-created Leafhopper, an image based project taking its name from the common cicada, and focused on concept driven long form stories that combine philosophical criteria with powerful aesthetic images creating a reflection on the human and the natural world. In their work as Leafhopper, culture, people, fauna and flora are seen as equal expressions of the natural sublime, creating a common thread across subject matter as seemingly disparate as LGBTQ communities in Malaysia, narco-iconography, coral bleaching and a global study in addiction published in 2019 titled ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ [https://ivorypress.com/en/product/its-a-wonderful-life/]. Paul Geddis Paul Geddis [https://www.psgcontent.com/] is a Barcelona-based journalist, editor, and communications professional whose work spans media, music, culture, and tech. After spending 2007–2015 at VICE Spain, including time as Editor in Chief, he went on to lead content at Sónar Festival, serve as EU Content Lead for Patreon EMEA, and later move into PR. Across those roles, his work has focused on original storytelling, cultural communication, youth audiences, emerging talent, and content-led campaigns that connect strong ideas with wider publics. TOTIM [https://totim.org/] is a new, nonprofit initiative built to support and amplify a global and diverse community of visual storytellers. We rely on your support to bring under-reported stories to light and sustain vital, independent documentary photography. Please consider a charitable, tax-deductible gift. [https://totim-corp.fundjournalism.org/contribute/] Get full access to TOTIM at totim.substack.com/subscribe [https://totim.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

22. apr. 202626 min
episode Valerie Plesch / Tasneem Alsultan - "Kosovo, After the War" Podcast artwork

Valerie Plesch / Tasneem Alsultan - "Kosovo, After the War" Podcast

In Episode 019 of Exposures [https://totim.substack.com/podcast], Valerie Plesch, in conversation with Tasneem Alsultan, speaks about the long aftermath of war and the human collective scarring that persists after international attention has moved on. In discussing her recently published story, Kosovo, After the War [https://app.totim.org/s/5766155109138432], Plesch describes how her own family history shaped her approach to reporting: her mother’s family fled Vietnam in the final days before the fall of Saigon, and that experience of displacement, resettlement, and inherited trauma continues to inform the stories she is drawn to today. Plesch reflects on her sustained interest in post-conflict and post-disaster societies, and on the particular value of documenting what comes after the formal end of crisis. Rather than focusing only on the spectacle of war itself, she returns to the quieter and more difficult terrain of reconstruction, memory, and survival. In Kosovo, that means listening to women and families still living with the consequences of violence, grief, disappearance, and stigma, and tracing how conflict persists across generations. Valerie Plesch Valerie Plesch [https://www.valerieplesch.com/] is an independent photojournalist, documentary photographer, and writer based in Washington, D.C., where she covers politics, the White House, Capitol Hill, immigration, refugee resettlement, and related issues for editorial and feature assignments. Her work has been published by a wide range of major national and international outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Bloomberg News, The Wall Street Journal, PBS NewsHour, USA Today, Reuters, NPR, Politico, Financial Times Magazine, Al Jazeera English, and FRONTLINE, among many others. Her long-form documentary work focuses on the aftermath of war and the ways memory, identity, trauma, and displacement continue to shape individual and collective lives. Tasneem Alsultan Tasneem Alsultan [https://www.tasneemalsultan.com/] is a Saudi-American investigative photographer and visual storyteller whose work explores women’s rights and social dynamics in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf region. Her work has been published in The New York Times and National Geographic amongst others. Tasneem became the first Arab female Global Ambassador for Canon in 2018, a Catchlight fellow in 2019, was voted the ‘Princess Noura University Award for Excellence’ in the Arts Category and received honourable mention for the Anja Niedringhaus Courage in Photojournalism. In 2020, she cofounded Ruwa Space, a platform to support visual creatives and offer education and consultation across the Middle East & North Africa. She’s a member of Rawiya women’s Middle Eastern photography collective. TOTIM [https://totim.org/] is a new, nonprofit initiative built to support and amplify a global and diverse community of visual storytellers. We rely on your support to bring under-reported stories to light and sustain vital, independent documentary photography. Please consider a charitable, tax-deductible gift. [https://totim-corp.fundjournalism.org/contribute/] Get full access to TOTIM at totim.substack.com/subscribe [https://totim.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

9. apr. 202628 min
episode Jason P. Howe / "Between the Lines" Podcast artwork

Jason P. Howe / "Between the Lines" Podcast

To Experience “Between the Lines” DOWNLOAD TOTIM APP [https://app.totim.org/] In Episode 018 of Exposures [https://totim.substack.com/podcast] Jason Howe reflects on the kind of work that has defined his career: slow, proximity-based photography built through time, trust, and sustained presence. He speaks about his early years traveling through Latin America, his long engagement with conflict photography in Colombia [https://app.totim.org/s/5668756323827712] and Afghanistan, and his belief that meaningful images are rarely made in haste. Rather than chasing breaking news, Howe describes a practice shaped by immersion—living in places, returning over years, and preserving his creative energy for work that feels necessary. The conversation also turns to ethics, responsibility, and what photography owes the people it depends on. Howe speaks candidly about the limits of documentary impact, the importance of treating subjects with dignity, and his discomfort with the one-way extraction that so often underpins image-making. That same sensibility shapes his current long-term project in rural Spain, where he is documenting disappearing ways of life as a record for future generations. Exposures 018 is Hosted by TOTIM Founder/ Director Luke Mertz Jason P. Howe Jason Howe [https://www.jasonphowe.com/]is an internationally recognized photojournalist whose work has taken him from the front lines of conflict in Colombia, Iraq, and Afghanistan to the remote high plateaus of the Pamirs and into rarefied political environments at the highest levels of power. Known for operating with precision and credibility in complex, high-risk settings, he has built a body of work defined by access, range, and sustained visual authority. His photographs have appeared in many of the world’s most respected publications, including The New York Times, The Telegraph, The Guardian, Time, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, Le Figaro, and Rolling Stone. His work has also been exhibited internationally in both solo and group exhibitions and presented through festival screenings, reflecting a career that has moved fluently between journalism, documentary practice, and the broader cultural sphere. TOTIM [https://totim.org/] is a new, nonprofit initiative built to support and amplify a global and diverse community of visual storytellers. We rely on your support to bring under-reported stories to light and sustain vital, independent documentary photography. Please consider a charitable, tax-deductible gift. [https://totim-corp.fundjournalism.org/contribute/] Get full access to TOTIM at totim.substack.com/subscribe [https://totim.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

25. mar. 202628 min