Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Entertainment > Brief Introduction of Zhou Hao, Director of TV Documentary Shooting

Entertainment > Brief Introduction of Zhou Hao, Director of TV Documentary Shooting

Zhou Hao, director of 2 1 century video studio. Worked as a photojournalist in Xinhua News Agency, Southern Weekend and 2 1 Century Business Herald.

1998, his photography topic "Industrial Pollution in Southwest China" won the second place in the news photography competition of professional photographers in Freedom Forum (Beijing Station).

In 2002, it won a scholarship from IPS (International News Agency) to study the living and economic conditions of people in the Mekong River basin, and focused on the impact of the opening up of the upper Mekong River on the economic development of various countries. The investigation lasted for one month, and the related reports are still the most influential reports on the life and development of the Mekong River Basin in Chinese mainland.

In 2002, before the impoundment of the Three Gorges Dam in China, he spent two months walking through the Three Gorges area, and reported in detail the real life of the immigrants in the Three Gorges area at that time. During his career of nearly 65,438+00 years, he has photographed more than ten special topics for Geogeography magazine in Taiwan Province Province, covering the fields of folklore, humanities and environmental protection, and has become one of the magazine's best photographers in Chinese mainland.

200 1 in the second half of the year, try to make a documentary. In 2002, he completed his debut novel "Houjie". In May, 2003, this film won the Black Pottery Award (Best Newcomer Award) in the Anthropological Image Exhibition of South of the Cloud. In the same year, the film was selected for the Fribourg International Film Festival in Switzerland. In 2004, Houjie was selected as the "2004 Shanghai International Biennale", and in 2006, Houjie was selected as the "Guangzhou International Triennial", which is regarded as a rare masterpiece that truly reflects the living conditions of migrant workers in China.

In 2006, his second documentary "Senior Three" won the Best Documentary Humanitarian Award at the Hong Kong International Film Festival.