This volunteer crew is on a mission to fix Wikipedia’s worst celebrity photos

Visit a celebrity’s Wikipedia page and there’s a good chance you’ll be greeted by a blurry, outdated, or unflattering photo. These images often look like they were snapped in passing at a public event—because, in many cases, they were.

The reason? Wikipedia requires all images to be freely available for public use. Since professional photographers typically sell their work, high-quality portraits rarely make it onto the site. That’s bad news for celebrities, for whom this page is often their most-viewed online presence—and therefore the face they present to the world. Some photos are so notoriously bad, they’ve even earned a spot on a dedicated Instagram page.

Enter WikiPortraits: a team of volunteer photographers on a mission to fix this injustice.

Armed with their own camera gear—and often covering their own travel—these photographers attend festivals, award shows, and industry events to capture high-quality, freely licensed images of celebrities and other notable figures. They’ve brought portrait studios to major events like the Sundance Film Festival, SXSW, and Cannes, helping to refresh outdated Wikipedia photos or fill in the blanks for biographies missing images altogether.

“It’s been in the back of our minds for quite a while now,” Kevin Payravi, one of WikiPortraits’ cofounders, told 404 Media in a recent interview. Last year, the team decided to turn the idea into action. They secured press credentials for Sundance 2024, sent a few photographers to the festival, and set up a portrait studio on site. It marked WikiPortraits’s first coordinated effort in the U.S. to capture high-quality, freely licensed images specifically for Wikipedia.

Since launching last year, WikiPortraits has grown to over 30 photographers, collectively covering about 10 global festivals and snapping nearly 5,000 freely licensed celebrity portraits. Their photos have racked up millions of views on Wikipedia and have even been picked up by news outlets around the world. Celebrities? They’re often thrilled.

Just ask Jeremy Strong. At a New York screening of The Apprentice, photographer Nikhil Dixit approached the Succession star about taking an updated Wikipedia photo. Strong’s publicist initially declined, Dixit told 404 Media, but the actor interrupted. “Wait, you’re from Wikipedia?” he asked. “For the love of God, please take down that photo. You’d be doing me a service.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91296845/this-volunteer-crew-is-on-a-mission-to-fix-wikipedias-worst-celebrity-photos?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Utworzony 2mo | 13 mar 2025, 11:20:06


Zaloguj się, aby dodać komentarz

Inne posty w tej grupie

Going ‘AI-first’ appears to be backfiring on Klarna and Duolingo

Artificial intelligence might be the future of the workplace, but companies that are trying to get a head start on that future are running into all sorts of problems.

Klarna and Duloingo

12 maj 2025, 20:20:01 | Fast company - tech
Lyft CEO David Risher on competing with Uber and the future of rideshare

The rideshare market has reached a crossroads. Autonomous vehicles are on the rise, driver unrest is mounting, and customers are questioning everything from pricing to trust and safety. In the mid

12 maj 2025, 17:50:04 | Fast company - tech
Tech billionaires’ plan for a new California city may bypass voter approval

A group backed by tech billionaires spent years and $800 million secretly buying up over 60,

12 maj 2025, 13:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Snapchat’s Snap Map reaches 400 million users

Move aside, Google Maps: Snapchat’s Snap Map has hit a major milestone with 400 million monthly active users.

Launched in 2017, Snap Map began as a GPS-based feature that allowed users t

12 maj 2025, 13:20:03 | Fast company - tech
How Yahoo built AI-driven content discovery into its revamped news app

In April 2024, Yahoo acquired Artifact, a tool that uses AI to recommend news to readers. Yahoo folded Artifact’s—which was cofounded by Instagram cofounders Mike Krieger and Kevin Systrom—into it

12 maj 2025, 10:50:05 | Fast company - tech
How AI is changing your doctors appointments

It is hard to believe that in 2025, we are still dialing to schedule doctor appointments, get referrals, refill prescriptions, confirm office hours and addresses, and handle many other healthcare

12 maj 2025, 10:50:04 | Fast company - tech