A Paparazzo’s Lessons on How Stars Are Born

…”Since the landmark elevation of gossip and celebrity scandal into a national obsession that was undoubtedly the O.J. trial, the picture or piece of video footage most in demand from Woody and his colleagues is the one featuring a celebrity in a “newsworthy” incident or set of circumstances. Time and again throughout the ’90s, events that would once have been purely paparazzi stories, covered in print by gossip columnists, have been given the status of serious news.

During the unfortunate Monica Lewinsky business, Woody would fight to take pictures or shoot video amid a massive, swirling sea of cameras, many of which belonged to the networks and news organizations that would routinely and, in Woody’s eyes, hypocritically point the finger at the supposedly lower-than-low paparazzi.”

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Photographer Tries to Sell Story of ‘Rocky’ vs. Woody

March 30, 1991 | BOB POOL | TIMES STAFF WRITER

…”When Thursday’s incident began, Woody said, he was sitting in a rented 1991 Honda Civic and chatting with a friend, singer-songwriter Philip Norris. He said he uses rented cars to avoid being recognized.

“It was insane. He kept ramming my car repeatedly. What kind of nut uses a $100,000 battering ram?” Woody said of Stallone. “He and his bodyguard in another car were alternating ramming me. I was very lucky not to get hurt.”

Still, the incident was all in a night’s work for Woody, a 6-foot, 3-inch Texan who joined Hollywood’s corps of paparazzi about 16 months ago after working 20 years as a portrait and fashion photographer.

Since then, he said he has sold pictures of movie stars to dozens of European publications, along with American tabloids like the National Enquirer, Star and Globe.”

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