- [first lines]
- Judi Cobb - Photographer: Photographers try to tell the story in a very immediate, powerful, provocative way.
- Steve McCurry - Photographer: [whirling dervish dancers] What I'm doing in this studying that subject's, movements, their personality, they're depth, their gestures.
- David Doubilet - Photographer: [undersea] Working for Geographic *is* the best job in the whole world. It's also the hardest job in the whole world.
- Michael 'Nick' Nichols: [charging elephants] The intensity you have to live with with the photography, most people are not willing to pay the price.
- James Stanfield - Photographer: They're a little bit like a Texas Ranger. You're out there by yourself, on your own, frequently, just doing your thing.
- Michael 'Nick' Nichols: [Africa] It's just a little moment out of time, and you've captured it in the box. And then you put it on the page.
- Beverly Joubert - Photographer: Once it's made, you've captured something that possibly can never be captured again.
- Sam Abell - Photographer: Pioneering editor, Gilbert H. Grosvenor, maintained that the mind must see before it can believe.
- Michael 'Nick' Nichols: There's a difference in capturing your subject and putting it where you want, and having it stand there. The subject is really in control. You're just trying to capture a moment with that subject.
- William Albert Allard - Photographer: That picture is the result of simply showing up for work on time. I got there, they played the National Anthem, the light was very nice. Not a difficult picture to make.
- David Doubilet - Photographer: [about his equipment] That's like a mountain of stuff, to go off and take a picture of a shrimp. Or a shark. Or a shrimp and a shark.
- Sam Abell - Photographer: [lions feeding] As this primal scene plays out in front of her, Beverly must find the presence of mind to balance her lights, cameras, and her emotions.
- [last lines]
- Michael 'Nick' Nichols: One of the things that photography has special to offer is it's a slice. It's just a little moment out of time, and you've captured it in the box. And then you put it on the page. And you can look at it for a long time. It never goes away - that elephant just keeps charging. But that was only a 250th of second, back in the swamp. But now that's going to live forever. That's pretty neat.