Over the next several weeks leading up to Sports Shooter Academy VIII, we will be posting profiles of our faculty members to share a little insight on who they are and what they do through a little Q & A.
Robert Hanashiro is the co-founder of the COOLEST sports photography event in the country, the Sports Shooter Academy. A California native, Robert got his start in the central valley as a journalism student Cal State University-Fresno. After starting his career as a staff photojournalist and Director of Photography for the Visalia Times-Delta, he became the USA TODAY Los Angeles based staff photographer on 1988. Bert or “The Kahuna”, as he is known to friends, is also the founder and publisher of the Sports Shooter Newsletter which has published over 140 issues since 1996 to over 7,500 subscribers. Robert’s vision and dedication to education and helping young photographers is evident in the countless hours and late nights he devotes to make the Academy a reality.
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ROBERT HANASHIRO
- The Visalia Times-Delta, Chief Photographer, 1979-1989
- USA TODAY, West Coast Staff Photographer, 1989-present
- 1998 – Began publishing the Sports Shooter Newsletter
- 2001 – Held first Sports Shooter Workshop & Luau
- 2003 – Started SportsShooter.com
- 2005 – Held first Sports Shooter Academy
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Why do you love photography?
I love telling stories, whether it’s through words or images. But I believe that the power of images is strongest. To be able to convey a thought, show a personality, give a viewer the news … to inform, enlighten, entertain and educate in a single glance is very powerful.
Who was your mentor or the most influential person in your professional career?
Growing up and spending the first 22 years in Fresno, CA. there were really no mentors for us photographically. My father was also a “newspaper man” — working for a small community newspaper outside of Fresno — he is my earliest memory of what journalism is. He and my mom are also the ones that instilled in me that hard work is something you challenge yourself with, no matter what that work is. And most of all they showed me that it’s “family first”. Photographically during my high school and college years my idol was W. Eugene Smith. I collected every book and article I could about him and spent hours studying his work. Another early influence was a book my cousin Gordon showed me when we were juniors in high school, “Self-Portrait USA” by David Duncan Douglas. It’s a photo essay on the 1968 political conventions and I still look at when I need a boost. As far as sports photography, Neil Leifer was every photographer’s influence in the 70′s and he still is. I came to USA TODAY from a 22,000 circulation newspaper to a national publication that at the time had a circulation of over 2 million. Was I scared? Hell yeah. The person that has been my mentor/rabbi through the early days all the way to today has been my colleague Bob Deutsch. He is the a great friend and the best photographer I know.
What’s your most important reason for being involved in the Sports Shooter Academy?
As I mentioned, when I was growing up and then going to college, there were no mentors in Fresno … the photographers at the local newspaper were not very involved with the high school and college photographers. I started the Sports Shooter Newsletter by accident, emailing rants about this and that, sharing information about tech stuff and passing along stories I’d read. Those emails got forwarded around, posted on bulletin boards and all of a sudden people we’re contacting me wanting to “subscribe”. Within a year or so after I had started sending out these emails fairly regularly I had several hundred “subscribers”. Now I have over 7,000. My buddy Brad Mangin helped me with a lot with a patient ear and lots of good advice…which later turned into a partnership that developed SportsShooter.com. The logical extension of Sports Shooter was some kind of meet up and the first educational programs we did, the Sports Shooter Workshop & Luau, was born. I a lot to Ronal Taniwaki for helping us get that first workshop off the ground and he’s the one that came up with the name. For several years we held the Workshop & Luau and the final program attracted about 500 people. Teaching and sharing information is what Sports Shooter is all about, so after I decided to end the Workshop & Luau, Matt Brown and I developed the Sports Shooter Academy, a smaller program that would be different in that it would be more hands-on and most importantly would involve shooting. And now we are about to hold the 10th Academy workshop. These programs give me the opportunity to have my friends, who happen to be some of the best photojournalists working today, educate, inspire and guide students and photographers from around the world. Sports Shooter has been my way of giving a little something back to a profession that has been pretty good to me.
What would you say is the most important moment/image in your career to date?
I would say I have a 12 important “moments” in my career. I’ve covered a dozen Olympic Games since I started at USA TODAY and each one of those is extremely special to me. From Seoul to Sydney to Lillehammer, Norway to Beijing to Greece to Nagano, Japan — it was been a wonderful, memorable ride. A single photo … I guess would have to be the image I made of the final play of Super Bowl XXXIV. With the clock running out, Tennessee Titan wide receiver Kevin Dyson is stopped just short of the goal line by Rams’ linebacker Mike Jones, preserving a 23-16 win. The image is of Dyson stretched out in the grasp of Jones as he reaches toward the end zone. That Super Bowl is often referred to as the best ever and is listed in everyone’s Top 10 list of greatest endings of all time. And that photograph taken in the last second sums up that game.
If you could jump into a time machine, what advice would you give a young you 20 years ago?
Listen to your mom and dad. Stay in school. Get the 24mm instead of the 35mm wide angle. Never buy a Pinto no matter how cool the paint job is. And shoot, shoot, shoot…

SSA Co-Founder and USA Today Photographer, Robert Hanashiro, helps a SSA VII student with a portrait at La Habra Boxing Club.