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'Napalm Girl' Photographer Returns; With iPhone, Instagram

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9 June 2015 13:36 WIB

Pulitzer winning photographer Nick Ut gestures while talking with media at the place where he took his iconic 'Napalm girl' photo 43 years ago, June 8, 2015 in Trang Bang, Vietnam. Ut returned Monday to the location of his iconic photo with a tool from an entirely different era, a 4-ounce iPhone 5 equipped with the ability to send photos to the world in the blink of a digital eye. AP/Na Son Nguyen

9 Juni 2015 00:00 WIB

FILE, In this June 8, 1972, file photo taken by Huynh Cong Nick Ut, South Vietnamese forces follow behind terrified children, including 9-year-old Kim Phuc, center, as they run down Route 1 near Trang Bang after an aerial napalm attack on suspected Viet Cong hiding places. On Monday, June 8, 2015, precisely 43 years later, Nick Ut returned to the same place to capture his memories with a tool from an entirely different era, a 4-ounce iPhone 5 equipped with the ability to send photos to the world in the blink of a digital eye. AP/Nick Ut

9 Juni 2015 00:00 WIB

Pulitzer winning photographer Nick Ut uses a smartphone to take a photo of Ho Van Bon holding the iconic 'Napalm girl' image Ut captured 43 years ago, June 8, 2015 in Trang Bang, Vietnam. Ut returned Monday to the location of his iconic photo with a tool from an entirely different era, a 4-ounce iPhone 5 equipped with the ability to send photos to the world in the blink of a digital eye. AP/Na Son Nguyen

9 Juni 2015 00:00 WIB

Ho Van Bon, 52, right, points at himself in the iconic 'Napalm girl' photo taken by the Pulitzer winning photographer Nick Ut, left, 43 years ago, June 8, 2015 in Trang Bang, Vietnam. Ut returned Monday to the location of his iconic photo with a tool from an entirely different era, a 4-ounce iPhone 5 equipped with the ability to send photos to the world in the blink of a digital eye. AP/Na Son Nguyen

9 Juni 2015 00:00 WIB

Pulitzer winning photographer Nick Ut uses a smartphone to take a photo of noodle bowls to share on Instagram at a restaurant owned by the family of Kim Phuc, the 'Napalm girl' in the iconic photo that Ut took 43 years ago, June 8, 2015 in Trang Bang, Vietnam. Ut returned Monday to the location of his iconic photo with a tool from an entirely different era, a 4-ounce iPhone 5 equipped with the ability to send photos to the world in the blink of a digital eye. AP/Na Son Nguyen

9 Juni 2015 00:00 WIB

Pulitzer winning photographer Nick Ut talks to the media at the place where he took his iconic 'Napalm girl' photo 43 years ago, June 8, 2015 in Trang Bang, Vietnam. Ut returned Monday to the location of his iconic photo with a tool from an entirely different era, a 4-ounce iPhone 5 equipped with the ability to send photos to the world in the blink of a digital eye. AP/Na Son Nguyen

9 Juni 2015 00:00 WIB