Beyoncé Knowles-Carter is notorious for keeping tight control of her image. She archives every photograph taken of her. When she isn't keeping her own video diary, she employs a videographer to record many of her waking moments. Now she has decided she wants everyone else to play by her rules as well. Yahoo reports that, irked by photos taken of her by professional photographers during her Super Bowl performance (The snaps showed her making snarly or supposedly "unflattering" facial expressions as she danced, and Internet commentators later photoshopped them to poke fun at her):

This time around, Beyoncé isn't taking any chances. The star has reportedly instituted a ban on independent professional photographers to shoot her ongoing Mrs. Carter World Tour, according to the New York Post and The Guardian. Instead, news outlets are being given a link to a website featuring pre-approved photos of Beyoncé taken by ONE photographer.

Knowles-Carter is used to getting her way with these things, it seems. Her commercial draw is such that HBO even aired an entire documentary about her that she produced herself, rather than an independently directed examination that might have produced actual insights. But while Knowles-Carter may have the right to log her life all she likes, no news outlet should feel required to oblige her directives. If Knowles-Carter is going to stick to this demand on her tour, news outlets should pay for fans’ crowd-sourced photos instead—or just not cover the tour at all.