“I am still juiced up for making a good photo,” said the 1946-born who has won dozens of top global awards for his work.

With fellow visual storyteller Rick Smolan, Burnett, often said to be the last photographer hired by Life Magazine before it folded as a weekly in 1972, reflected on a career spanning the Vietnam War, the Iranian Revolution, every US president since Kennedy and producing the only photographic record of three presidential impeachments.

"Turn off all the feedback screens. Just go be a photographer," the 2024 White House News Photographers Association Lifetime Achievement Award recipient told the audience, offering advice that distilled his philosophy on the craft.

Burnett's journey began with an intercollegiate news service press card he purchased for five dollars during his freshman year at university. "There is never, there has never been, nor will there ever be, an intercollegiate news service," Burnett recalled ‘the start of it all’, with a laugh. 

That early resourcefulness would serve him throughout a career defined by being in the right place at the right moment and sometimes, miraculously, not being there at all.

Burnett recounted his decision to buy a one-way ticket to Saigon in the early 1970s. What he thought would be a month-long visit became two years documenting one of the 20th century's defining conflicts. His most haunting Vietnam memory dates to February 1971 after spending five months in the war zone, By a slim margin of fate, he missed the flight that claimed the lives of Larry Burrows, Henri Huet, Kent Potter, and Keisaburo Shimamoto, whose helicopter was lost over Laos just minutes after departure.

"Having been stopped from getting on that helicopter, somewhere inside there is this feeling: ‘you were lucky that day’. Stay as dedicated to making pictures as you can be, because that's what these guys all died for, was the chance to make a picture,” he said. 

Burnett's coverage of pivotal diplomatic moments demonstrated his ability to shape history whilst ostensibly only ‘observing it’. At Ronald Reagan’s first meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev, Burnett missed out on White House credentials for the final press conference, secured last-minute access through the Soviet press office, and once inside immediately noticed the leaders’ chairs were set nearly a metre apart—too distant for a compelling photograph.

“We go up, and everybody's got their light metres out, and as we're doing that...we're pushing the chairs together so that you could get them with a 200 millimetre lens," he said. "Because, you know, they were way out, because by the time the protocol people saw what had happened, it was too late."

His advice to emerging photographers emphasised passion over equipment. "It's all about your passion. Find the subject," he said. "Find something you love, and you focus on that."

Named one of American Photo magazine's 100 Most Important People in Photography and recognised by Sony as an Artisan of Imagery, Burnett has written 16 books and two award-winning documentaries that continue to shape the field of visual journalism.