Christine Negroni got her WestJet SXM article picked up by Forbes' website with a different edit of the first low approach photo and a book plug at the end:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/christi.../#6a14d8c75492
The EXIF data says that the picture was taken with a Canon EOS 6D camera, a lot of folks would call this a 'prosumer' model.
And the EXIF data says the photo was edited in, gulp, Photoshop 6.
Actually this in itself is nothing sinister, Christine Garner probably used Photoshop mainly to apply the eponymous watermark.
The camera will put copyright info with the image, the 6D is the smallest lightest full frame camera and the lines between "prosumer"are blurred these days, it is horses for courses and you vary the models you use to what you want to get out of it functions wise, the important thing is simply the glass, no matter what your camera is or does, shooting through third rate glass always will result in a third rate image.
Photoshop is used to tweak the image and crop etc, also to convert the image if shooting in RAW. Though six is an old version, then again back to the horses for courses and if it is doing the job, why change.