Friday, April 28, 2006

People without People

Lately, I have found myself taking a lot of photos with non-human subjects. In photo-j school, the term used was "people without people." Essentially the picture would have a non-human subject, but it would still reveal how a person had interacted or influenced that environment. Here are a few pics taken in Tooele County, Utah.










Tuesday, April 18, 2006

High School Rodeo

Last week I shot the State High School Rodeo Competition in Tooele (~40 miles west of SLC). The light was pretty amazing and I had fun shooting these young athletes ride the fierce animals. I also played around with a "Lens Baby." This is a poor man's tilt and shift lens that is made from plastic and has no electronic components. It gives the images a blurry vignette around the edges. It was a challenge to manually focus this lens on the fast moving subjects, but I do like the end results.











Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Dignity March

On Sunday, an estimated 30,000 people marched through downtown Salt Lake City during a rally in opposition to immigration reforms proposed in Congress. This was a historic day, as this was the largest public protest in Utah history. This was an amazing event to witness as the sea of people, almost a mile long, marched toward the state Capitol.

There were also about 200 "Pro America Protesters," mostly comprised of members of the Utah Minutemen, who actively voiced their opposition to all immigrants. These were some of the most ignorant and racist people screaming hate-filled chants like, "This will never be your country," "Go back to Mexico and work at McDonalds," "It's the United States of Americans [not Mexicans]," "Illegals are welcome when they use [the] door my family used," "Go home then get a visa," and "Seal our borders now."

Despite the large number of people and the great tension between the two groups, this was overall a peaceful demonstration. There were many heated verbal exchanges between the groups, but zero arrests were made.

With the help of the millions of other protesters around the country, I hope this rally can help send a strong message to the government that the nation's estimated 11-12 million undocumented immigrants deserve a chance to live the American dream.



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Tuesday, April 04, 2006

#3

Last night, Ashley and I spent over an hour playing around with a tripod, spotlight and a strobe, experimenting with a photo technique called light painting. We were working on making a photo to contribute to a collective photo essay on numbers.

Here are the basic settings used:

Date: 4/4/06
Time: 2:08:31 AM
Model: Canon EOS-1D Mark II N
Lens (mm): 17
ISO: 500
Aperture: 9.0
Shutter: 13
Program: Manual
Focus Mode: AI Servo AF
White Balance: Auto

The camera was mounted on a tripod and an initial exposure was measured. Once I figured out the correct exposure for the ambient light, I then underexposed it by about a stop. Then, I stood in front of the camera holding an off camera strobe to my right. Once Ashley pressed the shutter button, I manually flashed the strobe on myself while Ash used a 1,000,000 candle-watt spotlight to paint a “3” onto the neighbor’s house. After she finished painting, she moved to her position in front of the camera while I quickly ran across the frame so that I was positioned out of sight on the right side of the frame. I used the same off camera strobe to light Ashley and the tree in the background. This all had to be completed in 13 seconds…without waking up the neighbors. It took over 60 tries, but we finally got one that worked.



Monday, April 03, 2006

Lewis Black

On Saturday, Ashley and I went to see comedian Lewis Black. You probably have seen Black on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show," or "Comedy Central Presents." He was in town because he is in the processing of filming the new movie "Unaccompanied Minor," with "The 70's Show" star Wilmer Valderrama. Black delivered 75 minutes of his signature rant-style comedy, all of which was funny and true. All he needed to say was, "Dick Cheney and Michael Jackson." Hilarious.





Saturday, April 01, 2006

Fun in the Snow

Today I got to cover the 2nd annual Wolf Mountain "End of the Season Soapbox Derby". I am not sure why they called it a soapbox derby because there was certainly no soap, soapboxes or even derby racing involved in this event. What was involved was about 15 different teams, each of whom had constructed some sort of snow vehicle in which they would navigate down the mountain.

Their ski creations ranged from rafts, couches and toilets to blow-up dolphins, Barbie fun jeeps and outhouses. Some of these devices, like the raft, couch, and dolphin did not make it down the mountain, as the snow was very slushy and didn’t provide for the best sliding surface. Surprisingly, the guy skiing while sitting inside the outhouse had one of the fastest times, coming in just over a minute. Unfortunately, the women in the whitewater raft could not get the raft to slide and they were disqualified for taking over five minutes to complete the course.

I think it would fun and interesting if they did use real soapboxes to ski down the mountain…but I think that is called bobsleds.