Sunday, December 30, 2007

Airport Report





I feel like Gumby. Lack of sleep has left me lightheaded and groggy. Coffee isn't strong enough for this.

Sitting in SFO waiting for a flight to Boise. Up way too early with almost no sleep last night. Shot Stanford basketball yesterday and tomorrow is Fresno State's bowl game.

Can't wait to get to my hotel in Boise and get some sleep.

Kept busy in the airport shooting pictures of the sportswriters I'm traveling with.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Aloha Stadium


Nice light, cool clouds and interesting walkways made for the best photo of the night in Hawaii tonight. The football pictures were pretty routine but I liked this image of the stadium at sunset.

I'm out of here in tomorrow afternoon and hoping the flights home go a little smoother than the incoming journey.

Friday, November 09, 2007

Greetings from the Sandwich Islands






I'm in Hawaii to shoot a football game. I'm not a big fan of the beach and sun so much of the appeal of this place is lost on me. Waikiki, where I'm staying is essentially Las Vegas with a beach. It's the most commercial, tourist pocked place I've ever been.

I've been to the island of Hawaii aka The Big Island and much of it is quite nice. Fewer tourists and more glimpses of what it must have looked like before Whitey fucked things up.

My room on the 28th floor has a small balcony which gives me a view of the ocean. It's nice but the noise from the traffic below is a constant reminder that I'm in a city. Sirens are ever present. As I type this I can see people with surfboards strapped to their bikes heading for the beach.


I walked around today and shot pictures of tourists. I'm sure if I spent more time I could do better but hey, I'm here to shoot football.

I shot this stuff in color of course but since I set the color balance wrong and wasn't able to see the screen because of the bright sunlight, I converted them to black and white.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Monday, September 24, 2007

Big Elvis and Loud Whores






We took a quick drive across the desert to Las Vegas last week. I have mixed feelings about Vegas. It’s clearly an example of everything that’s wrong with American society and capitalism run amuck but at the same time it provides an endless supply of weird sites and sounds that I just can’t resist. It’s like a Freakshow Bootcamp. In just 48 hours you’re exposed to enough bizarre behavior to last several years.

We arrived around 8PM, checked into the hotel and rested for an hour or so before venturing out for food. After dinner we wandered around the strip checking out the casinos and parade of people. The drive left me a little weary so we decided to call it a night around midnight and headed back to the room. I watched a show about Area 51 on TV and fell asleep.

At 6 AM I was awakened by the sound of a very loud, whiney female voice that sounded like it was coming from the hallway. It turned out that it wasn’t the hallway, but the room right next to ours. The women was carrying on a conversation at a volume level just slightly below that of a Mastadon concert. We could hear every single thing she said. At first I assumed that she was just drunk and would soon pass out in a stupor thus ending the sunrise performance.

I was wrong. For a while I was able to slip in and out of sleep, only to wake up to hear the conversation in mid stride. The broad just wouldn’t shut up. At one point I remember saying “Just stick something in her mouth to shut her up.” You could hear a male voice in the room as well, but the man was speaking at a much lower volume, as if he actually realized that it was 6 AM in a hotel occupied by others.

My wife had also been awakened by the noise and was actually able to follow the conversation enough to figure out what was going on. The women it seemed was a whore or at least a part-time whore (what with downsizing and all, it was bound to happen) and was trying to strike a deal with the guy in the room next door.

I couldn’t figure out why she didn’t just leave when the guy wouldn’t cough up the money she was requesting ($200.00). I always thought hookers were very time conscious
and didn’t waste time negotiating.

But the bargaining continued, they ordered room service and ate, blabbing away at full volume the whole time. It became apparent that although the women was asking for money in exchange for sex, she wasn’t a street hooker or even an escort. It seemed she had met the guy in a nightclub at the Luxor and spent the night clubbing , drinking and gambling with him before coming back to his room and demanding $200 to tickle his tutu.

At some point they turned on a porno movie . The sound of recorded moaning and “Ohhh Gawddddddd thundered out of the room and filled the hallway of the hotel. It was nearly 7 AM by now and people were beginning to leave their rooms for breakfast. Maids were pushing carts down the hall to clean rooms and yet the sounds of prerecorded orgasms were bouncing off the walls. I kept thinking that someone would complain, maybe a family with kids headed off for a day at an amusement park or something but no one did.

After a little while, the couple apparently reached a deal and the sound of their moaning and thrusting began to mix with the porn movie to make it seem like there was a full scale Roman orgy taking place in the room.

At some point I drifted back to sleep thinking that maybe this was a new service provided by Vegas hotels: Would you like a whore in your room sir, or perhaps in the room next door?

We woke up late, ate and began the long hike down the strip, stopping in as many casinos as possible. They all begin to look alike but each one has the potential for offering something really odd, so you have to take a look.

Between Bally’s and the Flamingo we stopped in a small, dingy looking place called “Bill’s Gambling Hall”. The place was very old Vegas, with ratty carpet and lot’s of old people who looked like they started smoking when they were still in the womb.

My wife and sister motioned me over to a corner of the casino where the music of Elvis was being sung by what I assumed was just another one of the seemingly endless Elvis impersonators.

As my eyes adjusted to the dark, I slowly became aware of what first appeared to be some sort of walrus in a tent-sized, black jump suit. Whatever it was, it seemed to actually be human and it was doing a fairly good vocal imitation of the King.

As I got closer I realized that what I was seeing was clearly the worlds largest Elvis impersonator. This guy was massive, making even the latter-day, fried banana and quadruple cheeseburger for breakfast Elvis look svelte. It looked like someone has poured three hundred gallons of flesh-colored yogurt into a tight black jump suit.

He was billed as “Big Elvis” and there’s no way to argue about his title. The guy had a huge throne-like seat that he held court in. He would stand for 30 seconds or so before slumping back down into his wooden ass-harness.

The guy did actually sound like Elvis though, which is more than I can say for most people who pass themselves off as the King. But visually, it just was too much to take. I kept feeling like I was gasping for breath just watching the guy and I was afraid to get close to him because of the sweat that was launching itself from his torso.


The rest of the trip was fairly typical of a Vegas visit. Brides and grooms walking down the strip and through casinos in full wedding garb, Mexican guys handing out cards that say “ Have a women delivered to your room in 20 minutes” and the usual drunken tourists.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Up On The Roof




I spent several hours on the roof of Fresno's Security Bank building today. They are replacing the sign and I was there to shoot pictures of the event. The guys doing the work arrived late so I wandered around the balcony of the 14th floor and shot pictures of the streetlife below. The light was nice and these pictures ended up much better than the sign.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Postcards from Yosemite





I finally got my Yosemite tourist project into the paper and on the web this week. I've been shooting these pictures for years but began to hit it hard again this summer. I consider it a work in progress and am going to try and get an exhibit and at least self publish a book. I'll be looking for any sort of grant money I can scrounge to finance the rest of it.

Making these pictures has really gotten me excited about photography again. It's really easy to get beaten down by the daily grind of a newspaper job. I'm hoping that I can keep the excitiment going for a while.

I'll be flying to Texas later this week to shoot football. I hope I can somehow find a few non-football pictures to make along the way. Even one nice picture from a road trip would be a victory.

There's always a ton of stuff to do before one of these trips and I usually feel anxious in the days leading up to them.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

It's Check Yourself For Ticks Month



Most of the interesting pictures lately have come on the way to, and from assignments. Lot's of busy work in the summer.
I have resurrected my Yosemite tourists project and have some really nice new work to add to my body of work. I will be doing something for the paper and probably a slide show with audio for their website but my goal is to do a book. I may have to settle for a self published book and an exhibit but it's better than nothing.

But for now, here are a couple of pictures made while doing other things.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Nothing Is Ok



It's been a long time since I updated. A few odd things have happened. I was photographing yet another candlelight vigil (or as I heard one yokel call it a "candlelight virgil") when it finally happened. A women set her hair on fire during the vigil. I knew if i attended enough of these events I would live to see the day when someone torched themselves. She was quickly extinguished without injury but there's nothing like the stench of burned hair to put a damper on a candlelight vigil. It has now set the bar quite high. I will not be fully satisfied next time unless there is some sort of explosion.

It diddn't make much of a photo though so instead enjoy some barn owls right before they attacked me.

Bring Me The Head Of Donald Trump

Friday, May 04, 2007

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Space Invaders Replace Children


Shaver lake? I hardly know her…
Exeter? I never even entered her….
Filter? I never touched her…
Shelter? I was never near her…
Scooter? I diddn’t even see her…
Parker? I never even drove her….
Fax Her? I don’t even know her name….
Skier? I never even spoke to her….
Fowler? I can’t stand her…

Sunday, March 04, 2007

The Sporting Life


For the past six years or so, most of my assignments have been sporting events. I’m not a huge sports fan but I enjoy photographing games because it offers one of the few opportunities in newspapers to capture real emotions. Too much of what passes for journalism these days is so heavily manipulated by PR firms and handlers that sports has become one of the last homes for capturing the decisive moment. I find that sad, but it’s reality.

Still, shooting sports has it problems as well. Each year it seems to get harder and harder to get the access necessary for good pictures. At the Save Mart Center in Fresno it has become a game between the photographers and arena security. It usually goes something like this:

Security guard: “You can’t sit there.”
Photographer: “What? I’ve been sitting here all season. Why, can’t I sit here?”
Security guard: No, you’ve never been able to sit here. Move”
Photographer: “I was sitting here 20 minutes ago and no one seemed to mind.”
Security guard: No you weren’t, now move or I’ll have the police arrest you.”

A couple of years ago I was actually led out of the arena by a couple of cops only to have a representative from Fresno State call and apologize the next day, after I had missed half the game. Every game it’s something different, I don’t remember the last time I was left alone to shoot pictures without some douchebag in a yellow jacket, or in the case of the SMC a red sweater getting in my face like a shit –eating fly.

Every once in a while despite all the bullshit I manage to make a picture that captures the essence of an event. This past Friday was one of those nights. After spending at least 20 minutes trying to get a pack of troll-like cheerleaders to move out of my way, I was able to get a pretty nice image of Fresno State players and fans celebrating in a huge, mass scrum at the end of the bulldogs last second victory over Boise State.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The Who Kick Ass In Fresno




It's easy to dismiss The Who as irrelevant dinosaurs making the rounds of the nation's arenas as an nostalgia act. In fact, when tickets for their Fresno show went on sale last year I nearly did just that. I quickly came to my senses and realized that it would be like a devout Catholic missing a visit by the pope.

First of all, I along with many fans have trouble calling the current version of the band The Who. Keith Moon and John Entwistle were far more than just sideman. Moon was clearly the greatest drummer in rock and Entwistle was an innovator on his instrument (the solo on My Generation alone is enough to elevate him to the front of the pack) with a wicked sense of humor and a slew of wacky songs like "Boris The Spider" to add to the act.

Still, The Who has always been the canvas for Pete Townshend's art and as one of the 5 or so most important figures in rock history even his minor works are considerable. Time and loss of bandmates has done little to erase that fact. The group's new album "Endless Wire" is their best since 1975's The Who By Numbers and the passage of time has only made the older music more relevant.

I've seen most of the living guitar Gods and without a doubt the greatest live exhibition of rock'n' roll I've ever witnessed was by The Who in 1980 at the Oakland Colisium Arena. Townshend was possessed that night, he looked angry, wearing a Clash t-shirt with the arms cut off and scowl, he played like his future depended on how much noise he could generate. Roger Daltry was still able to scream, I mean real, honest- to- God bloodcurdling, "i'm going to explode" screams. It was perhaps the first and last time I could describe a show as frighting. The band played so loud my head rang for three days. It was an amazing experience and set the bar pretty high for future shows.

I knew Sunday's show in Fresno wouldn't match the intensity of that Oakland show, I've seen the band three times since that night and although the shows were all great, that night in Oakland was a near religious experience and things like that just don't happen twice.

Still, I wasn't prepared for how good they would be. Our seats were good, maybe 12 rows back, right in the center and at times it felt like we were in a small club. The band no longer plays at brain damage volume levels and the sound Sunday was as crisp and clear as any arena show I've seen.

The show included a number of the usual hits but unlike the recent Stones tour, The Who played 7 or 8 songs from their new album. It was clear that the audience wasn't too familier with the material but the slower, mostly acoustic set was one of the highlights of the night.

Townshend, for his part is still a master of the power cord, windmilling his way through "Baba O'Reily" and a powerful Tommy medley as an encore. They ended the show after the 20 minute blast of heavy metal from Tommy with a quite acoustic number called "Tea and Theatre" from the new album, with just Daltry and Townshend onstage. It was a dramatic way to close a show instead of the usual high energy number.

Daltry's voice is still powerful and by choosing songs that are clearly still within his range they avoided exposing any overreaching which could have been ugly.

Townshend in particular seemed in a great mood, joking with the crowd about the pronunciation of the name Fresno " Is it Fre-Sno?" and playfully banging himself over the head with his acoustic guitar after a slow number.

Replacing Moon on drums was Zak Starky, Ringo's son, who somehow manages to play more like Moon than anyone i've ever heard. Pete's brother Simon adds backup guitar and vocals and was pressed into duty as an opening act Sunday when the scheduled band got stuck in a snowstorm on the way from Reno. Simon did a short, entertaining set of acoustic songs including one called "I Want a Sex Change".

In any case, The Who is not even close to being a nostagia act, I'd argue that most, if not all newer bands couldn't come close to holding the stage with the presence and power that they did Sunday. And even if some of the best moments were from 30 year old albums, I hardly think that negates the importance of what they do.

And beside that, when was the last time you heard anything as good as "Who's Next or Live at Leeds'? Seriously, I love new music as much as anyone, my favorite album from last year was by the Arctic Monkeys but I'm still waiting for music as compelling as work done by the old farts.

Maybe that makes me an old fart. If so, i hope the smell drifts your way.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Hobbits, Spam, Hookers and Bad Air and Malls.






We are home safely after two weeks in the Philippines.

The air is so bad you can taste it, the diet is so heavy on fried foods it would not be out of place in Graceland and everywhere you go you are assaulted by the sounds of wild dogs, roosters, honking cars and 24-hour karaoke bars. Still, it’s never dull and I enjoy the stimulation as long as I know I can come home.

One of the highlights of the trip was a visit to the Hobbit House in Manila. The place is legendary among travelers and I’d wanted to visit for years. It’s a folk music bar that features a staff of waiters made up entirely of midgets.

It didn’t disappoint and it turned out that the music was actually quite good. The waiters were pleasant and not once did I feel as though I was going to be bitten in the knees.

The Hobbit House is located in a red light district and before stopping in to visit the wee folk we had dinner in a Japanese restaurant next door to a whore house. The women were all gathered by the door with little numbers pinned to their tiny shorts. All along the street back to our hotel we passed windows with “hostesses” posing for all to see.

We spent far more time at shopping malls than I wanted because no matter how big they are, they begin to look the same after a week. The malls are huge though. Literally the size of four American malls they each seemed to have thousands of stores and entire floors of restaurants.

Another somewhat alarming thing we noticed in the Philippines was the level of security everywhere we went. As our taxi entered the driveway of our Manila hotel, security guards stopped the car and searched the underside of the vehicle with mirrors for bombs. Once outside the car we had to walk through the kind of metal detector they have in airports to get to the lobby. This process was repeated as we entered the parking garages of the shopping malls and every store including fast food joints was guarded by guards toting sawed off shotguns. I also noticed that as employees left the stores in the mall for lunch breaks the security guards searched them by patting them down.

I always thought of Spam as White Trash food but it turns out it’s quite popular in the Philippines. At one store I saw an entire aisle, at least 50 feet long stocked with nothing but Spam in about 20 different varieties. Elvis would be proud.

Ok, that’s all for now, I’m still tired from the trip and I’m sure you have better things to do than read my ramblings.

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Drive By Shooting









I'm trying out a new digital point and shoot this week. I borrowed it from work so that I can take it with me when we go to the Philippines. I no longer want to carry a film camera on the road and I want something as small as my Leica. This camera has a 28 mm lens and can shoot video . I hate the shutter delay but it seems to be just part of the trade off for being so small.

I don't have any instructions for this thing so I'm simply pushing buttons and experimenting. My goal is to use it for a very different style of photography than my usual newspaper work.

Today I shot all my pictures from a moving car.

Enjoy.