Archive Page 41


Photo by Jean Penders

Wisconsin Revolt

Media producer Finn Ryan and photographer David Nevala collaborated on this video to highlight the stories behind the union protests in Wisconsin.

(via Wonderful Machine)

Shop Walmart at Your Own Risk

People of Walmart is a site that celebrates the clientele of America’s largest retail chain. They feature photos of large and colorful and weird people, and everyone gets a good laugh. Until they spot their own mother on it — and then they go to the local Fox news channel and complain.

Melanie Wheeler, of Ypsilanti, Mich., told My Fox Detroit that her mom was unwittingly snapped and now she’s on the site with the caption “A member of the Canadian division of the trench coat mafia.”

“The thing is if you take a picture of someone in public, they’re in public,” she said. “My argument is you’re in a Walmart. We have no privacy shopping? … So, I could go into any store and take a picture of anybody or their children and put it up on a web page.”

Yep. That’s just the world we live in now. As the Fox legal analyst who weighed in said, it’s  totally legal and, in public, there is “no expectation of privacy.”

Source: My Fox Detroit

Pennsylvania Cop Lies About Wiretapping Law, Then Backtracks

Are You Anybody’s Favorite Person?

Here’s another video from my idiotwork archives called “Are You Anybody’s Favorite Person?”, which was made after watching Miranda July’s “Are You The Favorite Person of Anybody?”

Although, the video has less than 6,300 views on YouTube, the project really impacted mememolly who uploaded her own video to the site, where she talked about the concept and asked people if they thought that they were somebody’s favorite person.  Since her video was uploaded in 2007, it has been viewed more 3 million times and has influenced others to answer the question in their own response videos.

Photography Link Roundup

Photo by Alfred Wertheimer

•  Through May 15, the James A. Michener Art Museum in Doylestown, Pa., is featuring two amazing photography exhibitions: “Elvis at 21” by Alfred Wertheimer and “Muhammad Ali: The Making of an Icon” by various photographers. [Michener Museum and The Morning Call]

•  The PR guy behind the Desperately Seeking Susan poster shoot explains how it all happened — and how the now legendary shots of Madonna and Rosanna Arquette, as taken by Herb Ritts, were repurposed for Playboy, Vanity Fair and innumerable other outlets. [My Life as a Blog]

•  A team of students helped design the balloon camera that will capture the space shuttle Discovery launch this afternoon. It will photograph the shuttle from an altitude between 80,000 and 100,000 feet. [Space.com]

•  Mark Laita’s “Created Equal” looks at different subcultures with parallel photographic portraits (i.e., black Baptist minister and KKK members and polygamist and pimp). [Brain Pickings]

•  “Delayed Gratification in the Happiest Place on Earth “: a collection of photos capturing the agonizing waits at Disney World. [Arin Fishkin via Boing Boing]

Seeing Both “Sunshine and Noir”

Photo by Thomas Michael Alleman

Lens recently did a post on Thomas Michael Alleman’s “Sunshine and Noir,” a paean to the urban landscapes of Los Angeles and New York. The series was originally created in the wake of 9/11, and the Holga photos have a melancholy bent.

The series is great and mesmerizing especially since they were shot using a toy camera. If you know Los Angeles — and I mean know it, beyond the glossy veneer of freeways and palm trees — you will really recognize the city’s quirky and incongruous tableaus.

NPPA Protests JetBlue’s Treatment of Photographer

The National Press Photographers Association has come out in support of photographer Steven Sunshine, a New York Daily News contributing photographer, who was taking photos of blizzard-induced flight delays at JFK airport in December. JetBlue security personnel told Sunshine he should have requested clearance three days earlier, despite the fact that the Sunday storm’s severity was not known until the day before. Sunshine was escorted out of the terminal and, when he filed a complaint with the Port Authority Police, which oversees the airport, they threatened to pull his credentials.

“For you to have singled out Mr. Sunshine, who identified himself as a credentialed press photographer is an insult to our profession and members, who are also part of the flying public. While I appreciate your concerns for the safety of your patrons and employees I would hope that you can understand that photography/videography by itself is not a dangerous or pernicious activity.”

Source: NPPA Advocacy Committee

Mrs. Brandywine

Made this a long time ago under my old pseudonym idiotwork.

Mass Mayor Says No to Funding Police Legal Fees

When politicians talk about cutting budgets it’s amazing that they go after things like teachers and firefighters. Wouldn’t it make more sense to cut the needless expenses brought on by agressively incompetent and/or abusive civil servants?

As the Eagle Tribune reports, the mayor of Lawrence, Mass., William Lantigua, has the right idea: He says the city will no longer pay the legal bills for police officers who are being sued for misconduct charges. Over the past three years, the city has paid $1.2 million defending police officers in civil cases. (Twenty new police officers could be hired for that money.)

Instead, Lantigua says he will hold to the police unions’ contract, which says the city only has to pay the $5,000 retainer for a patrolman and $7,500 for a superior officer. Lantigua says officers have two options when they are being sued — to use one of the three city attorneys or have their unions pay for the defense.

Police brutality cases are especially costly, and there six lawsuits going to trial in the next six months. Lawrence recently settled one case, paying the plaintiff $400,000. So you can imagine, at this pace, we’re talking about the city potentially paying out over $2 million this year.

This idea is especially relevant in the case of photographers’ rights too, because the courts almost always respect those rights. To wit: a Fox TV camera operator got $1.2 million from the City of Los Angeles, Antonio Musumeci recently got an undisclosed settlement from the federal government, and infamous Amtrak photographer Duane Kerzic reportedly got a five-figure sum from the national railroad.

Really, this is a no-brainer. Spending millions on these lawsuits is just egregious waste. And in many, many cases it is entirely preventable. Some police officers don’t seem to understand the severity of abusing their authority because there are no personal repercussions. If the city foots the bill, and they get a new job, where is the disincentive?


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