Archive Page 44

Chicago’s Hypocratic Oath

Illinois has some of the toughest laws in the nation when it comes to taking pictures or shooting video of police in action. Depending on the specifics and the mood of the officers at the scene, it can be construed as a felony offense to whip out that video camera to catch moving pictures of our police at work.

Which is why it comes off as hypocritical to listen to law enforcement types rant about how much they need to have those cameras installed on lamp-posts and buildings all over the city – creating the impression that “someone’s watching you” at all times.

Source: Chicago Argus

Patriot Act Extension Doesn’t Get Enough Votes

Yesterday House Republicans were not able to get the seven votes needed to extend the Patriot Act. The failure is being chalked up to resistence from the new so-called Tea Party Republicans.

As we all know, the Patriot Act has been used as a catchall justification for abuses of power and the stripping of many of our basic rights, including photographer’s rights. (How many times have we heard authorities throwing it around and around when faced with a “dangerous” photographer?) It’s expected if Democrats don’t like it (as Rep. Dennis Kucinich said, “it represents the undermining of civil liberties”), but with the Republicans’ opposition, could this mean our leaders in Washington actually recognize what a dangerous law this is?

The Washington Post reports:

Rep. Steve Southerland (R-Fla.), a freshman who voted yes, said the measure is “going to need some examination going forward, so all I did today is just, hey, instead of making a wrong decision, we’re just going to do a little more due diligence to make the very right decision to both protect our security as well as protect the civil liberties of the American people.”

It’s not like I want to come down in favor of any of our political parties because I think they’re all self-serving and corrupt. But one thing I can say for the Tea Party movement is that if it is really for less government intrusion and a more faithful following of our founding documents, then I agree that the Patriot Act does not fit into either concept.

Source: Washington Post

MOPLA: Enter Now

MOPLA, which is Month of Photography Los Angeles, is accepting submissions for its annual April shows — for both a general show and the Smashbox Group Show. Their aim is to celebrate photography in all its forms in the great, creative city of LA. (Last year our own Shawn Nee participated in the group show.) 

Deadlines are in February and March. Find out about submissions here and here.

Interview: Ara Oshagan’s “Juvies”

Interview by Shawn Nee and Julie Haire

Ara Oshagan is a Los Angeles-based documentary photographer who delved into the  world of the juvenile criminal justice to make “Juvies,” a moving series about the bleakness and despair of kids who are caught up in a broken system that has nothing to do with rehabilitation.

The project was developed in tandem with  filmmaker Leslie Neale, who created her own documentary on the subject. Oshagan graciously submitted to a long interview with us, and he has a lot of good insights on getting access, his process and the state of documentary photography today.

Leslie Neale’s documentary Juvies focuses on juvenile offenders in an LA County detention center. Can you tell us how you became the set photographer for the film?
Leslie had seen some of my work from Armenia and she invited me to shoot with her. From very early on in the project, I did not consider myself to be a set photographer but in a sense a collaborator, a documentary photographer working in parallel with the aim of developing a parallel project, a book that would be about the same kids and same topic.

For a project like “Juvies,” we’re always interested to know how the photographer was able get to permission to photograph such a difficult subject that involves state government and the prison system. It seems like you must have jump through a lot of hoops while cutting endless strands of red tape. Can you explain how you were able to gain access?
Leslie Neale was a magician when it came to access. She was politically very well-connected in high places (for instance she knew the DA well), and she had some very key people in Corrections supporting her work. She also had an assistant who dealt with access on a continual basis. Often we would get shut down during a shoot and then we would have to wait in a waiting area until Leslie or her assistant made some calls and then we got clearance to shoot again. It was a HUGE and tireless effort on her part because, as you know, no one wants to give you access. I was supremely fortunate to be part of her crew.

What was the routine like that you went through each time you entered the prison?
We came with a cart-load of equipment—camera man’s equipment, sound person’s equipment, myself with my camera gear. A list of all our equipment would have to be sent in ahead of time and then at the entrance to the prison, our equipment would be checked against that list. Then we would be allowed in. Always one or two corrections officers would be with us the whole time we were there.

Photographers are artists who are generally allowed to be creative and free-flowing, so was it at all challenging to photograph inside a place where there are many rules and restrictions?
This was the most challenging part of the work for me. My usual process is to wander and photograph whatever interests me in, for instance, a certain region or around a topic. And I tend to spend a lot of time with people until they are comfortable with my camera and myself. To make the kind of images I am interested in, I need people to be in their natural way of life and ignore my presence. My book Father Land is based on this process. And I always work alone. So, in prison, not only are you not allowed to wander too far away from the two corrections officers who are accompanying you, but you also have to deal with a film crew shooting at the same time and basically shooting the same thing you are shooting. And when you are in the yard for instance, all the prisoners are interested in you and looking at you and want to speak to you. Plus to be able to shoot anyone besides the youths who were in the film, we needed to get signed releases. So, the whole process was very cumbersome and not at all intuitive.

Did ever you feel as though your access was being limited, or that you were being censored regarding the people and things you could photograph?
Due to Leslie’s magic, we went in as a documentary crew and were able to shoot in places very, very few people can—in the yard, in the dorms, in the eating areas, pretty much everywhere. But every once in a while we would get shut down as I wrote above. I personally was not censored on any specific occasion—like someone never told me “Do not photograph this.” But there were ground rules, which were: do not wander away from the officers who were accompanying us and no photos without releases. As long as we stuck to those rules, we were fine. If they felt you respected their ground rules, they respected us in doing our work. This was in the state prisons.

In juvenile hall, it was totally different story. The same respect was there, but you absolutely could not photograph anyone’s face besides the kids who were in the film. And there the corrections officers did not want to be photographed either. And in juvenile hall, we met the kids in the film in a “video production” classroom and rarely went anywhere else. When we did go to shoot their “dorms,” for instance, it was just us and our kids, no others.

Continue reading ‘Interview: Ara Oshagan’s “Juvies”’

Katy Perry Gets Fixed In Post

Photoshopping magazine covers is not news, but still, one can never get enough of a side-by-side comparison, as in this shot of Katy Perry’s Rolling Stone cover from last year. Turns out that awe-inspiring cleavage is not entirely natural … what can we believe in anymore?!

Shawn Nee / discarted

Are MLK, the Great Depression, WII, 9/11, and the Super Bowl all the Same?

Sorry to digress from the subject of photography, but how infuriating was it to watch Michael Douglas equate this year’s Super Bowl to some of the most important moments and people in the history of the United States?

Does he really believe that a football game is on the same playing field (yes, pun intended) as Martin Luther King, Jr., the Great Depression, John F. Kennedy, World War II, the Dust Bowl, a woman’s right to vote, the Berlin Wall coming down, and the Challenger explosion?

What a fucking joke.

There has been one MLK in this world. How many Super Bowls have there been, and can anybody name the team that won last year’s Super Bowl without Googling it?

What arrogant NFL P.O.S. came up with the idea for this spot? It was like watching Apple mistakenly equate themselves to Rosa Parks a few years ago when they posted her image on Apple.com after releasing some pointless updated iPod or iPhone.

If I was capable of puking, I would have after watching this video.

On a personal level, and contrary to what Douglas claimed, my personal journey through life has nothing to do with the NFL, the Pittsburgh Steelers, or the Green Bay Packers.

Note to NFL:

Stop putting cancer survivors and very emotional music that tugs at people’s heartstrings under bullshit television spots and then get off yourself.

Update: Thankfully, others in this country are able to see the absurdity of this commercial as well.  Comments via YouTube:

This was a great video – right up until it equates the Super Bowl with some of the greatest struggles of the past century. It denigrated those real struggles. – elizik

Why are they presenting historical events that caused great change with garbage such as the Super Bowl? It’s just football. It doesn’t and never will change anything. This video was a perfect example of taking a game too seriously (that seems to be considered normal for some reason). They throw/hit random objects around on fields. Entertaining? Maybe to some. Important? No. – ShitDizzleTheThird

Utter garbage. How people can get up in arms over a “wardrobe malfunction” and not this trash is beyond me. – Phreakiboi

Seriously? It’s FOOTBALL. It doesn’t matter. It’s a bunch of guys running back and forth on a field beating the shit out of eachother over the possession of a brown egg.  Comparing it to people like Martin Luther King Junior? Really? REALLY? It’s just football. – chekwob



Shawn Nee / discarted

Flying Into LA: Badass Cockpit Video

For your Friday kick-back: Here’s an engrossing cockpit video of a plane coming into LAX at twilight via the SADDE Six Arrival (which means one of the routes pilots can use for landing). There’s a little more on YouTube about the backstory here.

Photography Link Roundup

Photo by Kira Wakeam

•  People who live in Fort Greene are cool, yo.  Check out Kira Wakeam’s slideshow of the Brooklyn neighborhood’s residents and see how they do it. [The Local/New York Times]

•  Oops. Flickr accidentally deleted a user’s account…and 4,000 of his photos. [Switched]

•  Amateur photog David L. Foster got a photo of a train plowing through a snow bank, but still, he says, “I wish I had 20 more seconds.” [Boston.com]

•  Can you handle one more awesome timelapse video, this one of snow accumulation? But this has the bonus of Detroit Free Press photographer Brian Kaufman explaining how he did it. [Freep.com]

•  And just because …”The best in sexual harassment stock photography.” [PhotoZZ]


Spam Blocked