Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Business Week
I love the calls that take my photography in a direction that I have been wanting to go. Last week I got such a a call from Kathy Moore at Business Week magazine to shoot a CEO portrait. It took a while to arrange our schedules and find a good weather window, but on Friday morning I photographed Jerry Norman, the president and CEO of the Neptune Society on the Neptune Memorial Reef in Biscayne Bay. My idea for the shot was for a traditional CEO portrait in a non-traditional location, and Jerry was game to give it a try. Of course, the realities of having a person stand on the bottom in forty feet of water wearing only a business suit are quite challenging. Peter Manno and Neil Andrea were my assistants and were essential parts of the shoot. The water could have been a little clearer, but I think that all things considered, we got some great images. Once the article runs, I will post a few more images.
Myth Busters
I usually get one call a year right around Shark Week to shoot for the Discovery Channel. Last year it was for the documentary about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis. This year it was with the Myth Busters crew. Since the program is still a few weeks from running, I probably can't say too much about the show. However, the crew was a lot of fun, and it is a unique set of hosts that can look good filling syringes with dog urine and fecal secretions. (If that doesn't make you want to tune in, then I don't know what will.)

The shoot took place in Nassau and we dove with JP Genasi and Stuart Cove's. I always like getting into the water at Stuart Cove's shark dive. There is nothing natural about that spot, or about 50 Caribbean Reef sharks circling in forty feet of water. However, it is as close to a studio situation as you will ever find for photographing sharks. The white sand bottom produces amazing light, the sharks are everywhere, and if you have an idea that you want to try ... shooting down on a shark, have a shark swim left to right through frame, or panning for a blur, or using the sharks to frame a diver ... you don't have to wait too long for the opportunity. And in most cases, JP Genasi can make it happen. All he needs is a fist full of bait and a chain mail suit.



Sunday, March 23, 2008
Earth Hour Miami
I provided a portfolio of images to be projected at Monday's Earth Hour event at the Bank of America Tower. Amy Rosenberg is a friend from Lara's LegalArt days, and is organizing this environmental event for Mayor Manny Diaz. Unfortunately I won't be able to attend, as I flew to Nassau this morning for a quick Discovery Channel shoot. But if you have the chance, go! And check the Earth Hour site for information about turning out the lights on March 29th at 8Pm, as well as ways to cut power use every day. It is a simple, easy and important thing we can all do.
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Bequia Boats
I picked up a copy of the April Caribbean Travel & Life magazine this morning. I've got a couple images on page 40 with an article by Chris Cox. "The Fleet Petit". I was happy to see that they were finally used. The photos of Christopher Waldron outside of Withfield Sails were some of my favorites of the trip. It seems like a long time ago.




Thursday, March 20, 2008
Hawaii by Land
I have been to a couple of volcanic islands in the past ... St. Vincent and Dominica. Some of the beaches were black sand, and the peak of the volcano could sometimes be seen in the distance. But driving around Hawaii, I saw first hand how these islands are made. The simplest way that I could sum it up was with the following image. I saw the photo as I drove to a meeting with the director ... a flash of three colors through the car window. But they seemed to perfectly capture the natural elements of Hawaii - the ocean, the vegetation and the volcano. I parked the car on the side of the highway and had to hike over an old lava flow until the image looked good through the 400mm.








The Hawaii I was Hoping For
I took two days after shooting wrapped to see some of the Big Island. (I feel a little weird using such a familiar term for such a new place, but I also don't like names that don't really say where you are ... such as "I'm going to Africa." Anyway.) I found Brett LeMaster's company Mele Nai'a through some sort of web search, and I had some great email conversations with his partner Leina before I left Miami. To be honest, all I needed to know was Brett's reputation as a freediver and see the photos of False Killer Whales on their website to know that I wanted to dive with them. I REALLY made the right decision! Spinner dolphins is the basis of their business, and we had just found a pod on Monday morning when Brett got a call about some Pilot whales logging on the surface. Before slipping in the water in front of the slowly moving pod, Brett casually warned me about Oceanic Whitetips that often travel with the whales. And as I sat in blue water waiting for the whales to pass, the first thing I saw come out of the distance was a shark. As it got bigger, I consciously told myself to be ready for an aggressive shark. And it was aggressive, in a slightly disinterested way. On that first pass, I had to stick my fin in it's face to send a message, and I know I was nervous because I didn't think to shoot the shark just behind my fins. It was nice to turn and see Brett behind me. But after that, the sharks were turned simply by eye contact, and I have to admit that I was wishing them just a little closer, just a little closer. Wow are they incredible! Such huge fins. Such amazing color. I have wanted to get in the water with an Oceanic Whitetip for a long time now. I can't believe how seemingly easily is happened.






Hawaii Production
There came a point on Day 2 of the production ... sometime after the wind went quiet on Mauna Kea, and the clouds completely rolled over Parker Ranch, and the production reached a generally low point ... there came a point when one of the clients pointed out that Bob Gordon's company motto is "Making the impossible, possible". Yes, it was more a comment on how impossible the idea of ever completing the commercial seemed at that point. But at the same time it was probably obvious to everybody that the best way to overcome most impossible situations is a talented helicopter pilot. And in Hawaii we had two of them ... Craig Hosking and Don Evans. Plus Akoni Kama, who's job it was to be literally dragged around by a helicopter. Who needs wind when you have a Hughes 500?

The fact of any film shoot is that mornings are early. We had back to back 4:15 am calls on this job. And it was a surreal experience to drive through the pitch black, with an impossible number of stars overhead, following small crew signs along the roadside. And when the sun came up, our location was revealed as something closer to the moon than the Hawaii I was expecting. Mauna Kea was one of the most dramatic and beautiful places that I have ever been.


The fact of any film shoot is that mornings are early. We had back to back 4:15 am calls on this job. And it was a surreal experience to drive through the pitch black, with an impossible number of stars overhead, following small crew signs along the roadside. And when the sun came up, our location was revealed as something closer to the moon than the Hawaii I was expecting. Mauna Kea was one of the most dramatic and beautiful places that I have ever been.
Monday, March 17, 2008
MIT Triathlon
Lara ran the Olympic distance event at the Miami International Triathlon this morning. I have been looking forward to shooting lots of swimmers churning water. However, the swimming portion of all events except the sprint happened before the sun came up. Here are a selection of the few that almost worked. I blame my poor shooting on lack of sleep and the huge amounts of Nyquil in my system. Note: all camera blur on the bike photos is intentional. All blur on the swimming photos is the result of the 7 am start and the 7:29 sunrise.




I am trying to wade through the gigabytes of photos that I returned from Hawaii with. It might take me a couple of days to get something posted.




I am trying to wade through the gigabytes of photos that I returned from Hawaii with. It might take me a couple of days to get something posted.
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Kingman, AZ
I flew home on Thursday from three days in Kingman, Arizona. The return flight on Air Tran (the airline with least leg-room) took us high over the snow covered country. Even though I spend much of any flight looking out of the window, the days I spent in Kingman now make me consider aerial views in a much different light.
This project was part of Bob Gordon's on-going series of commercials. The story dealt with two guys who load their old Jeep into an even older cargo plane, fall out at 10,000 feet and parachute safely to the desert floor where they drive away in search of even more adventure. All skeptical looks by readers can easily be explained by three words ... foreign cigarette ad. (Someday soon I will approach this topic.)
The key shots to this shoot were all done from either plane to plane, or helicopter to plane and some amazing technology was used to for the motion picture photography. Of course, being "the still guy" on a commercial shoot, Space Cams and Snake Heads are not available to me. All of my key shots were taken while strapped into the back seat of a helicopter. (The flight crew thoughtfully provided paper-tape to make sure that the seatbelt stayed closed.) Once strapped in, I was a on a ride that both changed my perspective and made me a part of the action in a very immediate way. The logistics of these sequences were detailed and there is a lifetime of pilot experience that goes into getting a cargo plane, which stalls out just under 100 mph to fly alongside a helicopter that maxes out just over 100 mph. And there is a lot of trust in paper tape by any photographer who sticks his head and camera out into a hundred mile an hour head wind and squints through the viewfinder. I have to thank Craig Hosking for getting me into some incredible camera positions. And for the paper-tape that kept me in the helicopter.
The view from that high above the desert is amazing and in a lot of ways it reminded me of underwater photography. Looking down on all of that neutral negative space, a silver plane literally popped off the page in the similar way to a freediver in the blue or a dolphin on the bank. And the dark horizontal line of the distant mountains reminded me of a still day in the Gulf Strem. The scales were entirely different, but the connected and inspired feeling was the same. I think I could have spent the entire shoot looking at the abstract possibilities presented by the desert far below.
Anyway, it was a tough shoot in many ways, but I came away with some great photography. Orlando Noa and David Dominick of Digital Decaf were a great addition to the still department. And as always, Bob's crew was great to work with. New stop is Hawaii. I am already shopping for a climbing harness to save on paper-tape!



This project was part of Bob Gordon's on-going series of commercials. The story dealt with two guys who load their old Jeep into an even older cargo plane, fall out at 10,000 feet and parachute safely to the desert floor where they drive away in search of even more adventure. All skeptical looks by readers can easily be explained by three words ... foreign cigarette ad. (Someday soon I will approach this topic.)
The key shots to this shoot were all done from either plane to plane, or helicopter to plane and some amazing technology was used to for the motion picture photography. Of course, being "the still guy" on a commercial shoot, Space Cams and Snake Heads are not available to me. All of my key shots were taken while strapped into the back seat of a helicopter. (The flight crew thoughtfully provided paper-tape to make sure that the seatbelt stayed closed.) Once strapped in, I was a on a ride that both changed my perspective and made me a part of the action in a very immediate way. The logistics of these sequences were detailed and there is a lifetime of pilot experience that goes into getting a cargo plane, which stalls out just under 100 mph to fly alongside a helicopter that maxes out just over 100 mph. And there is a lot of trust in paper tape by any photographer who sticks his head and camera out into a hundred mile an hour head wind and squints through the viewfinder. I have to thank Craig Hosking for getting me into some incredible camera positions. And for the paper-tape that kept me in the helicopter.
The view from that high above the desert is amazing and in a lot of ways it reminded me of underwater photography. Looking down on all of that neutral negative space, a silver plane literally popped off the page in the similar way to a freediver in the blue or a dolphin on the bank. And the dark horizontal line of the distant mountains reminded me of a still day in the Gulf Strem. The scales were entirely different, but the connected and inspired feeling was the same. I think I could have spent the entire shoot looking at the abstract possibilities presented by the desert far below.
Anyway, it was a tough shoot in many ways, but I came away with some great photography. Orlando Noa and David Dominick of Digital Decaf were a great addition to the still department. And as always, Bob's crew was great to work with. New stop is Hawaii. I am already shopping for a climbing harness to save on paper-tape!



Saturday, February 23, 2008
February Catch Up
I have been away from the blog for a while now. There may not have been a lot of assignments to comment on, but new ideas, new photos and a trip or two would have found space. I could chalk it up to basic laziness, but to be honest, I am thinking about the consequences of simply putting ideas out there for others to see. It is easy to believe that few people visit a site, and nobody really reads a blog. However, it is an indescribable feeling to become aware that another photographer has paid close attention to your work. Right down to what I called my last show. Anyway, I will leave it at that for now. And for the rest, the rain is pouring here in Miami, and I am right in the middle of a couple of unusual and interesting assignments. Seems like a good time to jump back in.
I always appreciate working with a crew, and the three days that I spent working with Bob Gordon and Pete Zuccarini last week produced some great images. I was hired by Bob to shoot the still photos for an Indonesian soccer tournament campaign. It was set entirely in a pool in Ft. Lauderdale. Of course, footwork is key in soccer, and Pete had guys training for weeks to cross-volley kick and dribble all while holding their breath. At the same time, Matt O'Connor and Harper Hellams worked hard to makes sure there was a ball for every scene ... sinkers, floaters, mid water balls and balls that could fly across the pool. Alex Krim and Neil Andrea provided water safety. We had directors, editors, wardrobe and PA's in a small camp around the pool, and six guys who's specialty is soccer and were very excited to see what water could add to their game. And in the end, it is amazing what happens when a dozen people focus their combined efforts on making something happen in front of a lens. Today I am flying to Kingman, Arizona to continue work with Bob's crew. The next stop will reach towards the pinacle of what a shoot can be when money is only a relative consideration and might make me wonder how an underwater guy ended up in a helicopter.


I always appreciate working with a crew, and the three days that I spent working with Bob Gordon and Pete Zuccarini last week produced some great images. I was hired by Bob to shoot the still photos for an Indonesian soccer tournament campaign. It was set entirely in a pool in Ft. Lauderdale. Of course, footwork is key in soccer, and Pete had guys training for weeks to cross-volley kick and dribble all while holding their breath. At the same time, Matt O'Connor and Harper Hellams worked hard to makes sure there was a ball for every scene ... sinkers, floaters, mid water balls and balls that could fly across the pool. Alex Krim and Neil Andrea provided water safety. We had directors, editors, wardrobe and PA's in a small camp around the pool, and six guys who's specialty is soccer and were very excited to see what water could add to their game. And in the end, it is amazing what happens when a dozen people focus their combined efforts on making something happen in front of a lens. Today I am flying to Kingman, Arizona to continue work with Bob's crew. The next stop will reach towards the pinacle of what a shoot can be when money is only a relative consideration and might make me wonder how an underwater guy ended up in a helicopter.


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