Day of weird (and cold) assignments
I know its been awhile since I made a post, but this day could not be cut down to facebook size… so here’s the day:
Today was a day about as varied as any I have had at the YH-R. Thankfully it involved most of my day inside because it was coooooold today. My photo day pretty much went from shooting a convicted sex offender at his place of residence to a portrait (and video) of a Christmas light fanatic outside in the snow with his lights going crazy. The full day walk-through is below the photos.

This photo of one of the Tourist Motel residents and his cat will not run in tomorrow's paper, but it is one of my favorite of the day.

The final shot of the day, froze my and reporter Pat Muir's collective butts off in the snow waiting for the lights to animate just right with the background music of the "Transiberian Christmas" song... I had about a quarter inch of snow on my head when it was all finished.
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Once I got in, went through the 20 odd e-mails from people letting us know about their crazy Christmas lighted house, then added them to our google map for the public.
Went to the morning budget meeting, found out that a news story about a particular “motel” in town had probably closed leaving residents out in the cold. It’s a pretty big story considering this was essentially a follow-up story that we broke about the place being riddled with code violations and another knowing we were greatly limited for art because no one from the property wanted to be on camera.
So I headed off armed with the shop 400 2.8 and my kits to the motel, was lucky enough to catch officials talking about the closure of one building, not the whole thing, as we first believed. Moved on to ask said code enforcers what happened, interviewed him with my iPhone, then met up with the reporter to talk to managers and residents about the relocation of people to other vacancies at the motel.
The residents varied from mothers with young children, immigrants from as far away as India and of course an unintentional shot of a multiple child sex offender. That’s where the photo comes in at top. He wasn’t being moved, but was part of the color I saw living all around this motel. I didn’t think of asking ‘are you by chance a sex offender’ while I asked questions, but after returning to the office our cops reporter recognized the name and so this photo now becomes part of the Web gallery.
Continued plugging along after getting the photos and gallery set on that assignment to work on Web work, iPhone app testing (for our YH-R beta test app) and getting packed up to shoot a night portrait of one of the crazy Christmas light setups in the community.
The assignment had a narrow work window because the guy who set this music animated house up was only around for a couple hours this week. So a night shot was in, the house was in full glory and the music blared Elvis’ “Blue Christmas” and music from the Transiberian Orchestra. The only thing… it was cooold and snowing, a lot.
So much for the big stobes. Go to the backup equipment and the gaffer tape. After the interview, I had our intrepid reporter Pat, hold an extended light stand with one of my flashes mounted on it with cardboard gaffer taped around the end to give it a spotlight effect from above. Then I put the camera on a tripod and handheld another flash with a softbox on it for fill. After I got the one shot I was confident was in focus (because of the pitch black without the flash and the snow foiling with the AF) and with the house lit up in the most complete manner, I put the still equipment away and pulled out the video stuff. I went ahead and shot the house musically going through “Blue Christmas” about four times from different angles then put it away to shoot secondary stills — inside. Overall, I’m OK with the outdoor portrait, but the snow was coming down and our willing victims were freezing. Ultimately it was a challenging situation that I made it through but know I will do differently next time. (Once I do the video I will post it here)
Now that I’m home and warmer, I can say that it was a strange day where the weather changed dramatically in a short amount of time, the subjects were all over the map and I was able to adapt to the environment at hand. If only I had more time in the day…
-TJ