Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Johnny Get Your Gun

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

disgruntled-combat-vet-copy1The London Telegraph just published the piece Alex and I did on militias back in May.  We spent an action packed afternoon in West Texas with Johnny Cochran and his friends.   We watched them run shooting drills and enjoyed a delicious meal of  MRE’s (Meals Ready to Eat).  Read the brilliant words from Alex here and browse a few more of my pics below.

John Graves

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

graves-opener

Texas Monthly commissioned me awhile back to photograph writer John Graves for a feature out this month.  It was a pleasure to meet him and hear a bit of an insiders take on the literary history of Texas.  I’m also really excited about the opener design TJ Tucker created out of this shot.  As always, it’s a great pleasure working with the entire creative staff over there.  I’ll post a few outtakes and options later.

Susan Wright Follow Up

Monday, July 26th, 2010

If you are familiar with Susan Wright from my offender series here is a follow up on her story.  48 Hours did a show on her appeal that you can watch here on the CBS website.  Watch for some of my Texas Monthly photos half way in and again towards the end.

Galveston Ferry to Bolivar

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

I was in Galveston the last few days shooting a heart breaking story for Texas Monthly… more on that in a week or two.  Had a great time swimming in the not oil soaked parts of the gulf while getting stung by jelly fish and avoiding sting rays.  Here are a few shots from the ferry from the Bolivar peninsula to Galveston where you are encouraged to feed the gulls.

Sam’s BBQ Revisited

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

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I spent all day traveling back from working a story on Florida’s gulf coast yesterday.  What was supposed to be a quick two leg journey turned into an all day trip that took me from Panama City Beach to Memphis to Nashville to Atlanta and finally back home to Austin.  There was a pretty big group of us that took this journey together when our flight was canceled out of Memphis.  Mostly the conversation was casual, sticking to subjects about work and travel.  It was until the plane finally landed in Austin and the subject of BBQ came up that the entire rear of the aircraft erupted into divided opinions about where the best brisket is or who makes the best dry rub or what wood works best for smoking.  Finally, a conversation with passion that united us all.

Just now I was thinking of that and I remembered this photo.  I shot this at Sam’s, a BBQ  joint on the east side of Austin, well over a year ago and for me it perfectly embodies the uniting aspects that food has in our culture.  I’ve never been totally happy with this shot even though I love it.  Something about the magenta color shifts in the photographs combined with a yellow wall and blue window light make it a color balancing nightmare.  For better or for worse this is the latest version.

Oiled Birds in Louisiana

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Last Monday Alex Hannaford and I set out to Louisiana to cover the story on the wild life rescue and cleanup effort for the Sunday Telegraph in the UK… link to story here.  By Tuesday we were in Grand Isle, LA where most of the oiled birds have been showing up.  We spent most of the day baking in the sun and trying to gain access to a boat that could actually show us where the birds were being rescued and the effects of the oil on the islands off of the coast.  In fact most of the trip was spent just trying to get access, trying to get through red tape, and battling the bureaucracy in charge of wrangling the media.  Here is a great story written by Newsweek that examines the exact problem we ran into.  The following day we drove 4 hours east to Fort Jackson where the rescued birds are being cleaned.  After getting added to the list of legit media allowed in (last month) we were revoked at the gate and then re-added last minute after some convincing sweet talking from Alex.

The scene inside was pretty unbelievable, oiled birds in crates filling an entire warehouse.  Birds were scrubbed down in Dawn dish soap and penned outside to dry 45 min later.  This is where the bulk of the story took shape and where I got the most interesting pictures. The birds fate is yet undecided, the ones that survive will be shipped to the Atlantic Coast of Florida where they will hopefully be safe.  Cross your fingers and pray there isn’t a hurricane or tropical storm this year.

The final image is a poster that I’m working on taken from one of my shots and inspired by Tony Hayward’s now infamous quote… if you are interested in a few let me know and I’ll try to ship them out to you.

Do you like to ride bikes?

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

I do too, but not as much as this guy. Just wrapped up a shoot for Bicycling Magazine and this was one of my favorites.

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12 Baskets

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Oh man, its finally here… all the hard work that our dear friend Robin  has been putting into the new Mobile Loaves and Fishes online publication is finally out.  Check out Twelve Baskets here and pay special attention to the wonderful architectural photos of homeless camps by my beautiful fiance, Ryann Ford.  Also, be sure to check out the always great work of Adam Voorhes and the cover feature that I shot of Danny and Maggy.  Preview below.

Astrophysics + Meavy Metal = A Lot Of Music

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

I just got back from California where I photographed Jon Swift for an upcoming issue of Spirit Magazine (the in-flight for Southwest Airlines).  If you aren’t familiar with him yet then you should be; Jon is an incredibly talented singer-songwriter who is working on scoring the upcoming film “Melali” an upcoming surf film featuring Rob Machado.  If you love surfing, then you need to check this out.  Jon, in addition to being a talented musician, is also a published astrophysicist doing research on the formation of stars using the world class observatories on Mauna Kea, Hawaii.  Here is a shot we made as a joke… if only he was a 70’s prog rocker.

Also, I just had the great pleasure of shooting The Sword… again if you aren’t familiar you should be.  These guys are bringing back metal reminiscent of old Black Sabbath.  Check them out here…  choose any song, you can’t lose.  Here is one of my favorite shots from the shoot.

Regarding new web updates, the Haiti stuff should be going up later this month.  I’m off to Guantanamo Bay in a day or two so its understandable that things have been super busy around here.  Special thanks to my loving and understanding fiance who has been so patient with my travels lately… I love you.

One Portrait from Haiti

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

I just returned from spending 9 days in Haiti with doctors doing relief work.  I shot thousands of photos while I was there and am going to be sifting through them for a long time to come.  I wish I could say that there are a lot of uplifting stories to tell but the reality is that there are not many happy endings.  I think this is some of the best work I have ever done and I will be very proud to share it once the project takes more shape.  For now I’ll share this… this story was the first one to hit me really hard.  This man had been suffering from an infection in his leg for a very long time.  I had to leave the room and almost threw up from the smell while the nurse prepped it for surgery.  His foot was swollen beyond belief and the infection had rotted parts of his calf down to the bone.  To save his life the doctors had to amputate just above the knee.  This portrait was shot minutes before he went into the OR and his leg was photographed just after it was removed.

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