While trying to find a way to pick my wife from the Corporate Cycling Challenge, I came across nature at it's cruelest. I quietly crept up and made this frame.
On one steamy day in August, I and my coworkers were tasked with two things. Get photos of trash day for an upcoming story about the new trash hauler contract with the city of Omaha and get a photo that illustrates the hot weather. I then asked my boss, "I have a trash truck on fire, which one does that count for?"
I've talked a lot about timing when it comes to photography, now I am going to talk about how to do in situations when you show up late. I always preach is, if you show just "on time," you are late. For the purposes of this blog, I will refer to being late by the conventional standards. I have been late to various assignments in my life, some were my fault, others were not, but I won’t go in-depth to the causes. I was one of the first journalists on the scene when a dorm caught fire at UNO . Breaking news situations are definitely one where being on-time is a key to a great photo, but oftentimes hard to accomplish. According to police, this gentleman was shot while trying to rob a business Most photographers will agree that the sooner you arrive at breaking news, the greater potential for photos. I once knew a photographer who did not want to go to a fire 30 minutes after it happened, she didn’t think it was going to make ...
The flood of 2019 has been long and arduous to document. I think it is worth mentioning that it is much more worse to live through. In May I went to Hansons Lake near Bellevue, Nebraska. It is a lakeside community right next to the Platte River that flooded badly in March. We returned in May because the recent rains have caused the Platte to rise again. Residents and volunteers were trying to shore up existing levees and build new ones. This is one of the few times while covering the flood that I felt concerned for my safety. I could see the river inches from the top of the levee and oozing through lower parts I was standing on. I made sure to have my escape route in my head in case the levee gave way to the river. At the lake, I kept hearing splashing and I noticed that the fish kept jumping out of the water. It seemed to in different places and random times, but I felt compelled to try and capture one with my camera. We were fortunate that it did not give w...
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