Days End at Graceland

Long day. Even with a late start.

Shot some B-roll on Beale St. in Memphis. What an electric downtown. Talked to a couple of cops on duty and though we didn’t record them, they had some interesting things to say about the city government. More on that when we’re not so tired.

Then, on to Days Inn at Graceland. It has not been our best hotel experience ever. . .

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Running Late

Okay, so our itinerary is a tad ambitious. We haven’t quite figured this out yet — the how of doing all this — and it’s taking us longer than we expected. 

That’s normal, we suppose. Nonetheless, it’s frustrating. Combine that with forgetting to pack one of our meds and having to go through a process to get it replaced on the road and I’ve ended up with a bit of a. . . 

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Thar Be Dragons!

We may be out on the edge with this latest addition to our workload but today debuts the new audio update to the 2016 Who Do You Love Tour (WDYL), Notes From The Road.

It's self-explanatory and is less than a minute long. Give it a listen.

FUD — Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt

When we first started making preparations for the 2016 Who Do You Love Tour, it was all about possibilities. Rolling the idea around in our head, we begin to imagine what we could do in a short film to shed some light on the current presidential campaign. 

Like many people, we are confused and confounded at the situation in which we find ourselves. As Paul Turley, a retired Corning employee put it this evening here in Muskogee, Oklahoma, This country "is in deep doo-doo."

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Can't Come With? Send Your Questions!

While we make final preparations to leave the comfort of home and hit the asphalt for the 2016 Who Do You Love Tour, we're also finalizing the questions that we want to ask each interviewee.

To that end, we'd like to enlist your help in making this film. It takes a village, right? What would you like to know from as many as a few hundred people (hey, it could happen!) regarding this presidential election, the candidates, the process, and the issues. We may be talking to kids, too. You never

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MPF: Multiple Points of Failure

The stress has been building for a week. Our road trip to film people across the South giving their opinions on the 2016 has any number of elements, and the failure of just one can stop everything in its tracks.

We were hoping to be able to leave bright and early Monday morning, April 4th. That's part of the stress. With so much going into making this trip successful, there was bound to. . . 

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Details, details. . .

The devil is in the details, they say. But so is God.

For this road trip and the film I'm shooting while traveling, I've faced a number of challenges in finding some of the things I need — batteries, lights, equipment of various types and rarity. But none have compared to the difficulty of finding someone to watch after my cat, SoongiddyDoongiddy Doo. (And, yes, that is his real name. For some reason it never fails to. . .

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The Toys! The Toys!

This is the only time I'm going to post about "toys."

One of the things I love most about working in digital art, photography, audio production, and video is all the toys. Boys and their toys, right?

In the end, however, they're all just tools. And I'm noticing some distinct differences between the "toys" for photography and those used for shooting video.

When I shoot photographs, my kit can be as small or as large as I want, depending on the job at hand. Shooting video is a bit different. Like many photographers who are making or have made the leap to shooting DSLR video, I'm finding. . .

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The Countdown Begins. . .

We’re so close to embarking on our 2016 Southern State Political Tour that we’re counting the minutes. Hence the clock. So, for all of you wanting to know when we are leaving, simply check in with us here for the current schedule. The clock will always be at the top of the current blog. We're planning a three-week tour. You can do the math on our return. But we'll probably have a countdown for that, as well, once we're underway.

If you're just now finding out about our little jaunt around the South, here are the basics: 1) 15 Southern states; 2) God only knows how many cities, towns, and hamlets; 3) 4200+ miles of Interstate. . . 

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We Are Polyglot! Meep!

Welcome to our new and improved website. Look near the top of the page for a new Google Translate button that will allow you to view the site in your language of choice — everything from Afrikaans to Zulu and everything in-between.

Simply click on the button and select your language. It's not perfect but it works pretty well and should allow us to reach a wider audience.

We were moved to make our site more accessible to non-English speakers because we have recently been both teacher and student to a person from Monterrey, Mexico. As we teach her English in preparation for her extended stay in Europe, she has, by simple osmosis, been helping us improve our Spanish. (¡Olé!) So, we decided to extend our newly developed language abilities to our website.

Let us know if you find any problems with the translation. Just click on the Contact form and tell us what's going on. It should also offer you an opportunity to give us what you think is a better translation.

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Coming Soon. . . .

For the past several months, starting in the last days of winter of early 2015, we have been producing a short-form audio program that runs on RioandReyes.com on a weekly basis. You may have listened to it, either on their website or here on ours.

When we started out, it became necessary to give the show a home on the Internet so listeners could hear the show, search through. . . 

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Loss

I’d like to talk about something that each of us will experience sooner or later — loss.

I’m not referring today to the kind of loss that takes with it a few photographs or even a few thousand for that matter.

No, I’m referring to the kind of loss that grips you by the throat and squeezes until you realize that you are just as vulnerable and might be taken, too. At any time.

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Walking the Talk

It's sometimes best to take your own advice. Last week, you and I explored how we could discover new images in our work by taking a little extra time to see what we could see in those lost frames packed away in the dusty folders of our photographic archives.

After a few days working on other projects (The SRO Show #019 / Journey and #020 / Pat Benatar) I came back to give the photos from my latest road trip for a second look.

I found a number of good shots that I'd overlooked before and ended up tweaking a shot that I'd originally included as my "selects."

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Let's Get Back to Normal, Shall We?

Second Passes

I want to talk about finding hidden gems on your hard drive. We all have them. I certainly do and you probably do, too.

In our rush to find the best images from a recent shoot (or one from some time ago), we often will miss some truly wonderful images that might take a little more polishing than the obvious ones we find on our CF or SD cards. 

Pulling back highlights, opening up shadows, cropping slightly different than usual, settling for a smaller print — or a web-only sized image, or masking parts of an image for use in a composite. . . these are all legitimate ways to reclaim images that previously we might have thought of as culls.

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