#2 Hillariuos story.

Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
 
Never underestimate the power of stupidity in large crowds 
(Very freely after Arthur C. Clarke, or some other clever guy)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Doug Brewer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 25. august 2005 03:04
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Survey: Your Most Unusual Shot
> 
> I've been thinking about this off and on for a couple of days, and
> rather than coming up with actual photos, what keep coming to mind
> are the various weird situations I've been in during my long
> association with photography.
> 
> 1. Had a visit from a guy in Elizabethton, Tennessee once. He walked
> in the studio and told me he'd like to have some photos made of
> himself for his girlfriend's birthday. Pretty standard request. No
> worries, I sez, and gave him the nickel tour of the studio. Here's
> the lights, the backgrounds we use, some packages we offer, etc. I
> pencil him in for a week or so later, and bid him adieu. A week or so
> later, of course, I'm in another studio 400 miles away and get a
> phone call.
> 
> "Doug?"
> "yup"
> "There's a naked guy in the camera room"
> "anyone we know?"
> "He says you told him he could have naked pictures of himself."
> "I think I'd remember that, but nothing comes to mind"
> "What should I do?"
> "Tell him to put on his clothes."
> 
> 2. Christmas season, College Square Mall, Morristown, TN, and I'm the
> Santa photographer. It's Friday evening, about seven pm, around a
> week until Christmas, and the place is packed. There's a line of
> fearful children and impatient parents roughly two miles long,
> waiting to see Santa, and I'm shooting two-year-old Nicholas. I have
> a decent shot of him, but I want the winning smile. I go for the big
> gun, a stuffed Mickey Mouse doll, to which I had attached some rubber
> bands. The ploy was to appear to throw the doll toward the subject,
> and boing! It magically returns to my hand. Hilarity ensues. Happy
> kid. Happy parents. Happy bank account.
> 
> Except.
> 
> Mickey continues his flight, FREE! no longer encumbered by the broken
> bands now snapping painfully against my outstretched fingers. It is
> not a soft flight, either. Nolan Ryan himself would have wept at the
> precision, the velocity, the unerring delivery, the audible FUMP! as
> Mickey plowed straight into young Master Nicholas' unsuspecting
> visage. Certainly the throng was impressed. You could have heard a
> butterfly sneeze in the silence that accompanied my frenzied attempt
> to chase down Walt's prized creation.
> 
> And it was bad. Nicholas looked at me, and I saw in his eyes the
> uncertainty, the melting away of trust, the signs that I had, in one
> brief moment, planted the seeds that would bloom into a fear of
> photographers, of Santa Claus, even of Mickey Mouse! It was a triple
> play, ladies and gents, and I was clearly to blame for not knowing
> the condition of my little rubber bands. His little face began to
> cloud up. And then the deluge.
> 
> I was apologizing to his parents before Mickey had cleared the
> intervening distance. I continued doing so as his mother swept in
> from stage right to nab him from Santa's lap and kiss away those
> tears. I felt terrible. I was panic-stricken. In the turbulence I
> looked around. I caught brief glimpses of waiting families,
> shopkeepers, young lovers, punks, and then, I spied Nicholas' father,
> not far from his cooing wife and wailing son, and I was comforted.
> 
> Because he was laughing his ass off.
> 
> 
> On Aug 23, 2005, at 10:26 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> >
> > Q. What is the most unusual subject matter you have ever shot? The
> > most
> > unique? Or the weirdest? Or simply the subject matter that you have
> > had the hardest
> > time "capturing" (either because it was hard to get to, or timing, or
> > movement, or whatever)?
> >
> > Please expound.
> >
> > A.
> 
> 



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