MY BETTER HALF...

This woman is cleverer, funnier and stronger than I am. So she can certainly kick YOUR ass...

LEAST ACTION HERO...

So many deadlines and dinosaur incursions, so little time...

JOURNEYMAN...

Lay back and think of the air-miles I'm earning...

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Archive for March 2008

The below video was brought to my attention on my brother's site, but I have to admit that I had to view it twice from the beginning to make sure I'd watched correctly. The advert and the point it makes are quite funny, fascinating and chillingly disconcerting.

Some photographs don't need captions. Ironically this one does. "On the day that the death-toll in Iraq for American troops passed the 4,000 mark (one estimate of Iraqi dead, well north of 100,000) President George Bush was said to be mournful..."

Seriously. Do the people in the White House PR department work for Jon Stewart, does the left hand not know what the right foot is doing or was this a freebie?

Got the second major sniffles of the year over this last week which filled my head with cotton-wool, made me achey and irritable and just made the winter seem more gloomy, though thankfully the sneezes seem to be fading and I'm not in for the long-haul like early new year. I seem to be rattling through my 'To Do' list though my white-board still has a fair few chores that need wiping off in the next week or so.

I've finished typing up the article on LA and the interview with James Kyson Lee and I'll have most of the major news items finished for Impact in the next day or so. Design-wise I'm awaiting event discs from HLWW, but templates are in place so that will be fine once I get started.

On the positive side, I have been commissioned to do more photographs for the new magazine, so I'll be combining a film screening in London with that early next week.

Lots of potential things coming up, but I've learned not to count my easter eggs before they're hatched.

While having a look through my photographs in search of some suitable shots I took in Los Angeles for an upcoming article, I came across some photos I took on one of my old cameras and saved in a TIFF format that I hadn't been able to read until I downloaded the IrfanView program (very useful, I can tell you!). One of the those images was taken quite a while back when the Lord of the Rings exhibition came to the Science Museum in London.
Invited to attend the opening, there were plenty of opportunities to take some shots and one was seeing a fully-fledged Orc/Urukai (sp?) posing outside. It was suggested he emerge from a typically British telephone box and I decided to get a unique angle on the pose. The lighting is a little off as I didn't have much time to set things up, but it still strikes me as a great image...

Well, I'm slowly getting through a ton of work. There's three articles for Impact already finished and later today I'm typing up a piece I've just done with James Kyson Lee (Ando in 'Heroes' and one of the stars of Shutter, the upcoming Hollywood remake of the Thai supernatural thriller). I have some photos of him from a quick shoot I did at an event last year, so that should all come together nicely. Then there's two travel pieces for another magazine (for LA and Biarritz)to get done at the start of next week and possibly some photography to do therafter.

It's also less than two months until my birthday and I'm trying to decide what to do for it, as sitting in drizzly Leeds seems a signifcant waste of my time. Finances are, of course, at the forefront of my mind as I'm making a determined effort to finish out this year on a very favourable fiscal footing, so I can't afford to overly splurge. Sadly, there's no conventions to eMCee this year and none of the more far-flung events inspire me to travel.

I was initially thinking of a big meet-up of some of my American friends in New Orleans - which I haven't been to since before Katrina - but that may have fallen by the wayside as May is a packed month of anniversaries and work for a lot of my friends out there. The idea of a multi-centre US trip like last spring is appealling, but expensive without events to attend. Australia is also on my radar, though it's a long way to go. My friend Kerry's currently out there and having a whale of a time in Sydney, Alice Springs, Cairns and heading down to Brisbane soon. I've already done Cairns/Sydney/Brisbane, but the landmass formerly known as Ayers Rock and Sydney itself remain places on my 'would-like-to-be-there' list.

This year was all about managing the work-rest-play ratios and though my energy levels are still pretty low, I think it's all going okay so far.

Almost a year ago, Madeline McCann was abducted by persons unknown while her family had a meal at a nearby tavern in Portugal. It's obviously distressing for her family and in the year that has followed the investigation has thrown up more accusations than it has answers. But the more I heard about it, the more that central question at the heart of the case kept coming back... why would ANY parent be more than a few feet away from their young child at ANY time on a holiday. If it were my child I'd probably be within a few square feet of the room. The McCanns and their friends weren't even in the building or in sight of their accomodation (albeit just a few minutes away), but enjoying drinks around the corner.

This week: another holiday tragedy.

I have a huge amount of sympathy for Fiona MacKeown whose daughter, Scarlett, was apparently raped and murdered and left on a Goa beach earlier this month. No person should ever lose a child and this was a particularly nasty end. The local police appear to have been totally corrupt and duplicitous in their efforts to cover up the incident (claiming that Scarlett had drowned and there were no signs of injury, when there were bruises all over her body and clear signs of rape and assault - not a mistake you could really make) and it's only MacKeown's tenacity that brought the truth to light. HOWEVER, Ms MacKeown says she has no case to answer as to why her FIFTEEN year-old daughter wasn't with her and was in fact regularly staying with a twenty-five year old tour-guide (whom she was having sex with) and his family while Fiona was up the coast with her other six children for several days at a time. For all the attractions of an alternative lifestyle, and the nice concept of exposing your children to the best of humanity, a parent must also take SOME care and responsibility in a world that is often not as nice as we'd hope or want.

Goa may be more sunny and 'natural' than being back in England where most people Scarlett's age are in school and taking exams - and attractive to those with an 'alternative' lifestyle, but it is also an area rife with drugs, assaults on western women and plentiful alcohol. It may look like paradise, but its no place for an under-age attractive girl on her own... and most adults should and would know that - and act accordingly to place safeguards for their children.
In most cases parents who lose a child feel guilt for the rest of their lives, regardless of whether they could realistically have done anything different. Therefore it's quite amazing to watch MacKeown calmly discuss the fact that she feels not a shred of responsibility in the matter of how her daughter's path led to her death.

If the facts reported so far are accurate, I applaud her fight for her rights and those of her daughter, to bring the alleged killer to justice. But demanding your rights and pointing out others' wrongs (however true) seems to be more en vogue nowadays than demanding a person also accepts their own responsibilities. It's hard to choose to live outside a system and then complain it has failed you.

All power to MacKeown in her battle for justice over Scarlett's death... all good wishes to the McCanns for discovering the fate of Madeline. It's perhaps just a shame, albeit in hindsight, that the same level of attention paid by their parents to their fate wasn't given to their lives in the hours leading to that.


It seems most of the UK is reeling from the 'biggest storm of the winter' (tm pending). However we've barely been touched here in Leeds and, in fact, it was sunny when I woke up. It's now looking drizzly and overcast but if this is the worst we get then I'm sure my stiff upper lip will see me through. I'm sure there HAS been flooding and wind damage elsewhere (the picture opposite suggests so) and I hope everyone's okay, but those weathermen in the south do panic at the merest sign of a snowflake or raindrop, so I wasn't bracing myself. When we do get a big storm here, I promise to moan/gripe as much as anyone.

Thankfully, I also found time to do a little wash and brush up on the site. No major changes, just a slight reordering. Still some changes to tweak, but hopefully it looks just a little better. I still need t0 get around to sorting the photo portfolio etc.

The biggest news-story of recent days is the RAF advising their troops not to wear their uniforms in public here in the UK because they're getting abuse because of the war in Iraq. This is, of course, utterly ridiculous and inexcusable - both on the part of the RAF bosses and the less intelligent members of the public. These people are risking their lives and I don't have to totally agree with the 'cause' to understand the courage it takes so serve your country full-stop. Shout at the politicians, point fingers at the people making a ton of money off the carnage, but don't prod the soldier who's chosen to defend you. They deserve better from their government and us.

Disengage rant mode. Engage article writing mode. Find chocolate.

About eighteen months ago I spent a very cold but rewarding week on the set of Highlander: The Source as it filmed in Lithuania. I went out with Carmel Macpherson and basically spent the week behind the camera, recording activities for posterity, filing a few reports and getting the access most people only dream of. The -10 degree, all-night shoots were worth it, even if the resulting film didn't reflect the passion and energy put into the project by some of the people involved.
The DVD of The Source has just been released in the US (it's already out in the UK) and the best thing on it is the documentary put together by Richard Blanshard. Though my brief foray in front of the camera is little more than a blur in the international release, I do get some minor screentime in the doc. In fact, look, there I am at about 53mins in joking around with Stephen Rahman Hughes (Zai) as we wait for the cameras to roll. Can't think why the fire was so popular! Brrrrrr. The bourbon bottle I'm tossing from hand to hand is real. Sadly the sauce on the Source wasn't.

All in all it was a good time and I'm proud of some of the photographs I took on location. Definitely ones for the portfolio.

Back to the present: While Kerry is currently off swanning around Australia *sigh* there's no rest for the wicked back here. Deadline week for the current Impact this week and already hard at work on the next... words & pictures stop for no-one.
Thanks to MP for the screen-grab

A fairly busy week. Though I got a lot of Impact articles done early so as to free up time later, there's always some stuff still left to do, so I've found myself with short reviews to finish that and also chasing up some photos for some of our key features. We'll go to press on time. Probably.

Away from the typing, I was hired to do some photos for a new prestige coffee-table magazine, highlighting some sleek, fast cars and their dealer. This basically meant I got to breathe on cars (Porsche, Ferrari... you get the idea) that I couldn't normally afford to dream about (or perhaps would want to, given the insurance!). Thanks to Dina who nominated me for the job and hopefully there'll be more opportunities down the line, both photographic and article-wise.

Apart from a couple of nights out with wine and food last week, I'm keeping my nose to the grind-stone and fingers to the keyboard. I'm actually just fine with that as I'm generally too tired and achey - and a bit apathetic - to do be very energetic at the moment and the chance for some early-ish nights or, more likely, late-mornings is no bad thing. I'm not as old as that makes me sound - I think it's just a mix of seasonal weather (windy!!!!) and workload.

I did however discover half a filling/tooth has crumbled overnight and I'll need to head to the dentist tomorrow to stop me inpaling my tongue on my molar.

Oh, no end to the excitement here, I can tell you.