Is it Photoshop?

Posted 07/11/08

Questions raised about Iranian missile-test photo.

 missiles


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Photo of the year

Posted 06/23/08

6mxgtdxmf8h9

You gotta look at it for a solid moment (click to enlarge). It’s got a couple/few different levels and it’s one of the best uses of Photoshop I’ve ever seen.

There’s the whole picture-in-picture thing, the fact that it’s all the same guy, the fact that the picture he’s holding is the picture being taken behind him….

It’s a shame I don’t know who the guy is. He deserves major props.


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Pro-photography bumper sticker

Posted 06/9/08

A bumper sticker I just made and put on Zazzle. Anyone can buy it. Tell Remind the world.

 

tl-photography_is_not_a_crime_bumpersticker

 

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Today’s definition of irony

Posted 05/19/08

I took this on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge:

irony


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How should photographers deal with cops?

Posted 01/29/08

Many of you know that I wrote a… thing a while ago called “Legal Rights of Photographers” that outlines when it’s OK to take a photo and when it isn’t. There are a lot of people who have the wrong idea –e.g., they think you can’t take a photo of a minor, or when on private property, and so on, without permission.

Cops are not immune from inventing laws in their heads. People have posted about troubles they’ve had — cops who claim “It’s illegal to shoot this or that,” citing security or 9/11 or the Patriot Act or some other nonsense.

But here’s where I need some help. Bert Krages has a terrific guide called “The Photographer’s Right” that talks a lot about what your rights are when confronted by private citizens (e.g., security guards) who want you to stop taking pictures. But he doesn’t talk much about dealing with cops.

Here’s my question: Can anyone out there give advice for dealing with the police when you know you’re in the right? I know the obvious stuff, like “be polite”; I’m looking for more detail from someone who knows police procedure.

For example, if a cop demands that you turn over your camera, you can legally refuse. But just because you can doesn’t mean the cop knows that, and he’s the guy with the gun. So what can you say that will actually resonate?

Can you ask him to radio someone? (One person told me that he was detained briefly by the police at a scene, but when they contacted the local DA’s office, they were told to let him go.)

If he threatens to arrest you for taking pictures (which he can’t do), how can you stop him or at least give him pause? Should you ask him what law you’re violating? Or will he ignore you?

If he demands to see your photos (and you don’t have to let him), what can you say without being a jerk that will convince him he’s going down the wrong path?

In short, I need someone who knows cop-speak, police procedure, or both who can tell me what ‘magic phrases’ a photographer can use when confronted by police for taking legal pictures — something that will hopefully result in the cop grudgingly letting the photog go about his business.

Lots of people have ideas and advice, but I really need someone who has an ‘in’ of some sort — someone I can cite, or who can point me to a resource I can cite.

Thanks!


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