Showing posts with label 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Texas State Football Championships

Two teams (Refugio and Shiner) from the Victoria Advocate's coverage area played in the Texas State Championships in Arlington at AT&T Stadium on Thursday.

Fellow Advocate photographers Mason Trinca and Kat Duncan covered the action of both games while I worked the crowd and looked for more feature oriented photos to help diversify the coverage a bit.

Here are a few frames from the assignment:











Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Single: Boot Fest

Last weekend, fellow photographer at the Victoria Advocate, Mason Trinca, and I, photographed Victoria's largest annual festival over the course of a few days. The event, which took place at DeLeon Plaza in the heart of Victoria, drew thousands of people from neighboring counties to partake in a fun two days of live music, food and games. Check out our gallery by clicking here.

Trace Laza, 4, of Bloomington, rolls around in his blue inflatable ball at the Water Ball pool put on by No Fear Sports at Bootfest in Victoria, Texas on Friday, Oct. 4, 2013.


Friday, May 3, 2013

May Day: Seattle Globalist

Another May Day is in the books. This year I took a different approach to covering the event-- instead opting for an interview with El Comité President Jorge Quiroga.

He's been around the block to say the least; imprisoned for nearly 4 years without charge in Argentina, immigrated to the U.S. with no English experience and now serves as a major voice for immigration reform.

Click the tearsheet below to read a transcript of my conversation with Quiroga. Photos from the day embedded throughout the article:


Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Kumbh Mela

Insanity...

.... is what happens when 33 million people decide to gather in the same place on the same day for the same reason; to bathe in the holy river Ganges during the Kumbh Mela festival.

On the eve of the auspicious and most attended day in the months long gathering, February 10th, I made it to Allahabad via a local bus from Varanasi. Moments after I was lost in a sea of people and beginning to realize the gravity and sheer energy such a crowd generates. Ten minutes later I had a guy try and pickpocket me using an annoying little decoy kid who wouldn't shut up about his "dreams of getting a piece of currency from every country in the world". When an Indian man came up out of nowhere and started telling the kid off in English (why not just do it in Hindi-- your first language?) I knew something was up. The awkward hug he proceeded to give me sealed the deal. Zippered breast pockets for the win...

Darkness came and I went to sleep with plans of an early rise to make it to the river before sunup the next morning. Hours later I woke up, stepped out into the road and was enveloped by the crowd moving excitedly through the predawn cold. 

I photographed during the early morning hours and then decided to get out while it was still possible. Ten hours in the back seat of a taxi with countless misguided turns and a stint of driving in the wrong direction against oncoming trucks on the freeway, to avoid miles of gridlock traffic, I was back in Varanasi. But my journey out of the mighty Kumbh was nothing compared to what some endured-- or didn't, unfortunately. A bridge collapsed that afternoon at the completely overrun Allahabad railway station killing pilgrims who had swarmed to make their way home.

To attend this festival is to see humanity on full display.