Showing posts with label Journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalism. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Lewis and Clark Circus

Lewis and Clark Circus aerial acrobat Chelcie Carpenter, 22, of Savannah, Ga., puts makeup on next to her dog Selena before a show at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. "I get to meet people from all over the world," Carpenter said about working for a circus. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Beginning in March, the Lewis and Clark circus will begin an eight month tour which will include up to three performances each day. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Aerial acrobat and owner of the Lewis and Clark Circus Lena Dotsenko performs at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Lewis and Clark Circus clown Vandeir Dos Reis leads an audience volunteer into the ring during a performance at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Lewis and Clark Circus aerial acrobat Veronica Betancourt, of Orlando, Fla., performs at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Various juggling batons and beanbags sit ring-side before a Lewis and Clark Circus performance at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)
Lewis and Clark Circus aerial acrobats, from left, Chelcie Carpenter, Lena Dotsenko and Veronica Betancourt laugh during an intermission at the group's performance at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Lewis and Clark Circus performing dog, Tiko, walks around the ring during a show at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Various brushes and paint sit on a work stand at a Lewis and Clark Circus performance at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

A Lewis and Clark Circus performer walks out of the ring at the end of the group's performance at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Jan. 24, 2014. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)







Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Texas Rage in a Cage MMA Fight

Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas hosted the Texas Rage in the Cage MMA fights on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Fighters prepare by stretching and taping their hands in a back room at Victoria Community Center before the start of the Texas Rage in a Cage MMA Fights on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013 in Victoria, Texas. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Professional UFC Fighter and host of the Texas Rage in a Cage MMA Fight, Diego Sanchez, left, introduces the evening's scheduled bouts at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Evan Ellerbe, left, lands a punch on his opponent Jordan Holy, right, during an MMA fight at Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Ruben Aguirre, of Victoria, steps into the cage before the start of his bout against Carlo Avendano at the Victoria Community Center in Victoria, Texas on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Kody Perez, right, lifts up Jay Martinez, left, during their fight at the Victoria Community Center on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013 in Victoria, Texas. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Jay Martinez, top, attempts to choke Kody Perez, bottom, during their fight at the Victoria Community Center on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013 in Victoria, Texas. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Jay Martinez, top, punches Kody Perez, bottom, during their fight at the Victoria Community Center on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013 in Victoria, Texas. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Defending 125-pound Texas Rage in a Cage champion Jerry Dakota Stewart, of Harlingen, makes his entrance before his fight at the Victoria Community Center on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2013 in Victoria, Texas. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Turkeyfest 2013

Each year, a turkey racing team from Worthington, Minnesota travels to Cuero, Texas to race its coveted turkey, Paycheck, against its Texan rival, Ruby Begonia, in a tradition steeped in history and folklore.

For more information, check out Advocate reporter, Elena Watts' story here.

Clayton Lantz, right, carries Ruby Begonia after winning the race at Turkeyfest in Cuero, Texas on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.

Paycheck, left, from Minnesota, and Ruby Begonio, from Cuero, wait to be transported to the start line for their race at Turkeyfest in Cuero, Texas on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.

Erwin Rath, of Cuero, sports his Ruby Begonia shirt at Turkeyfest in Cuero, Texas on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.

Ruby Begonia Race Team members, from left, Clint Clark, Mary Beth Finney, Terri Warwas and Clayton Lantz run towards the finish line at Turkeyfest in Cuero, Texas on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.
Miss Cuero 2013 Contestants wait for the start of the turkey race between Ruby Begonia and Paycheck at Turkeyfest in Cuero, Texas on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.

Annette and Erwin Rath, of Cuero, are awarded for their combined 32 years of service to Turkeyfest in Cuero, Texas on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.

Members of the Paycheck racing team and the Ruby Begonia racing team celebrate together after the conclusion of the race.

An inflatable turkey rides through Cuero, Texas at Turkeyfest on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013.



Coping With Dementia

Mary Ann and Ernest Zepeda have been happily married for over 50 years. The past four years have been a struggle, however, as Ernest's mind slips further and further away as a result of Alzheimer's disease. I recently spent an afternoon with the couple as they shared memories-- or at least, for Ernest, what was left of them.

Mary Ann Zepeda, of Victoria, looks through old photo albums with her husband, Ernest, at their home in Victoria, Texas on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2013.

For four years, Ernest Zepeda has struggled with dementia and the onset of Alzheimer's disease. His wife, Mary Ann, first became concerned when Mr. Zepeda seemed transfixed by hallucinations of people hiding in the bushes in the couple's backyard.

Since Mr. Zepeda's diagnosis, Mrs. Zepeda has sought support from church groups as well as educational books and DVD's on Alzheimer's disease.

Mary Ann and Ernest Zepeda walk through their living room at their home in Victoria, Texas on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2013.

Since Mr. Zepeda's diagnosis, Mrs. Zepeda has taken full responsibility for his care.

Old cassette tapes line the wall at the Zepeda family's home in Victoria, Texas.

Despite Mr. Zepeda's deteriorating condition, he still finds time to play music, something he did professionally in the 1960's and '70's.




Victoria Advocate | October 4, 2013


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.


Saturday, September 21, 2013

Single: Rain Delay

When it rains in Texas, it rains hard in Texas...

Hard enough to completely cancel the religious spectacle that is Friday night high school football. Friday night's game at Memorial Stadium in Victoria, Texas was the first I've covered for the Victoria Advocate, a newspaper I'm currently here completing a multimedia internship with.

I was expecting a pretty standard evening of shooting-- grab the first half, then transmit at halftime before heading back to the newsroom-- but the story quickly changed when lightning, thunder and a torrential downpour roared into the area and forced a cancellation of not only the game I was at, but also every other game going on that evening within the paper's coverage area.

In short, the story was no longer football, it was weather. I snagged this photo before scampering back to the press box to dry out:

Victoria East High School cheerleaders, from left, Anna-Ashley Spence, Kirsten Click and Sydney Warner huddle together in the rain at Memorial Stadium in Victoria, Texas on Sept. 20, 2013. Heavy rain and lightning would eventually cancel the game between Victoria East and CC King midway through the first quarter. (IAN TERRY/ITERRY@VICAD.COM)

Victoria Advocate | September 21, 2013

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Kumbh Mela: Seattle Globalist

Check out The Seattle Globalist for my short essay and set of photographs from this year's Kumbh Mela festival in Allahabad, India.

It remains-- and will always remain-- one of the most intense experiences of my life.

To see the article click the tearsheet below:


Sunday, September 30, 2012

Myanmar Part II

My experience with Sittwe, located in Myanmar's northwest Rakhine State, began long before I stepped off the plane and onto the primitive oceanside airstrip that welcomes visitors to the former fishing village.

Upon returning to Yangon from my trip north through Bagan, Kalaw and Inle Lake, I set out in the morning's humidity to see if I could buy a plane ticket for the following day. My first stop was just downstairs-- the lobby of a small guesthouse I'd stumbled on with a few other travelers my first night in Burma.

"No foreigners allowed," mumbled the manager after a quick phone call to a local travel agent. His firm  dismissal came as a bit of a surprise; the evening prior, I'd received nothing but smiles and nodding heads from the front desk upon mentioning that I was interested in booking a ticket to Sittwe. My bags were packed, equipment charged-- I was practically fishing for my wallet when I received the disappointing news. 

But, as I'd come to learn quickly in the weeks prior, every "no" is at the very least as good as a "maybe" in Burma.

So, with that thought in mind, I walked out to the street and flagged down a taxi. Or, at least that's what the sign on the roof said-- many taxis in Myanmar have a greater resemblance to forms of transportation you may find in an episode of The Flintstones than any vision of a typical Western car-for-hire. The day before, I'd stepped into one of these vehicles only to arrive at my destination sufficiently soaked. A mid-drive downpour had come in through the taxi's four nonexistent side windows and drenched the interior. The driver didn't seem to mind though as he sped through the afternoon traffic hawking blobs of red betel nut spit every few minutes, some of which would find its way back into the car via the open window I was sitting near behind him.

My destination after the encounter I'd had at my guesthouse was the domestic airport where I hoped to speak directly with an airline. And, as it turns out, Sittwe was suddenly (and quite mysteriously) no longer closed to foreigners. I flew out the next day.

What I found in the ensuing week was a quiet town. But, as my days there came to pass, it became increasingly apparent that the peaceful atmosphere had come with a severe cost. The Muslim Rohingya's had, for the most part, been run out of town. Essentially, there was just no one left to fight with.

In June, a group of Rohingya men allegedly raped a Rakhine woman which set off a week of conflict between the two groups. The Rohingyas, whose ancestral roots can be traced to nearby Bangladesh, have lived in Myanmar for generations. Today, most live in camps near the border, wanted by neither Bangladesh nor Myanmar as Burmese President Thein Sein made clear when he stated that he would gladly send the ethnic minority group to any country that would accept them. 

On my third day in Sittwe I visited a local monastery where I met a young man who could speak basic English. I told him that I'd seen the burned out remnants of a Rohingya neighborhood but still had yet to come across any Rakhine houses that had been set aflame. Together we walked out to the road where he had arranged for a bicycle taxi to pick me up and after a few minutes I was on my way, at an excruciatingly slow-- amusingly slow-- pace. We continued at this speed past small shacks, over the numerous potholes that dot the back roads of Sittwe, and then, to my surprise, right through a gap in the barbed wire fencing of a military checkpoint.

Once inside, I was taken by a group of local Rakhine men down a side street where the road opened up to the charred remains of what was once a thriving neighborhood. Far across the field, a group of children played amongst the wreckage. 

"Rohingya," said one man, the distaste in his voice bordering on fanatical with its intensity. Moments later, after I'd taken a few steps closer to the kids, the men called me back, as if worried by some matter of proximity I may become infected with evil just by the presence of the rival group. 

The following day I was invited for tea by a group of men sitting in a circle of plastic chairs on a sidewalk near the ocean. The men have been meeting for years in the same spot every evening after work to talk about politics and Buddhism, the philosophy of the Rakhine people. On that particular day "Niban", the Burmese word for what is more commonly known as enlightenment, was the topic of discussion.

After some time, the conversation turned to the ongoing conflict. I asked the men how, as devout Buddhists, they could possibly condone the violence that had taken place in Sittwe. 

"We have tolerated the Rohingya people for years," said one man. "But we've had enough of them disrespecting our culture and disrespecting our women." 

It was clear then that the path to "Niban" did not include living in harmony with the Rohingya people.


Sittwe, Myanmar. 
In a Rakhine neighborhood, only the front steps remain of one home that was burned down in June.

A boy flies a kite among the charred remains of what used to be a Rohingya neighborhood in Sittwe, Myanmar.

The flag of Myanmar hangs in a burned down Rakhine neighborhood.

On Sittwe's main street, Rakhine men get their hair cut at a barber shop.

On Sittwe's coast, a young monk collecting offerings is reflected in the mirror of a motorcycle.

A member of the Burmese military stands watch as evening traffic passes by. A curfew of 7 p.m. was in place which left the streets nearly empty at night.

A woman passes by a parked police truck in Sittwe, Myanmar.

Barbed wire fencing blocks the road to an area of Sittwe where some Rohingya remain. 

A man flies a kite in the late afternoon on Sittwe's coastline.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Myanmar Part I

The past month has been a whirlwind of flights, trains, bus rides, broken computers and perhaps most discombobulating; a sudden and unexpected change in continents.

I left Thailand for Myanmar (Burma) on Aug. 25 after spending a week preparing for what would be a 17 day venture into the rapidly changing country. Things were looking up; my visa application went through with no hitches, my Thai Baht had been successfully converted into perfectly crisp U.S. Dollars-- only brand new unblemished bills are excepted in exchange for the local currency, Kyat, in Burma-- and despite monsoon season, the weather report wasn't even looking too bad.

Then, because of a lengthy list of details that I'll spare you from having to read involving my partial citizenship, I realized that I needed to move to Denmark. Like, soon. Like, I probably-shouldn't-be-galavanting-around-Asia-right-now soon. Like, immediately-after-I-get-back-from-Burma-is-the-only-way-this-will-possibly-work soon.

So I did.

And now, after getting settled into an apartment in Copenhagen-- courtesy of a good friend-- I am now finding the time to sit down and really take a close at my take from Burma.

My trip was essentially divided into two parts: Number one being the sightseeing and touristy beginning of my time in the country and two being the last five days, in which, I traveled to the town of Sittwe in the northwest Rakhine State where conflict between Buddhists and Muslims (frequently referred to as the "Rohingya" people) has been simmering since June when, in one single week, thousands on both sides were displaced from their homes after a violent string of murders and arsons took place.

But, before I post images and experiences from Sittwe, I think it would be better to start with something more broad-- something that shows something more subtle going on in Burma. At the core of it, the country is undergoing rapid changes. Just last week, oppositional party leader and National League for Democracy (NLD) chairperson, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, met with President Obama on his own soil-- a political appearance that would have been unthinkable a few years ago when Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi was being held under house arrest in Yangon. Then, earlier this year, she was elected to parliament in yet another move that seems to hint at a more democratic future for Myanmar.

The future I heard locals speaking of varied from place to place. On a night bus somewhere outside of Inle Lake, a business man spoke of the plethora of possibilities as he flipped through files on his iPad-- his legs crossed underneath the traditional checkered longyi he wore together with a pair of weathered sandals.

In Kalaw, a small mountain town in Shan State known as a popular starting point for treks, I drank tea with a Punjabi guesthouse owner on a cloudy afternoon. His prognosis for the country he grew up in was much more grim.

"We cannot get passports, it would take years," he said, speaking for himself and other non-ethnic minority groups that inhabit the country. "But for someone with a connection to the government-- who knew the right people-- it would take just a few days."

Such division is apparent in Burma where the what-is-new clashes with the what-used-to-be-old each and every day.


Wearing a traditional Burmese "longyi", a man walks through the grounds of Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar. The pagoda is believed to have been built some 2,500 years ago.

A young couple check their smartphones as a monk reads a newspaper at Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar.

A goat herder tends to his animals near the Nann Myint viewing tower in Bagan, Myanmar. The 60 meter tower officially opened to the public in 2005 to provide a higher vantage point to see the over 2,000 ancient stupas and pagodas that dot the horizon of the surrounding area. Despite ample qualifications, Bagan has not been awarded a UNESCO World Heritage Site which some believe is due to the modern restorations some temples have undergone as well as the construction of new buildings such as the Nann Myint Tower. 

A woman walks past a Daw Aung San Suu Kyi t-shirt for sale at the Bogyoke Market in Yangon, Myanmar.

Crowds gather near the the Yangon central bus station in the late evening.

A young boy sits in his home outside of Kalaw, Myanmar. "It his our dream to live in a home like this," said his parents of the picture displayed on the wall behind him.

A boy holds a BB Gun to the head of a young Buddhist Monk at a festival in Bagan, Myanmar.

Wearing the white cream derived from tree bark as traditional make up, a girl sits along side a dirt road outside of Kalaw, Myanmar. 

A young couple share a roadside kiss after the night bus they were riding on broke down in the early morning on its way to Bagan, Myanmar.