View allAll Photos Tagged Fallout
A custom build fallout Vault-Tec door which opens and closes to 'safely' shelter people from the nuclear winter!
Original copies of Fallout 1 and 2, with manuals. I also have the boxes, flattened out, in the closet.
Fallout Shelter sign along the side of the American Indian Center building in Ravenswood, Chicago. This was one of the first pictures taken with my new Xmas present: the Blackbird, Fly toy camera. It was taken on 1600 speed film and was pulled to 400. I'm not very keen on the white lines that run down the length of my roll, apparently caused by glare off the plastic on the inside of the camera (I shot without the mask, obviously), but I'm hoping that maybe with a proper 400 film like Tri-X they will go away.
fallout sign on an old factory outside Boston mass. this was during the cold war.. i wonder how many people may have died in this so called safe building. it was loaded with p c B's
Lego Fallout MOC. A raider camp set in front of Vault 27, set somwhere in the Mojave Wasteland.
Check out the full review in the video on my YouTube channel: youtu.be/sxg22-fIBoE
Toronto, April 16, 2019 - After witnessing the horrors of war, natural disasters or local crime stories, journalists must often cope with emotional trauma, moral quandaries and PTSD. How can reporters—and newsrooms—manage the personal impact of covering stories that involve human cruelty or suffering? How do these experiences shape future reporting?
To discuss these issues, join our speakers: Anthony Feinstein, University of Toronto psychiatry professor, who is a pioneer in the study of mental health trauma among journalists; Paul Hunter, Washington-based correspondent for CBC News; Peter Akman, investigative correspondent for CTV’s W5; Ioanna Roumeliotis, senior reporter with CBC News; and Patrice Roy, host of En Direct on Radio-Canada. The moderator is three-time Toronto Star National Newspaper Award winner Michelle Shephard, now a freelance journalist, author and filmmaker.
Photos: CJF/Chris Young