View allAll Photos Tagged interviewing
Interviewed by ethnotraveler about one of my favourite photo that i recently shot in Chennai on New Year
you can read the article here
Larissa Waters (Australian Greens Senator for Queensland and Andrew Bartlett (Australian Greens Senate Candidate for Queensland interviewed by Channel 9. In the city
Melville House - Trade PB - ISBN 978-1-61219-779-1
Ursula K. Le Guin - The Last Interview and other conversations [non-fiction - review no. 0932 - October 3, 2021]
For admirers of the writings of Ursula K. Le Guin (1920-18) this is an excellent source of factual information concerning this exceptional writer. Seven interviews from different viewpoints conducted over the period 1977 to 2018 allows a very public author to express herself on her books and opinions.
I was pleased to read that Ms. Le Guin was an admirer of author Philip K. Dick.
The "Last Interview" is a series of trade paperback books that feature conversations with notable individuals, mostly authors but not exclusively so, that are deceased. This is the third volume I have read. The other two were Ray Bradbury and Philip K. Dick.
Toshihiro Oshima (Tommy Oshima) was ever so kind to let Kai interview him with 10 questions and share with us some of his photos and videos. Read the full interview: 10 Q&A with Toshihiro Oshima - Virtuoso of Visual Creation
Check out Tommy on Flickr.
Note: portrait of Tommy in the banner is taken by Masanori Miyauchi
Kakata, Margibi County, Liberia -- February 4, 2015
In order to identify any and all people that may have been contaminated by the newest Ebola case, the Montserrado County case investigation and contact tracing team interviews community members and anyone else in contact with the newly reported patient--rumored to have traveled from Monrovia to Kakata while infected. The Montserrado Consortium, a brave group of real-life Sherlock Holmes’ figures, is a key component of the U.S. Ebola strategy. It is USAID actions like this that allow the global aid effort to combat and contain Ebola at its source.
Photo by Neil Brandvold, USAID
via Painters' Table - Contemporary Art Magazine: Daily Painting Links on Artist Blogs, Painting Blogs and Art Websites ift.tt/2eDRebk
Kansas City District Natural Resource Specialist Scott A. Rice (left) is interviewed during the July 17, 2014, Springfield Cardinals minor league game by play announcer Andrew Buchbinder on live radio. They discussed water safety and the importance of wearing a personal floatation device while recreating on the water. Photo by David S. Kolarik.
April, 1985 Interview Magazine with Shirley MacLaine. Publisher, Andy Warhol. Brittle condition.
Upfront - Sound Bodies
Interviews - Shirley MacLaine, Behavioral Training: Werner Erhard, Person to Person: Leo Buscaglia, Human Relations: John-Roger, Therapy: Robert Fritz, Crystal Therapy: Linda Waldron, Washington: Senator Clairborne Pell, Washington: Dr. C. Everett Koop, Vitamins: Earl Mindell, Life Extension: Durk Pearson & Sandy Shaw, Books: Patricia Hausman, Nutrition: Nathan Pritikin, Macrobiotics: Michio Kushi, Beauty Care: Janet Sartin, Marketing: Andre Balazs, Cellular Therapy: Aileen Rowland, Dermatology: Dr. Karen Burke, Shiatsu: Eizo Ninimaya, Rolfing: Kayte Ringer & Dr. Louis Schultz, Fitness: Chris Meade, Chiropractic: Dr. Linda Li, Physical Culture: Bob Paris, Analysis: John Cleese, Therapy: Patricia Pearlman, Nutrition: Oz Garcia, Performance: Rachel Rosenthal
Features - Body & Soul, Fashion: Hawaiian Style, Hollywood Photographers Archives, Beat, In Bi-Coastal Health, Awful But True: Health Problems
This band (guy on left) had just played in a small bar in Szombathely, Hungary. The guy on the right was taking photos throughout then after he pulled out this dictaphone and did a 10 minute interview in front of us in the bar. I'm guessing from a local paper or musi magazine,
This shot really captured the discomfort of the band member even though taken in very low light and no flash. Nokton @f1.4 at ISO 3200.
Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck gets interviewed as the majority of his teammates make their way off the field and into the locker room following the annual Seahawks Scrimmage at Qwest Field on August 2, 2008.
If you wanna know a bit more on my photographic work, here is a recent inteview for Mull It Over : mullitover.cc/post/135635325748
NOTE: INFORMATION HAS BEEN RECEIVED ON 4/21/13 WHICH CALLS THE VERACITY OF THIS ACCOUNT INTO QUESTION.
Jo Quasney is a survivor of Hurricane Katrina. Of French Creole heritage, Quasney is a native of New Orleans who was living alone in her house in the eighth ward when the hurricane struck on August 29, 2005. Quasney bred birds and had no way of transporting or finding shelter for the birds when New Orleans residents were advised to evacuate so she stuck it out. Her neighborhood began to flood after she heard an explosion that she attributes to a Halliburton company oil barge breaking through a levee. (For a discussion on the cause of the breech, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ING_4727)
A third of her roof was blown off but she managed to escape upstairs from the rising waters. To this day she has nightmares from hearing her birds drowning on the floor below. She had bottles of water but no food for three days and recalls most vividly the silence around her, hearing only her own breathing, a silence so profound it was deafening. From time to time she waved, in vain, to a helicopter passing overhead.
After the third day, she noticed that the waters had receded sufficiently for her to exit the house. Throwing her briefcase and a small bag of clothes into a recycling bin, she left the house and, turning around to look back, then knew in her heart she would probably not see her home again.
For more than ten hours she pushed her bin through the floodwaters to the Superdome where she endured three horrific days of body odor, people out of control and authorities treating the hurricane victims like prisoners.
She left and started walking along Highway 10 and says she was halfway to Baton Rouge when she got picked up by a relief worker. There was no place to stay in Baton Rouge so she wound up for another three days at the Cajun Dome in Lafayette, Louisiana which was not much better than the Superdome but she at least got a chance to shower.
Authorities suggested that she relocate to Arkansas but she was determined to come to Philadelphia, where she had studied years before. For three days she sat in a chair in the Greyhound bus station waiting for a bus that could get her to Atlanta from where she get her connection north.
Upon arriving in Philadelphia, a very kindly hotel manager at a hotel she was acquainted with from before converted the $68 nightly charge to $60 for the week upon learning of she had survived Katrina.
After a couple days of recuperating, the manager knocked at her door and told her to go to the Wanamaker School. The people there were incredible, she says- firefighters, police and Housing Authority personnel volunteering their off-time. She received food stamps, help filling out FEMA and other forms, a $300 gift card from the Red Cross and relocation assistance. She still maintains friendships with people she met there.
Finally, Quasney decided to accept placement at the Emlen Arms, a Philadelphia Housing Authority building. In her small, but very cozy apartment, she has the company of Ziggy, a parrot rescued from a crack house, a parakeet and a cat. She has amassed a sizable little collection of ceramic elephants, like the one she had in New Orleans, and numerous pothos plants adorn her small living room.
She loves Mardi Gras so that’s what she misses most about New Orleans but she continues the tradition here. She decorates a tree in green and gold, the Mardi Gras colors, and bakes King cakes for the community room. Friends and neighbors usually cajole her into making jambalaya and gumbo.
As she has become settled in her new home, she is now the one regularly helping newly entering residents who often arrive with few possessions. Of her Emlen Arms sanctuary, Quasney says, “They’ll have to carry me out of here feet first.”
Mayor Eric Adams visits the memorial for Brandon Hendricks and does walk and talk with NBC News' Lester Holt in the Bronx on Thursday, July 7, 2022. Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office
Gorgeous Nimrat Khaira Interview in Tashan Da Peg – Gorgeous Nimrat Khaira Punjabi Singer Inerview in Tashan Da Peg. She is Very Talented Punjabi Singer and Winner of Voice Punjab Season 3 (2013) Nimrat Khaira Was Born on 22 December 1992. Nimrat Khaira Mother Goverment Teacher and Father R...
punjabitoday.com/news/gorgeous-nimrat-khaira-interview-ta...
I have several escape routes out of the job I'm currently doing. I applied last week for a 3 year secondment to the Boundary Commission for Wales, dealing with electoral boundary reviews.
Today I had this letter telling me I've got an interview for the job! Here's hoping I get it as I know it would make me feel so much happier than I do now.
You people call me a ghost crab but I have never worked out why. Someone tried to tell me once but the answer was confusing. Because I am a light colour, because I am the colour of sand and you think I am well camouflaged, because I can run fast and hide in my burrow or dash into the sea if I hear your big clumsy footsteps and loud voices, because I come out at night. I was also told you think I am a scavenger.
I agreed to talk off the record today and pose for some photos so as to set things straight. Not true I only come out at night. I’m out here now, aren’t I. And if you sit down quietly here, where the sand is damp, you will see many of my relatives and neighbours. One topic we probably shouldn’t go into is the name we give you human beans. Well, you do stamp all over our homes and chase after and grab us for crab knows why! No wonder we run away from you!
I know that you sometimes confuse us with fiddler crabs, but it’s not hard to tell the difference. In fiddler crabs only the male has one claw larger than the other but with us ghost crabs we all do. We spend a lot of time cleaning our burrows and eating and probably not as much time fighting as the fiddlers. Our eyes are different too.
I showed the human bean how I eat and make small neat sand balls of the remains of my food, how I can carry bigger balls of sand when cleaning out my home, how I throw the sand a long way ( but she’s too slow to get that; we ghost crabs have competitions to see how fast we can throw sand balls and I am the current seaweed record holder), how I can hold my eyes down and make a funny face.
I wanted this human to do a photo story, some writing and a photo, some more writing and a photo to illustrate etc but the human tells me that “flickr” doesn’t do that well anymore. Oh well, I will just have to find a video photographer for my next interview.
Note from the photographer
This photo entailed considerable physical discomfort as the day before I had slipped on seaweed and fallen heavily on my posterior end. This made sitting on the sand to listen to the above very painful and errors of translation may have crept into the account. ( But my camera is Okay ; - ))))
Behind the scenes. Fiona was our technical support during our live interview.
See the video here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=MxTWJ6yu66k
June 10, 2016 | www.TheBlueBottleTree.com | Copyright © Gary Allman, all rights reserved
Bob in Michigan (according the car tag and heavy coat) interviewing a Shell owner for one of Shell's in-house publications.
I have a few of Bob's stories -- will dig them out and post them soon.