Monday, November 29, 2010

Photo of US soldier in pink boxers turns iconic

Soldiers from the U.S. Army First Battalion, 26th Infantry take defensive positions at firebase Restrepo after receiving fire from Taliban positions in the Korengal Valley of Afghanistan’s Kunar Province. Spc. Zachary Boyd of Fort Worth, Texas, far left was wearing “I love NY” boxer shorts after rushing from his sleeping quarters to join his fellow platoon members. May 11, 2009 (AP)
“Like them, I was thinking about the situation — where was it safe and where was it safe to work,” said David Guttenfelder, photographer for the AP, who was embedded with a U.S. Army unit in the Korengal Valley when a firefight broke out on May 11.
U.S. Army Specialist Zachary Boyd leapt from his sleeping quarters and grabbed his helmet, vest and rifle — but not his pants — and took his station behind sandbags.
Guttenfelder’s photo made newspaper front pages the next day, including The New York Times and Boyd’s hometown Star-Telegram in Fort Worth, Texas. It elicited an immediate smile, but also symbolized the dedication of those fighting in Afghanistan. It put a human face, or backside, on what can seem an anonymous conflict.
At least initially, the soldiers were worried the photo would make them look bad, Guttenfelder said. But Firebase Restrepo, on a steep mountainside where soldiers are on constant lookout for Taliban fighters, isn’t a place for formality: Uniforms have holes in them, and some men wear flea collars because of bugs in their beds, he said.
Boyd called his parents at 12:30 a.m., Fort Worth time, to warn them about the photo. He was legitimately worried about losing his job, said his mother, Sheree Boyd.
Her husband, Tommy, immediately got on the computer to find the photo and roared with laughter, she said. The boxers were emblazoned with “I Love NY.”
“We thought it was such a funny picture but so typical of him,” Sheree Boyd said of her son, who turned 20 on Sunday. “He’s always liked boxers, the wilder the better. But we’d never seen him wear pink before.”
The photo drew a wide response on the Internet. A handful of commentators found it an undignified representation of America’s fighting forces but most supported Boyd. “I think this is great,” a woman named Melissa wrote on a TV station message board. “I wish I had an address for him. I’d send him some that say `Don’t mess with Texas.’”
At the Times Web site earlier this week, a technology officer was surprised to find that one of the top 10 search items was “pink boxers.” It was people looking for the photograph.
Boyd doesn’t have to worry about his job. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, speaking in New York on Thursday, said he wanted to meet Boyd and shake his hand the next time he’s in Afghanistan. He lauded Boyd for having “a special kind of courage.”
Guttenfelder said Boyd was one of the bravest soldiers he’d seen in Afghanistan. Guttenfelder also said he was surprised by the amount of attention the photo received.
“It doesn’t really belong to me anymore,” he said. “You put it out there and it takes on a life of its own.”
He believes that most people recognize what he saw in the situation. “When the Taliban starts shooting, whatever you’re doing, whatever you’re wearing, you run to your station,” he said.
Sheree Boyd said she and her husband had heard from many people expressing admiration for their son. She’s eating that up, as any mom would, but said she appreciates how the photo reminds Americans that it’s the “kid next door” fighting the war.
She said she hopes to see her son back home by the Fourth of July. Would he be wearing pink boxers in any Independence Day parades?
“Don’t challenge him,” she said, laughing. “He just may do it.” (DAVID BAUDER/AP)

Looking Closely at Photographs

David Guttenfelder, AP
Copy/paste the photo and questions to your blog. Analyze the photograph by answering the following questions.

1. What feeling does this photograph create in you, the viewer?
2. What story do you think this photograph tells the viewer? Does it capture something that would be hard to convey in words?
3.  Who or what is the subject of this photograph?
4. Is the lighting natural or artificial? What time of day is it?
5. What colors stand out? 
6. What part or parts are out of focus, if any?
7. What is the distance between the subject and the camera/viewer? What is the effect of this?
8. How is the picture composed? Is the subject centered? Is the "rule of thirds" followed?
9. How personal/impersonal is this photo? What elements make it this way?
10. What strikes you most about the photo? Why do you think that is?
11. What is the background for this image?
12. Why do you think this photograph was taken?
13. Does this qualify as photojournalism? As commercial, casual or art photography, or some other category? Why?
14. Is the photo timely? Does it have a timeless quality? Both? Might it become iconic? Why or why not?
15. What else do you notice about the photograph?

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Life In the Valley Ideas

Seth Patterson
by Seth Patterson

Check out his website for inspiration on cultural photos you can take too!
http://www.wildsnap.com/?set=cultural

The Making of "El Valle"

Presenter:
Seth Patterson

Thursday, November 18, 2010
7:00 pm

McAllen Public Library
601 N. Main Street
McAllen, TX 78501

  

http://www.texnep.org/

Monday, November 1, 2010

Get Inspired! HIdalgo County Photo Contest Nov. 24

Examine the photos taken from the 2009 and 2008 Hidalgo County Photo Contest
http://www.co.hidalgo.tx.us/index.aspx?NID=846

Write down what kinds of photos you can take for your next assigned photo essay "Life In The Valley." (See details on Blackboard)

What ideas do you have?
Where do you have to go?
What time of day would be best?

Choose your best photos to enter in the Hidalgo County Photo Contest by Nov. 24.