ruby.monkey
Veteran
Very appropriate, Michael! 😀
I imagine that the original poster sees himself rather more like this...
At least the offending photographer will be safe. 😉
Very appropriate, Michael! 😀
I imagine that the original poster sees himself rather more like this...
So.. let me guess, using leica 'properly', maybe a silver leica hanging on the neck with a smily face, will buy someone the name ''a truly nice artist and photographer'' and distinguish him from jerk/a'hole..
And Canon Nikon tele users can never have that name.. even they finally get a black Leica and say ''hey, finally I get a light portable camera! I no longer want my neck hurt so Imma just put it in my pocket!''
Ad the reason they buy black is just silver runs out, or, they don't like them, who knws, who cares.
I couldn't find the original source, but this post reminds me of this great Bukowski poem.
a photography poem
The photographer in question is an a'hole. As far as I am concerned a part of the unwritten "code" of street shooting is that if someone does not wish to be photographed then the photographer should respect that, smile, wave and move on. Good karma to him. But if they don't do this and push the issue, then they should not complain if they get belted in the gob by someones fist. I am not advocating violence mind you - just reflecting that disrespectful behaviour can attract a disrespectful and sometimes physical response. Its impossible to understand the state of mind of a stranger in the street. Maybe they just had an argument with their wife and are in an uncompromising mood, maybe they are cheating on their wife and don't want to be photographed. Maybe they came from a culture where being photographed is a hostile act by dangerously autocratic authorities. You just don't know - so a proper person respects it when they realize that a particular person does not like being photographed. And don't quote law and precedent at me. That's not the issue - its about good manners. Of course the banana with the camera probably fancies himself as a papparazzo and like many of his breed thinks its OK to provoke people to get a reaction. Like I said - what an a'hole.
I often wonder why people mind having the picture taken in public places. What is it they are worried about? What exactly do they think these pictures could 'do' to them?
The real question for me is WHY people don't want to be photographed.
Contrast that with England, where children sometimes seem to be taught to actively fear adults in general and being photographed in particular...
In this country the chances of an accurate account of these events being believed are, I think, minimal. The issue wouldn't be that the boy was breaking the law and disturbing the peace of a Sunday morning, it would be why a man on his own would, according to the boy's account, be out taking photographs of children. Anyway, I didn't wait around to find out.
True, but so do drug dealers and hit men.Actually Roger I think there are a huge number of people who could benefit from anger management, they are skills that can be taught and that can and do change people's lives for the better, and even people who provide anger management courses have to eat. There are many worse rip-offs in the personal development world.
Perhaps living in rural France gives you a different perspective to those of us who have to drive on overcrowded roads and battle through major cities for work every day. 😎
Dear Steve,No, none of that, you're trying to put words into my mouth.
Imagine yourself walking down the street. At one corner, a beautiful blond 20 something woman takes your picture, quickly and discreetly, with a film Leica, gives you an open, friendly smile to say thank you and moves on. At the next one, a poorly dressed, shifty looking middle aged man with a DSLR and long lens blasts off 5 quick shots of you and your family and then pointedly looks away and shuffles off before you can make eye contact and get a feel for what he might be doing.
Forget the cameras, can you honestly say there's no difference in the nature and quality of those two interactions, whatever age or sex you are? And I say that as middle aged, balding sometime DSLR user 🙁
Then there's always Greece (among other places), where the hitch-hiking "thumb up" gesture apparently means the same thing.... and another thing; I wouldn't have said the finger was far from "the international sign language" of disapproval, its use is more common in the US and its acolytes I would have said ... much of the rest of the world manages with the traditional two-fingered salute popularised so well by the touring British soldiers over the years
the streets and places that we congregate are an epic and continuing tale of our species in all of its beauty and ugliness. What's not to love about that?