Monday, November 24, 2008

Valencia - New Music Video

I was the Director of Photography on a quick bang em up music video gig in Philly about two months ago. My friend Chris called me today to tell me he saw the video on the front page of Myspace. It already has 100,000 views. Craziness.

Where Did You Go?






Thursday, November 20, 2008

The Fray Update - Thursday

Whilst taking breaks from hours of editing, K Michael Esquire and I, L. R. Blackhurst the IV, like to play rounds of golf in the Office Professional Players Golf Association (OPPGA). Our course of choice is the Brickyard Open and so far I've won two season championships.

Back to editing. Film done any day now.

Friday, November 14, 2008

The Fray Update - Friday

1. Tomorrow, Saturday, the 15th, go to your local Barnes and Noble and pick up a copy of Billboard the magazine. There will be an article in there about the Fray with two of my photographs. I just saw this article online, perhaps its the same text, just with new photographs!

Billboard - Exclusive The Fray Debuting Single On ABC

2. Next Friday, the 21st, the viral video I directed for The Fray's new single, You Found Me, will premiere online first at the band's official website, and then at Amazon.com, and possibly iTunes. This will be the first listen anyone will have of the new single which is pretty awesome. This viral video is also a theatrical trailer of sorts for the documentary we're currently in post production on about the band. In case you missed my last post, the film has an official title, 'Fair Fight', and will be released with the album in February!

So excited.....

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Assorted Documentary Trivia

The documentary that will be released with The Fray's new album officially has a title, Fair Fight.


Assorted Documentary Trivia:
175 hours of footage
145 reels
14 months of filming
87 days in a studio
3,242 individual clips
51 pages of log notes
51 complete scene ideas
1,630 GBs of hard drive space

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Yes We Can

I cried last night as I watched Obama speak. I've never been more proud, in my 28 years on this planet, to be an American.

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This is our chance to answer that call. This is our moment. This is our time - to put our people back to work and open doors of opportunity for our kids; to restore prosperity and promote the cause of peace; to reclaim the American Dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth - that out of many, we are one; that while we breathe, we hope, and where we are met with cynicism, and doubt, and those who tell us that we cant, we will respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people:

Yes We Can.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Found Photo

I found this photo today when looking for some other lost photos.

Why I'm Voting

Going to lay it all out. Lay it all on the line (well lay it all on the HTML of the WWW). I believe that across the board it is best to be honest about your political opinions and feelings and therefore I am going to lay out the reasons for which I am voting for Barack Obama instead of John McCain.

1. Religion

Religion can't not be involved in politics. The distinct separation of church and state is one of the founding principles of our nation. As everyone remembers from their US history lessons settlers arrived on the shores of North American hundreds of years ago to escape religious persecution. As free citizens of this nation we have the choice to practice whatever religion we choose, including the choice of no religion at all.

I am a Christian yet I will never be able to agree with the idea of my personal ideas being completely right in the moral and obligatory sense of the word. My ideas and morals are no better than the next man and therefore there should never be a reason to force them on anyone else. Obama is a man of faith as is McCain. The difference though is that McCain feels that his ideas in life are more right for every American. As he would have it every person in this land will no longer have the ability to choose which morals in life they abide by, for they will have to abide by his. He is seeking to take away the freedom of choice in reproductive rights and the freedom to choose who we want to spend our lives with, merely because he thinks those who are different than him are wrong.

To put this in layman's terms. I could say I don't like the Backstreet Boys CD but I can't say that the Backstreet Boys CD is bad because there are many people who think otherwise.

2. The Supreme Court

McCain consistently says that he will not impose a litmus test on any Supreme Court nominee yet without any uncertainty he would never nominate someone to the bench who does not share the same religious views he does. How is this separation of church and state? His litmus test is obvious.

Obama on the other hand is a Constitution expert. He has a masters in Constitutional Law and taught for years at the collegiate level his knowledge of this important document. This is why he understands that appointing judges to the bench does not come down to a personal point of view but instead what is better for the nation, not for a select group of individuals who feel a certain way.

3. The War In Iraq

Until McCain can acknowledge that the war in Iraq is illegal I will never be able to fully respect McCain as a human being. For all the service he has given to this country as a POW and as an elected official it is in times like this where he needs to admit that the principles for going to war, as put forth by the Bush Administration, and supported by him were wrong.

There were never any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

Al-Qaeda was never in Iraq prior to the US invasion.

If McCain is a man of principles he should admit publicly that he was wrong. In order to deal with the future we must understand the past. Admitting you're wrong is a hard thing to do, and it takes a big man to do so. In the spring of 2004 my friend Kevin was killed in Iraq. My friend Brian just left the service after two tours of duty in Iraq. The war has left us as a nation more hated and vulnerable than ever before in history. John Donne wrote that "No man is an island". The same is said for a nation. Our nation is not more safe and better off now than we were before Bush invaded Iraq. We now have more enemies in the world. In order to regain our integrity as a nation we must apologize to the world for what we have done wrong and seek to work with those who are different.

4. Health Care

Under McCain's health care plan I will not be offered coverage and in fact will not be able to pay for it. I have a pre-existing condition. My aorta valve does not work and will have to be replaced sometime in the near future. This requires open heart surgery. I was born with this problem. In the state of Colorado the cheapest insurance I can purchase is $720 a month! This insurance is required by federal law, HIPPA and or COBRA insurance. But under McCain these programs won't exist anymore.

Obama has clearly stated that under his health care plan those who need insurance coverage the most will be offered it at an affordable price. I am a hardworking tax paying citizen. I am not on Medicare or Medicaid or welfare. Yet no matter how hard I work I can barely afford my health insurance.

These 4 reasons are why I am voting for Obama. I believe in the freedom of choice, not associated with my ideas on life being any better or more right than any other human beings. I believe in the right to be happy and to pursue success based on these freedoms. And I believe in the principle of being honest and sincere.

I know there are those of you out there who disagree with me. We can disagree and still be friends. It is our job as Americans to understand our differences and to acknowledge that neither you nor I are better humans or Americans because of these differences. We can all co-exist as long as we recognize that we are all entitled to our own personal choices in life and that I will never ask anyone to change their way of living to be more like mine. We need to each have the option in life to pursue that path which is best for us.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Never Been So Worried About My Future

I've never felt so concerned about the future. John McCain's policies and conservative radicalism don't align with my life. His ideas don't align with a popular majority of Americans.

If I could ask McCain one question it would be "How could you possibly represent me?"

Friday, October 24, 2008

upstate new york

There is a common misconception amongst New Yorkers, the city kind, that Westchester county is Upstate NY. Hell, if they're feeling crazy they might call the Catskills Upstate NY. But the truth is that Upstate New York doesn't start until you get to Albany, the state capital, 120 miles north of Yonkers. If you were making a run to Canada you'd still have 5 hours of pavement to cover from Albany north. This is Upstate NY.

I went home a few weeks ago to visit a few remaining friends in the area, saw my sister play some games, and stayed at my folks house. October in upstate is something else, an animal that makes you feel the hum of the earth and the character of your surroundings. The older I get the more I feel drawn to those places that the earth is slowly reclaiming as hers. Perhaps I am alone sometimes in this sentiment but I find these moments beautiful.





Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Sam "joe" The Plumber Owes Taxes, Has A Lein on His House and Doesn't Have a License to Work

Yet McCain seems to think he's an honest, upright American citizen, worthy of being a visual calling card for his tax plan. Actually under Obama his business would pay less money and he'd even be eligible for a tax break. I'm so sick and tired of McCain lying to the American people.

Here's the story from the Associated Press:

One week ago, Joe Wurzelbacher was just another working man living in a modest house outside Toledo, Ohio, and thinking about how to buy the plumbing business where he works. But when he stopped Senator Barack Obama during a visit to his block last weekend to complain about taxes, he set himself on a path to becoming America’s newest media celebrity — and as such suddenly found himself facing celebrity-level scrutiny.

As it turns out, Joe the Plumber, as he became nationally known when Senator John McCain made him a theme at Wednesday’s final presidential debate, may work in the plumbing business, but he is not a licensed plumber.

Thomas Joseph, the business manager of Local 50 of the United Association of Plumbers, Steamfitters and Service Mechanics, based in Toledo, said Thursday that Mr. Wurzelbacher had never held a plumber’s license, which is required in Toledo and several surrounding municipalities. He also never completed an apprenticeship and does not belong to the plumber’s union, which has endorsed Mr. Obama. On Thursday, he acknowledged that he does plumbing work even though he does not have a license.

His full name is Samuel J. Wurzelbacher. And he owes back taxes, too, public records show. The premise of his complaint to Mr. Obama about taxes may also be flawed, according to tax analysts. Contrary to what Mr. Wurzelbacher asserted and Mr. McCain echoed, neither his personal taxes nor those of the business where he works are likely to rise if Mr. Obama’s tax plan were to go into effect, they said.

None of that is likely to matter to those who see Mr. Wurzelbacher as a symbol of the entrepreneurial spirit they hope to foster with tax cuts, but even Mr. Wurzelbacher said he was shocked by all the attention.

“I’m kind of like Britney Spears having a headache,” he told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Everybody wants to know about it.”

Just five days ago, Mr. Wurzelbacher, 34, lived in anonymity in Holland, Ohio, a single father who, as he said on national television, worked all day and came home to fix dinner and help his son, 13, with his homework.

But he became the hero of conservatives and Republicans when he stopped Mr. Obama, who was campaigning on his street, and asked whether he believed in the American dream. Mr. Wurzelbacher said he was concerned about having to pay higher taxes as an owner of a small business.

“I’m getting ready to buy a company that makes $250,000 to $280,000 a year,” he told Mr. Obama. “Your new tax plan is going to tax me more, isn’t it?”

That encounter wound up on YouTube and led to appearances on the Fox News Channel, interviews with conservative bloggers and a New York Post editorial, all of whom seized on a small part of Mr. Obama’s long reply. “I think that when you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody,” Mr. Obama had said.

Mr. McCain invoked Mr. Wurzelbacher in Wednesday’s debate as a way to criticize Mr. Obama’s tax plan and wealth-sharing argument, and picked up the theme again on Thursday.

“You know what Senator Obama had to say to Joe? That he wanted to spread his wealth around,” Mr. McCain said at an event in Downingtown, Pa. “America didn’t become the greatest nation on earth by spreading the wealth,” he said. “We became the greatest nation by creating new wealth.”

After some version of “Joe the Plumber” was mentioned two dozen times during the debate, Mr. Wurzelbacher found news crews outside his home and Katie Couric on the phone.

Mr. Wurzelbacher told reporters that the company he works for, Newell Plumbing & Heating, has two full-time employees: himself and the owner, Al Newell.

Neither Mr. Newell nor Mr. Wurzelbacher responded to telephone calls. And Mr. Wurzelbacher has provided only vague information on his and the company’s finances since talking to Mr. Obama. But if the plumbing business remained a two-person company and the net proceeds — after deductions for business expenses — were shared by the two men, both incomes would most likely fall well below the top tax brackets on which Mr. Obama wants to raise rates, as would the company itself.

Both, in fact, would probably be eligible for a tax cut, said Bob Williams, senior research associate at the independent, nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, though the cut would probably be greater under Mr. McCain’s tax plan than Mr. Obama’s.

According to public records, Mr. Wurzelbacher has been subject to two liens, each over $1,100. One, with a hospital, has been settled, but a tax lien with the State of Ohio is still outstanding.

In his interview with Ms. Couric, Mr. Wurzelbacher, who voted Republican in Ohio’s March primary, said that his encounter with Mr. Obama had been prompted by his desire “to ask one of these guys a question, and really corner them and get them to answer a question for once instead of tap dancing around it. And unfortunately I asked the question, but I still got a tap dance.”

He added, “He was almost as good as Sammy Davis Jr.”

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Why McCain Is Wrong

During the Presidential debate tonight John McCain said that we need to "change our culture" in regards to abortion.

I'm sorry John but you're an egotistical lunatic if you honestly believe that people WANT TO BE LIKE YOU. 54% of Americans don't want to "change their culture" to be like you. In fact 54% of Americans want to have their constitutional freedoms protected. John, isn't this what you stand for, at least you say it is. Yet you have this radical set of blinders on that limits you to only seeing the world as you personally see fit.

Unfortunately John this is not the way the world works. The world is about people being different and us accepting others for having their own beliefs. You are the most self centered self righteous self proclaimed moralist I've ever heard of. You consistently talk about how you've spent your entire life in the service of this nation. This is true. But by choosing only to represent one type of person you unfortunately haven't spent your life representing those who are different than you. People aren't going to change to adopt your points of view.

Do you not realize that Obama offers me a choice? He also offers you a choice. You're "culture" doesn't have to choose to have an abortion. But he's going to let 54% of Americans have their own belief and their own choices.

Why don't you "change your culture" and become like the majority of Americans? How would you like that?

Sunday, October 12, 2008

kids from my high school

My little sister showed me these videos last week. All four kids go to my old high school, and most of them are in my sisters grades or a few above. The guys in the Backstreet video are all in a hardcore screamo band. Those 3 think they're tough guys so the pure fact that they made this video and then put it on youtube is awesome. I 100% applaud their courage in stepping outside the box and making fun of themselves.



Thursday, September 18, 2008

Spring of '85 + Fall of '88



Spring of '98 + Spring of '01

It was the spring of '98. I was allowed to participate in Senior Skip Day even though my mother was a teacher at my high school. Ryan T and I drove two and a half hours to Utica to see matchbox twenty play in some run down minor league ice hockey arena.



In '01 I lived in France for a while. I found this photograph this morning of my friend Alix and I somewhere in Nice whilst on a night out on the town. I don't know where she is these days. I kind of wish I could find her and tell her how nice it was to see this photo. Brought back a flood of memories.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Palin Leaves the US For The First Time In 43 Years!

from http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/

Sarah Palin did not visit troops in Iraq, a spokesperson for the Republican VP nominee confirmed Saturday, as new details emerged about the extent of the Alaska governor’s foreign travel.

In July of last year, Palin left North America for the first time to visit Alaskan troops stationed in Kuwait. Palin officials originally said her itinerary included U.S. military installations or outposts in Germany and Kuwait, and that she had visited Ireland. An Alaska spokeswoman for Palin had said Iraq was also one of the stops on that trip.

The Boston Globe reported Saturday that Palin visited the Iraqi side of a border crossing — but never journeyed past the checkpoint.

Earlier, campaign aides confirmed reports that Palin’s time in Ireland on that trip had actually been a re-fueling stop.

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Do you realize that Palin has never left the United States before last year? How can someone like this have any sort of worldly experience? Wait, isn't that necessary for someone in her potential position? This makes me want to vomit.

Why does she have to lie about the places she thinks she visited? Is she that unintelligent that she can't tell the difference between visiting Ireland and sitting on the plane while it refuels?

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Oh and this just in.

Sarah Palin's reputation for rarely deviating from a scripted stump speech as she travels from city to city is not entirely accurate. She’s open to changing a few lines here and there — depending on the audience.

Consider her speech Saturday in Nevada, site of the proposed Yucca Mountain Repository, a controversial project that would store radioactive waste in Nevadans’ backyard. At nearly every campaign stop over the last two weeks, Palin has touted McCain’s plan to expand nuclear energy, including storage and reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel.

“In a McCain-Palin administration, we’re going to expand nuclear energy, expand our use of alternative fuels, and drill now to make this nation energy independent,” she said to cheers last week in Lee’s Summit, Missouri.

But in Carson City, where the Yucca issue hits closer to home, that remark about expanding nuclear energy disappeared.

Palin also gave a pair of modified stump speeches during her recent Welcome Home tour through Alaska that failed to mention the notorious Gravina Island Bridge, subject of her usual applause line on the campaign trail that “I told the Congress ‘thanks but no thanks’ for that Bridge to Nowhere."

The Alaska governor routinely cites her opposition to the bridge on the trail to reinforce her reformer reputation, but fact-check groups and the Obama campaign have noted out that Palin supported building the bridge before she came out against it.

At rallies last week in Fairbanks and Anchorage, where Palin's original position in favor of the bridge is well-known, her “thanks but no thanks” was left behind in the Lower 48.

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So let me get this right, she ditched the "thanks, but no thanks" line when in her own state because everyone there knows her original position of supporting the bridge yet she still lies about it to everyone else in the Lower 48? That's incredible. If she has no problem lying about this then think about everything else she'd be inclined to lie about.

Oh and she lies to the communities closest to Yucca Mountain because she knows they're against the fuel dump yet she boasts about it everywhere else? Okay, so she lies, we know that, but now she lies to people's faces? And they don't feel the need to stand up and shout? I know she's not intelligent, but the citizens of that town needed to stand up and scream.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

CBS Pulls McCain Ad that Lies + Palin lies about the "bridge"

1. A John McCain web ad that was running on YouTube has been yanked because of a copyright claim filed by CBS.

The McCain campaign tried to 'spin' footage of CBS news anchor Katie Couric talking about sexism, as it related to Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign, to their own benefit by tying it to Sarah Palin.

A CBS spokesperson said, "CBS News does not endorse any candidate in the Presidential race. Any use of CBS personnel in political advertising that suggests the contrary is misleading."

That was a little shady of the McCain folks, don't you think?

2. (as reported by the AP and NPR amongst other news outlets)

Palin's only talking point this past week has been regarding her desire to cut pork-barrel spending/earmarks and how she killed the plan for the "bridge to nowhere". Well the truth is that not only did she SUPPORT THE BRIDGE PLAN while running for governor, but she was a STRONG SUPPORTER.

In fact appropriations process for the bridge happened before she became governor. And although most of the earmarks for the project -- which involved more than one bridge and a road -- were removed, Alaska received "every cent of its application," meaning that Palin had nothing to do with shooting down the bridge plan, it was done before she could do anything about it, but she went ahead and received all the pork barrel money from the fund anyway. Who knows what she did with it????

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Pretty much wherever she goes on the stump, Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin tells voters she killed Alaska's now-infamous "Bridge to Nowhere" in portraying herself as an anti-pork-barrel reformer.

And yet, pretty much every time journalists have compared Palin's record with her rhetoric on that proposed bridge, they've called a foul. The results — whether from CBS News, USA Today, the Anchorage Daily News, NPR or some other outlet — have been remarkably consistent. The surprising thing is how little effect that journalistic fact-checking has had on the campaign trail.

"It is pretty striking that so many news organizations have looked into this independently and come to the same conclusion — that she didn't play that much of a role in ending the bridge," says Bill Adair of the St. Petersburg Times and the Web site PolitiFact.com. "And yet they continue to say it — day in and day out.

"I just hope the voters will stop to take the time to learn what's true and what's not — from us or from some other source — and then make their own judgment," Adair says.

'Thanks, But No Thanks'

Palin, the first-term governor of Alaska, usually offers up a formulation like the one she gave at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn.

"I told Congress, 'Thanks, but no thanks, on that Bridge to Nowhere,' " she told cheering delegates. "If our state wanted to build a bridge, we were going to build it ourselves."

She has repeated it at campaign stops since, as recently as Wednesday, and the anecdote has become a key element of her political biography as the campaign of her running mate, Sen. John McCain, casts her as a reformer in his own image. McCain has consistently opposed projects that are funded through specific earmarks tucked into larger legislation.

"Whether it's killing the Bridge to Nowhere … or vetoing $500 million in government spending in Alaska over the last two years, she has earned and deserves the title of reformer of her state," says Ben Porritt, a spokesman for the McCain-Palin campaign.

A Complicated Record

Palin's record, however, is more complicated. The bridge involved would have connected the small town of Ketchikan with a sparsely populated island that has an airport. The bridge would have also cost several hundred million dollars. It is true that as governor, in 2007, she announced the project was dead.

But, as McClatchy Newspapers political reporter Margaret Talev says, "She was for it before she was against it — and actively for it before she became actively against it." McClatchy owns the Anchorage Daily News, which has covered Palin's quick ascent in state politics thoroughly.

While running for governor in 2006, Palin said she supported federal funding for the bridge, and she praised the state's two senior lawmakers, Sen. Ted Stevens and Rep. Don Young, who were promoting the project.

But it came under national fire, and as Stevens and Young became tainted, political support for the project ebbed. (Stevens is now facing federal charges in a political corruption trial. Both Stevens and Young are battling for re-election.)

Congress dropped the specific designation of the more than $200 million in federal funds for the bridge, instead releasing it for use for any Alaska projects. Palin wanted to direct the money to other projects that would prove less embarrassing. So, according to major news organizations that examined Palin's record, there was no "thanks, but no thanks" moment.

Last Rites For The Bridge

"Even in Alaska, there were a lot of people who were opposed to it. So it's not like she boldly stood up against it," says Adair of the St. Petersburg Times. "What she did was, seeing the political reality, she ended it."

"It's not that she really killed it — but she did perform the last rites," Adair says.

As for the larger issue, as a small-town mayor, Palin hired lobbyists, and as a mayor and governor, she sought such targeted earmarked funds herself. The Associated Press reports that Palin is seeking another $200 million in such projects for Alaska next year.

Adair calls Palin's account of her role in the bridge's demise a "half-truth."

Jack Nelson, the retired Washington bureau chief of the Los Angeles Times, has a tarter term for it: "It is a lie," he says.

That's not a word most journalists use, because it is so charged. Nelson says he can use it because he is retired.

"Most of the time in past campaigns, when major news organizations have come out and said that something is totally false, the candidate will drop it," says Nelson, who was a reporter for more than five decades. "In this case, they are repeating it over and over and over."

But with so many other sources of information and opinion online, revelations in mainstream news organizations don't pack the same punch that they once did.

Campaign Defends Palin's Record

Porritt, the McCain-Palin spokesman, says there is no reason to back down.

"There have been a number of distortions about Sarah Palin's record as a reformer," Porritt says. "But this isn't about claiming the title. This is about having a record to back that up."

Porritt points to journalistic site FactCheck.org to prove Palin is telling the truth. But FactCheck.org wrote last week that Palin's line about the bridge is "inaccurate."

In fact, FactCheck.org cited the Bridge to Nowhere first in its list of reasons why it concluded Palin was "short on facts" during her speech at the Republican convention.

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I especially love this video where Karl Rove talks about how a certain Virginia Governor can't possibly have the experience necessary to join a Presidential ticket yet he doesn't realize that Palin has much less experience. Obviously Rove didn't read the municipal code for being the mayor or Wasilla Alaska

1. Preside at council meetings. The mayor may take part in the discussion of matters before the council, but may not vote, except that the mayor may vote in the case of a tie.

2. Act as ceremonial head of the city

Ceremonial. Laughable.



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And finally Palin doesn't even know what a Vice President does.....