Fear & Loathing Archives
:Photography

Tue. July 5, 2005

I'm Still Here

Hey, loyal readers. I am still here. Recently work has been extremely hectic, and I've gotten into a new passion -- bonsai. But I've been saving up a bunch of "draft" posts that will be uploaded soon. For now, check out this photo of the July 4th fireworks at the National Mall in Washington, D.C. (click to enlarge). Have patience!

fireworks2_small_070505.jpg

 Posted by glenn at 08:53 AM | Comments (1)

Sun. March 27, 2005

This is the Life

I'm back from vacation, where it snowed all but one day at Telluride. Check out my photos. Sure beats working any day, especially on powder days, like we had all week.

telluride.jpg

 Posted by glenn at 06:38 PM | Comments (0)

Mon. November 15, 2004

Favre For President

This weekend my family and I traveled to the shrine of NFL football -- Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin -- to see already legendary quarterback Brett Favre lead the Packers to yet another last-minute victory. Rescue Act [Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel]. It was quite an experience. Our view of the stadium (pre-game) is below, and more photos are posted on my Multimedia Pages. Go Pack Go!

lambeau.jpg

Update: Those folks in Wisconsin really know how to drink beer. Perhaps as a result, their reputation for niceness and orderly behavior may be a bit of a myth, because 14 people were arrested and 29 ejected during the game.

 Posted by glenn at 10:31 AM | Comments (0)

Tue. January 13, 2004

Digital Revolution Complete

This is a telltale sign that the digital revolution is over. The company that basically invented the camera for popular photography will no longer sell film cameras, limiting its product line to digital devices. Kodak to Stop Selling Traditional Cameras in U.S. [YahooNews.com]. That's a major sea-change in the digitization of America and, in all likelihood, the end of a brand that was once synonymous with photography itself. Polaroid went bankrupt when 1-hour photo shops made their instant prints obsolete, and now even Kodachrome itself is largely a thing of the past.

 Posted by glenn at 05:47 PM | Comments (0)