That is hilarious! And I chide Peter Ng for misappropriating Texan
culture by the use of ya'll.  ;)


On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 9:08 AM, Igor PDML-StR <pdml...@komkon.org> wrote:
>
>
> This morning someone sent me a link to a brief blogpost on Cnet, which got
> me (re)evaluating - (re)thinking certain aspects of photography in our
> lives. The photo was of a crowd in front of a famous politician waving at
> them, while most people turned their backs and taking selfies of themselves
> with the famous people being the background.
>  (The link is below, but first the thoughts.)
>
> Over many years of taking photographs, sometimes as tourist (i.e. in very
> touristic places, etc.), - I've been offered by others (friends, relatives,
> bystanders) to take a picture of _me_. ... or rather of _me__being__there_.
> Not that I was against those (and sometimes I did want some picture,
> especially with friends or family), but I was not particularly ego to get
> those. I wanted to take some interesting (at least to me) of the views from
> that place.
> One of the repeated questions/comments I had (usually not from close friends
> or relatives who already knew what I am after, but from more distant
> friends): "Why do you need those? - See there, they sell cards with this
> view already printed."
>
> Why was/am I taking those photos?
> 1. I enjoy _taking_ them and
> 2. I enjoy looking at them later, as they remind me of good time I had
> there. And often, aftre many years, I remember the photos I've taken even
> without looking at them: they are a connection for that place, person,
> event. ... even though I might not be in those pictures myself.
> (As an aside, - I appreciate the fact of being in some of those photos more
> now, as my daughter is growing up, - so, that she can see her dad in those
> photos too.)
>
> Now, getting back to the conclusion quoted in the Subject of this message.
> Yes, selfie is the fad du jour [is that tautology?].
> To this date, most of the selfies I've taken are with my SLR (with a tripod
> or a mirror help). But I don't want to judge those people who enjoy selfies:
> to each of his/her own. And to some extent, those people aren't that much
> different from those stranger on the street who are ego to pose for you even
> though they are never going to see that photo. (This was a very frequent
> situation with kid groups in Japan.)
>
>
> My understanding of the said blogpost is that someone is trying to question
> of how polite it is to take a selfie with a famous person (and hence turning
> one's behind to her/him) as opposed to piercing with your eyes and
> listening.
>
> That brought to memories yet another story. Long time ago, one famous
> Russian poet wrote a song that was "thinking" about a family being
> photographed in front of the monument to the famous Russian poet Alexandr
> Pushkin. The idea was based on the juxtaposition of the timelessness and
> greatness of someone whose fame survived the test of centuries, and
> "todayliness" of the concerns and that-minute problems of that family. I
> remember that a friend was thinking that the author was criticizing the
> family, and that that type of photo was awkward or even ridiculous due to
> the contrast. While I understand that point of view (and I personally do not
> like taking photographs of people (and myself) specifically with someone's
> _personal_ monument), I never felt comfortable with that criticism. And I've
> always thought that the song's author was just bringing up the contrast as a
> way to highlight the simultaneous distance and closeness of the great and
> small, old and contemporary, timeless and transient.
>
> But back to today's photo, here is what I am curious to hear from you, deal
> PDMLers:
> As photographers with different preferences, views and reasons to take
> photographs, what do you think about what is shown in the photograph
> discussed in that blogpost?
> (Please, let's not digress into a political debate about the specific
> politician, so, let's keep the political comments on mute.)
>
> Here is the blogpost in question: https://goo.gl/VC5fU3 .
>
> Thanks in advance to all who will respond.
>
> Igor
>
>
>
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