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Rosemary Kaul, groundbreaking L.A. Times photojournalist, dies

Khai Le

Los Angeles Times staff photographer Rosemary Kaul walks in front of police officers guarding Parker Center during the 1992 riots.

(Robert Durell / Los Angeles Times)

Inspired by a trip to Guatemala, Rosemary Kaul moved to a pocket of Los Angeles where Central Americans found refuge from the civil unrest and violence that ravaged their home countries.

Kaul rented a studio on 12th Street in Pico-Union where she’d live for nearly two years. A single bed and a leafy schefflera — the only thing passing for green space in a concrete-dense neighborhood — took up most of her living space.

Struck by the poverty in the area, the Los Angeles Times photojournalist wanted to capture how hard it could be to begin a new life. She wondered if life in L.A. was truly better for them, but later realized the story was the people themselves.

“They have a spirit that really comes through in their faces,” she told KCET in 1991.

Sensing her genuine sincerity, Pico-Union accepted her as one of their own. Neighborhood children kept an eye out for her company vehicle. Locals chatted with her as they washed clothes in the laundromat. Other tenants in her building invited her over for dinner, offering their best home-cooked meal.

Peers and loyal readers lauded her Pico-Union photo essay. “Having grown up in this area, it is refreshing to see a sincere humanistic portrayal of this community by The Times,” Arturo Vargas, then-director of outreach and policy for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund in Los Angeles, wrote in 1991.

In an era when institutions, including The Times, overlooked marginalized communities, Kaul used her lens to chronicle their lives and help capture their humanity in a manner others could understand. She was part of a cadre of journalists who shifted their approach to the job, questioning the significance of what an event said about greater Los Angeles. Throughout her career, Kaul’s hard-charging and vibrant personality helped inspire the next budding photojournalists in the industry.

Kaul led the charge in her approach to photojournalism, showing empathy and care for sources, said Iris Schneider, a former L.A. Times photographer and longtime friend

She “didn’t really want to just go in and out in some sort of voyeuristic way,” Schneider said. “But she really wanted to know what it was like on a gut level to live there and experience that neighborhood and feel what the people were feeling in terms of how hard it was to start over and start a new life.”

Always a free spirit, Kaul died of health issues on March 31, said her daughter, Marjo Garrison. She was 80.

Kaul grew up in a tiny town in southern Indiana, but had an itch to see the world. Riding her pinto horse, Beauty, bareback provided her a temporary sense of escape. She was the first in her family to go to college despite pushback from her parents.

Freelancing for Chicago’s Star Publications, a small group of newspapers, was Kaul’s first big break. She commuted on a crowded expressway from her home in Arlington Heights to Chicago Heights until she was hired full-time.

John Murphy, Kaul’s mentor who worked as darkroom process manager, was in awe of her passion and commitment to her job all while raising three children as a single mother.

“If you have to ask Rosemary how she did it, you’ll never do it,” he said. “Because you have to be born with it, struck with it, bitten by a muse. She was just really interested in everything about photojournalism and she could not get enough.”

By 1982, the L.A. Times poached Kaul.

There, she flourished. Kaul was among the first photographers in the streets when the Rodney King verdict was announced. She captured images showing the rage of those congregated near the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters in Downtown L.A. Her colleague Mel Melcon helped her return to the office just in time for him to get photos of the crowd smashing the windows of The Times’ first-floor offices.

A dead, oil-soaked bird is pulled from the water off Knight Island in April 1989.

(Rosemary Kaul / Los Angeles Times)

Her photograph of the first oil-coated bird found in Prince William Sound in Alaska, illustrating the disaster caused by oil tanker Exxon Valdez, earned her a World Press Photo award.

Following the riots, The Times created the City Times, a weekly publication to cover L.A.’s inner cities. Kaul volunteered to serve as photo editor and became a mentor to the new generation of photojournalists.

Family, friends and colleagues were quick to highlight Kaul’s natural ability to connect with her sources.

Bob Chamberlin, a Times colleague, said he sometimes got the sense she suffered whenever she told a story because she cared that deeply about her sources and carried their feelings, too.

In one instance, Kaul interviewed a mother who was baby-sitting six children so their moms could go to work. The woman, Chamberlin recalled, described feeling the happiest in her life.

“To us white guys, this woman looked like she was disadvantaged,” Chamberlain said. “She’s a migrant, she’s probably illegal. She’s living in freakin’ L.A. and she’s stuck all day inside a tenant slum apartment with a bunch of kids. And that looked like it was rigorous, set-upon, dangerous living. And Rosemary put a human face on that made it approachable and understandable.”

Readers felt similarly. Some wrote to The Times, imploring them to dedicate more space to stories from the inner cities, an area often viewed with a negative lens.

“All we ever read about predominantly African-American neighborhoods are shootings at liquor stores, quarrels with Koreans, drug abuse and police brutality,” wrote Jan Kovaleski in 1991. “I’m aware that all this is real and exists and needs to be told, but for the well-being of young black kids growing up in poor neighborhoods, there needs to be another story told also — the story of mothers and families and neighbors that care about doing something good and positive.”

Angry crowds demonstrate near LAPD headquarters in downtown Los Angeles during the Rodney King riots in 1992.

(Rosemary Kaul / Los Angeles Times)

An LAPD officer stands guard on Florence Avenue the morning after the L.A. riots.

(Rosemary Kaul / Los Angeles Times)

As photo editor for City Times, Kaul gave Francine Orr her big break.

Orr’s first assignment was to photograph a woman in front of her razed home. Standing in front of the rubble, the woman broke into tears and asked Orr to refrain from taking her picture until she could compose herself. The green photojournalist obliged.

Kaul, a veteran journalist, was livid with Orr’s work and told her to document the truth before her.

“She was a tough editor, and she was the right editor for me and her words were the right words for me in that moment,” said Orr, now an award-winning photojournalist with The Times. “And every single day since that day, I have Rosemary’s voice in my head, reminding me that even if I’m confronted with really difficult things, to do my job — and my job is to document the truth, document what’s right in front of me, even though it can be a very difficult as a photojournalist to do your job.”

Kaul later sought out a trusted colleague to mentor Orr because she didn’t have the time to do it herself.

In 1994, Kaul ended her career with The Times. She took a buyout once her migraines were too difficult to manage with her workload.

Always looking for her next creative outlet, Kaul pivoted to homebuilding. She researched Earthships and straw bale construction.

Kaul found her ideal place to build a home miles away from the closest town in New Mexico. Solar architects helped execute a blueprint for her eco-friendly home, and she built a straw bale house with solar electricity and passive solar heat.

“My mom jumped into everything with both feet. There was no halfway of doing anything,” Garrison said.

While living in New Mexico, she helped establish a community garden and briefly worked for the Albuquerque Tribune before health problems forced her to leave.

Later, she lived in a tent in Yosemite for a season until she moved in with Garrison in San Gabriel.

As her health continued to decline, Kaul took up oil painting and mixed natural elements such as pieces of wood into her artwork. Colleagues and friends stayed in touch with her over the years, sharing their latest photo work or treating her to lunch.

“Nothing stood in her way,” said Al Seib, a colleague who first worked with Kaul in Chicago and later L.A. “Rosemary is a tour de force story, a history that’s [not often found] in our lifetime.”

Now a mother herself, Garrison is hoping to lead in her mother’s example and follow her heart.

“Follow your passion and it’ll all figure itself out,” Garrison said. “She just really wanted you to do it. To not waste your life or wait for something.”

In addition to Garrison, Kaul is survived by two other children, Greg and David; and her brother, Bill Messenger.

Longtime PPAGLA Member Jim Ober Passes Away

Khai Le

Jim Ober, a longtime member of PPAGLA who served on the board for many years, passed away peacefully overnight at his home in Simi Valley, according to his wife Jeanette. Jim’s service on the board began around 1972 and continued intermittently until 2022. He served as President in 1984, and as Treasurer for many years. More information will be posted when available.

Upcoming 2023 Events

Khai Le

Exciting News from PPAGLA! Get ready for a thrilling lineup of events throughout the year.

First up, we have the much-awaited 2023 Annual Awards Presentation on March 19, 2023, where we will celebrate the best of the best in the photography world.

We have more in store for you. Are you a student eager to showcase your work to experienced photojournalists? Then our Student Portfolio Review event is perfect for you! Get valuable feedback and critique from seasoned professionals.

We know legal issues can be daunting, especially for photographers. That's why we're bringing in a legal firm that specializes in copyright law to help you navigate these murky waters. Join us for our Legal Seminar and get all your burning questions answered.

And what better way to welcome the spring season than with a delightful picnic? Mingle with fellow members, and get your hands on the latest Just One More book showcasing the remarkable work seen in the 2023 Awards and beyond.

Stay tuned for more details on these events and more exciting happenings from PPAGLA. We can't wait to see you there! Sign up below for an email alert as these events come together.

Save the date for the PPAGLA Awards Banquet

Khai Le

Mark your calendars! The PPAGLA Annual Awards Banquet will be LIVE and IN PERSON this year at the Zimmerman Automobile Driving Museum on Sunday, March 19, 2023 at 11 a.m.!

Details:

  • March 19th, 2023

  • Social hour 11 a.m. - 12 p.m.

  • Awards Ceremony 12 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. 

  • Raffle drawings throughout!

We'll be sending out digital invitations in the following weeks with a link to register for the ceremony and to buy raffle tickets. You won't want to miss out on our prizes and silent auction items!

Click here to purchase tickets - https://www.ppagla.org/banquet

Submit Images for Q3 Photo Contest!

Justin L. Stewart

Our 2022 Q3 contest for professional members is open for submissions! Be sure to check out our updated rules regarding editing, found on page 7 of our rules PDF.

Also remember that to enter in our POY portfolio contest at the end of the year, you need to have submitted work to at least TWO of our quarterly contests.

Can't wait to see your work! All entries are due by SATURDAY, APRIL 30TH.

View rules and enter the Q1 contest at this link: https://www.ppagla.org/quarterly-stills-contest

Contact contests@ppagla.org with any questions.

Submit Images for Q1 Photo Contest

Justin L. Stewart

Our 2022 Q1 contest for professional members is open for submissions! Be sure to check out our updated rules regarding editing, found on page 7 of our rules PDF.

Also remember that to enter in our POY portfolio contest at the end of the year, you need to have submitted work to at least TWO of our quarterly contests.

Can't wait to see your work! All entries are due by SATURDAY, APRIL 30TH.

View rules and enter the Q1 contest at this link: https://www.ppagla.org/quarterly-stills-contest

Contact contests@ppagla.org with any questions.

BROADCAST STUDENTS - SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITY!

Justin L. Stewart

DEADLINE APPROACHING! APRIL 17th

RTNA Broadcast Journalism Scholarships up to $1500

 
 

The Radio and Television News Association of Southern California for more than 4 decades has worked to support the next generation of broadcast journalists through its annual scholarship. Since the late 1970s, the RTNA has awarded more than $180,000 in Scholarships to hundreds of college students.

Any student whose career objective is broadcast journalism and who currently is studying at sophomore level or above at an accredited Southern California college or university is eligible. Scholarship winners will be announced in early May and will be presented with their scholarships at our annual Golden Mike Awards® ceremony on Saturday, May 21st at the Hilton Universal.

​ APPLY TODAY!

Deadline is April 17, 2022

For more information

Visit the RTNA website www.rtnasocal.org

Contact: Ernie Castelo - Scholarship Chair

(949) 278-8349

scholarship@rtna.org

RTNA Office

(562) 987-4545

info@rtna.org

Submit to the Annual and Quarterly Contest

Khai Le

Annual Contest Open!

Members are now welcome to submit to the annual stills and video contest. Entries are due at 11:59pm Sunday, Jan 23, 2022.

Those entering the Photographer of the Year contest must have participated in the quarterly contests. For this year you can still enter at least one frame in the Q4 contest to qualify. You can submit to the Q4 contest by 11:59pm Sunday, Jan 23, 2022. Details are in the next section below. Our intent is to have members share their work year round, build our photographic community, and help educate the next generation through our web galleries and publications.

View rules and enter the professional and student contests at this link - https://www.ppagla.org/annual-contest-rules

Contact contests@ppagla.org with any questions.

Thanks to Canon for sponsoring the Videographer of the Year Award

Thanks to Nikon for sponsoring the Photographer of the Year Award


Quarterly Clip Contest - Q4 2021

Entries for the Q4 clip contest are being accepted until 11:59pm Sunday, Jan 23, 2022.

View rules and enter the Q4 contest at this link -

https://www.ppagla.org/quarterly-stills-contest

Contact contests@ppagla.org with any questions.

Holiday picnic party

Khai Le

Hello PPAGLA family!
Thanks to all who attended our first Holiday Picnic Party last Saturday! Over 60 PPAGLA members, guests, friends, families, and dogs celebrated our new yearbook, and dined together on a festive picnic lunch wearing antlers and Santa hats. We even had some new members join our wonderful group!

Happy Holidays!

Your PPAGLA Leadership Team

Chester Brown

Khai Le

PPAGLA member Chester Brown of Burbank, passed away on September 22, 2021, just 4 days shy of his 71th birthday. He was born September 26, 1950. According to the Burbank Fire Department, Brown was found dead at his home following surgery the day before.

Chester Brown joined the PPAGLA in 2015 as an independent still and video photographer. Brown was described as a gifted fire action photographer.  He regularly contributed photos to the Los Angeles Fire Department and would frequently photograph airplanes at the Burbank airport, according to PPAGLA member Mike Meadows. 

Brian Humphrey, Firefighter/Specialist - Public Service Officerwith the Los Angeles Fire Department, had the following comments: "To describe Chester as gifted and beloved would be an understatement. Like many in the fire service, we came to know Chester as both an amateur radio operator and an action photographer, two passions that he effectively intertwined for the good of our community. Though Chester had a great ear, a welcomed voice, and an eagle eye, he will always be remembered by first responders for his deeply caring heart. Indeed, there remains no greater affirmation of our effectiveness at the scene of an emergency, than to have heard the click of a shutter and have Chester quietly say ‘Got It’. While saddened by his untimely passing, we are grateful to know that Chester's photographs and mentorship will continue to inspire emergency action photographers for generations to come."

Brown had worked as an Emergency Management Specialist at the U.S. Government Veterans Affairs Medical Center. After his retirement, he volunteered there frequently. Of course, he was a proud veteran.

Brown was also an amateur radio operator with the call sign K6CRB, which included his initials, akin to a vanity plate for amateur radio operators. He was active in Burbank BEARS (Burbank Emergency Amateur Radio Service) and was a long-time member of another radio group, the Southern California Monitoring Association.

Chester Brown is survived by three sons - Jeffery Brown, Kevin Brown, Christopher Brown - and two daughters - Beverly Brown and Jennifer Brown.

Holiday Party

Khai Le

The holidays are here and so are the yearbooks.

Come celebrate at the PPAGLA holiday picnic party! We’ll have food and you’re welcome to bring your favorite holiday dish.

When: Saturday, Dec 18 from 11:00am - 1:30pm

Where: Kenneth Hahn State Recreational Area (we’ll pinpoint the exact spot & let you know via RSVP for updates).
4100 S. La Cienega Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90008

Bring your friends, family, and even the dog! Wear your holiday garb.

Vaccinations required to attend.

RSVP HERE - https://forms.gle/ETPbZ7EGkoE1V1GL8

Bill Beebe

Khai Le

Bill Beebe died October 24th at his home in Los Angeles. He was 94.

Bill was a member of the Press Photographers Association of Greater Los Angeles for more than 60 years. Bill served as president in 1963 and served on the Board of Directors for an additional ten years. 

Bill was one of the dinosaurs that ruled the news business. His peers included Ben Olender, Larry Sharkey and Art Rogers, all of the Los Angeles Times. Bill was the last man standing. All are gone now.

Bill’s most famous photo was shot in 1962, when he worked for the Los Angeles Times. It showed President John F. Kennedy as he stood in the surf surrounded by admirers at Santa Monica beach. The photo was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Bill used a Rolleiflex and strobe with a 510-volt battery, and remember, he was standing in the surf to shoot the photo.

In 2002, Bill was honored by the PPAGLA with a Lifetime Achievement Award. At the time Bill said, “My job was my hobby. Didn’t make much money, but I made a lot of friends and had a lot of fun.”

Bill was born in Los Angeles and moved to Santa Monica as a young kid. He enlisted in the US Navy while still in high school. In 1946, he was one of the first students to major in photography at what then was Santa Monica City College.

Following his graduation, he started his career at Emerson Gaze’s Pacific Press Photos, a group of photographers who provided images to local news organizations.

Later, Bill spent ten years working at the Los Angeles Mirror, which merged with the Los Angeles Times. He stayed at the Times as a staff photographer until 1963.

Bill moved to the Santa Monica Evening Outlook in the 1960s. He spent the next three decades covering assignments in the bay cities.

Bill retained the rights to the images he produced while working for the Evening Outlook, and, upon the newspaper’s closure in 1998, generously donated his collection of over 100,000 negatives to the Santa Monica History Museum.  When PPAGLA membership director, Rick Meyer, searched the Museum’s photo archive, he found in minutes Bill’s photos of gangster Mickey Cohen, baseball great Babe Ruth, and President John F Kennedy, not all in the same frame.

Bill was an environmentalist before the term was invented, devoting countless time to documenting and protecting the Ballona Wetlands.

Bill was also an avid hunter and fisherman. So, here is a fish tale. Bill, covering for Western Outdoor News, was sent on a fishing assignment to Baja Mexico. A photographer from Sports Illustrated was along as well for the trip. The Sports Illustrated photog was so drunk during the trip, that Sports Illustrated used Bill’s art instead of that of their staffer. Bill said that was the crowning achievement in his career.

PPAGLA member Richard Mackson described Bill as “My mentor who taught me the Journalism business.” He went on to say that “When I was just 18-years-old, Bill was editor of the weekend tabloid, Outlook West. Bill did a story about me and the USC vs. UCLA football game. He gave me the cover and six pages inside on how an 18-year-old covered the big game. Bill insisted that I use the coverage in my portfolio when I applied to Sports Illustrated. His advice and mentoring helped me land a contract position with Sports Illustrated.”

PPAGLA member Robert E. Clark also fondly remembers Bill: “Bill Beebe was The Outlook's outdoor sports' men (hunting, fishing, sailing, all things outdoors) columnist. I worked with Bill for thirteen years as the photo editor. Bill had free reign as a traditional 'combo' man. (He wrote and photographed the story). He was also known for the variety and quality of his personal photographic gear which outpaced The Outlook's equipment by a mile.”

“Bill was affable, engaging, and prone to offering up random observations on the day-to-day look of The Outlook. He was a spot news junkie. One October day, a small plane crashed into a house on the street he resided on. When I arrived at the scene, several minutes after the crash, fire trucks were still rolling in to control the flames; Bill handed me five rolls of exposed Tri-x film and said, "Here! It's covered!”  I cleared the scene.  He was first on the scene, and that was excellent for our readers and me. He was a good guy.”  

Mackson sums up Bill’s career in this way: “He was probably one of the best news photographers around. He had a nose for news and the skills to produce pictures in all conditions.” 

In the 1970s, Bill Beebe hosted the Association’s “fish fry” held at Paradise Cove in Malibu. Bill caught the fish, the  Association provided the beer.  Many PPAGLA members hoped that the CHP or Sheriff’s Department would not set up a DUI checkpoint on PCH.

Roger Vargo, PPAGLA Past President, shared darkroom facilities with Bill at the Evening Outlook in the late 1970s. He recalled how Bill had a wealth of stories as well as anecdotes about the people he interviewed and those in whose social circles he traveled. He remembers Bill as being involved in many “manly” activities such as hunting, sport shooting, and deep-sea fishing. Bill’s shaved head was always well tanned from being out in the sun.

“Bill was an asset to his profession and community, and I’m a better person for having known and worked with him,” said Vargo.

Bill is survived by his wife of 71 years, Sonya, and daughter Suzann Peterson, son Bill (Wm.) Beebe and also grandson Brett Beebe, granddaughter Krista Beebe and niece Denise Silfies.

ROBERT GAUTHIER: PHOTOGRAPHING THE PANDEMIC OLYMPICS

Khai Le

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9TH, 2021 AT 11AM

ADVANCE REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED!

PPAGLA_Olympics-2.jpg

From moments of solace and empty stands to elated athletes and peak action, Gauthier captured it all. Join us on Zoom on October 9th at 11am as LA Times staff photographer Robert Gauthier shares stories from his experiences photographing the 2020 Tokyo Olympics during the pandemic.

Pulitzer Win - Ringo Chiu & AP!!

Guest User

Congratulations to long-time Press Photographers Association of Greater Los Angeles (PPAGLA) member Ringo Chiu whose photos are part of the Associated Press Team that has won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography. Ringo’s photos were part of a collection of photographs from multiple U.S. cities that cohesively captured the country’s response to the death of George Floyd.

Ringo has been a dedicated member of our photojournalism community for many years and has also served as an esteemed member of our PPAGLA Board of Directors. Throughout his career, Ringo has worked tirelessly documenting historical moments in greater Los Angeles as well as around the world, and the PPAGLA celebrates our colleague and friend in this wonderful achievement.

Associated Press photographer Ringo H.W. Chiu, left, celebrates with his wife, Suki, after watching the announcement of the Pulitzer Prizes via video conferencing from Los Angeles Friday, June 11, 2021. Chiu is one of ten AP photographers who won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Associated Press photographer Ringo H.W. Chiu, left, celebrates with his wife, Suki, after watching the announcement of the Pulitzer Prizes via video conferencing from Los Angeles Friday, June 11, 2021. Chiu is one of ten AP photographers who won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Webinar- Speed Up Your Workflow with Photo Mechanic

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Speed Up Your Workflow with Photo Mechanic

Wednesday May 12, 2021
11:00 AM
Advanced Registration is Required 

PPAGLA Members: take back your weekends! Speed up your workflow and shave minutes or even hours from your process time with Photo Mechanic. Learn best practices for ingesting, culling, and organizing your photos with this hour long working session, including live Q&A with Mick O. from Camera Bits. Learn the interface and features of the program used around the world by photographers to hit deadlines every time. At the end of the session, PPAGLA members will be given a discount code for this incredible program.

PPAGLA Awards Ceremony, Sat. April 24

Guest User

You and your guests are invited to our Annual Awards Ceremony live online Saturday, April 24. Registration is free, but required, and open to all! See below for registration info, raffle and silent auction advance purchases to support the awesome work of the Press Photographers Association of Greater Los Angeles.

Mark J Terrill - Shooting Sports in the NBA Bubble

Guest User

FORTY-FIVE GAMES IN FORTY-FIVE DAYS

By Mark J. Terrill

“What was it like inside the NBA bubble?” That is what several people have asked me so I thought that I would share some of my experiences there while on assignment for the Associated Press. First, allow me to explain what “the bubble” is. After the 2020 NBA season was suspended in mid-March due to the coronavirus outbreak, the NBA came up with a plan to restart play safely in late July by playing the remaining games with 22 out of 30 teams with the best records in one place and quarantining all of the players, coaches, support staff and even some media in an isolated compound of hotels. BTW, it cost the media that were staying there between $500 and $750 per night. That’s a pretty penny to essentially be in prison for three months. That compound was part of Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida which they had sectioned off from the tourists that were visiting the park during this time. The venues that they chose to hold all of these games were at the ESPN Wide World of Sports complex which offered three arenas that they could play four to seven games a day in. The WWS complex was also part of Disney World and a very short bus ride from the player hotels to the venues. These two locations were considered “The Bubble” and reportedly cost the NBA $150 million to finish the season there. Pretty much a perfect plan to finish the season and avoid an outbreak. The season only ended up being shortened by about 10 games or less for the remaining teams. The players who were stuck there for three months away from their families and the outside world weren’t too thrilled about the plan, though.

This was a trip that almost ended for me before it started. At one point there was a possibility of the whole thing being cancelled. As I was in the air on my way to Orlando, the players were talking about calling the whole thing off because of the two people that were shot to death during a BLM protest in Wisconsin. Fortunately, they decided to keep playing following a three day strike.

It is important to note that there were two zones at the WWS complex and people from the two were not allowed to mix. It consisted of a “Green Zone” where the players and coaches, NBA photographers, a few media writers and broadcasters could go which was the floor level at the venues as well as the compound where the players were staying. If you had watched any games, I am sure you noticed that even the NBA photographers weren’t on the court. No one was. They were shooting from corners off the court. Normally you would have at least ten photographers and videographers from various organizations sitting on the court for a typical game but there was nothing normal about this situation. We would also normally have remote cameras in various places on the court and in the catwalk for different and interesting angles. There was none of that here. The only people photographing on the floor level and putting remotes around the court were working for the NBA.

There was also a “Yellow Zone” where other media writers, photographers, NBA staff and VIP’s were positioned which was one level up from the floor. This is where I was. This meant shooting from from a single position from above which is definitely not something that I am accustomed to. We were all basically even with the basket at TV right. Even though the stands at the other end of the court were unused, hat was the only position for 45 games straight. Anyone that has ever shot basketball from an overhead position knows that it is challenging to make a clean and interesting picture from there, much less shooting from the same spot night after night. You really feel disconnected from the game up there. On the bright side, shooting from above meant that I was not locked into the bubble and was allowed to roam beautiful Orlando in my off-time. Also, there was a media hotel for people working in the yellow zone that cost about $150 per night.

That being said, there was no off-time for the first two weeks that I was there. It was mostly two games a day until the conference. You would shoot the first game in one venue and then run about 200 yards (often in a downpour) with all of your gear to the next venue where the second game had usually already started for some reason. There was at least one game where I missed the entire first quarter before I was able to get in there. Once the conference finals started, though, it was a game just about every day and then trailed off to game every two or three days once the finals started.

Regardless of what zone you were in, everyone had to get COVID tested every 72 hours and prove that you were clear before covering any games. The testing increased to every 48 hours once the finals started. They would scan your credential before you entered each venue and here were also temperature checks at each venue They also made us wear a contact tracing/tracking device that would beep at you if you get within four feet of anyone else which was sort of hard to do since there weren’t many people there to begin with. The essentially knew where you were and who you were with at all times while at WWS. With the exception of all of the security, bomb sniffing dogs and a few Disney staff, all of which had the usual “Happiest Place on Earth” attitude, walking the normally bustling Disney Wide World of Sports campus reminded me of a Walking Dead episode. It was mostly desolate and very surreal as was the feeling inside the venues.

What really made the situation livable and even down right enjoyable was that the AP rented a house for the three months that we were there. Our newest L.A. staffer Ashley Landis was there for us for the first month and a half and then I came in and took over for the rest. Anyone that has ever been on a long travel assignment knows that living out of a hotel and a suitcase can be tiresome and you tend to get homesick for some of the simple things that you take for granted like cooking a meal for yourself or not hearing doors get slammed all night. Getting a rented house solved most of the “home sick” problems and it was cheaper than the media hotel that the NBA was offering to us. Most of the time that I was there, I didn’t feel like I was on a travel assignment and it was a short 8 minute commute to the WWS complex.

Most of my meals were either made at home after work or take-out from somewhere. One of the joys of being on a travel assignment is eating with friends (aka your competition). Unfortunately, because of the pandemic, there wasn’t a lot of opportunity for that although I was able to meet up with them at the media hotel to have lunch outside a few times because everyone had to go there every few days to get tested.

That brings up the best part about having a rented house in that situation. Once the NBA Finals started, the NBA decided, without warning, to completely lock down the media hotel that, up until that point, had been in the yellow zone where people were free to come and go. That meant that no one could leave except to go to the venues for games. Los Angeles Times photographer Wally Skalij arrived just as this lock-down began and wasn’t even allowed to leave his room until he got a negative COVID test the next day. We believe that this was because team owners, executives and NBA family members were staying there. Meanwhile, I was free to roam and therefore would often bring lunch to my friends who were stuck there for the two weeks that the finals went on for.

As far as I know, no one actually got sick while I was there but there was a scare. The photographer that I had been sitting closest to the entire time and socializing with tested positive during the conference finals. Obviously, this was pretty unnerving for me and him. He was quarantined to his hotel room for several days while they retested him multiple times and I was concerned that, since the contact tracing devices would have told them that were were near each other, I would be quarantined as well. As it turned out, it was a false positive which was a relief but the idea that a false positive could leave the Associated Press without coverage for two or three playoff games was just as unnerving as actually testing positive.

Because of the distance that they had us at, I shot most of the games with a 600 f4, a 400 2.8 and a 200-600. In normal times and with a normal game, I would almost always do my own editing, captioning and transmitting during a break in the game or at halftime but these were not normal times so I had fantastic remote editors in various parts of the country to whom I would push about 600 select pictures per game from the camera via FTP via Wi-Fi and Ethernet. This was a huge help as it allowed me to concentrate on shooting the game and nothing else. Most of the editors were actually photographers that had nothing to shoot that particular day and volunteered to assist me. They would in turn pick 100 or so to crop, caption and send out to the wire. This method allowed us to get a picture on the wire within just a few minutes of the game starting to make early deadlines for all of the newspapers and websites that were waiting. You might be wondering why I would send the editors so many to only have one sixth sent out. This is mostly to give them options on any given play and the extra frames help them identify players when my voice tag recording that gets attached to the pictures wasn’t enough. I was also allowed to have a remote camera near my shooting position for a little wider view of the court which was helpful as a backup since a 600mm is extremely tight. That camera was tethered to my computer which allowed me to control it, download the pictures remotely and then drop them to my remote editor.

There were a few little hiccups along the way with the exception of the very limited access and the lockdown problem at the media hotel. All-in-all the NBA put together a pretty good plan. The food that the NBA provided wasn’t bad either. They split off an ESPN Zone restaurant (half for the green zone and half for the yellow zone) for meals and Mickey Mouse shaped ice cream sandwiches.

All-in-all, it was one of the better experiences that I have had on a travel assignment and, because of the unusual circumstances, one that I will remember for a lifetime.

Mark J. Terrill has been a staff photographer with the Associated Press since 1997.

Pete Noyes

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Pete Noyes Obituary

Died Feb. 1, 2021

(Story in part from City News Service)

Pete Noyes, named an Honorary PPAGLA member in November, 2016, died February 1, 2021 at age 90 according to his son Jack, a long-time assignment editor at NBC4.

Pete was a Los Angeles television news pioneer who became an award-

winning news producer and investigative journalist. He was also a mentor to many colleagues and students who took his broadcast newswriting classes at USC and Cal State Northridge.

Noyes began his journalism career at Stars and Stripes, the American military newspaper, while serving in the Army during the Korean War.  During his decades-long career, he worked at KFMB in San Diego, KOVR in Sacramento, and in Los Angeles at City News Service, KNXT/KCBS, KNBC, KABC-TV, KTTB and KCOP, along with the Fox network newsmagazine “Front Page.” He mentioned that he might have been fired from more stations than any other journalist!

Along the way, Noyes was honored with TV’s highest award, the Peabody, 10 Emmys, two Edward R. Murrow awards and many Golden Mike Awards.  He taught his craft at the USC and Cal State Northridge journalism schools and penned several books, including “Legacy of Doubt,” which linked organized crime to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

After retiring from the news business in 2008, he published several other books, including “The Real L.A. confidential,” in which he wrote about some of L.A.’s most notorious crimes, including the Manson  family and O.J. Simpson murder cases.

His 2015 book “Who Killed the Big News?” tells the story of KNXT’s introduction in 1961 – and ultimate death of – “The Big News,” which was billed as the first 45-minute newscast in the nation and launched the careers of the late Jerry Dunphy and Ralph Story, among others.

Noyes notched many scoops as the show’s city editor and was named the producer of the newscast in 1963 as it expanded to an hour as the lead-in to a 30-minute edition of  ”The CBS Evening News,” featuring a new anchorman named Walter Cronkite.

Videographer and PPAGLA member George Zanuzoski, who worked for several years with Pete at KNBC said Pete was a great producer, a good boss, and a dear friend.  They covered a political convention in New York in 1980 as well as many stories in California.  George said that regardless of his title, Pete did everything.  He was the go-to man – the glue that held the organization together. He would raise his voice, but always with respect, and George remembers a time when, after a long lunch, Pete threw a typewriter across a room. Pete led newsrooms that could be rowdy, but fun.  It was  quiet, and dull when Pete left the room.

Longtime USC journalism professor Joe Salzman met Noyes in 1964 when both worked for Channel 2. 

“He was a tough, hard-bitten newspaper reporter who, like the rest of us didn’t know what to make of this new concept:  television news,” Saltzman recalled in a Facebook post.  “He had come from City News Service and took no prisoners.  I can still remember him shouting out my name when he was reading a piece of my copy and yelling, ‘What the hell is this?’

“He’d sit me down and show me what I should have done with the news story, and I learned more from him than five years of undergraduate and graduate journalism school about how to tell a story in a minute and a half.”

Saltzman added: “You always knew when Pete was working on deadline because his white shirt was always half out of his pants as he scrambled about the newsroom barking orders. He was every journalist I had ever seen in the movies and on television, and the rumor that he was the model for Lou Grant in ‘The Mary Tyler Moor Show’ was, at least for me, as true as it could be.  And Pete said it was so.

In addition to his wife, Grace, son Jack, daughter-in-law Linda and two granddaughters, survivors include his sister, Liz Gorsich, and  brothers Frank and David.

Funeral services will be private, but his sister hopes to hold a “celebration of life” via Zoom.

In lieu of flowers, Gorsich suggested that contributions be made in Noyes’ name to the 8-Ball Emergency Fund for Journalists, formerly known as the 8-Ball Welfare Foundation.  Noyes was a long time board member of the Foundation, which provided emergency financial grants to journalists in need and promising journalism students.

https://www.8ballfoundation.com

Dave LaBelle- The Feature Photograph Webinar

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THE FEATURE PHOTOGRAPH: THE SUBTLE SIDE OF LIFE WITH DAVE LABELLE

ADVANCE REGISTRATION REQUIRED!

Saturday, February 6, 2021. 11:00 AM 12:30 PM

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In this webinar, Dave LaBelle, author of The Great Picture Hunt (The Art and Ethics of Feature Picture Hunting) will discuss what feature photographs are, why they are so important, and how to increase your odds of capturing compelling moments.

Throughout his 50-year career, Dave LaBelle has been a photographer, editor, teacher, author and lecturer.

LaBelle has worked for 20 newspapers and magazines in nine states, including the Anchorage Times, San Bernardino Sun-Telegram, Ventura County Star-Free Press, The Chanute Tribune, Ogden Standard-Examiner, The Sacramento Bee and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, where he was assistant managing editor for photography.

His work has won numerous awards including National Press Photographers Association Region 10 Photographer of the Year three times, runner-up to W. Eugene Smith for the first Nikon World Understanding award in 1974 and runner-up for the NPPA National Photographer of the Year award in 1979.  He was awarded the International Understanding Through Photography award by the Photographic Society of America in 2002.

LaBelle is also a master teacher whose students have gone on to win more than 10 Pulitzer Prizes.  Shortly after his time as Photographer at the Sacramento Bee, he turned his sights towards teaching as a compassionate storyteller and was a key member of the legendary team who built Western Kentucky University’s renowned Photojournalism program.  NPPA honored him with the Robin F. Garland Award for photojournalism education in 1991.  He also taught at University of Kentucky and was director of Kent State University’s Photojournalism program for many years.

He is the author of 5 books including The Great Picture Hunt which is widely regarded by many as the cornerstone book for shooting features.  Lessons in Death and Life is a sensitive, in-depth discussion about photographing grief and delicate issues.  His most recent book Bridges and Angels: The Story of Ruth is his first novel based on the disappearance of his mother in the 1969 Ventura County Floods.

LaBelle has served as judge for Pictures of the Year International, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame Photo Contest among many others.

To learn more about Dave please visit DavidLaBelle.com