Archive

Photography

Skiing and snowfields, c. 1930s, by Sam Hood

Photo: “Skiing and snowfields, c. 1930s,” by Sam Hood / Flickr

This piece by Jesse Singal utilizes one of my favorite writing tools for breaking into a story in a different way: taking a known form (in this case, a step-by-step guide) and using it to tell a story. Singal executes it perfectly, and as a neurotic myself, whose brain is “a machine built primarily to weave disaster movies out of life,” it hits home particularly well. Though I learned to ski at a young age, before I was aware of all the terrible things that could possibly happen that I might want to be afraid of, Singal’s observations about the finer points of skiing still strike all the right chords:

The sign by the lodge promises Refreshments. But for the mountain’s owners to display photos of thick hot creamy broth laden with clam and potato to very hungry, very cold people who have already paid an eye-bulging amount for the privilege of skiing, and to then attempt to charge them $9 for a thimbleful of it, isn’t just a ripoff—it’s a betrayal.

“The Neurotic’s Guide to Skiing” by Jesse Singal

[A note about the photo – I found this great archival picture in the Flickr Commons, where a search for skiing brings up hundreds of funny, breathtaking and otherwise extraordinary shots, mostly of the vintage variety. Here are a few other shots from the collections – there are plenty on Flickr to check out if you’re interested.]

Photo: Official White House photo by Pete Souza. President Obama's favorite photo of the year.

Photo: Official White House photo by Pete Souza. President Obama’s favorite photo of the year.

The White House has released a wonderful collection of photos from 2012 taken by White House photographer Pete Souza. Photography is an art form that’s always eluded me – I know how to point a camera, and I know what I enjoy in a photograph, but the alchemy that combines the two and would allow me to take a great photo myself has always been out of my grasp – but it’s hard to look at these photos and not be touched by the realness and beauty Souza managed to capture. Regarding the photo above, Souza said,

“The President pretends to be caught in Spider-Man’s web as he greets Nicholas Tamarin, 3, just outside the Oval Office. Spider-Man had been trick-or-treating for an early Halloween with his father, White House aide Nate Tamarin in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. I can never commit to calling any picture my favorite, but the President told me that this was HIS favorite picture of the year when he saw it hanging in the West Wing a couple of weeks later.”

“Year in Photographs 2012 by Pete Souza” on the White House Flickr stream