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Last week, we recorded the last episode of On Taking Pictures. If you're a longtime listener, you may think you've heard this before, and you're right, you have. But this time it's different. I'll get to why in a minute, but first I need to back up. In 2008, I was teaching Photoshop at Tri-Community Photo in Covina, California. One of the other instructors and I started doing photo walks with some of the students on the weekends. As they got more popular, we put up a simple web page called Faded & Blurred that had details about the upcoming walks. It pretty quickly evolved into a full-blown site, complete with a blog, spotlights on some of our favorite photographers, and a podcast called Q&A@F&B, which was a series of long-form conversations with photographers who were willing to sit down with me for an hour and talk about their work. In addition to getting to talk with photographers like John Keatley, David duChemin, and Ibarionex Perello, I also spoke with Bill Wadman for the first time. Bill and I hit it off straight away, and in 2012, when he was thinking about doing a weekly photography podcast, he started auditioning potential co-hosts. He reached out to me and asked if I'd be interested. I said sure, and my audition ended up being the first episode of OTP. For the next 6 years and 325 episodes, my Tuesday mornings were spent recording the show, with me in Rancho Cucamonga, California—at least to start—and Bill in Brooklyn, New York.If you enjoyed this Iteration, I would love it if you would share it with a friend or two. And if it resonated with you on some level, I'd love to know why. Email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.CONNECT WITH MEWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Instagram: @jefferysaddorisEmail: talkback@jefferysaddoris.comSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Almost Everything with Jeffery Saddoris in your favorite podcast app. You can also subscribe to my newsletter on Substack.MUSICMusic For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris
After recording last week's episode of On Taking Pictures, Bill sent me a link to a video that's both fascinating and deeply disturbing, called “AI vs Artists: The Biggest Art Heist in History.” The video presents some of the grim facts around how images, including the 5.85 billion uncurated images in the LAION-5B dataset, are being illegally scraped and used to generate derivative work. The dataset was initially intended for research but has since been made available commercially and has been used to train AI models, including MidJourney and Stable Diffusion. While it does contain images from the public domain, it also contains millions of copyrighted images, as well as explicit content. As they say in the video, no consent was obtained, nor were artists given the opportunity to opt in or opt out—and this is really at the core of why so many artists whose work has been stolen are so upset.LINKSJuxtapoz articleWolfe von LenkiewiczAI algorithmsDiscussion on ThreadsGagosianIf you enjoyed this Iteration, I would love it if you would share it with a friend or two. And if it resonated with you on some level, I'd love to know why. Email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.CONNECT WITH MEWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Instagram: @jefferysaddorisEmail: talkback@jefferysaddoris.comSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Almost Everything with Jeffery Saddoris in your favorite podcast app. You can also subscribe to my newsletter on Substack.MUSICMusic For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris
Last week, I sat down for a conversation with Bill Wadman that was released in this feed as well as the On Taking Pictures feed, which hadn't been updated since 2018. The response to the episode was, well, unexpected to say the least. We've gotten a ton of feedback and I can't tell you how much we appreciate it. We don't really know how often these conversations will happen moving forward, but it's always good to sit down will Bill and just hit the record button and see where we end up.What I do know is that this is part two of the conversation from last week that started with Bill talking about whether or not he was going to return his new Fuji GFX 100. In this conversation we're talking about media, materials, and an incident involving some Ikea shelving that leads us down a rabbit hole around legacy and perspective.LINKSOTP Episode ArchiveIkea IDÅSEN shelvingCONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadmanCONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Twitter: @jefferysaddoris Instagram: @jefferysaddorisYouTube: @jefferysaddorisSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get conversations like this, along with Process Driven, Deep Natter, and Iterations all in one feed.SUPPORTLeave a review or a rating wherever you listen or share the episode on social media.MUSICEyes This Way by Bill Wadman (w/ Andrea Mann)
Last week, I sat down for a conversation with Bill Wadman that was released in this feed as well as the On Taking Pictures feed, which hadn't been updated since 2018. The response to the episode was, well, unexpected to say the least. We've gotten a ton of feedback and I can't tell you how much we appreciate it. We don't really know how often these conversations will happen moving forward, but it's always good to sit down will Bill and just hit the record button and see where we end up.What I do know is that this is part two of the conversation from last week that started with Bill talking about whether or not he was going to return his new Fuji GFX 100. In this conversation we're talking about media, materials, and an incident involving some Ikea shelving that leads us down a rabbit hole around legacy and perspective.LINKSOTP Episode ArchiveIkea IDÅSEN shelvingCONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadmanCONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Twitter: @jefferysaddoris Instagram: @jefferysaddorisYouTube: @jefferysaddorisSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get conversations like this, along with Process Driven, Deep Natter, and Iterations all in one feed.SUPPORTLeave a review or a rating wherever you listen or share the episode on social media.MUSICEyes This Way by Bill Wadman (w/ Andrea Mann)
Last week, I sat down for a conversation with Bill Wadman that was released in this feed as well as the On Taking Pictures feed, which hadn't been updated since 2018. The response to the episode was, well, unexpected to say the least. We've gotten a ton of feedback and I can't tell you how much we appreciate it. We don't really know how often these conversations will happen moving forward, but it's always good to sit down will Bill and just hit the record button and see where we end up.What I do know is that this is part two of the conversation from last week that started with Bill talking about whether or not he was going to return his new Fuji GFX 100. In this conversation we're talking about media, materials, and an incident involving some Ikea shelving that leads us down a rabbit hole around legacy and perspective.LINKSOTP Episode ArchiveIkea IDÅSEN shelvingCONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadmanCONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Twitter: @jefferysaddoris Instagram: @jefferysaddorisYouTube: @jefferysaddorisSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get conversations like this, along with Process Driven, Deep Natter, and Iterations all in one feed.SUPPORTLeave a review or a rating wherever you listen or share the episode on social media.MUSICEyes This Way by Bill Wadman (w/ Andrea Mann)
In 2012, Bill Wadman and I recorded the first episode of On Taking Pictures and for the next 324 weeks, we never missed an episode. Even though Bill and I don't talk every week like we used to, whenever we do, it's like picking up the conversation where we left off. If you've never listened to an episode of OTP, consider this a teaser for the 325 episodes you have ahead of you. OTP changed my life for the better and I always love getting to sit down with Bill, regardless of whether or not we hit the record button. But it's often a lot more fun when we do because we get to share the conversations with you. LINKSOTP Episode ArchiveMichael FremerWilson Watt Puppy speakersFuji 32-64 f/4 zoomFuji GFX100sJohnny Carson Carnac the MagnificentBill's GFX100s playback exposure issuePentax 645zCONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadmanCONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Twitter: @jefferysaddoris Instagram: @jefferysaddorisYouTube: @jefferysaddorisSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get conversations like this, along with Process Driven, Deep Natter, and Iterations all in one feed.SUPPORTLeave a review or a rating wherever you listen or share the episode on social media.MUSICEyes This Way by Bill Wadman (w/ Andrea Mann)
In 2012, Bill Wadman and I recorded the first episode of On Taking Pictures and for the next 324 weeks, we never missed an episode. Even though Bill and I don't talk every week like we used to, whenever we do, it's like picking up the conversation where we left off. If you've never listened to an episode of OTP, consider this a teaser for the 325 episodes you have ahead of you. OTP changed my life for the better and I always love getting to sit down with Bill, regardless of whether or not we hit the record button. But it's often a lot more fun when we do because we get to share the conversations with you. LINKSOTP Episode ArchiveMichael FremerWilson Watt Puppy speakersFuji 32-64 f/4 zoomFuji GFX100sJohnny Carson Carnac the MagnificentBill's GFX100s playback exposure issuePentax 645zCONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadmanCONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Twitter: @jefferysaddoris Instagram: @jefferysaddorisYouTube: @jefferysaddorisSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get conversations like this, along with Process Driven, Deep Natter, and Iterations all in one feed.SUPPORTLeave a review or a rating wherever you listen or share the episode on social media.MUSICEyes This Way by Bill Wadman (w/ Andrea Mann)
In 2012, Bill Wadman and I recorded the first episode of On Taking Pictures and for the next 324 weeks, we never missed an episode. Even though Bill and I don't talk every week like we used to, whenever we do, it's like picking up the conversation where we left off. If you've never listened to an episode of OTP, consider this a teaser for the 325 episodes you have ahead of you. OTP changed my life for the better and I always love getting to sit down with Bill, regardless of whether or not we hit the record button. But it's often a lot more fun when we do because we get to share the conversations with you. LINKSOTP Episode ArchiveMichael FremerWilson Watt Puppy speakersFuji 32-64 f/4 zoomFuji GFX100sJohnny Carson Carnac the MagnificentBill's GFX100s playback exposure issuePentax 645zCONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadmanCONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.com Twitter: @jefferysaddoris Instagram: @jefferysaddorisYouTube: @jefferysaddorisSUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get conversations like this, along with Process Driven, Deep Natter, and Iterations all in one feed.SUPPORTLeave a review or a rating wherever you listen or share the episode on social media.MUSICEyes This Way by Bill Wadman (w/ Andrea Mann)
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you probably knowhow my conversations with Bill Wadman go. If this is your first one, you're in for a treat. As is often the case when we talk, the conversation follows more than a few rabbit holes, from how podcasting has changed since we started OTP in 2012, to watching the Beatles demystifying creativity, to how it feels to see home movies of our parents who were taken from us way too soon, and a bunch more. It's another terrific conversation and I hope you enjoy it. LINKSThe Rest is HistoryDominion by Tom HollandThe Beatles Get BackNo Such Thing as a FishThe Hedonic Treadmill (Wikipedia) CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve Poloni All of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you probably knowhow my conversations with Bill Wadman go. If this is your first one, you're in for a treat. As is often the case when we talk, the conversation follows more than a few rabbit holes, from how podcasting has changed since we started OTP in 2012, to watching the Beatles demystifying creativity, to how it feels to see home movies of our parents who were taken from us way too soon, and a bunch more. It's another terrific conversation and I hope you enjoy it. LINKSThe Rest is HistoryDominion by Tom HollandThe Beatles Get BackNo Such Thing as a FishThe Hedonic Treadmill (Wikipedia) CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve Poloni All of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you probably knowhow my conversations with Bill Wadman go. If this is your first one, you're in for a treat. As is often the case when we talk, the conversation follows more than a few rabbit holes, from how podcasting has changed since we started OTP in 2012, to watching the Beatles demystifying creativity, to how it feels to see home movies of our parents who were taken from us way too soon, and a bunch more. It's another terrific conversation and I hope you enjoy it. LINKSThe Rest is HistoryDominion by…
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you probably knowhow my conversations with Bill Wadman go. If this is your first one, you're in for a treat. As is often the case when we talk, the conversation follows more than a few rabbit holes, from how podcasting has changed since we started OTP in 2012, to watching the Beatles demystifying creativity, to how it feels to see home movies of our parents who were taken from us way too soon, and a bunch more. It's another terrific conversation and I hope you enjoy it. LINKSThe Rest is HistoryDominion by Tom HollandThe Beatles Get BackNo Such Thing as a FishThe Hedonic Treadmill (Wikipedia) CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve Poloni All of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.Support the show (https://jefferysaddoris.com/#donate)
One of the things I love about talking to Bill Wadman is that even when we don't talk for a while, the banterand chemistry that was the heart of On Taking Pictures for more than 300 episodes is right there regardless of what we're talking about. It's been that way since the first episode and nearly a decade later, it's still fun to see where we end up. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.Support the show (https://jefferysaddoris.com/#donate)
One of the things I love about talking to Bill Wadman is that even when we don't talk for a while, the banter and chemistry that was the heart of On Taking Pictures for more than 300 episodes is right there regardless of what we're talking about. It's been that way since the first episode and nearly a decade later, it's still fun to see where we end up. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve Poloni All of the music featured in this episode is licensed from…
One of the things I love about talking to Bill Wadman is that even when we don't talk for a while, the banterand chemistry that was the heart of On Taking Pictures for more than 300 episodes is right there regardless of what we're talking about. It's been that way since the first episode and nearly a decade later, it's still fun to see where we end up. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
One of the things I love about talking to Bill Wadman is that even when we don't talk for a while, the banterand chemistry that was the heart of On Taking Pictures for more than 300 episodes is right there regardless of what we're talking about. It's been that way since the first episode and nearly a decade later, it's still fun to see where we end up. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
The other day I was on the phone with Bill Wadman and it didn't take long before Bill asked “wait, should we be rolling tape on this?” When you've recorded 1000 or so hours with someone, the answer is usually yes. I just wish we had been rolling from the beginning, because when Bill called, he asked what I was doing and I said that I was listening to Steve Perry. Without missing a beat, Bill launched into the opening bars of Oh Sherrie and we both started cracking up. Here's the rest of the conversation. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.Support the show (https://jefferysaddoris.com/#donate)
The other day I was on the phone with Bill Wadman and it didn't take long before Bill asked “wait, should we be rolling tape on this?” When you've recorded 1000 or so hours with someone, the answer is usually yes. I just wish we had been rolling from the beginning, because when Bill called, he asked what I was doing and I said that I was listening to Steve Perry. Without missing a beat, Bill launched into the opening bars of Oh Sherrie and we both started cracking up. Here's the rest of the conversation. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
The other day I was on the phone with Bill Wadman and it didn't take long before Bill asked “wait, should we be rolling tape on this?” When you've recorded 1000 or so hours with someone, the answer is usually yes. I just wish we had been rolling from the beginning, because when Bill called, he asked what I was doing and I said that I was listening to Steve Perry. Without missing a beat, Bill launched into the opening bars of Oh Sherrie and we both started cracking up. Here's the rest of the conversation. CONNECT WITH BILLWebsite: https://billwadman.comTwitter: @billwadmanInstagram: @billwadman CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris Music in this episodeFive to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
Jeffery Saddoris often refers to himself as a “serial conversationalist” and podcasting has become an increasingly important platform for his lifelong interest in learning, exploring, communicating, and sharing about art and artists – between more than 5 years talking about photography on On Taking Pictures, hosting the 12-episode Craft & Vision Podcast, and Process Driven, his ongoing podcast of long-form conversations about creativity and how the creative process manifests itself across a wide range of genres and disciplines. Websites Jeffery Saddoris Jeffery Saddoris Podcast Library Dan Wood Sponsor Charcoal Book Club - Sign up today Chico Hot Springs Portfolio Review Education Resources: Momenta Photographic Workshops Creating a Personal Breakthrough Photo Workshop Candid Frame Resources Download the free Candid Frame app for your favorite smart device. Click here to download for . Click here to download Support the work we do at The Candid Frame by contributing to our Patreon effort. You can do this by visiting or visiting the website and clicking on the Patreon button. You can also provide a one-time donation via . You can follow Ibarionex on and .
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you know how all over the place some of the conversations with Bill Wadman and me tended to get and this one is no exception. We talk a little about gear, a little about process and a little about whatever tangent we happen to feel like following. In other words, just a normal chat between friends who have literally hundreds of hours of recorded conversations behind them.SHOW NOTESSound Devices MixPre - https://www.sounddevices.com/mixpre/RØDECaster Pro - https://www.rode.com/rodecasterpro/Apple Big Sur - https://www.apple.com/macos/big-sur/Gary Yost - http://www.garyyost.comOculus - https://www.oculus.com/CONNECTConnect with Bill: Website | Instagram | TwitterConnect with me on Instagram and Twitter @jefferysaddoris or on my website at jefferysaddoris.com. If you've got questions or feedback, email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.Music in this episode:Five to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_ArtlistWANT TO SUPPORT THE WORK I'M DOING?Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Overcast | Google PodcastsTell Your Friends & Share Episodes Online: You can even share a favorite show clip using the terrific Recast feature. I've made a video showing you how: Create Custom Audiograms with Recast by Simplecast - YouTubeBuy a copy of my book: Photography by the LetterAffiliate Link Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links for which I earn a small commission if you make a purchase (at no additional cost to you). If I'm including an affiliate link, it's for something I actually believe in.Support the show (https://jefferysaddoris.com/#donate)
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you know how all over the place some of the conversations with Bill Wadman...
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you know how all over the place some of the conversations with Bill Wadman and me tended to get and this one is no exception. We talk a little about gear, a little about process and a little about whatever tangent we happen to feel like following. In other words, just a normal chat between friends who have literally hundreds of hours of recorded conversations behind them.SHOW NOTESSound Devices MixPre - https://www.sounddevices.com/mixpre/RØDECaster Pro - https://www.rode.com/rodecasterpro/Apple Big Sur - https://www.apple.com/macos/big-sur/Gary Yost - http://www.garyyost.comOculus - https://www.oculus.com/CONNECTConnect with Bill: Website | Instagram | TwitterConnect with me on Instagram and Twitter @jefferysaddoris or on my website at jefferysaddoris.com. If you've got questions or feedback, email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.Music in this episode:Five to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_ArtlistWANT TO SUPPORT THE WORK I'M DOING?Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Overcast | Google PodcastsTell Your Friends & Share Episodes Online: You can even share a favorite show clip using the terrific Recast feature. I've made a video showing you how: Create Custom Audiograms with Recast by Simplecast - YouTubeBuy a copy of my book: Photography by the LetterAffiliate Link Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links for which I earn a small commission if you make a purchase (at no additional cost to you). If I'm including an affiliate link, it's for something I actually believe in.
If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you know how all over the place some of the conversations with Bill Wadman and me tended to get and this one is no exception. We talk a little about gear, a little about process and a little about whatever tangent we happen to feel like following. In other words, just a normal chat between friends who have literally hundreds of hours of recorded conversations behind them.SHOW NOTESSound Devices MixPre - https://www.sounddevices.com/mixpre/RØDECaster Pro - https://www.rode.com/rodecasterpro/Apple Big Sur - https://www.apple.com/macos/big-sur/Gary Yost - http://www.garyyost.comOculus - https://www.oculus.com/CONNECTConnect with Bill: Website | Instagram | TwitterConnect with me on Instagram and Twitter @jefferysaddoris or on my website at jefferysaddoris.com. If you've got questions or feedback, email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.Music in this episode:Five to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_ArtlistWANT TO SUPPORT THE WORK I'M DOING?Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Overcast | Google PodcastsTell Your Friends & Share Episodes Online: You can even share a favorite show clip using the terrific Recast feature. I've made a video showing you how: Create Custom Audiograms with Recast by Simplecast - YouTubeBuy a copy of my book: Photography by the LetterAffiliate Link Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links for which I earn a small commission if you make a purchase (at no additional cost to you). If I'm including an affiliate link, it's for something I actually believe in.
A few months ago I was out on a morning walk with Adrianne and got a call from a familiar voice. Since then we've spoken a few times and thought why not roll tape on one and see where it goes. Today seemed as good a day as any to do just that. Here's a brand new conversation between me and Bill Wadman.SHOW NOTESBeetlejuice - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094721/Schitt's Creek - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3526078/Ted Lasso - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10986410/Films to be Buried With - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/films-to-be-buried-with-with-brett-goldstein/id1408585620Hackers - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113243/A History of Pictures: From the Cave to the Computer Screen - https://amzn.to/2GpqCK2Depeche Mode by Anton Corbijn - https://bit.ly/3kVmnopObey Giant - https://obeygiant.com/Rocky 4 Training Montage - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_9FyTiq3SABurt Young - https://burtyoungofficial.com/ Connect with Bill: Website | Instagram | TwitterMusic in this episode:Five to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_ArtlistWANT TO SUPPORT THE WORK I'M DOING?Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Overcast | Google PodcastsTell Your Friends & Share Episodes Online: You can even share a favorite show clip using the terrific Recast feature. I've made a video showing you how: Create Custom Audiograms with Recast by Simplecast - YouTubeBuy a copy of my book: Photography by the LetterAffiliate Link Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links for which I earn a small commission if you make a purchase (at no additional cost to you). If I'm including an affiliate link, it's for something I actually believe in.Support the show (https://jefferysaddoris.com/#donate)
A few months ago I was out on a morning walk with Adrianne and got a call from a familiar voice. Since then we've spoken a few times and thought why not roll tape on one and see where it goes. Today seemed as good a day as any to do just that. Here's a brand new conversation between me and Bill Wadman.SHOW NOTESBeetlejuice - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094721/Schitt's Creek - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3526078/Ted Lasso - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10986410/Films to be Buried With - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/films-to-be-buried-with-with-brett-goldstein/id1408585620Hackers - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113243/A History of Pictures: From the Cave to the Computer Screen - https://amzn.to/2GpqCK2Depeche Mode by Anton Corbijn - https://bit.ly/3kVmnopObey Giant - https://obeygiant.com/Rocky 4 Training Montage - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_9FyTiq3SABurt Young - https://burtyoungofficial.com/ Connect with Bill: Website | Instagram | TwitterMusic in this episode:Five to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_ArtlistWANT TO SUPPORT THE WORK I'M DOING?Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Overcast | Google PodcastsTell Your Friends & Share Episodes Online: You can even share a favorite show clip using the terrific Recast feature. I've made a video showing you how: Create Custom Audiograms with Recast by Simplecast - YouTubeBuy a copy of my book: Photography by the LetterAffiliate Link Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links for which I earn a small commission if you make a purchase (at no additional cost to you). If I'm including an affiliate link, it's for something I actually believe in.
A few months ago I was out on a morning walk with Adrianne and got a call from a familiar voice. Since then we've spoken a few times and thought why not roll tape on one and see where it goes. Today seemed as good a day as any to do just that. Here's a brand new conversation between me and Bill Wadman.SHOW NOTESBeetlejuice - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094721/Schitt's Creek - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3526078/Ted Lasso - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10986410/Films to be Buried With - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/films-to-be-buried-with-with-brett-goldstein/id1408585620Hackers - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113243/A History of Pictures: From the Cave to the Computer Screen - https://amzn.to/2GpqCK2Depeche Mode by Anton Corbijn - https://bit.ly/3kVmnopObey Giant - https://obeygiant.com/Rocky 4 Training Montage - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_9FyTiq3SABurt Young - https://burtyoungofficial.com/ Connect with Bill: Website | Instagram | TwitterMusic in this episode:Five to One by Steve PoloniAll of the music featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist.io, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist.io free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_ArtlistWANT TO SUPPORT THE WORK I'M DOING?Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Overcast | Google PodcastsTell Your Friends & Share Episodes Online: You can even share a favorite show clip using the terrific Recast feature. I've made a video showing you how: Create Custom Audiograms with Recast by Simplecast - YouTubeBuy a copy of my book: Photography by the LetterAffiliate Link Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links for which I earn a small commission if you make a purchase (at no additional cost to you). If I'm including an affiliate link, it's for something I actually believe in.
On Taking Pictures with Jeffery Saddoris and Bill Wadman Comments? Send them to me at info@kennethwajdaphotographer.com and find me on the web at KennethWajdaPhotographer.com, on IG at www.instagram.com/kennethwajda/ and on YouTube at HeresToGoodLight.com - We can post our photo assignment photos and connect on the Daily Photography Blog FB Group at www.facebook.com/groups/2151928021601330/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kenneth-wajda/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kenneth-wajda/support
Jeffery Saddoris is endlessly curious – about people, about creativity, about line and shape and color – and his personal and professional pursuits are driven by learning, discovering, imagining, listening, celebrating, and making. Jeffery often refers to himself as a “serial conversationalist” and podcasting has become an increasingly important platform for his lifelong interest in learning, exploring, communicating, and sharing about art and artists – between more than 5 years talking about photography on On Taking Pictures, hosting the 12-episode Craft & Vision Podcast, and Process Driven, his ongoing podcast of long-form conversations about creativity and how the creative process manifests itself across a wide range of genres and disciplines. Photographer Links: Education Resources: Candid Frame Resources Download the free Candid Frame app for your favorite smart device. Click here to download for . Click here to download
I've been frustrated with my own photography for quite a while, and I think that frustration played a big part in the whole “which camera should I buy?” saga. Look, I think I am a good photographer — sometimes maybe even really good — but lately I've been having a hard time connecting with the photographs I make. Many of them are interesting from a technical perspective, and I love the experience of seeing the world through a viewfinder and the challenge of finding an interesting composition. But, beyond that, there's something missing and the work just doesn't land for me. It doesn't grab me and I think it has to do with my connection — or specifically the current lack of it — to the subject matter that I photograph.Subscribe: iTunes | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSLINKSHere's an amazing behind the scenes look at the stunt driving in Mad Max Fury Road. It's incredible to see just how much of that movie was done practically, rather than CGI.From the real to the unreal is the work of 3D artist Josef Bshara whose work is just fantastic. I did a little 3D back in the day in Lightwave and 3DSMax, but nothing as complex or realistic as this.And I meant to put this in the last episode but it slipped my mind. On Taking Pictures listener Josh Eikenberry has managed to cull six years of OTP show notes into one monster list. So if you want to see what we talked about over the course of 325 episodes, Josh has you covered.Music in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
A number of you have asked why I am selling what review after review calls the best APS-C camera on the market today to buy a two-year old Micro 4/3 camera that I've already bought and returned once before? Well, it's complicated, but if you'll give me a little bit of rope, I'll promise to try and wrap it up without hanging myself.What camera should I buy? It's a question I get asked a lot. And I try to stay pretty consistent with my advice. If you were an On Taking Pictures listener, you know that I could answer the question for everyone but my myself. My search for a new camera became an epic saga and the butt of jokes for years on the show.Subscribe: iTunes | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSLINKSHere & Now recently posted an interview with climber Alex Honnold and adventure photographer Jimmy Chin and his wife Elizabeth on their Oscar nominated documentary Free Solo, which follows Honnold as he climbs the 3,000 plus foot sheer granite face of El Capitan without any safety ropes to catch him.Also, if you dig seeing how the special effects in your favorite movies are done, follow movies.effects on Instagram. The feed features side by side photos and before and after clips so you can get a sense of what it takes to bring these big budget fantasies to life.And this is either really cool or really creepy, depending on your perspective, but Ukranian artist Olga Kamenetskya transforms overly made up toy dolls into hyper realistic looking figurines. According to the article on My Modern Met “Kamenetskaya strips the dolls' makeup and opts for bushy facial hair, freckles, and even wrinkles in their skin. The results are so lifelike that you'd expect to see these people walking down the street.”Em1 Mkii vs. PhaseOne IQ3Josef Müller BrockmannMy paintingsMusic in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
One of the things that I enjoyed the most — and miss the most — about doing a weekly podcast like On Taking Pictures is having discussions in between episodes with friends and listeners. Sometimes we would go a little deeper on conversations that were started on the show, other times they would prompt related discussions connected to things going on in our lives. I think the in between moments are what are most interesting to me — connecting broad conversations around a topic to our actual everyday lived experiences. I'm starting to roll tape on some of these conversations and while I'm not entirely sure whether it will become a new show per se, many of you have expressed an interest in hearing more of these types of explorations. With that, here's In Between.Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSAs I said in the intro, I'm not entirely sure what this is going to be, but I'd love to hear what you thought of it, and whether or not you'd like to hear more conversations like it. Email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.You can catch up with Jon on Instagram @jonwilkening or on his website at jonwilkening.com.Music in this episode: Take Me Higher (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
One of the things that I enjoyed the most — and miss the most — about doing a weekly podcast like On Taking Pictures is having discussions in between episodes with friends and listeners. Sometimes we would go a little deeper on conversations that were started on the show, other times they would prompt related discussions connected to things going on in our lives. I think the in between moments are what are most interesting to me — connecting broad conversations around a topic to our actual everyday lived experiences. I'm starting to roll tape on some of these conversations and while I'm not entirely sure whether it will become a new show per se, many of you have expressed an interest in hearing more of these types of explorations. With that, here's In Between.Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSAs I said in the intro, I'm not entirely sure what this is going to be, but I'd love to hear what you thought of it, and whether or not you'd like to hear more conversations like it. Email me at talkback@jefferysaddoris.com.You can catch up with Jon on Instagram @jonwilkening or on his website at jonwilkening.com.Music in this episode: Take Me Higher (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
Iteration 37 was called The Myth of the Perfect Thing and in it I chronicled part of my years long search for a new camera to replace or at least complement my Fuji X-Pro1, ultimately leading me to the Olympus EM1 Mkii. A few days after I recorded that episode I actually bought an X-T3 and since I started posting images taken with it, I've gotten some emails and messages asking what happened and whether or not my feelings had changed about the Olympus. The short answer is no, but I feel like this deserves a little clarification. The main reason I chose the Olympus was how it felt in the hand, but as I mentioned mentioned in 37, it wasn't JUST the feel — the performance of the camera is outstanding, and not outstanding for a micro 4/3 camera, just outstanding. Full stop. But something in the back of my head kept me wondering about the new Fuji. If you were ever an On Taking Pictures listener, you heard me repeatedly wax poetic about my love and borderline obsession with my X-Pro1.Subscribe: iTunes | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSEsquire just released a brutally honest and revealing interview with Bruce Springsteen talking about politics, mental health, and exorcising some of his demons. And if you enjoy the interview and want to learn more about Bruce's life, I can't recommend his autobiography Born To Run highly enough, especially the audiobook version. Hearing Bruce tell his own life story — at least for me — was a profoundly moving experience.Also, Russian director Maxim Zhestkov has created a new short film called Layers, which shows a variety of matte black monoliths being bisected by an invisible force revealing multicolored layered interiors. My description isn't doing the piece justice—it really is hypnotic.And finally, Google has created a new augmented-reality app called Vermeer that pulls together images from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Art here in DC, the Rijksmuseum, the Louvre, the Frick Collection, and The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum into a virtual museum of all 36 pieces of Vermeer's work.Music in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
At the end of 1999, I bought my first new car: a 2000 Chevy Blazer Sport in black, with a dark grey interior. I had never bought a new car before and the purchase process took months. Literally. I think I test drove every car available under $30,000 — multiple times. It got to the point where sales people at several local dealerships knew me by name. As it turned out, the local Chevy dealer was owned by the father of a guy I went to high school with, who ended up making me a great deal on the Blazer — I think in part so I would stop coming in to test drive his cars. Still, I loved that car and drove it for more than a decade before trading it in. When I decided to upgrade to a new mic, I tested more than 20 different mics — condensers, dynamics, even a couple ribbon mics — before landing on the ElectroVoice RE320 that I currently use. And then there's my search for a new camera, which was a running joke for about five of the six years of doing On Taking Pictures. The point is, I do an exhaustive amount of research on the tools I buy. On the upside, once I finally get to a decision, I rarely have buyer's remorse. Seller's remorse is another story — specifically, a mint-condition Nikon F2AS with 50mm f/1.2 lens that I still don't know why I sold.Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSFreakonomics Radio recently did an episode called How to be Creative where they asked a bunch of academics, artists, musicians, scientists, and inventors: how do you define creativity?Photographer Nick Brandt just launched a teaser for his next body of work called This Empty World, which as he writes “addresses the escalating destruction of the natural world at the hands of humankind.” It looks like another stunning body of work and I'm looking forward to getting the opportunity to talk to Nick about it.I've recently finished the latest season of The Man in the High Castle and in watching was reminded how much I love the opening titles, which were done by a company called Elastic, who also did Westworld, The Crown, The Punisher and a ton of other really terrific work.Music in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
Earlier this week, we recorded the last episode of On Taking Pictures after more than six years of weekly episodes. While the...
Earlier this week, we recorded the last episode of On Taking Pictures after more than six years of weekly episodes. While the...
Earlier this week, we recorded the last episode of On Taking Pictures after more than six years of weekly episodes. While the show was ostensibly about photography, the legacy of the show is 325 episodes—about 600 hours, give or take—of conversations that ranged from why we make art to whether digital is better than film. I think we spent more time asking questions than answering them, and for me, that became the main point of being there week after week. One of my favorite quotes is by Rainer Maria Rilke and while I won't share the whole thing with you now, the core of it is to “live the questions.” By living the questions, Rilke writes, “Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.”Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSHere's a link to the full episode of On Taking Pictures the clip was taken from: Episode 43 Artistic MonkhoodLA-based artist and photographer Natalja Kent makes incredible colorful geometric large format photographs without the use of a camera.Here's a terrific documentary about Japanese motorcycle culture called Motorcycle Boy. I love the way this thing is shot – it's dripping with tons of style and energy.Music in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
Earlier today, Bill and I recorded episode 312 of On Taking Pictures and while I wouldn’t say it was our best show—it was...
Earlier today, Bill and I recorded episode 312 of On Taking Pictures and while I wouldn't say it was our best show—it was a good show. I think every show is a good show for one reason or another. It was one of the more significant shows because of the number—episode 312. If you do the math, 312 marks the end of six years of doing On Taking Pictures every week and while I've talked in the past about what doing OTP has meant to me and what I've learned from it, how it has changed my life and the new friends I have as a result of it, those things are really byproducts of doing the work.Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSChristopher Burkett is a landscape photographer who uses a large format 8×10 film camera and discontinued Cibacrome paper to make stunning photographs of the natural world. Unfortunately, when Christopher runs out of paper, he will put away his camera and turn out the lights in his darkroom for the last time.Sanderson to Brackettville is short documentary made by filmmaker Parker Hill as she followed photographer Jason Lee on a four-day stretch in West Texas as he attempted “to document residual American landscapes across Texas in early 2017 with large format color films” for his new book A Plain View.If you are a fan of classic movies and terrific graphic design, Indiewire has you covered with this fantastic collection of every movie poster iconic graphic design Saul Bass ever created.Music in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
Earlier today, Bill and I recorded episode 312 of On Taking Pictures and while I wouldn’t say it was our best show—it was...
Sean Tucker is a photographer in London who I was introduced to by an On Taking Pictures listener who emailed me and...
Sean Tucker is a photographer in London who I was introduced to by an On Taking Pictures listener who emailed me and told me “you have to see this guy's work. I think it's right up your alley.” He was right. Sean's work is terrific, but it was his YouTube channel—how he approaches and speaks about photography and creativity—that was even more up my alley. As you'll hear, Sean is honest, insightful, and the dedication he has to the craft of photography really shines through. We begin this episode at a point in the conversation where we were talking about some of the challenges commercial photographers face working with clients, specifically when your ability as a photographer to simply shoot the brief seems more important than having the talent and creativity to go beyond it. CONNECT WITH SEANWebsite: http://seantucker.photography/YouTube: Sean TuckerInstagram: @seantuckTwitter: @seantuck MUSICPlease Listen Carefully (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
Sean Tucker is a photographer in London who I was introduced to by an On Taking Pictures listener who emailed me and...
In the last episode, I had a conversation with Glenn D'Cruze from North Atlantic Explorers, who I was introduced to by a listener of On Taking Pictures. In this episode, my guest was recommended to me by one of my favorite photographers, John Keatley. A month or so ago I reached out to John and asked if he knew anyone who he thought would be interesting for me to talk to. He responded with two names, one of whom is my guest on this episode. Whether you know Tom Deslongchamp as an illustrator, an animator or even a ninja, he's every bit an artist, both in the work that he makes and in how and why he makes it. In this episode, Tom and I talk about the importance of play, wrestling with labels and self-identification and his need to be in love with what he makes. LINKSJukabox – You Cried MeDavid ShrigleyNo Talking PlzCrayola MarkersThe Gift: Creativity and the Artist… CONNECT WITH TOMWebsite: tomdeslongchamp.comTwitter: @tomthinksInstagram: @tomthinks MUSICPlease Listen Carefully (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
This week, Happy Anniversary to us! We talk a bit about four years of On Taking Pictures, which leads to a discussion on the value of output. There’s the idea of getting better with practice, which we’ve talked about several times, but also the value of the body of work as an object, independent of anything else. We also talk about meanings we associate to objects and share a wonderful email from a listener called “The Mythology of Things” in which he works through some reasons that objects become more to us than their component parts. Also, is the Photo Renaissance over or are we in a New Golden Age of photography? Former Baltimore Sun photographer A. Aubrey Bodine is our Photographer of the Week.
This week, Happy Anniversary to us! We talk a bit about four years of On Taking Pictures, which leads to a discussion on the value of output. There's the idea of getting better with practice, which we've talked about several times, but also the value of the body of work as an object, independent of anything else. We also talk about meanings we associate to objects and share a wonderful email from a listener called “The Mythology of Things” in which he works through some reasons that objects become more to us than their component parts. Also, is the Photo Renaissance over or are we in a New Golden Age of photography? Former Baltimore Sun photographer A. Aubrey Bodine is our Photographer of the Week.
In this episode, I'm doing something a little different. One of the goals I've had for Process Driven from the beginning has been to expand the scope of the conversations I have beyond visual arts as an exploration into how and where creativity overlaps, regardless of the discipline. In this episode I'm sitting down with Glenn D'Cruze, a Canadian musician who records under the name North Atlantic Explorers. I was introduced to Glenn's music by a listener of my other podcast, On Taking Pictures who emailed and asked if he could send me one of Glenn's CDs. I'm so grateful that he did. My Father was a Sailor is a gorgeous atmospheric homage to Glenn's late father, who was an engineer on merchant ships in the North Atlantic during the 1950s. After his father died, Glenn embarked on a journey of his own that ultimately took him from his home in Vancouver to the seas sailed by his father nearly six decades earlier — and it all began with a pair of drum sticks and a stack of cardboard boxes. LINKSBBC Shipping ForecastsSailing ByFreedy Johnston – We Will ShineBelle & Sebastian – A Space Boy DreamDream Academy – Life in a Northern Town FEATURED SONGSInto the Blue SeaGlasgow, Circa 1952Hebrides, Bailey, Fair IsleYarboroughThe Sailor & The Stenographer CONNECT WITH GLENNWebsite: North Atlantic ExplorersTwitter: @northatlanticxp MUSICPlease Listen Carefully (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
The last nine years of producing The Candid Frame have included hundreds of special and memorable conversations with great photographers. It’s also provided me not only unique insight into what it means to pursue one’s passion for making photographs, but also what it means to make the choice to lead a creative life. So, when my friend and fellow-photographer Bill Wadman posed the question as to what I’ve learned from all these conversations, we thought it a good idea to record our discussion and share it with you. Bill Wadman is the cohost along with Jeffery Saddoris of On Taking Pictures, a weekly podcast that examines many of the idea and themes that we touch on The Candid Frame. I highly recommend their show. Check it out. I think you’ll like what you hear. Resources: On Taking Pictures http://www.ontakingpictures.com William Wadman Website http://www.billwadman.com Download the free Candid Frame app for your favorite smart device. Click here to download for iOS. https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-candid-frame/id371497499?mt=8 Click here to download for Android http://www.amazon.com/Wizzard-Media-The-Candid-Frame/dp/B00FYW38VW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1382319099&sr=8-1&keywords=the+candid+frame Click here to download for Windows 8 http://apps.microsoft.com/windows/en-tt/app/the-candid-frame/1a925d03-8bdf-44d5-83be-5ed475a054c8
"We’ve been charged with telling new stories for a younger generation because they deserve what we all had — a mythology to call their own." Disney's announcement of new Star Wars films, theme parks, TV shows, and other goodies have us wondering — how much is too much? Do we need a new Spider-Man, a Fantastic Four reboot, more Star Trek, and another Avengers film? Where do artistic endeavors end and commercial franchises begin? Why do these stories keep repeating, despite our fatigue, and how do we keep them relevant? Special guest, geeky photographer and host of the On Taking Pictures podcast Bill Wadman.
It’s our 50th episode spectacular! We bring back your favorite guests to answer the essential question of what is a nerd? How are nerds different from geeks? Has our understanding of these terms changed over time? What is geek culture? How is it liberating and in what ways do the “fake geek girl/boy” backlash limit fans? What does the mainstreaming of science fiction, fantasy, and comic books mean for the future of nerdery and geekdom? We share our favorite nerdy moments from 2014. Special guests: Diana Chang (host of Without a License), Derek Bishop (speculative fiction writer), Bill Wadman (photographer, cohost of On Taking Pictures), Nhu-An (lover of learning). 0:00 - 1:03:17: What is a Nerd & Nerds versus geeks; 1:03:18 - 1:23:52: Top Nerdy Moments of 2014.
Recorded on September 22, 2013 at Beer Diplomacy HQ in NYC This week, Stuart is joined by photographer Bill Wadman. We discuss photography, passion in one's work, the impact of one's work & legacy, the iPhone 5S (of course!), and a bit of privacy politics. Check out Bill's work at http://BillWadman.com & be sure to check out his podcast, On Taking Pictures.
Bill Wadman joins me for episode 19 and we spend a bit of time talking about his photography business and the gear he uses for that before getting into a discussion on his podcast – On Taking Pictures. We talk 5by5, live streaming, and workflow of producing a two person photography podcast.
Bill Wadman joins me for episode 19 and we spend a bit of time talking about his photography business and the gear he uses for that before getting into a discussion on his podcast – On Taking Pictures. We talk 5by5, live streaming, and workflow of producing a two person photography podcast.
Bill Wadman joins me for episode 19 and we spend a bit of time talking about his photography business and the gear he uses for that before getting into a discussion on his podcast – On Taking Pictures. We talk 5by5, live streaming, and workflow of producing a two person photography podcast.