Will I get up from my table and jog down the block to get a picture of a 1963 Buick Riviera idling at a traffic light?
Yes. Yes I will.
Photographed with a Canon EOS R and an RF 24-105mm f/4L IS zoom lens.
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Books. Bikes. Boomsticks.
“I only regret that I have but one face to palm for my country.”
I am not the only one thinking about the upsides of inconvenience, it seems; there is even a term, frictionmaxxing, to describe the trend of people resisting the lulling ease of screens. On a Saturday morning when I do not have to help a friend move, I am in bed scrolling Instagram. One video features what appears to be an elder millennial saying that he wants the nineties back. He wants a VCR. He wants old-school arcade machines that you have to feed with quarters. He wants a Walkman and cassette tapes to put in said Walkman.When you're in front of the arcade game, you are playing that game, when listening to the Walkman, you're listening to that album. When you're reading a dead tree book, you're reading that book. When you're photographing with a camera instead of a cell phone, that's all you're doing: taking pictures.
"All that money pouring in, those TV ads ... did bring people to the primary polls in record numbers, but that record still amounts to a 14.9% turnout instead of the usual single digits. Just over eighty-five percent of registered voters are, apparently, okay with whoever the rest of us pick."One state senate primary contest that had millions of out-of-state dark money advertising dollars spent on it is likely to come down to three votes.