photography, NASCAR, snow, New York City
Shooting Race Cars in the Snow?
17/12/07 17:48 Filed in: Story Behind
the Picture
As I watched the Jacksonville
Jags beat the Pittsburgh Steelers yesterday on a
snowy, windy Pennsylvania afternoon,I thought of
the winter afternoon in New York City a few
years back where I stood on Park Avenue wearing
a tuxedo in a blowing blizzard and photographed
the newly crowned NASCAR Winston Cup champion as
show shot horizontally through the photo. Matt
Kenseth had clinched the '03 championship a few
weeks before and I as prepared to travel to New
York for the banquet from my home in Florida, I
was excited by the weather channel's forecast of
snow for the banquet week in New York, as I
hadn't seen any real show since I was a
5-year-old growing up in Massachusetts. When the
snow arrived, however, it was much more than I
had bargained or prepared for, with 17 inches
falling over the Thursday, Friday and Saturday
of banquet week. The storm reached its peak late
Friday afternoon and Matt Kenseth and his team
prepared to pose with their race car on Park
Avenue in front of the Waldorf. At the appointed
time the driver, crew, and all the media (me
included) walked out into the storm to record
the traditional image of the NASCAR Champion and
his crew and car in front of the Waldorf on Park
Avenue. Wearing my light tuxedo in the blizzard,
I might as well have been standing there in
shorts and a tee shirt. I would bet that this
Park Avenue Champion's shoot was the quickest,
and most unusual on record. We quickly shot our
photos and everyone dashed back into the warm
lobby of the Waldorf. I've always liked the look
of the photos from that shoot, with the snow
blowing through the pictures, and yesterday, as
I watched Jacksonville's Fred Taylor carry the
football on a snowy field in Pittsburgh, I
thoguth to myself that NFL players aren't the
only ones who are called upon to perform their
jobs in less that perfect weather.


