groovygoolie wrote:So even though I don't particularly like you people; I still have regard for what you do.
Makkonen wrote:Hi Simon,
I noticed you didn't have PMs enabled so I decided to post here.
I'm interested in producing Finnish subtitles for the September Clues video. How does the process go? Is it complicated?
simonshack wrote:Makkonen wrote:Hi Simon,
I noticed you didn't have PMs enabled so I decided to post here.
I'm interested in producing Finnish subtitles for the September Clues video. How does the process go? Is it complicated?
Dear Makkonen,
I have just e-mailed you the Excel file with the English/Russian transcript of September Clues. All you have to do is to replace the Russian text with Finnish (well, I do realize this is pretty hard work - but I really hope you will find the time to do the job!)![]()
Warmest regards - and let me know if you have any questions/problems - ok?
jaytotale wrote:my non-wageslave pursuit as an alternative musician?
jaytotale wrote:Dear Simon
In the spirit of Wikileaks and their burgeoning T-Shirt franchise, have you got any September Clues T-Shirts you can send to me to wear on stage while I badger the unwashed during my non-wageslave pursuit as an alternative musician? A sober yellow(like this site) would suffice.
P.s I know you have no T-Shirts, but could you have one tastefully made and shipped post haste!! I'm back on the road with a new venture very soon and want this one to have maximum impact. Heres an example of past vitriol.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3xYu41jABs

Kathy Cacicedo — director/producer/still photographer/editor/graphic designer
Kathy holds a BFA in Graphic Design from Syracuse University. She has her own company, BuenaOnda Pictures.
"The photo of the second plane approaching the World Trade Center on September 11 was shot on 400 ASA negative FILM. The FILM was developed on September 11 at the STAR LEDGER- NJ's largest newspaper. It can be seen in the Life Magazine book "One Nation [America Remembers September 11, 2001]" and Time Life's "Year in Pictures" The photos have been published in magazines and newspapers around the world. Der Spiegel, Max, Geo Germany. The Guardian, London Times, England. Paris Match, France. Profil, Austria. Herald Sun, Australia. Sette, Italy. NRC Handelsblad, Holland. US News and World Report, The Star Ledger, Encyclopedia Brittanica. USA." - kcphotographer.com
Finally making the jump to film and video, in 2002 she formed her own production company -BuenaOnda Pictures. One of BuenaOnda's first projects - a music video for latin group CTO "Prendele la Mecha" won the BEST MUSIC VIDEO award at the Garden State Film Festival and the NY International Film Festival.

Luke Cremin — amateur photographer
"This image just prior to the plane impact with the South tower still, a year later, puts a shiver down my spine. Image taken from Atlantic Basin due South of the site of the WTC."
Contributor's location on 9/11: Brooklyn, New York
Cite as: Luke Cremin, Image #1200, The September 11 Digital Archive, 10 September 2002, http://911digitalarchive.org/images/details/1200



Joe Vazquez — amateur photographer
Recently found (2010) source details, thanks to researcher Prishep:
"Photo taken by Joe Vazquez at the Gowanus Gas Turbine site. The first plane has crashed into the south tower. The second plane has targeted the other tower. A lone seagull is perched on a coal mound. Striking contrast!"
Update January 4, 2010: See more photos from Joe. None are better quality, unfortunately. YougeneDebs placed the gravel pile "at the NW end of 25th St in Brooklyn (on the water)" and the camera looking over the Federal Bureau of Prisons building, near "where 2nd Ave would meet 28th St, if those streets went that far." -

Bond analyst Will Nuñez had gone to his corner newsstand and bought a $14.99 disposable Kodak, hoping to record the smoking tower out his office window "for history's sake," he says. "I remembered an incident back in the thirties when a plane had hit the Empire State Building, and I was always impressed by photos in encyclopedias." Instead, from his perch on the thirty-second floor of One State Street Plaza, he captured the plane's breathtaking blur out his office window, quite unintentionally. In his shot, a colleague, standing before a vast picture window, looks on in silhouette, next to an innocuous baseball trophy, its tiny batter poised on a two-handled loving cup. The plane had streaked by with such speed, Nuñez had not even realized he had caught it on film until he finally got around to developing the roll a week or two later.
- David Friend, Watching the World Change: The Stories Behind the Images of 9/11, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, p. 13.
Gary-Welz wrote:Hey Simon,
Are you familiar with these "amateur" photos of the flying cartoons on 9/11?
Cool - thanks, had not seen those 2 masterpieces by 'Fabien Moreau' and 'Joe Vazquez' (that seagull is really cute!).

hoi.polloi wrote:No way in hell are those real photos, let alone taken by a disposable!

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests