 | Pulitzer prize photos| Modern Discuss Pulitzer prize photos in the Other Eras forums; ... |
|
07-24-2007, 01:30 AM
|
#16 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,530
Country: | |
| |
07-24-2007, 07:10 AM
|
#17 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Jersey Shore
Posts: 2,214
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by ccheese You have to go a long way to beat this shot by Joe Rosenthal. No other
explanation is needed.
Charles | The picture you attached looks like a reenactment. Where is it from?
Here's the original...
__________________ “Let's get Enterprise and Hornet turned into the wind." |
| |
07-24-2007, 07:34 AM
|
#18 | | Older Than Dirt
Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Virginia Beach, Virginia
Posts: 5,240
Country: | My pic was taken from the Wikipedia web site. I think the only difference is
one has be 'colorized'. It's still a winner.....
Charles
__________________ I can only please one person per day.
Today is not your day.
Tomorrow doesn't look good either.... |
| |
07-24-2007, 11:03 AM
|
#19 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Jersey Shore
Posts: 2,214
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by ccheese My pic was taken from the Wikipedia web site. I think the only difference is
one has be 'colorized'. It's still a winner.....
Charles | Definitely still a winner...but I got it figured out... It's a color still photograph from the movie, "Flags of our Fathers". 
__________________ “Let's get Enterprise and Hornet turned into the wind." |
| |
07-28-2007, 07:49 PM
|
#20 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,530
Country: | It's good to see survivors. Taken by Bill Crouch (1949?) at the Oakland Airport in front of 60,000 spectators at an air show on a Sunday October afternoon. Chet Derdy was at the controls of his stunt plane and was just finishing his aerobatic routine. Derby's performance was to culminate in this hottest stunt. Trailing smoke from his agile biplane, he would do an upside-down loop-the-loop leaving large smoky circles in the sky.
The plan was that one minute after his performance, three B-29 bombers were to appear in formation and make a high speed pass at full power.
They arrived early.
Derby, upside down, didn't see them coming. It's reported he missed the bomber's wing by five feet.  |
| |
07-28-2007, 08:37 PM
|
#21 | | Older Than Dirt
Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Virginia Beach, Virginia
Posts: 5,240
Country: | In the first photo posted by Graeme, Ira Hayes is sitting on the far left.
Mike, Ira, Doc Bradley and Franklin are in this photo, but Ira is the only
one I can identify.
Charles
__________________ I can only please one person per day.
Today is not your day.
Tomorrow doesn't look good either....
Last edited by ccheese : 07-28-2007 at 08:41 PM.
|
| |
07-28-2007, 09:11 PM
|
#22 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Jersey Shore
Posts: 2,214
Country: | Identifying the Iwo Jima flag raisers
From the left, by color... red = Private First Class Ira H. Hayes magenta = Private First Class Franklin R. Sousley Brown = Sergeant Michael Strank Aqua = Private First Class Rene A. Gagnon Green = Pharmacist's Mate Second Class John H. Bradley Yellow = Corporal Harlon H. Block
__________________ “Let's get Enterprise and Hornet turned into the wind." |
| |
07-28-2007, 11:42 PM
|
#23 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,530
Country: | This B-26 crashed while returning to Mitchell Air Force Base on November 2 1955. Miraculously no one on the ground was killed or injured. A miracle because it crashed in the middle of the Long Island community of East Meadows, in a street called Barbara Drive. Some of residents saw the plane approaching and were able to gather their children and run in what they hoped would be the right direction. It missed the Meadowbrook Hospital by 500 feet, landing in the front yard of the home of Paul Koroluck. One B-26 motor was deposited on Koroluck's lawn, another was in his doorway. Koroluck was at work at the time and his wife was away with their five-year-old daughter.
It was photographed by George Mattson, a photographer for The New York Daily News, who was in the air at the time and noticed a pillar of smoke in the distance. Approaching closer this is the devastation that he found.
The B-26 pilot and his sergeant died in the crash.  |
| |
08-01-2007, 12:49 AM
|
#24 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: South Jersey, United States
Posts: 7,059
Country: | And this one...
AP photographer Eddie Adams won a Pulitzer Prize in 1969 for a photograph showing Lt. Col. Nguyen Ngoc Loan executing a prisoner. It was an image that defined Eddie Adams' career.But fame -- instant, enduring and discomforting -- resulted from a single photo taken Feb. 1, 1968, the second day of the communists' Tet Offensive, in the embattled streets of Cholon, Saigon's Chinese quarter.
Drawn by gunfire, Mr. Adams and an NBC film crew watched South Vietnamese soldiers bring a handcuffed Viet Cong captive to a street corner, where they assumed he would be interrogated. Instead, South Vietnam's police chief, Lt. Col. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, strode up, wordlessly drew a pistol and shot the man in the head.
Mr. Adams caught the instant of death in a photo that made front pages worldwide. It would become one of the Vietnam's War's most indelible images, shocking the American public and used by critics to dispute official claims that the war was being won.
In later years, Mr. Adams found himself so defined and haunted by the picture that he would not display it at his studio. He also felt it unfairly maligned Loan, who lived in Virginia after the war and died in 1998.
"Sometimes a picture can be misleading because it does not tell the whole story," Mr. Adams said in an interview for a 1972 AP photo book. "I don't say what he did was right, but he was fighting a war and he was up against some pretty bad people."
__________________ 
"If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it's English, thank a soldier!" |
| |
08-01-2007, 07:22 AM
|
#25 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,530
Country: | Good post Njaco. Quote: |
He also felt it unfairly maligned Loan, who lived in Virginia after the war and died in 1998.
| Adams once visited Loan's restaurant, went to the bathroom, and saw inscribed on the wall "We know who you are."
At the time of the shooting loan walked up to Adams and said "They killed many of my people, and yours, too". Adams comments, "And that's all he said. He just walked away." Loan told Adams that his wife said he was foolish not to confiscate the film. But Loan never criticized Adams for the picture saying that if he hadn't taken it, someone else would have.
Moments before...
and after...  |
| |
08-01-2007, 09:35 AM
|
#26 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: South Jersey, United States
Posts: 7,059
Country: | There was also video that I've seen.
And another photographer that couldn't handle the situation to a degree. This affects more than just the camera subjects sometimes. 
__________________ 
"If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it's English, thank a soldier!" |
| |
08-02-2007, 08:02 PM
|
#27 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: South Jersey, United States
Posts: 7,059
Country: | William C. Beall, like Joe Rosenthal, was a combat photographer during World War II. Yet it was years later that he won the Pulitzer Prize for a photograph entirely different from the one of the flag raised on Iwo Jima.
While working for the Washington Daily News, William Beall was assigned to cover the Chinese Merchants Association parade on September 10, 1957. It hardly seemed like the kind of event that would produce the most-applauded photograph ever to appear in the Washington Daily News.
While keeping his eye on the parade, Beall saw a small boy step into the street, attracted by a dancing Chinese lion. A tall young policeman stepped in front of the boy, cautioning him to step back from the busy street.
According to Beall, “I suddenly saw the picture, turned and clicked.” The result was a moment of childhood innocence frozen in time.
One bit of info was that Bill Beall was on Iwo Jima at the time the famous flag raising photo was taken and was in the same marine photography outfit as Joe Rosenthal, he just happened to go to the other side of the island that day.
One thing often missed was that the young spit & polish policeman went on to become the Chief of Police of Washington DC, Maurice Cullinane.
There is also a statue in front of a courthouse, in Jonesboro, Georgia, honoring policeman that is taken from the photo.
__________________ 
"If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it's English, thank a soldier!" |
| |
08-02-2007, 08:32 PM
|
#28 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 8,443
| That picture is a great one!
__________________ "Pilot to copilot..... what are those mountain goats doing up here in the clouds?" |
| |
08-02-2007, 09:12 PM
|
#29 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,530
Country: | A Boy, a Pistol, and Trouble June 1947. Fifteen year old Ed Bancroft is holding Bill Ronan, of the same age, hostage with a pistol in a Boston alleyway.
Two officers had routinely stopped Bancroft and questioned him about a robbery that had occurred earlier. He immediately pulled out a pistol, shot one of the officers in the arm and fled into a nearby alley, where he grabbed Ronan. Both ends of the alley were quickly blocked off by the police and Bancroft threatened to kill Ronan if they advanced.
'Meanwhile'..Frank Cushing, a photographer for the Boston Herald had managed to position himself in a house, opposite the alley, and take the photo.
While Bancroft was figuring out his next move, a policeman managed to work his way along on the opposite side of the fence. At the right moment, he stood up behind Bancroft, reached over the fence, and stunned him with the butt of his gun. Situation defused.
As it turned out Bancroft had nothing to do with the robbery which the officers had originally questioned him about.
Cushing's photograph was remarkable because at a time when hostage situations were rare, his photograph showed one actually underway. In addition, the limited lens capabilities of the Speed Graphic, the usual camera of the press photographer, meant that cameramen had to be close to their subjects, which is generally not possible in a hostage situation. Cushing's ingenuity and persistence paid off and resulted in an extraordinary picture.  |
| |
08-02-2007, 11:38 PM
|
#30 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Fresno, CA
Posts: 2,559
Country: | great thread... thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
__________________ “Despite the threat of SAMs and increasing visibility on 31 January 1991, one gunship opted to stay and continue to protect the Marines. A SAM subsequently shot down this AC-130H, call sign Spirit 03. All 14 crew members of Spirit 03 perished." www.NewMediaPerspective.com |
| | | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:56 PM. |  | |