Most of the time, I feel like I am too busy to really contemplate my assignments as deeply as they deserve in order to cover them well. Being the only staff photographer, most days I have to shoot at minimum four assignments in a coverage area the size of Rhode Island. My typical day has me coming into work around 1 in the afternoon with perhaps one assignment already scheduled on my calendar, with an inevitable flurry of requests upon walking in the door, and throughout the afternoon updates about what sports I'll be responsible for covering. I rush out the door and head off to tackle these widely varied tasks, usually without the reporter even fully informing me about what the story is about and what the name of the subject I will be photographing is. I inquire when I have the time, and I always try to make the time, but often I am just left with an address and a skeletal description of what I need to do. When I arrive at each, I have an extremely fast burst of attentiveness and try to size up the situation as well as I can with what little information I have in advance, and rarely am I able to spend more than an hour on anything. I want to understand why I am taking a picture of this person, what their story is, what their personality is, what their goals are. I have endeavored to develop a sixth sense about these things and pick up on all these unsaid things and read them into the photos. For better or worse, most of the time the stories are so superficial that there is little subtext to be found, since until recently our editor had enforced a 20 inch limit on stories. I want to bask in these assignments, and flesh them out, care for them through repeated visits and get to know them for more than a a speed date. I want a committed relationship with my assignments in a journalistic world of one-night stands! Thankfully, we have just successfully increased the number of reporters we have by %100, now at a grand total of 4, and I hope that will increase everyone's attention spans to work on more meaningful stories, but that could result in me being flung even further and more frequently, and abandoning the hope of long term stories... but, even in these short term contacts with people and places, I still try to make some telling and worthy images.
Parents of graduating Headstart preschoolers encourage their kids to smile for their cameras.
Bill Burke, Navy E-6 retired, watches as flags are straightened around him while he holds an American flag during the Memorial Day ceremony at Lee Street cemetery on Sunday, May 24.
Jaquanta Walton, 12, strides across the dance floor at Glenwood Community Center during the 5th Grade Prom, on Friday, May 29.
Elijah Nenichka, 11, holds his breath in the shallow end of the YWCA pool during the open swim celebrating the pool's opening.
Graduates of Chatham Hall, an Episcopal women's boarding school in Chatham, embrace after their commencement ceremony conclusion.
Niariah Davis (center) covers her face with her hands in excitement as her class of the Head Start Child Development preschool program graduates.
This was just a photo I took for myself, since it was too creepy to run in a feel good Easter story, but I love it.
Tyler Younger (left), no. 3 for Chatham High School's varsity baseball team, receives a congratulatory kiss from his girlfriend, Katelyn Dockery, 17, following Chatham's victory against Northumberland High School.
Armed with flashlights and pastel-colored baskets, children took to the fields around Coates Recreation Center searching for Easter eggs during a flashlight egg hunt.