Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Paddleboard Yoga



Here's my latest video for AP, a standard lifestyles, TV-type report on people using paddleboards to do yoga.

Check it out.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Terrorism Plot



Soon after word came out that two men _ one from Seattle _ were being charged with planning to bomb a federal building that houses an Army office, I was sent out to get video.

Here's a standard video report.

I'm slowly getting the hang of it now...

Saturday, June 18, 2011

"Twilight" Town's Immigration Debate

In December, a forest worker named Virgilio invited me to photograph him work. He was later deported.

Forks _ the town better known to the world as the fictional setting for the "Twilight" series _ is in the midst of a fierce debate over immigration. In recent years, Border Patrol expanded its presence there, beefing up patrols in the town. That has clashed with the immigrant community there, which has many members working illegally in the country. They work in the forests, collecting salal leaves for the floral ornamental industry.

I visited in December after hearing of complaints from immigrant rights advocates for a couple of months. They were worried that the immigrant community was being targeted by Border Patrol. The complaints about Border Patrol weren't new. A couple of years ago, there was a flare up over the use of road blocks to check people driving on the highways of the Olympic Peninsula.

For its part, Border Patrol says it's just doing its job, which is enforce the laws of the land.

The result is a natural clash, like lions hunting wildebeest, a cycle that never ends.

 For my visit, I photographed forest workers and the town, as well as talked to many townsfolk. Later on, photographer Ted Warren did a ride-along with a Border Patrol agent, who was quite candid about the agency's role.

But I had to shelve the story after I went down to Olympia for legislative coverage.

In May, a man named Benjamin Salinas, a forest worker, jumped into a frigid and swollen river, fleeing from a Border Patrol agent. His body was later found decomposing.

His death has put a spot light on the clash here between Border Patrol and immigrants.

And free from Olympia, I was able to finally write a story.

Forest workers carry salal leaves.
The town of Forks is tiny.

Initial complaints were that Border Patrol agents were approaching Latinos outside the local courthouse asking about their immigration status.




Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Sweetie Rolls Her Rs



Sweetie, one of our family's dogs, can roll her Rs. This is further proof that growing up in a bilingual household leads to higher intelligence. She makes this noise whenever she greets someone she hasn't seen in a while.

Sweetie used to look like this. She was cute.

This is our other dog, Nikolas Tesla Valdes:

He used to be cute. Now he pees like a girl.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Latino America


Latino America from Manuel Valdes on Vimeo.

This is a collection of photographs - some good, some bad - of my trips to Mexico, Guatemala, Cuba, Nicaragua and Panama, set to the music of Calle 13's "Latinoamerica." (Great song, by the way.)

I need to travel again. I've yet to see the majority of Latin America. Maybe someday I'll update this to include more countries.

I shall plot another escape soon.

Mexico and Guatemala (2011) shot with a Canon Rebel T2i, and the rest with an Olympus point-and-shoot.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Back Behind The Camera



It had been months (thanks OLYMPIA!) since I had pressed the record button. This week I was sent to get comments from the Barefoot Bandit's (aka Colton Harris-Moore) lawyer after a federal court hearing. Probably could have zoomed tighter on the lawyer.

Photo by Kevin P. Casey

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Guatemalan Bike Riders Stare at My Camera & Vice Versa


Any time I go back to the country of my birth, I feel like an outsider. That's to be expected after leaving so early, and staying away so long. Plus, I wear too many shorts and my Spanish is not up to date.

But feeling and looking like an outsider is acerbated by the camera. That big black box with a tube coming out with a little motor noise - it stands between you and people; though, sometimes it unites you with a person, but often it doesn't. Like in this case, where the camera is just an object from a car staring like a tourist at the way these people live and transport themselves.

So the people stare back.

Often I wonder what kind of person I'd be had I stayed in Guatemala, I'd probably be skinnier.






Sunday, May 15, 2011

Guatever

Monterico, Guatemala

Legendary (and perhaps cheating) war photographer Robert Capa is widely attributed to saying, "If your pictures aren't good enough, you aren't close enough."

It's sage advice for anyone who photographs people, and one echoed to me by several of the pros in Seattle.

It's advice to follow.

But in my recent trip to Guatemala, I did not. I didn't feel like talking to people, something neccesary to gain their trust for a photogenic moment.

So I lagged behind and instead looked for wide shots, trying to capture human figures in different lights.

The pictures are basically from three places in Guatemala: The beach of Monterico, on the Pacific Coast; the colonial city of Antigua Guatemala, and from the highways cutting from the coast to Guatemala City.
 
Here are the results:


As the sun fell on Monterico, a large group of men and women, and children gathered near the hotel where I stayed to play soccer and volleyball on the beach.









A group of kids were there, too, kicking and bouncing a volleyball:




Antigua:




Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Last Line: Dave Ammons


Dave Ammons, who spent nearly 40 years with the AP in Olympia, stops by the bureau to say hi to new capitol press corp member Mike Baker, not pictured. Baker took over the bureau in late April. Always beaming with a positive attitude, Dave was a rarity in the cynical world of politics and journalism. His love for state government continues to show as the communications director for Secretary of State Sam Reed.