On the Big Screen

I took the photo below at the Nebraska vs Michigan State football game on November 16th in Lincoln, NE with my Samsung Note 2.  I used the new HDR feature of #Snapseed to edit the photo, and I posted it to Twitter.  Later that night I had a few people tweet me saying that my photo made the big screen at the Nebraska Volleyball game.  Pretty cool!

 

2013-11-19

Lincoln Zombie Walk 2010

The Lincoln Zombie walk was this past weekend on 8-28-2010. This year was bigger than ever as over 1200 Zombies participated in taking over downtown Lincoln. The event was moved to be earlier in the month this year and it was a great success. The weather was fantastic with highs in the mid 80’s compared to last year when I remember wearing my winter coat and gloves. The time was also moved to a little earlier which made photography much more enjoyable. The zombies were suppose to do the Thriller dance at the Union but at the last minute decided not to for an unknown reason. In the end everyone gathered outside of Pershing Center for a street dance. I met several Lincoln Flickr and Twitter people for a Flickr Walk and Tweetup. It was great fun. See the photos below.

See more photos on Flickr Page http://www.flickr.com/photos/eos_liquidretro/sets/72157624728841511/detail/

Manual Lens Portrates on a Canon DSLR

I have gotten very interested (With the help of an influential friend) in some of the older classic manual lenses, so I now have a SMC Pentax 55mm F2 Type K in Pentax mount and a Jupiter 9 85mm F1.8 M42 that I have been mounting on my 7D and I wanted to try them out so I went out with a friend and had some fun around town. The 85mm is hard to focus because it has such a small DOF and its goes through 2 converters to mount on my camera so its no perfectly tight. The lens is also a bit stiff, but optically its good. I need more practice. The Pentax is a great lens & I am getting the fever for more. Its very sharp and extremely mechanical. Great little lens. Thanks to my model Megan for the great job, I could not have done it without you.


Pentax 55mm

Pentax 55mm

Pentax 55mm

Pentax 55mm

Sigma 10-20mm

Jupiter 9 85mm

Jupiter 9 85mm

Jupiter 9 85mm

Canon 50mm F1.8

Canon 50mm F1.8

To see the full gallery Click http://liquidretro.net/photo/gallery3/Megan1/

Family Inc.: The New B-School Job Choice (BusinessWeek)

Two weeks ago I was given an amazing opportunity to be interviewed for an article focusing on college students and the family business. Last week Alison Damast conducted a 20 minute interview over the phone for the article. We talked at length about what I am learning in the class, the current job situation for soon to be graduates, and family businesses.

Overall I am very pleased with this article. I thought it represents myself, the family business, and the University of Nebraska in a positive manner. I hope that this article helps persuade the University of Nebraska to give this class I am currently taking MNGT 322 permanent funding. There are a lot of kids who have personal ties to a family business and the normal curriculum of the College of Business Administration does not talk about the uniqueness and the potential challenges in family businesses. I did think the stock Getty image used in the article was kind of funny though.

Please take a look at the article here http://bit.ly/JMBizweek

There is no place like Nebraska – 300th Sellout

I don’t normally post things like this but I got it in an email and found the souce. Its just too good not to post and it really makes me feel good to be a Husker. The original source is located here http://www.espn1420.com/Default.aspx?tabid=3710&EntryID=6695

Written by Jaywalker

This is my 18th season covering Cajuns football. And, for eight years before that, I had the opportunity to broadcast selected games on TV as well.

I’ve been to nine SEC stadiums. (I’ll go to a tenth next season at Georgia.) I’ve seen the grove at Ole Miss, experienced the Gator Chomp, the Mississippi State cowbells, been a part of Alabama football in both Birmingham and Tuscaloosa. I’ve been called “Tigerbait” in Baton Rouge and experienced some pretty good hospitality in South Carolina.

I’ve said hello to the folks at Illinois and Minnesota. Felt September heat in Tempe, AZ.

Been to Manhattan, Lubbock, Austin, Stillwater and College Station. College Station was probably the best. Folks say “Howdy” when they see you. And they say “welcome.”

Haven’t been to the Horseshoe, the Big House or Happy Valley. Nor have I seen Touchdown Jesus.

But I’ve been to College Football Nirvana.

It’s located in Lincoln, Nebraska.

From the time we touched down (“Welcome to Lincoln,” the police officers doing the escort said) to the time we left the stadium (“Thanks so much for coming, have a safe trip home. We hope you’ll come back again”) every Cajun fan felt like a guest.

That’s right. A guest. Not the opposition…not the enemy….a guest.

Check into the Cornhusker Marriott, not far from campus. Fans of Big Red Nation are already there. Smiles, handshakes….welcome to Lincoln. Good luck tomorrow.

Board the bus for dinner. Arrive at Misty’s, Lincoln’s famous steakhouse (I mean, you gotta eat a steak, right?). There were about 25 in our party. We had to wait about twenty minutes for them to get everything ready. No problem. As soon as the patrons saw the Cajun gear, they wanted to talk…introduce themselves….welcome to Lincoln….thanks so much for coming. Hope you enjoy the game…..

Is this for real??

And, it continued throughout the evening and into the night. We made lots of friends. We Cajun people make friends pretty easily, but it’s even easier when folks want to be friends.

In Lincoln, they all want to be your friend.

Gameday is different in Lincoln. They tailgate, sure….but it’s tougher because, well, there’s just not a lot of tailgaiting spots. But they do open the soccer field next to the stadium. Families can let the kids roam free. Nebraska radio does a pregame show there. And, a band plays during the commercial breaks.

I did an interview at the soccer field with the Nebraska radio folks. And then, had a pretty good trek to the media entrance. At each gate, the sight was the same. Hundreds lined up, waiting for the gates to open so they could get into the stadium and watch their team warm up.

By the time Nebraska came out, about 45 minutes before kickoff, the stadium was about 65% full. There was no “hey, let’s stay outside and pound a few more beers.”

Because it was gameday. And they came to see football.

By the time the band was ready to come out, 86000 strong were in their seats. They stood and clapped along when the Cornhusker Band played “Fight on Cajuns” to honor their guests. And when the band played “There is no Place Like Nebraska” I knew that the statement was true.

For the first time ever in my years covering the Cajuns, I did not hear a single boo when the Cajuns came out of their tunnel onto their sidelines; in fact, I heard a smattering of applause.

During the game, 86000 cheered as Nebraska rolled. They didn’t leave at halftime to go out and start drinking (and remember it was 34-0 at the half). Some were outside, but they had passes to get back in and by the time the second half was ready to kick off, they were all back in their seats.

In the fourth quarter there were STILL over 80000 in the stands. Security keeps an eye out for the sign of alcohol in the stands, which is how trouble starts. If they see alcohol they don’t turn a blind eye. After all, college football is about a FAMILY atmosphere.

And when it ended, the fans stayed for another Cornhusker tradition. They applauded the Cajuns as they left the field.

Now you might say…sure, it’s easy to clap for someone when you just beat them 55-0. But they do that when their team LOSES. The newspaper on Saturday morning reprinted a handwritten letter from Florida State coach Bobby Bowden after the Seminoles got a hard fought 18-14 win years ago. Yep, the Nebraska fans cheered them as they left.

More of the same post game. There was a young man in a wheelchair where the Cajun players were getting their postgame meal. As each player came out, the young man thanked them for coming and wished them safe travels home. Many of the players stopped to chat for a minute.

Then it was over. And, as the buses left for the airport, the fans that were still there waved and applauded. No one finger salutes. No “you suck” chants. Simply, safe travels, my friends.

If the two teams should play again in the future, plan ahead Cajun Fans. Make the long drive or the relatively short flight. Come in Friday…leave Sunday. And, you will learn what REAL college football atmosphere is about.

Because, trust me…..there is no place like Nebraska.

A few photos from the celebration after the game. It feels great to have attended the 300th consecutive sell out and be part of the largest crowd ever at Memorial Stadium.



Husker Football Spring Game 2009 Photos

The Husker Nation sure is a dedicated crew. When you can get over 77,000 people to attend what can only be described as a glorified practice its a good day for a great game. All week the weather was forecast to be rainy for the game. Well the weather men were wrong! It rained before the game but cleared up perfectly for the game its self. The entire game was sunny and warm. You could not have asked for better weather.

I decided to bring my camera to the game because I had great seats (Thanks mom and dad). It has been a while since I had shot sports but considering I was in the sands I think I got some decent results.


More photos can be in the gallery







Jones Coffee Photo Show

UNL Photo club has an exhibition up at Jones Coffee (11th and G st) till March 31, 2009. I should have posted this a few weeks ago but got busy with school and things. Go see the show if you have the chance and grab a nice cup of tea (or coffee if you prefer) while your at it. Below are a few of my photos in the show.

My photo is the toaster in the top right corner



A close up of my photo (Toaster)



My second photo second from the left.



A closeup of my second Photo.



Light Painting or Light Graffiti

Wow, a month gone by and no update. I really need to be more frequent and I will try hard to get this done.

UNL Photo club picked a very cool and creative topic for a theme recently. It was Light Painting and Graffiti. I made some LED Light pens out of LED, Clear Vinyl Tube, Wire, Lithium Batteries, a Resistor, and a Switch.




I built these using a combination of previous knowledge and with a little help from the following websites
http://lightdoodles.com/pages/pens.htm
http://www.instructables.com/id/LED-Light-Drawing-Pens-Tools-for-drawing-light-do/
http://ledcalc.com/

My roommate and I decided that January in Nebraska was way too cold to go outside and do some more of the typical things that are seen with this type of photography so we stayed inside and experimented in the kitchen.


Toast anyone?