Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/09/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Didier showed: the way it was! ;-) > That's nothing compared to this crowd of impacted photogs and digicams: > http://www.pbase.com/vthian/athens_olympics_2004%26page=all > (From the recent olympic games) Hi Didier, Thanks for posting these Athens Olympics photog photo position situations. They sure brought back a flood of good, bad and ugly memories for me considering I covered the Olympics from 1968 until 1992. I noticed some of the viewer comments of "fun?" It isn't fun for these photogs in the positions shown as it's damn hard work of 12 hours or more standing in the pit packed like this all day! One would think some of the viewers might understand it isn't a bunch of happy snapping photogs on a Sunday afternoon stroll in the park. If reaching the Olympics for the athlete is the ultimate goal in their sport. So is reaching the level to shoot the Olympics as demanding for the photographers as for the athlete. Certainly as they're packed in here. The unfortunate thing is, the numbers of positions allotted for photographers has increased dramatically each Games. However the amount of space to accommodate them has hardly enlarged at all, obviously by the situations seen here! However, the mental attitude one must work with is..... "This isn't for the rest of your life, it'll be over in a couple of weeks!" Accept it, do your job as best as you can and get on with life after it's over. Remember, editors don't give a damn if you're naked and freezing or sweating under the noon day sun..... they want pictures, and better than everyone else's! Nothing less. And one surely doesn't say.... "I didn't get any pictures because we were crammed in worse than sardines!" And if you showed him a picture illustrating the photo position and numbers crammed in, his response would be nothing more than , "So what the hell, big deal, that's no excuse for no pictures! Where the hell is the winner?" By viewing these photographs one can appreciate the "work and dedication" required to cope with being a photographer at the Olympics and yep it's "all fun!" ;-) Yeah right! :-( ted