Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/04/04

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Subject: [Leica] Cameras and TV
From: hoppyman at bigpond.net.au (G Hopkinson)
Date: Wed Apr 4 14:20:14 2007
References: <C7F2156D-CF9F-4971-8739-866E8805FD12@mac.com> <DC4B73A4105FCE4FAE0CEF799BF84B36013F1DF2@case-email>

DaveR, that's an entertaining analysis ;-) I don't know that particular 
show, but let me tell you that if you have a medico in your
household you often get an equivalent analysis on scenes involving emergency 
rooms  or intensive care scenarios etc. Our list
medicos might chime in here.

Cheers
Hoppy 

-----Original Message-----
From: lug-bounces+hoppyman=bigpond.net.au@leica-users.org 
[mailto:lug-bounces+hoppyman=bigpond.net.au@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of
David Rodgers
Sent: Thursday, 5 April 2007 02:42
To: Leica Users Group
Subject: [Leica] Cameras and TV

Anyone happen to watch "House" on Fox last night. The patient was a 
photographer.

For those not familiar with "House" it's a drama. In each episode a patient 
with a complex -- and often terminal -- medical
condition is admitted. It's up to Dr. House and his team to diagnose and 
save the patient.  

While I'm sure the medical story line is always factual and 
realistic......the photography sidebar in this episode was a bit of a
reach. Early in the episode the patient began photographing the doctors.
(Who on their death bed wouldn't keep clicking away??? My dying words will 
no doubt be, "where's my Leica?")

Not surprisingly, prints appeared almost immediately. It's a one hour show 
and with commercials and a medical story line they
couldn't get into the technical photography stuff. They probably didn't care 
that I'd be interested to know they had an Epson 3800
handy in Medical Records department. 

The first doctor discovered his portrait when it was hanging from a string 
next to the patient. It was almost as though the patient
had just pulled it from a tray of fixer. (Again, who wouldn't want to 
develop prints from a hospital bed??? My next to last dying
words will no doubt be, "I'm going back to Selectol".)

I assume the prints where chemical. After all, it's not necessary to hang 
digital prints. But therein was my greatest dilemma. I
couldn't make a clear digital or film connection. 

The prints were BW. Perhaps they were printed on Crane Museo. I can't be 
sure. The producers couldn't get Crane to pay for a plug.
Why are "artistic" prints never in color? 

The prints were very nice. Image area was 5x7 printed on 8x10 paper (or 
maybe 8 1/2 by 11) The images had a very film-like border.
It almost looked like film printed through a filed out neg carrier. Or a 
contact print from PN55. 

The photos looked like studio portraits. I hope my next hospital room is 
equipped with a canvas backdrop. 

The camera used in bed was either a digital body....or a film body. I'm not  
familiar with Canon bodies, unfortunately. I did see
the photographer chimping, so maybe it was film. If so they must have had a 
Jobo in the pharmacy and a Nikon 5000 in the OR. More
likely, it was a digital camera and someone had CS2 loaded on a their 
hospital PC. 

The brand of camera used was clearly Canon! They didn't black out the 
letters on the camera like they used to do. Money must have
changed hands somewhere. I've noticed that on law enforcement dramas you'll 
normally see Nikons. 

I've observed that if a TV program depicts a serious photographer they'll 
show a Leica, or more often a Hasselblad. In the intro to
"House" the photographer used a Hasselblad during a studio shoot. That 
established "professionalism". Obviously a Canon wasn't
enough to do the trick.

During the studio shoot the Hasselblad was activating strobes. Yet there 
wasn't a synch cord or remote attached to a PC socket. They
must think we're idiots not to notice such things! It looked like a 500 or 
501 but I could have been mistaken. 

All in all this unrealistic treatment of photography made me lose interest 
in the show. The real conflict in the drama for me was
whether or not all the photography was digital or film. The pictures looked 
filmy, but the turn around was immediate. I knew I'd
never have a definitive answer so I fell asleep half way through the show. 
The patient lived, I assume. 

DaveR  



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Replies: Reply from gpinkcp at msn.com (Gary Pinkerton) ([Leica] Cameras and TV)
Reply from leicam4pro at yahoo.com (Photo Phreak) ([Leica] Cameras and TV)
In reply to: Message from imagist3 at mac.com (Lottermoser George) ([Leica] A good while ago)
Message from drodgers at casefarms.com (David Rodgers) ([Leica] Cameras and TV)