New Weblog’s Up!

October 1st, 2009

Redirect your bookmarks, this is currently the Christine Chang’s old blog.  Check out the new pizazz-y weblog, it has been four months in the making!

Click here to redirect!

YAY!!

Shoot Now, Ask Later

April 22nd, 2008

Here’s a picture I took in December 2006 when I was interning for the local paper. This was when the U. of Michigan Football Team was having their pep rally at the Santa Monica Pier, and I was sent to cover the event. They were getting ready for the Rose Bowl, where they eventually lost to USC. I had just started shooting for the paper and the paper didn’t have a press pass ready for me yet. Actually, the whole year I was interning they didn’t really have a press pass for me, just a business card and then my editor basically threw me out there to the rest of the world.

And what a big world it was on that day. I was photographing alongside the Detroit Free Press, who flew people out there, of course, to cover the event, along with the LA Times and various other venues. It was really fun, but the one thing was I had to talk to this big “bouncer” guy and he was big enough so that I had to bend my neck all the way back and look at his head and 80% of the rest of my view was the sky. I was expecting alot of convincing (talking, smiling, showing him my card, showing him my camera, and more talking, smiling), but once I showed him my card he smiled and moved the gate for me. It was nice.

Flash foward a year to something that I don’t need any security clearance for: weddings. Weddings are clearly a situation where others want me to take pictures, the more the better. This is Maria, by the way, in Las Vegas getting her wedding makeup done at Macy’s. Everything about this picture looks normal, prepping for the wedding, etc.

So she gets seated and I ask the lady at the counter if I could take pictures, and she said yes. Then this manager walks up to me and begins to have a fit. I haven’t seen grown men have a fit in a while, but he seemed to be having one. You can’t shoot pictures here, it’s against policy, Mr. Manager says. I know it’s against policy, I say, but can’t you just let me shoot this bride and this bride alone on her wedding day? I will not shoot any of your products or anything else in your store.

He says no, and then I proceed to try to explain to him that this is the bride’s only day in her entire life that she will ever get makeup put on for her wedding and I have a job to do. He said absolutely no pictures and he walked away.

Remember when you were little and sometimes you asked your mom for something and she said no? Then you decided to ask dad, who didn’t know that mom said no. So dad said yes and you were off the hook.

Well I remembered that situation and lo and behold another manager (of equal stature) walked by. I asked him if I could please shoot some pictures for the wedding and he said “Sure! Go ahead.” And then he semi-retracted his statement when he said “but did that other manager say no?” to which I nodded my head. But, he said, it probably wouldn’t hurt, it’s her wedding day after all.

So dad said yes and I was off the hook.

The manager who said no to me, though, kept on hovering a circumference around the makeup area, so I photographed when he was at the farthest distance from me (look around, look through viewfinder. pause. look around, look through viewfinder. click.) My camera’s shutter gave the whole show away though, so when he heard the shutter in the stone silent morning at Macy’s he stormed over there and here’s how it ended:

“I am VERY DISAPPOINTED in you! I told you photography wasn’t allowed and YOU chose to DISOBEY me and take a photograph!!!”
“I’m sorry sir, but I have a job to do, this is her wedding day and I was hired to take pictures of her.”
“You explicitly went against my word and took pictures.”

To which he then asked my favorite question out of the whole scene:

“WHO do you work for?! I am going to talk to your supervisor!”

And then I had to keep myself from saying anything, I just really wanted a moment to compose myself and give the dramatic pause. To then which I answered, “I work for myself. Would you still like me to talk to my supervisor?”

And then he turned around, gave a little huff and stormed away. I felt bad then; he was only trying to do his job, but I just couldn’t get through to him that I wasn’t harming anyone in trying to capture a bride on her wedding day.

This story surfaced two weeks ago when I was sleeping over at my sister’s apartment. We were talking about everything, it was late, we both had work the next day, and it felt so good because we used to do this in high school. We would stay up late talking about boys and school and friends and the only thing missing was our dad knocking on our door at 3am telling us it was late and it was time to sleep.

So here’s to all the future weddings I will shoot: come rain or storm or unflinching manager, I will capture your special day!

September 12th, 2007

(L to R) On September 6, 2007, Grant and Oliver Mass enjoy the last days of summer as well as their Sponge Bob Popsicles, purchased by their caretaker from an ice cream truck on California Avenue in Santa Monica, California. The Sponge Bob is their favorite type of popsicle, and here they begin by gnawing off their favorite part first, the eyeballs on Sponge Bob.

Home Entry Assignments

August 14th, 2007

The thought of entering someone’s home wasn’t a very thrilling concept a few months ago. In the past if I wanted to photograph a person in their home it took alot of asking, waiting, and prepping. But then my editor would tell me that the assignment is due tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, and then I realized, fear is a powerful thing. Fear made me think of everything but the positive: what if I get hurt, what if someone locks the door behind me and I never get out of there, what if they say no, and what if I knock on every door and no one lets me in.

The first time I had to do this type of assignment (I call it Home Entry assignments), I had to photograph people who live in low-income housing, and it was the most difficult thing, because with many homes I was talking to immigrants. I came from an immigrant family, so for the most part I know how many immigrants react to the media (usually with fear and distrust). So with my own background baggage I was knocking at every door, and people said what I expected: They took a look at my camera and my little girl smile and they said No. Absolutely not. You cannot come in.

But…I still needed to complete the assignment. So I went there a second time later on and I heard the same things. There was a bit of light at the end of the tunnel though, as one family let me in….to photograph their interior. None of them would get into the picture. Not exactly failure, but it still didn’t fulfill the assignment.

The third time I went there I went with the reporter, who was a big help to me. He had reported on many stories where he has had to go from door to door with his notepad in order to write the article. And lo and behold, an immigrant family warmly invited me into their home, with one thing in their living room: a couch with a bedsheet over it. By then I was so tired I didn’t really even care about artistic angles or lighting. I just asked them to sit on the couch and let me take that family photo.

That was a few months ago. I’ve done many home entry assignments since then, and I can’t say that more people have let me into their homes and it’s a piece of cake right now, but being rejected is alot easier on me now. I just thank them for their time and move on. I’m also a bit better at the door-to-door salesman thing. I try to sell them the idea that I am trying to portray the truth about a story and I need their help, because I do. I even did an extensive photo shoot with one woman and she called me later not wanting any pictures to be published. Fine, I can deal.

On the positive side, as usual with my photo endeavors, I met alot of interesting people. The lady above had been a journalist all of her life and we got to really connect in our passion for telling a story, and it was great listening to her travel experiences. I also met Sylvester Stallone’s stunt double (I guessed it when he said he was a stunt double), and he told me about how he was asked to but didn’t stunt double for the movie 300 because he wasn’t sure back then whether it was going to be a big film or not…little details like that really make my day.

Happy Birthday America

July 4th, 2007

Parade on Main Street

Summer

June 28th, 2007

Lifestyles of the rich

June 25th, 2007

Today I tagged along with a trainer who specifically trains kids.

Little League

June 8th, 2007

Downtown History

May 20th, 2007

Docent Carol Agate leads the Walking Tour of Downtown Santa Monica, hosted by the Santa Monica Conservancy on May 19, 2007. On Second Street and behind Agate is the first brick structure erected in Santa Monica. It was known as Rapp’s Saloon, which also served as the town hall in 1875.

Swingers

May 18th, 2007

For an Andy Worhol-inspired atmosphere and late-night dining, head to Swingers in Santa Monica, California with friends and you might see “B” list stars, said to frequent the establishment.