This seems to happen a lot when I'm shooting. I turn around and catch some dude with his camera pointed right at me. They usually look away very quickly and pretend that they were taking a picture of something behind you or above your head. Then they slink away and sometimes even try to catch you from a more remote vantage point.

Does this ever happen to you? How does it feel to be photographed without your consent? If the dude came up to me and said, "Hey, do you mind if I take a couple of shots of you using your camera?" I'd probably be fine with it. It's the creepy, sneaky attitude that annoys me, like a thief waiting to pick my pocket when I'm not looking.


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It happens to me often being a particularly handsome photogenic dude...why, sometimes they start scrapping among themselves in their excitement; understandable really. It's something i just have to live with i suppose but it would be nice to be asked so i could pose offering my best profiles. 


I have no problem with people photographing me. This is more likely to happen when I am playing flute than when I am photographing something. I apparently have a sufficient resemblance to Kenny G to get asked about it at least once a month.

I get photographed/videotaped so frequently using the subway, driving to work, using an ATM or going into the bank, going into most stores, etc. that I don't give it much thought anymore. Being photographed because someone thinks I'm interesting/funny looking doesn't seem any worse than having my image recorded because I'm a potential criminal.

I recently received a great question from a new angler of mine regarding why Islamorada fishing guides are usually the one holding the tarpon in the photos. I thought it was such a great question that I decided to share my answer in case other people were curious too. My answer involves several reasons why Islamorada fishing guides take hold during tarpon photo ops.

First, in order to get the fish in the position to even take a picture usually is the result of some serious tarpon wrestling. The wrestle involves me getting extremely wet, slimey, often throwing out my back and nearly breaking my arms. During the wrestle, I have many safety concerns including my angler, myself, the fish and the my equipment. The reaction of the fish can be very unpredictable and I need to have the person who caught the fish holding the rod on the ready in case the fish gets loose which happens a lot. Additionally, he or she is usually pretty exhausted after a long fight and the handling of the fish is hard work they want no part of under the circumstances.

could you please put your click activity inside a try/catch and set as exception to catch Uipath.Core.ImageOperationException with a warning log inside (" Uipath.Core.ImageOperationException catched by activity")

The setup: On 3rd down and 5 from the Michigan 20 in the first possession of overtime, Virginia Tech QB Logan Thomas attempted to hit Coale on a corner route in the end zone. Coale had Michigan's coverage (by safety Woolfolk and cornerback Avery) beat to the outside but the ball was slightly overthrown. Coale dove for what would be a spectacular one-handed catch, bringing the ball in just as he, and it, hit the ground just inbounds. The side judge ruled it a touchdown, but on review it was overturned and ruled an incomplete pass because the receiver did not have control of the ball when the ball hit the ground.

Incomplete Pass 

ARTICLE 7. a. Any forward pass is incomplete if the ball is out of bounds by rule or if it touches the ground when not firmly controlled by a player. It also is incomplete when a player leaves his feet and receives the pass but first lands on or outside a boundary line, unless his progress has been stopped in the field of play or end zone (Rule 4-1-3-p) (A.R. 2-4-3-III and A.R. 7-3-7-I).

The argument: The debate centers on whether or not Coale had "firm control" of the ball when it touched the ground. If the ball never touches the ground it's a clear reception, but since in this case nobody is arguing that the ball didn't touch the ground, the standard we're debating is whether or not Coale had established this firm control before the ball touched turf. For that we will consult the video.

Coale now brings the ball between his forearms. This too would not be confused for "firm possession." However at this point he has a chance, if he can bring the ball to his chest and get it crooked in his arm, to prevent the ball from hitting the hard thing that is rapidly rushing toward him very fast.

Here is the money shot (clickening embiggens). Coale's elbow has hit the turf (just inbounds) but the ball is still between his forearms, not in his hands. It is hard to tell but the ball has now hit the ground as well, a nanosecond after the elbow.

A good test of this "firm control" (this is a sanity check not the final arbiter) is whether the ball moved when it hit the ground. It stands to reason that if the receiver had firm control of the ball when it came in contact with the ground it won't move that much.

If you recall, this is what doomed Junior Hemingway's TD catch attempt while down 8 in the closing seconds of the Iowa game. Hemingway actually managed to get two hands under the ball and secure it against his chest and arm a moment before coming down atop it. The "firm control" test in that case seemed to have been passed, but the catch was ruled incomplete because the reviewers saw the ball move in his possession after it hit the ground.

What controversially damned Hemingway was that after this the ball rotated about 90 degrees after the nose of the ball hit the ground, or so it was supposed since Hemingway's body blocked most of that. With Coale however the movement after contact with ground was pretty clear.

But it's too close to call/not enough evidence to overturn! If someone is saying this to you they are confusing a Law & Order episode for reality. They have conceded that "incomplete" is the correct call, and are essentially complaining that it should have been ruled incorrectly because of a technicality in the literal meaning of the review rule. You cannot complain about calls the refs get right; that's not how complaining works. If you think the video is "inconclusive" you are conceding the call could have gone equally either way and saying it should be one or the other makes as much sense as whining that a flip of the coin should have been heads.

is that the referee's post-replay recitation of the rule as cited by Seth, was spot-on. The correct ruling, for the correct reason, correctly citing the correct rule in the process. Had we been burned on this one, as well as Hemingway's end-line catch versus Iowa, it would have caused some severe chapping. Might have left a mark. I still think that there is a good case to be made, that Hemingway's ball was a catch and Coale's was not, applying the same rule equally.

The slow mo really shows how the ground aided the catch. He has the ball pinned between his forearms, but he has not caught it, and as the nose of the ball hit the ground it moves the ball noticeably into his chest.




The ball even drags along the ground as he tries to control it. It is a great effort, but its an incomplete pass. I dont think its even that hard a call. I was in the Dome last night. In stadium we could see on replays the ground aided the catch. The replay ref got it correct.







not matter, because Denard would taken off for a 25 yard touchdown on Michigan's OT possession, and then Hoke would have pointed at Fitz telling him to take the ball and hammer it in on the two point conversion resulting in a thunderous Michigan win, but I still say catch, catch today, catch tomorrow, catch forever. I say this because I think instant replay has had a very disproportionate effect on the complete v. incomplete pass as opposed to any ofher kind of play. I think the standard for a "completed" pass has become to high, almost leading to the impossibility of actually "catching" a ball while in close proximity to the ground. I think that the Coale play was as much a catch as Calvin Johnson v. the Bears last year or Junior v. Iowa this year. If the ball winds up in the receivers hands without any referee seeing it come out and the video does not provide clear evidence that it was trapped, it should be ruled a completed pass.

I kind of agree with what you're saying, but I think the video provides clear evidence it was trapped. The nose of the ball hits the ground and then shifts into a more secure position between the receiver's arms. Is that not trapped?

Yuu can clearly see the ball hitting the ground while at the same time the receiver has only one hand on the ball. He clearly did not have control - the ground helped keep the ball right there for his left hand to wrap.

I think that the Coale play was as much a catch as Calvin Johnson v. the Bears last year or Junior v. Iowa this year. If the ball winds up in the receivers hands without any referee seeing it come out and the video does not provide clear evidence that it was trapped, it should be ruled a completed pass.

I doubt the rule has changed since instant replay was installed, but the number of angles, 3D, HD, 360 shots, all of these different kinds of analysis have completely changed the way it is enforced, thereby basically changing the definition to an unascertainable degree of "completion." You can't find a catch like that where a player has 100% control of the football. If you are going to call it like that, rhe rule should say "No portion of the ball can be touching the ground." That is how it is called right now.

...is that it's very hard to catch a football and control it as it hits the ground (especially if you're hitting the ground at the same time). There were probably a lot of non-catches ruled as catches in the past when replay didn't work as well or didn't exist. 152ee80cbc

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