Raising the Flag at Ground Zero is a photograph by Thomas E. Franklin of The Record newspaper of Bergen County, New Jersey, taken on September 11, 2001. The picture shows three New York City firefighters raising the U.S. flag at Ground Zero of the World Trade Center, following the September 11 attacks. The official names for the photograph used by The Record are Firefighters Raising Flag and Firemen Raising the Flag at Ground Zero.[1] The photo appeared on The Record front page on September 12, 2001. The paper also put it on the Associated Press wire and it appeared on the covers of several newspapers around the world. It has often been compared to the Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima photograph taken by Joe Rosenthal during World War II.[2]

The picture taken by Thomas E. Franklin is not to be confused with another picture of the same event but from a different angle by Lori Grinker,[2] a photographer from the photo agency Contact Press Images (who photographed the entire sequence), nor by Ricky Flores for The Journal News. Flores also was able to get near Ground Zero on the day of the attacks, and, at around the same time that Franklin took his shot, Flores was able to get into a second story of a nearby building and capture the same scene.[8][4][2]


Download Picture Of Fireman


Download Zip 🔥 https://bytlly.com/2y3JUV 🔥



At a farm market in McLean, Virginia, a helmeted fireman shops for pumpkins, leaving his companions to fight the flames engulfing a two-story home down the road. All of this really happened. The photographer Joel Sternfeld saw it while traveling across America in his Volkswagen van, and the picture he took documents every detail save one: The fire was a training exercise from which the pumpkin-buyer was taking a break.

Sternfeld's photograph was published in Life, and has since become the most iconic image of his career, currently included in a major retrospective at Vienna's Albertina. Regardless of the format, the caption is always the same. The sole information is the location and date. No accusations are made against the firefighters of McLean, nor are there any correctives. If this picture is deceptive, it's only because we've deceived ourselves.

Sternfeld's most provocative body of work, collectively titled On This Site, is in many ways the opposite of the Virginia firefighting scene. In most of the pictures, nothing unusual is happening. One shows a Los Angeles street. Another depicts an Ohio parking lot. In a third, sunlight filters through a crab apple tree in Central Park. The places look innocuous, almost anonymous, until you learn that the roadside is the spot where Rodney King was pulled over and beaten by police officers in 1991, the parking lot is the pavement where five Kent State students were slain by National Guardsmen in 1970, and the tree once sheltered the body of Jennifer Levin, strangled to death by her boyfriend in 1986. In other words, these pictures expose what can no longer be perceived. Their subject is what is missing.

A century ago, anything a camera captured was widely accepted as fact. Today every image is presumed to be contrived. We're wary of underhanded propaganda and attuned to journalistic perspective. Yet as concerned as we've become about pictures, we remain all too confident about our unmediated vision, which is also inherently selective, limited by when and where we're looking. Sternfeld's pictures remind us that, like a camera, our eyes are essentially passive. Like photography, observation is an act of authorship.

This next shot is one of my favourites from the night. It shows the teamwork that needed in these situations. Once again, I only had available light. A flash would have ruined the scene by lighting up the reflective strips. I shot a series of five images as they brought the hose over, and the first was the only one that worked as in the next second the fireman in front turned his head back to the rest of the crew.

This shot (below) presented itself as a natural composition. I had to crop two firemen out on the right (you can see the water from their hose in the top right), but the form of the single fireman and blurred water from the hose makes for a great (almost graphic) composition.

But she did email him and thanked him for contacting the National Archives, acknowledged the sensitivity of the issue, and asked to talk with him about how he found the picture and his own and his father's thoughts about the image and to the fact that it's part of the permanent collection of the National Archives. He responded immediately that he and his father would be willing to talk.

It was not clear from the complaint when the photo was taken. Orlando attorney Daniel Prez, who is representing Starkey, said the picture had been taken by one of Starkey's co-workers and had circulated among officers in the department "as kind of a joke."

\"I was able to [help] make safer federal buildings,\" said Almon, who went on to lobby for increased security at government buildings. \"If I'm able to use it to save lives and if Chris is able to use it to save lives, then that's what we should do. We've dealt with that picture for so many years that if we're able to help other people with it, then we should be able to.\"

Billy Rose Theatre Division, The New York Public Library. "Joe E. Brown during the filming of the motion picture Fireman, Save My Child" The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1932. -0904-265e-e040-e00a18060b99

Billy Rose Theatre Division, The New York Public Library. "Joe E. Brown during the filming of the motion picture Fireman, Save My Child" New York Public Library Digital Collections. Accessed December 31, 2023. -0904-265e-e040-e00a18060b99


The Los Angeles Fire Department, specifically the Film Unit in the Bureau of Fire Prevention and Public Safety, handles all fire and life safety oversight for motion picture and television production studio sound stages, approved production facilities and production locations, and all commercial digital media production conducted within the City of Los Angeles.

The report states that person convinced the girl to send sexually-explicit pictures and videos of herself. During the investigation, police identified another youth who had also been persuaded to send explicit videos of themselves by that same person, some being sent to the Instagram user "Taylorsimpson2419."

The Fireman's Carry technique used to be a common way for firefighters to carry someone from danger but it's no longer used in that scenario because it exposes the victim's airway to smoke. However, this method is still used by soldiers and lifeguards because it allows the rescuer to carry the victim for some distance relatively quickly, with less discomfort and risk of further injury than various other carrying positions. Inappropriate techniques may cause injury to either the carrier or the victim, so make sure you know what you're doing before attempting the fireman's carry! 2351a5e196

cocosa lonely days mp3 download

stylish fonts pack zip download

firefox extension download facebook photo album

download game taxi driver

ncix