Staggering reporting by the Washington Post — Abused by the Badge — finds "at least 1,800 state and local law enforcement officers who were charged with crimes involving child sexual abuse from 2005 through 2022."
This interactive article was posted 2 months ago, yet didn't cross my radar. And I have pretty good radar. As a result, I've decided to do my part to get it more widely seen.
Caleb Stein's, Down By the Hudson, a series of b&w photos taken at a watering hole in Poughkeepsie, NY, explores the camaraderie and simplicity a gathering place engenders by simply being.
The full series, including gallery shots and accompanying text, is on Caleb's site.
Anecdote Alert
The image of the soaped-up boy reminds me of people I encountered on a weekend drive as a teenager. I was camping with some friends at a lake. There was a cliff with a rope tied to an overhanging tree. Locals would emerge from the water "clean," after soaping up, swinging, and letting go. One child, who couldn't yet have been 10, forgot to wipe his palms on his shorts before grabbing the rope. The excess Sunlight stymied his grip and he plunged into the shallowest part of the lake, just that side of the rocks. When I think of it, I see him strike stone and break — some times his head, some times his arm, most often his leg — complete with crack!, or blood, depending on what's been struck. It's an overwhelming "memory" that I have to remind myself didn't happen. He was fine, though a bit shook. I don't doubt that what he saw bursting through the water — the horrified looks on the observers' faces — is burnt into his brain the way the reverse has settled in mine.
That whole weekend was one of the strangest of my youth, and none of it in a good way.
Alex, 9, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilJames, 9, New York, USA
James Mollison's extraordinary series, Where Children Sleep, offers portraits of kids and their "bedrooms" from places around the world. So much to think about these, especially when contrasted with one another. Equality, opportunity, privilege, burden, culture. Fantastic stuff.
Joey, 11, Kentucky, USAJyoti, 14, Makwanpur, NepalDouha, 10, Hebron, West BankLamine, 12, Bounkiling Village, SenegalDelanie, 9, New Jersey, USANantio, 15, Lisamis, Northern KenyaRisa, 15, Kyoto, JapanSyra, 8, Iwol, SenegalJivan, 4, New York, USAAhkôhxet, 8, Amazon, BrazilKaya, 4, Tokyo, JapanJazzy, 4, Kentucky, USAAnonymous, 4, Rome, ItalyLi, 10, Beijing, China
Back home I dream of the water beyond the break and wake older angry at borders that keep me foreign and dry.
Did my wretched ancestors who walked inward abandoning shorelines and settling centered fear the power tides gift me?
And will my absence pull from both coasts to my landlocked city salt water so deep as to drown their evil guiding star?
— July, 2017, Toronto
Lake Ontario, 2024
Your Call Pulses Through Me With A Glorious Dynamism
I've felt this wave before, in Havana and Piles, too. You were with me, then, and the water senses your absence. I lay back and conspire with the tide. The sunlit Santa Monica sky turns black and star-pricked. I drift, whispering your name, until I feel your faint but unmistakable touch.
— December, 2017, Santa Monica
Sunset over Deb's pool. Paradise Cove, Vanuatu, 2019
Ambyence is a collection of live streaming microphones from around the world. Many of these are run by universities, but others are businesses or personal residences.
Along with a connection to the live audio, each location displays local time and weather as well as a brief description of the environment. Satellite images from Google Maps show the general location from above.
Tremendous use of the web and a fantastic interface on the site.
If you've ever been in my home, you'll recognize these paintings, some of which I've owned for almost 30 years. They're all by Toronto artist, Dana Boettger.
Sleepless NightsA New LanguageWaitingA Wing & A Prayer
Here's a shot of two of her works in my space. Unfortunately, I don't recall the name of the red one. The one on the right is Waiting, which is also pictured above.
Paintings by Dana Boettger
Though her site hasn't been updated in some time, she attended my birthday party not too long ago and confirmed that she's still painting.
Phoebe Todd-Parrish's woodprints of Toronto area eateries are fantastic. You can view the whole series on her site. Phoebe's the proprietor of Flycatcher Press, a Toronto letterpress and printmaking studio.