Thomas Hawk posted a photo:
Thomas Hawk posted a photo:
MHKBB posted a photo:
Camera: Hasselblad 503CW
Lens: Zeiss Planar T* 2.8/80 C
Film: Ilford XP2 Super
Lab: Prolab, Stuttgart
Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) posted a photo:
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
England will arrive at the tournament’s pulsating heart to find expectations soaring and the streets and bars abuzz
The shirt sellers are out en masse in the streets around Zócalo, the vast main square in Mexico City. The national team have never captured imaginations quite like this and there is almost unlimited demand for a jersey that, even before El Tri sealed a potentially epochal last-16 tie with England, had outsold every other at this World Cup. Three weeks since hosting the opening game Mexico can claim, for a few days at least, to be the tournament’s pulsating heart, and expectations are soaring. “We feel we are going to win,” says Francisco, who is walking along a buzzing Avenida 5 de Mayo. Even in a city notorious for its chaos and bustle there is an extra charge in the cool, thin air here. “It’s going to be difficult but we are all very motivated. Mexico will play a game like the previous one and they are going to beat England.”
Francisco is referring to Tuesday night’s win over Ecuador, which secured a first knockout victory since 1986. Even in the fabled, mythologised history of Estadio Azteca it was a night of almost unparalleled fervour. Then there was the situation on the streets. About 1.4 million people are estimated to have watched on outdoor screens despite a vicious pre-match storm that delayed kick-off by an hour. It is some increase on the 400,000 believed to have turned out for Mexico’s first match, a win over South Africa. Tragically it was not always safe, with four people killed in a crush and dozens trapped.
Continue reading...Derrick Callella admitted he called and sent texts to Guthrie’s family, demanding a bitcoin transaction
A California man is facing up to two years in prison or a $250,000 fine after pleading guilty to sending Nancy Guthrie’s family a phoney ransom note, federal authorities announced on Thursday.
Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today Show host Savannah Guthrie, was last seen on 31 January at her residence outside Tucson, Arizona. Inside the home, authorities observed her cellphone, medication and other basic essentials. Law enforcement also found drops of her blood near the porch.
Continue reading...The group stage is something you have to do but the World Cup starts here, Lamine Yamal had insisted, and down on the Pacific that was how it played out. It wasn’t that Spain defeated Austria to reach the last 16 where they will face Portugal or Croatia, their first victory at the knockout stage since they were champions back in 2010; it was that on an enjoyable sunny afternoon they were Spain again. Two goals from Mikel Oyarzabal and another from Pedro Porro completed a 3-0 win that was as recognisably theirs as their coach had requested.
For the fourth consecutive game Spain kept a clean sheet, Unai Simón breaking Iker Casillas’s record and Pau Cubarsí and Aymeric Laporte confirming their status as the centre-back pair of the tournament so far, but what really stood out was what was happening everywhere else. A little flat until now, that opening quarter against Saudi Arabia apart, here they flew and the ball did too. Intense, incisive, and ultimately entirely dominant. A lot of fun too, right from the start. And if Austria played their part then, by the time Oyarzabal added the third, this belonged only to Spain. What had looked like being a game had ended up belonging only to them.
Continue reading...⚽️ Kick-off time: 7pm EDT/12am BST/9am AEST
⚽️ Player guide | Bracketology | The full draw | Email Beau
Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s more on today’s matchup:
Can you remember what you were doing on 1 March 2006? Perhaps you were at Anfield, watching England beat Uruguay 2-1. You might have seen Switzerland put three goals past Scotland at Hampden Park.
Continue reading...This July 4th marks the 250th Anniversary of America’s adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Throughout that time, photography, artwork, storytelling, music and other forms of art have captured this country’s history and told its story from its beginning to today. This milestone anniversary does not exist within a vacuum. Photography from institutions like the US National Archives, Smithsonian and the Library of Congress show a wide expanse of experiences, triumphs and failures, loss and community building and everything in between. Each moment documented is an important part of this great experiment.
250 years of dreaming big, searching for justice, searching for freedom and documenting it all for those who come after us. That is what photography does. From pivotal moments in American history to quiet ones, a place, a person, a fleeting scene, these are images of what it has looked like to live in a country many of us call home, across 250 years.
Raising the first flag at Independence Hall, Philadelphia, circa 1776-77. Copy of a painting at US National Archives
Unratified California Treaty K, 1852 Installation at National Museum of the American Indian. Smithsonian
Two Boys in Front of a Tipi, documentation of the Flathead Irrigation Project, 1911. US National Archives
On Ellis Island, circa 1900. US National Archives
Votes for Women A Success, 1914. Schlesinger Library
Uncle Sam’s Birthday. 1776- July 4th 1918. 142 Years Young and Going Strong. US National Archives
Abraham Lincoln Statue Installation in the Lincoln Memorial, Washington, D.C. 1920. US National Archives
Basic and Advanced Flying School, Tuskegee, Alabama, 1941. US National Archives
This is America, Where you vote as you please, 1945. US National Archives
D.C. Grocery store owned by Mr. J. 1942. US National Archives
Young Woman at the Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C. 1963. US National Archives
Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C. at the Reflecting Pool, 1963. US National Archives
The Reagans and Michael Jackson at the White House, 1984. US National Archives
Crewmember in SPACELAB wearing the Acceleration Recording Unit and Collar, 1993. NASA
People’s Climate March, NYC, NY, 2014. Photo by Guano
First Family joined others to walk across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, 2015. Photo by Lawrence Jackson
Chicago, IL, 2017. Photo by Alek S.
Honoring the 31st Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities act with activist Tyree Brown in the Rose Garden, July 26, 2021. Photo by Adam Schultz
Robert Morris, George Washington, & Haym Salomon, 2025, Chicago. Sculptor: Lorado Taft. Photo by Don Sniegowski
NASA Artemis II mission specialist Christina Koch, 2026. NASA
From the very beginning to today, photography has captured America’s history and told the stories along the way, the struggles, the triumphs, the importance of community. The experiment continues and we hope you’ll keep documenting it. Get out there, take those photos and share them with us on Flickr. It’s a story that deserves to be told and your experiences are part of it. We can’t wait to see it unfold. Happy 250th, America!