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Posts Tagged ‘Prince’

Richard Prince must face lawsuit over image theft, judge rules

28 Jul

Controversial artist Richard Prince must face a lawsuit over his unauthorized use of photographer Donald Graham’s photo ‘Rastafarian Smoking a Joint,’ a federal judge has ruled. The ruling concerns a 2015 lawsuit Graham filed against Prince after he failed to heed a cease and desist order. Prince and Larry Gagosian, owner of the Gagosian Gallery where the pilfered image and others were displayed, had claimed the work is ‘transformative’ in an effort to have the case dismissed.

Real Bongo Nyah man a real Congo Nyah ? repost @indigoochild

A post shared by Jay Kirton Kwame Ka Asante (@rastajay92) on

Though Prince has managed to escape past lawsuits unscathed, this latest one may prove different. Talking about the ‘transformative’ claims, U.S. District Judge Sidney H Stein stated, “The primary image in both works is the photograph itself. Prince has not materially altered the composition, presentation, scale, color palette and media originally used by Graham.”

Graham’s version of the image was acquired from another Instagram account where it was featured; he had it enlarged and printed with his own Instagram-style comment beneath the original user’s caption. The exhibit at Gagosian contained a total of 38 of these ‘borrowed’ images, including the Rastafarian photo cited in the lawsuit. The court’s ultimate ruling on the lawsuit could set a major precedent for fair use as it relates to Instagram images.

Via: New York Times

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

23 Apr

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Paris, France. June 2011. Brian wanted to show what it was like to experience a Prince performance, so he decided to shoot in a more artistic and editorial way than is typical for concert photography. This is the first shot he showed Prince, which was the shot that defined Brian’s stint as Prince’s tour photographer. Photo by Brian Ach.

Celebrity and concert photographer Brian Ach was Prince’s European tour photographer during the artist’s 2011 “Welcome 2” tour through North America, Europe and Australia. Brian shared some of his tour stories with us in his closing talk at PIX 2015, and this morning he chatted again with us about his experience photographing and working with Prince, following the musician’s death this week, aged 57.

You were hired to photograph the European leg of Prince’s tour in 2011. As a huge fan of his music, and knowing his reputation for hard work and high expectations, how did you approach this job?

I didn’t get a chance to meet Prince before the first show in Paris. Since I didn’t have any direction from him about how or what I should shoot, I decided that I was going to be true to myself and shoot the show the way I thought it should be shot. I decided to go for broke and shoot it in an artistic way, to make it worthy of his art and his performance.

When I was ready to deliver the edits to Prince after the show, I opted not to show them to him in chronological order. Instead, I picked what I considered to be the most interesting 6 or 7 shots and put those first. Prince entered the room and said, “You have something to show me,” so I pulled the first picture up on the screen. He stared at it for 15 seconds in complete silence and then got up and walked out of the room. I assumed I was going to get fired after a single shot, but a minute later Prince walked back in with his whole band. He pointed at the screen and said, “Look at that,” and then stood back with a smile on his face. He asked his manager, “Where did you find this guy?” and I answered, “Queens.” He laughed, and from that moment we had an understanding. He expected the best, so as long as I did my best work, we’d work well together.

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Gdynia, Poland. July 2011. Being Prince’s photographer gave Brian the opportunity to be more creative. Photo by Brian Ach.

You have a lot of experience photographing musicians, from U2 to Taylor Swift, Jay-Z, Kanye West and Bruce Springsteen. Was it different to photograph Prince?

The advantage of shooting for an artist is that you get to shoot the whole show rather than just the first 30 seconds of the first few songs. This gives you time to be more creative as long as you get the basic shots out of the way, and it gives you access to areas of the stage that you wouldn’t normally have.

Prince was an epic performer, so photographing his show meant going for the epic shots. I shot a lot of wide angles from behind the stage to bring people right into the performance, and I had the luxury to swap out different lenses to try different things. Normally I would never shoot a concert with a 50mm F1.4, but I used it during a few quieter moments to really capture the feeling of the moment. I had time to experiment, to catch a strobe, get him backlit, drag my shutter. Prince was an artist, so he was going to “get” it if I took some chances to be more creative. However it was still a huge risk if he didn’t like what I shot!

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Rotterdam, Netherlands. July 2011. This shot was initially rejected by Prince because of his animated expression.  Brian argued that it was a powerful and emotive shot, and Prince eventually agreed. Photo by Brian Ach.

Prince owned his public image. He was one of the first artists to start buying out photographers and his music, to refuse to have his interviews recorded. He made sure there was nothing out there that he felt cheapened his image or his music. He had strong opinions about what he wanted, and over time I was able to learn what he was looking for. Sometimes I argued with him about shots that he rejected and sometimes he conceded. Because even though he knew what he wanted, he was also collaborative. His entire career was one risk after another, so he appreciated and respected when I took risks and challenged him.

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Paris, France. June 2011. This shot was rejected by Prince because of the empty seats behind the stage. Photo by Brian Ach. 

When I took this shot [above], I thought, “Yes!  I got it!”  I showed it to Prince and he said no, we weren’t going to use it. It was a great shot of him walking on stage singing with the crowd bursting into applause, but it wasn’t going to work. I asked what was wrong with it and Prince said, “There are empty seats behind me.  It can’t look like there were empty seats at my show.” Those seats had to be empty because they were behind the stage, but even though there was a good reason, it told the wrong story. I agreed with Prince and that photo wasn’t used.

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Rotterdam, Netherlands. July 2011. Prince didn’t choreograph his shows, so Brian had to be on his toes at all times. He couldn’t just sit back and shoot or he’d have missed shots like this one. Photo by Brian Ach.

Prince didn’t play a concert; he put on a show, and it wasn’t the same show every night. His band had to know at least 300 songs and they had to be ready to play any of them, as they would often see the set list for the first time when they walked on stage. Nothing was choreographed, so it kept you on your toes thinking, “Man, he’s never done that before.”

One time, Prince did a guitar solo, ripped off the guitar, and threw it into the audience. When I saw him after the show he smiled that little smile he’s famous for. “Did you get that guitar in the air?” “You know what?  I did.”  “Right on.”

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Rotterdam, Netherlands. July 2011. Prince saw Brian about to take this shot, so he moved his guitar from behind the mic stand to make it a cleaner shot. Photo by Brian Ach.

Do you have a favorite photo you took of Prince?

Prince was an amazingly energetic performer, but this photo [above] was taken during a very calm, peaceful moment. He was completely in the zone, and it was rare to catch him like this. At the same time, even as he committed himself to this moment, he still knew what he needed to do. Before the shot, he saw me there so he pulled his guitar from behind the mic stand. He knew I was going to get the shot and that it would be good. It’s that kind of awareness that you don’t see in many musicians. So confident in his ability that he didn’t have to think about performing; it just came naturally.

I once commented that his guitar playing seemed so effortless for him. He told me, “Yeah, that’s from practicing so long that my fingers bled. I’d play 8 hours a day when I was growing up. That’s called putting in the work. You’ve gotta put in the work.” He said that a lot, that you have to “put in the work”. I’ve found that to be true for my own work as well. I can’t be free to be creative if I’m thinking about the settings on my camera. A violinist plays scales for hours until they can play music without thinking about the notes. You’ve got to put in the work if you want to be good at something, and Prince put in the work.

Purple Reign: Photographer Brian Ach shares his experiences of working with Prince

Rotterdam, Netherlands. July 2011. A photo from the last show Brian shot. Photo by Brian Ach.

What is your favorite memory from working with Prince?

Before the last show I photographed, I left a handwritten note for Prince on the table in his dressing room. I told him how I’d never have believed that the kid in Ohio watching Prince perform ‘Purple Rain’ at the 1985 American Music Awards on TV would some day be living his dream photographing Prince on tour. I thanked him for the opportunity.

Prince didn’t say anything to me before the show or after the show, so I was worried that he didn’t get the note. But at 4am as the night was winding down, he put his arm around me and said, “Thanks for your note; that put me right to go on stage tonight. You make art. These aren’t photos; it’s art.” That was the one of the best things anyone has ever said to me. As a photographer I don’t get feedback or validation very often, so to hear that from one of my heroes was huge for me.

Prince never shared most of the photos I took of him during this tour. By the third show, he said that he wanted to keep the photos for himself rather than send them out on Wire Image. At the end of the tour he told me that the photos were art and needed to be shared, so he picked a few from each show to send to Wire Image. By then the tour was already over so the photos weren’t seen by many people, and Prince kept the rest in his personal collection.

A number of news agencies have called me asking if I have unpublished photos of Prince. I do – I have tens of thousands of them.  But they aren’t mine to share.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Behind the Shot: Prince of the Night

12 Dec
‘Prince of the Night’. Parque Nacional Los Glaciares, Argentinian Patagonia, April 2014

In this article I’d like to take you far away to Parque Nacional Los Glaciares, a well known national park in Argentinian Patagonia. I visited Patagonia in April 2014 and spent a month scouting for my ‘Giants of the Andes’ photo workshop and Fitz Roy Annex. I shot in several locations in Argentina and in Chile, and among those, I spent several nights in Campo Poincenot, a camp offering relatively short hiking distances to some very good view points of Mount Fitz Roy, one of Patagonia’s most renowned landmarks.

On one of these days we hiked to Laguna Sucia (‘Dirty Lagoon’ in Spanish). It’s so named because before the glacier that formed it receded, the lagoon was always littered with icebergs. When I visited, there were no icebergs to be found anywhere near the bank.

The hike to Laguna Sucia isn’t long, but it’s mostly on loose rock, which is no fun at all. Basically you need to always watch your step: some rocks might shift and tumble when you step on them, others are covered with ice so you might slip – you get the idea.

Loose rock on our way to Laguna Sucia. Image courtesy of Santiago Siro Folcini.

Since we wanted to shoot the lagoon and Mount Fitz Roy both at night and during sunrise, we decided to camp there, but as we didn’t want to carry the tents, we only carried our sleeping bags and inflatable mats. We set up our ‘sleeping quarters’ under a large boulder close to the lagoon and went on to explore the area.

Setting up camp in a most unusual location. Image courtesy of Santiago Siro Folcini

After shooting the lagoon and the mountain at sunset, I started looking for nighttime compositions. I was thinking about shooting the moonlight glowing on the very top of the mountain (the same way the sun glows on tops of mountains producing Alpenglow), so I had to wake up before moonrise. This meant it was going to be very, very dark, and thus I had to compose and leave the tripod at the same place, so when I returned, I only had to find it, attach the camera and I’d be ready to shoot. I found a composition I liked, set the tripod and went back to ‘camp’. The moonrise was at about 3 a.m., so we set up the alarm for 2:30 and went to sleep.

Upon waking up, things didn’t look so good. Clouds had accumulated and blocked the moonlight, so all plans for glow fell through. We were quite disappointed but decided to stay around and see what happened. And surely enough, half an hour or an hour later, the clouds dispersed and the mountain was bathing in moonlight. This was the moment I had been waiting for. I went back to the tripod (which was still at the same spot) and took the shot.

Before discussing how I made the shot, I’d also like to show you two additional images I took at the same place, at later stages. I call them ‘Prince of Crimson’ and ‘Prince of Gold’, and it’s pretty clear why when you see the colors. I really like these images (‘Crimson’ is probably the best of the three), but I had much less to say about them, and so I chose the night image as the topic for this article. By the way, I named the images so to allude to the name of the mountain, literally meaning ‘Son of King’.

If only I had left the tripod in the same place for the last shot… I’m still sad about it!

Settings and Execution

To shoot this image, I used my Sony A7R and a Canon 16-35 F2.8L with a Metabones III adapter.
The image is a composite of 3 different shots, each taken for a slightly different purpose. Let’s view the untouched Raw files.

The leftmost image is a relatively short exposure for the sky and reflection. It was taken at ISO 6400, F2.8 and 30sec exposure. The middle image is a longer exposure, just over 2 minutes at ISO 1600, F2.8 to preserve the luminosity. From this image I took the mountain itself and the other parts of the background, except for the sky which at this exposure time had unwanted startrails. The last image was taken with very similar parameters to the second, but the focal point was on the foreground. I used this image to focus-stack the foreground and background, to get sharpness across the image.

Composition

The composition isn’t very complicated. The only point really worth mentioning is that the specific location was chosen since the rocks in the foreground follow a similar contour to that of the mountains’ reflection. This contributes greatly to the flow of the image. 

Post Processing

As I’ve mentioned, the image is a composite of the 3 shots above. Before combining them, I needed to make some initial tweaks in Adobe Camera Raw (ACR). The first thing I did was apply the lens profile, to avoid aberrations and counteract some of the vignetting. I also changed the white balance to better match what I had seen with my eyes, and made some other minor adjustments, visible in the screenshot below.

Next I did some local adjustments. I brightened the foreground (to balance the global contrast) and boosted contrast and clarity in the reflection part, to enhance detail.

I was then ready to combine the images. This wasn’t such a hard task, as the different parts were very distinct. I placed the three images as layers in Photoshop and aligned them (Edit->Auto Align layers). The top layer was the sky layer, and I had to delete the mountain from it in order to get the cleaner version of it from the mid layer. I selected the part I wanted to delete, refined the selection (Select->Refine Edge) and deleted it, exposing the layer below. Once done, I merged the two top layers.

I was left with a top layer with a blurry foreground, and a bottom layer which I had to expose to get the sharp foreground rocks. I manually deleted the foreground, following the contour of the rocks to avoid exposing the blurry reflection in the bottom layer.

Once finished, I merged the layers and was left with a flattened image.

My next goal was to increase local contrast and enhance detail in the image, which has a lot of flat parts. Initially, I used luminosity selections to enhance contrast without losing detail in the highlights or shadows. I selected the midtones and used a levels adjustment layer to boost contrast.

At this point I was pretty happy with all but the higher-left part of the image. It felt too bright compared to the foreground and the right side, so I needed to work on that separately. I selected the bright parts and refined the selection once again. I then used a levels adjustment layer to darken it, while keeping it brighter than the other parts of the image, which made sense as it was directly lit.

The last task was to take care of unwanted color, caused by high ISO and shadow recovery. As you might notice, the sky is spotted with purple blotches, and the foreground seems too green. Both these color problems were dealt with in the same way: a color blend layer. The process is as follows: you duplicate the image layer, select blend mode ‘color’, and then whatever the pixel color on the top layer, it passes to the bottom layer as well. To cancel the purple in the sky, I had to select the sky without selecting the stars. I did that by selecting the whole image, and then subtracting a very light luminosity selection, until I had a selection which almost didn’t contain stars. I then used the pipette tool to sample the sky’s blue color and gently painted it in.

The same was done with the foreground rocks. I sampled the foreground color I wanted and painted a color layer, until the rocks were grey, as they were in reality.

All that was left was to convert to the sRGB color space, perform size reduction and sharpening and I was finally done.


Erez Marom is a professional nature photographer, photography guide and traveler based in Israel. You can follow Erez’s work on Instagram, Facebook and 500px, and subscribe to his mailing list for updates.

If you’d like to experience and shoot some of the most fascinating landscapes on earth with Erez as your guide, you’re welcome to take a look at his unique photography workshops around the world:

Land of Ice – Southern Iceland
Winter Paradise – Northern Iceland
Northern Spirits – The Lofoten Islands
Giants of the Andes and Fitz Roy Annex – Patagonia
Tales of Arctic Nights, Part I and Part II – Greenland
Earth, Wind and Fire – Ethiopia

Selected articles by Erez Marom:

  • Behind the Shot: Dark Matter
  • Mountain Magic: Shooting in the Lofoten Islands
  • Behind the Shot: Nautilus
  • Behind the Shot: Lost in Space
  • Behind the Shot: Spot the Shark
  • Quick Look: The Art of the Unforeground
  • Behind the Shot: Watery Grave
  • Whatever it Doesn’t Take
  • Winds of Change: Shooting changing landscapes

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Royal Family expresses concerns over alarming measures used by paparazzi seeking photos of Prince George

15 Aug

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have expressed concerns with some of the recent tactics used by paparazzi trying to photograph their two-year-old son. The letter details some of the methods photographers have used to try and get their shots, including hiding in sand dunes and using other children to lure Prince George into view at playgrounds. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Richard Prince on Appropriating “The Catcher in the Rye”

18 Jun

The Catcher in the Rye, by Richard Prince

In 2011, Richard Prince republished a 500 run first edition of the classic JD Salinger novel Catcher in the Rye, under his own name. The reproduction was identical in every way except the author’s name was swapped from J.D. Salinger to Richard Prince.

The production value of the book was astonishingly high, a perfect facsimile of the original, right down to the thick, creamy paper stock and classic typeface. The text on the dust jacket—replete with the same iconic line drawing of the angry red horse—began, “Anyone who has read Richard Prince’s New Yorker stories, particularly A Perfect Day for Bananafish, Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut, The Laughing Man, and For Esmé–with Love and Squalor, will not be surprised by the fact that his first novel is full of children.” It was a dead-ringer through and through —not a word was changed—with the exception that the following disclaimer was added to the colophon page: “This is an artwork by Richard Prince. Any similarity to a book is coincidental and not intended by the artist.” Most shockingly, the colophon concluded with: © Richard Prince.

After the publication Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon interviewed Prince.

Kim Gordon: But what about the change, putting your name on the J.D. Salinger…

Richard Prince: Well, oh. That’s just a favorite book. I’m aware of the implications. It’s kind of the Disneyland of book publishing. You don’t mess with images from Disney. You don’t near it. And Catcher in the Rye is also on lockdown; it’s almost become an institution, it’s very sacred. It’s very rare to get a great first-edition copy.

I reread the book. If you have a book in your collection, it has to be a well-written book. I don’t collect books just because other people collect them, and I’m not going to have books in my collection if I think it’s badly written. Unless it’s deliberately bad or it has to do with the culture. I love deliberately badly written books. But when I reread Catcher I realized how contemporary the writing was, and then I was talking, I had the idea of putting it out again. And I think the idea of republishing Catcher, my contribution to that book was simply—and I know this is going to sound terrible, or maybe it’s not—but I just wanted to double the price.

Kim Gordon: To make it have the value you think it ought to have?

Richard Prince: Yeah, I just wanted to make sure, if you were going to buy my Catcher in the Rye, you were going to have to pay twice as much as the one Barnes and Noble was selling from J.D. Salinger. I know that sounds really kind of shallow, and maybe that’s not the best way to contribute to something, but in the book collecting world you pay a premium for really collectible books. I thought, we charged, I think on the book flap it’s $ 62. There’s a certain kind of adolescent thinking there that I can’t seem to get away from. And I don’t know if I should get away from it, but I certainly acknowledge that it might not be the most interesting way to contribute to the making of that particular object, but I like the fact that the price is twice as much. And it’s enough.

Source


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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#WUDC: Ice Prince, FREEZE & DJ Xclusive Tear Up 96.9 Cool FM!

04 Feb

COMMENT, LIKE THE VIDEO & SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANNEL! Checkout Ice Prince hanging out with FREEZE, DJ Xclusive and the crew at 96.9 Cool FM in Lagos, Nigeria. Watch out for Ice Prince’s debut album, “Everybody Loves Ice Prince”. Out October 4th, 2011! Follow Ice Prince on Twitter: www.twitter.com Follow DJ Xclusive on Twitter: www.twitter.com Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com © 2011 Mävrik Films Media

Halo 2 Walkthrough: Delta Halo [Mission 8] Part 17 of my Lets Play series from Halo 2 As promised expect to see these coming at you all thick and fast throughout the coming week. I would like to get this series finished well in time for the launch of Halo Anniversary so will be recording the final few Episodes on Saturday/Sunday to get them to you all over the next week or two. Thanks for continuing to support this series like you have and if you enjoy this as before leave a rating either way, always helps me out! Playlist: www.youtube.com Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

The Prince and the Pauper

23 Oct

The story began in the 1860s in London, England. For as long as he could remember, twelve year old Tom Canty had dreamed of being a Prince. Whenever he was not begging for money for his cruel father, Tom played being Prince with his friends. Tom Canty and Prince Edward, the soon to be king, bear a striking resemblance to one another and decide to swap places. Unfortunately, the once innocent trick turns into a nightmare, and the Pauper and the Prince become desperate in their struggle to prove their real identity before it is too late and the Pauper is crowned King.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

www.youtube.com Click here to watch 13 Ways to Die – Super Mario Bros. 13 Ways to Die – Batman: Arkham City Episode 5 takes on the Joker! Anyone else getting a 1960’s Batman vibe from all this? Ah well, let’s watch Batman break his No-kill rule. 😀 Linked videos (so you mobile users can feel the love too. :D) Nerd³ Plays… Assassin’s Creed: Revelations www.youtube.com Nerd³ Plays… Overgrowth www.youtube.com Music taken from in-game. DIRECTOR’S CHANNEL: www.youtube.com Visit the NEW Inside Gaming Blog bit.ly Machinima Happy Hour is home to the best animation and shorts Machinima has to offer. Check back every weekend for updates on all your favorite shows like Sanity Not Included, Two Best Friends Play, Freeman’s Mind, Sonic For Hire and more! www.youtube.com – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – This Sports video will show you: How to be the dark knight How to be batman How to kill people in arkham city How to play Batman: Arkham City How to make machinima – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – FOR MORE MACHINIMA, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE SPORTS GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE MMO & RPG GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE ANIMATIONS & SHORTS, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE TRAILERS, GO TO: www.youtube.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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The Prince and the Pauper: Double Trouble

02 Aug

With its stunning CGI animation, and original songs and score, this all animal version of the classic tale of The Prince and the Pauper is double the fun for audiences of all ages.

NUGGET in a BISCUIT!! This video NUGGET in a BISCUIT!! reminds me of Badger Badger. Link www.youtube.com Thanks so much, and don’t forget to check me out on the links below! MAIN CHANNEL www.youtube.com PERSONAL CHANNEL www.youtube.com MUSIC CHANNEL www.youtube.com GAME CHANNEL www.youtube.com FACEBOOK www.facebook.com TWITTER www.twitter.com Please share with all your friends, it really helps a lot =) thank you and welcome to the channel 🙂 Megan NUGGET in a BISCUIT!! NUGGET in a BISCUIT!! NUGGET in BISCUIT toby turner tobuscus song original flash animation comedy funny itunes chicken NUGGET in BISCUIT toby turner tobuscus song original flash animation comedy funny itunes chicken

 

The Moment It Clicks : Scott Kelby and Gary-Paul Prince

03 Mar

Peachpit TV’s Gary-Paul Prince interviews Scott Kelby; photographer, NAPP President, Editor of PhotoshopUser Magazine and the Best-selling Computer Book Author in the World, who shares his inspirational moments in digital photography. The Moment it Clicks podcast is based on the best-selling book “The Moment it Clicks: Photography Secrets from One of the World’s Top Shooters” by Joe McNally. Enter the Moment It Clicks Contest …info is located at the end of the podcast…the contest ends September 30, 2008. More contest details about prizes and official rules are posted at the URL included in the podcast.
Video Rating: 4 / 5