Monthly Archives: December 2010

Dirty City

I decided to choose to shoot garbage on the street that are around the city. I wonder why people complained about so many rats are running around the city and they did not realize it was done by us. People left messes around that attract rats and roaches. For instance, a picture with the half bitten apple left in the street like that grasp an attention from rats who sense it. If we did not left that apple on the street and throw in garbage. Also, street food vendors leaving food on the street also attract the rats. Another issue that I have is that newspaper on the street. Nowadays, people do not read news from newspaper since there are so many new high tech items are keep coming out. Many people prescribe newspaper on their iphone or internet and we still keep printing so much paper that we do not need. Thus, we could save our environment if people start taking their own action.

Posted in assignment Five - ISSUES (black & white) | 147 Comments

Tribeca/Times Sq.

So close but yet so different.  This is my way of comparing two different neighborhoods in Manhattan, New York City.  Tribeca, a neighborhood where New Yorkers live is very different from Times Square, a neighborhood filled with tourists.  Fortunately for us natives there are areas in Manhattan where we don’t need to worry about walking around slow paced tourist’s trying to see the sights. However both areas are great in different ways.

By many criteria, Tribeca could be considered the best place to live in the city. It enjoys tons of transit, loft style apartments in industrial buildings and has already overtaken the Upper East Side as the city’s richest area.  A walk down a street here will yield newlyweds often with newborns.  Despite being in one of the biggest cities in the world TriBeca doesn’t get lost in the sea of neighborhoods but rather holds it’s own.  Mailmen with their carts, classic looking diners and the wide array of residents manage to keep the authenticity here that is disappearing so quickly in other parts of the borough.

Times Square is a must see for tourists but usually a place locals avoid when trying to get from point a to point b.  The naked cowboy and his enthusiastic fans is not a scene you will see in every neighborhood but that is what makes a trip here so memorable.  The crowded streets that make it almost impossible to walk in is the norm.  There’s no mistaking when one has entered times sq.

A train ride for a few stops could be like night and day. its really great to see that even in a borough that is only 23 sq miles there are so many different neighborhoods and each of them offers something different for everyone to enjoy.

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Sex,Drugs, and Alcohol

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The Shorakapok Preserve

The Shorakapok Preserve in Inwood Hill Park is part of Forever Wild, which is a program with the goal of protecting “ecologically valuable” land. This first started earlier on in the semester as a personal project, which I chose to expand upon for the purposes of this project. The significance of this particular location is that it has the last natural forest and salt water marsh in Manhattan. I chose to expose this area when all the vegetation has died and very few people come to visit as well as incorporating some pictures of the forested areas when they were still alive. There is a great contrast to the city and to many this preserve does not even seem to be a part of Manhattan.

Posted in Assignment Six - Final Project | 98 Comments

Colletion of Holiday Window Decoration

Since holiday are around the corner and many people are shopping for gifts. So I thought about taking photos window decoration on different stores. I am sure that all of the store are focusing on how the appearance of their store to their customers. Thus, sellers are making sure that they are grasping buyers attention to promote their items and to grow their sale.

Posted in Assignment Six - Final Project | 17 Comments

music: life. love. passion

To discover one’s own life, love, and passion is hard, but she has found it at a very young age. Her name is Annette and she is currently a senior in high school. Music has played a very big role in her life ever since she was born. Her parents had influenced her into this path. They had started to teach her how to play the piano themselves when she was young and then sent her piano school to learn professionally. Her music sense is so strong she can even play the piano at heart without having it physically in front of her. Playing the piano is not the only thing that she does musically. She writes lyrics in her free time, still collects CDs, and loves to sing! So musically driven, she is planning to continue her interests as her major in college.

Posted in Assignment Six - Final Project | 9 Comments

The Weekend Before Christmas

    It was the weekend before Christmas and I was begging Mariana to give me Christmas Eve off. For the past couple of years that I have worked at Food Dynasty I usually get the day off. Yet, this year I lost the fight; but I do have Christmas day off so that made my shift all the more enjoyable.

   I have worked at Food Dynasty as a cashier for the past three and a half years. It is located on 50th street on Skillman Avenue in Woodside,Queens. Many young individuals like myself do not last there long because the job is a lot tougher than it appears. Anyone who has worked part-time at a grocery store or any kind of store knows what I am talking about.

   Food Dynasty hires people of all ages to work as cashiers or stock shelves. The other positions such as being a supervisor/manager and working in the downstairs office either require a degree or many years of experience.

   Prior to working at Food Dynasty I had been a baby-sitter as a teenager and unable to find real jobs because I was not 18 years of age. Yet when I turned 18 in 2007 I got a job at New York & Company as a sales associate and worked there for three months. In September of 2007 I began to work at Food Dynasty out of convenience; I started college and needed a job close to home.I thought it would be an easy job.

   The job is tedious at first because you must handle various types of transactions which include redeeming bottle refunds, processing W.I.C . checks(sometimes 5 at once), cashing personal checks for a purchase, gift cards, food stamp cards(there are sometimes special cases because there is EBT cash and EBT food amounts on one card), DEBIT/CREDIT,and regular cash transactions.

   In addition to doing those transactions sometimes customers will do part credit, part debit, part cash, and part check-the combinations for one monetary transcation would amaze as well as confuse an individual who is not use to conducting all those adverse transactions where pressing one wrong button can ruin everything (then you must start over).

   Plus, you must bag all of the customers’ groceries in a matter of seconds.There could be a group of five people purchasing a party-load worth of items (100 plus) and they will all watch as one cashier bags every item by themselves. Cashiers and other workers at dynasty have been deemed as slaves to the public, why else would they watch as a cashier bags 300 things when they have 10 people with them?

 Many of them consider you to be a amachine so they are not nice to you and usually tell you to hurry up when you are taking an extra 30 seconds-literally. One customer said , “the cashiers always rush us out the door.”

   At my store it is the customers that rush the cashier and throw their money at us, on the conveyor belt (while it is moving!) where the money gets stuck in the register half of time and give us dirty looks when we say “hello, how are you today?”

   Food Dynasty workers get this type of treatment all year round, yet it heightens around the holidays . More customers shop at supermarkets to get bargains  because they have sales on tons of items every week-especially on holiday/limited edition items like egg nog ice cream.

  This year and on the weekend before Christmas 2010 I have encountered many miserable and mean people. Starting with the rude customers that have complained for the past month how they hate Christmas music that my job has been playing.

   My photos above were taken on a friday night, on the weekend before Christmas which is why they do not appear hectic in spirit of the holiday season. The majority of customers in Woodside, Queens either shop at Stop & Shop by northern boulevard or Food Dynasty (for the most part) because they are the local supermarkets in the area. There are two other supermarkets owned by the Food Dynasty corporation on 46th and 61st Woodside (by different owners) yet they are not a pleasant hike in 20 degree weather.

   In spite of it all we all work as a team at Food Dynasty to make one anothers shift bearable. At times we all individually feel like giving up because are hard work is not appreciate by customers who underestimate our worth and intellect all because we work behind a register (with an unsightly store apron).

   The point of this project was not not go on a rant about how terrible my job is. I did this project in hopes of conveying whether through phototography or context what my co-workers and I endure on every single one of our shifts. Many people at my job and even in my family  have worked in the grocery business  for at least a decade and have encountered many walks of life; many stories were unpleasant. Many of my stories are unpleasant and I have only been working since I was 18 years old!

  As cashiers we have consistently been dehumanized by the public. Some customers do respect us and do strike up conversations with us. When they do they find that the majority of us attend college, lead respectable lives and are intelligent individuals. On the other side of the register it is easy to judge someone like me; yet you perceive me wrong because my humanity goes beyond what your acclaimed ‘double-vision’ can see.

Posted in Assignment Six - Final Project, Uncategorized | 5 Comments

Cab Driver Woes: “gypsy” and private hire cabs

New York city is known for its yellow cabs. These cars dominate tourist areas and all of downtown Manhattan because it is legal for them to pick up passengers in the street. These cabs can be hailed conveniently at any street corner. For this photo essay I chose the ongoing issue of the lack of earnings in the cab driving occupation, specifically by “gypsy” and private hire cabs. “Gypsy” or unlicensed cabs are limited to places where the police will not likely lurk such as small neighborhoods , shopping centers or grocery stores as they have no permit to pick up passengers at all.

For hire cabs cannot pick passengers up off the street and are required to only take calls from a dispatcher. Many people will not call a cab company or simply do not know the number. Their cars are required to meet numerous requirements such as having automobiles from a particular year, which is updated every couple of years by the Taxi and Limousine commission. Many cab drivers are forced to rent a car or share the expenses with another driver. Because cab driving is among the most dangerous jobs in New York City in recent years after numerous of attacks and murders of cab drivers, the installation of cameras or partitions is now required to prevent these attacks.

There are fewer permits given out each year because of the regulations that are now applied to cab driving.

Drivers are also the most directly affected by higher gas prices and increased tolls. For hire cabs must also pay the dispatcher as well as the expense of radio receivers, the antenna to receive transmissions, and parking because these items are frequently stolen if the car is found unattended. In short, there are numerous causes for the lack of earning ranging from regulatory expenses to cost of living expenses that affect us all.

Posted in assignment Five - ISSUES (black & white) | 1 Comment

The Wilting Flower District

The flower district at West 28th street and 6th Avenue, holds a variety of businesses all dedicated to selling plants, flowers, and their accessories. In the winter months wreaths, Holly, and Christmas trees can be found in almost every store and filling the sidewalks for outdoor sales.

However, it is a precarious business. For every store owner, the need to move the product quickly is essential to making money. The cold weather makes it hard to sell traditional flowers year round. Unfortunately, flower shops are beginning to close down, as less people can afford to pay the expensive price of real flowers. Because of this, stores are expanding their products to include more flower accessories such as ribbons, glass and ceramic pots, and also fake plants.

Posted in Assignment Six - Final Project | 1 Comment

Car Enthusiasts

Communities are formed from the commonalities that a group of people share whether it being a location or even common interests. My community assignment is on the community that has been created by car enthusiasts and how it brings different people together. I began my set of photos with some pictures I took at a car show in New Jersey. What really caught my eye while taking the pictures was the amount of diversity that was present. There were people of different ages as well as nationalities huddled around cars having conversations with each other. At another time or place, these people would be strangers. But at the car show, these seemingly different individuals have something in common and there is nothing strange about that. As the photos progress I show some car enthusiasts taking their pride and joy cars to the streets.

Posted in Assignment Four - Community | 13 Comments