Lucy Nicholson

Blog Posts

August 20th, 2009

from Photographers:

Women’s refuge in Afghanistan

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Patooni Muhanna, who works at a women’s shelter in Kabul, speaks about women’s rights since the fall of the Taliban. Patooni says that despite some positive changes, domestic violence and self-immolation are still concerns.

Follow news from the Afghan election here.

August 18th, 2009

from Photographers:

On the Afghan election trail

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Soviet helicopters, pick-up truck racing, Kalashnikov-carrying security guards, banquet lunches.  Photographing Afghan presidential candidates as they traverse the country before the election on August 20, is campaign travel at its quirkiest.

Flying with Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah to a campaign rally in Samangan province.  Photo: Tyler Hicks

In Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan one week before the vote, the traveling press piled into the back of pick-up trucks following Abdullah Abdullah, Afghan President Hamid Karzai's main rival, from the airport to the Shrine of Hazrat Ali.


Supporters race to keep up with Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah's convoy as he arrives to give a campaign speech at the Shrine of Hazrat Ali in Mazar-i-Sharif.  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

Around 50,000 supporters jostled between the cars in the convoy, so each truck would accelerate, then slam on the brakes.  Abdullah supporters were grasping the back of the truck and trying to climb up.  It was challenging to stay standing to take photos without being launched into the crowd every time we went from 30-0mph in 3 seconds.


Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah is mobbed by supporters as he arrives to give a campaign speech at the Shrine of Hazrat Ali in Mazar-i-Sharif.  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

It was 104 degrees Fahrenheit at the shrine. Members of the media, soaked with sweat, got separated as we fought our way through the throng.  People were horribly packed and a few ended up in hospital with injuries and heatstroke.  It was brutal fighting my way through the crowd.  Even hard to breathe at one point. The crowd was all men so I was fighting off wayward hands.  The lens hood broke off one of my lenses and the filter on the front of the lens smashed.

Campaign workers attempt to cool off Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah with water before he gives his campaign speech at the Shrine of Hazrat Ali in Mazar-i-Sharif in Balkh province.  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

After Abdullah’s speech, the whole crowd was trying to fight its way back into the mosque. The security guards forced the door shut against the crush. I kept knocking to be let in and they eventually opened the door, but the force of the crowd propelled me backwards onto the floor of the mosque.  I was sweating profusely and breathing fast, so a man poured water on my head, soaking all my camera equipment.

Lunch, as always in hospitable Afghanistan, was a beautiful contrast.  Time slowed down as we drank tea from delicate china cups in an anteroom at the governor’s mansion with spinning chandeliers.  Upstairs we entered a banquet hall and were served at least six different meat dishes, rice, naan, okra, soup and watermelon.  Bollywood music videos, and later Abdullah’s speech, played on the flat screen television next to Karzai’s portrait.

Then came the rally car drive back to the airport with all the young drivers in the convoy racing each other.  Guys with Kalashnikovs hung out of the back of many of the pick-up trucks and the whole convoy drove at high speed.  They overtook on roundabouts, sounded police sirens, shouted at each other, and screeched tires on every turn, slamming on the brakes for cyclists and donkeys.

Cars tend to barrel towards you on both sides of the road in Afghanistan.  Drivers in both directions abuse their horns until one driver loses his nerve and swerves away from the impact.  We joked about dying, but laughed most of the way because it was just such a relief to not be at the mosque.

The view home flying over the Hindu Kush is a beautiful distraction from the noise, fumes, and claustrophobic heat of the Soviet-era MI-17 "flying truck" helicopters and troop planes the candidates use on the campaign trail.

October 14th, 2008

from Photographers:

Photographing the Beijing Olympics

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Lucy Nicholson presents a multimedia blog on Reuters' coverage of the Beijing Olympics.

August 11th, 2008

from Photographers:

Lucy in the sky with diamonds

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds was my nickname yesterday.

My Olympic opening ceremony endurance test began with an 8am call to be on the roof of the Bird's Nest stadium for a meeting of photographers.

I began my first of three climbs through the maze of steep, narrow catwalks with IOC pool photographers from AP, Getty, AFP and Xinhua. On either side of the path were sheets of glass through which the colored lights of the stadium are projected.

1

We were told to wear fireproof suits, helmets and climbing harnesses over our clothes.  The Chinese fireworks technicians on the roof had sensibly chosen to wear t-shirts and shorts.

2

It was 90-something degrees Fahrenheit and humid on the ground, but felt a lot hotter on the roof. -- especially after lugging 3 camera bodies, 5 lenses, a bag of magic arms and 50 meters of remote cable up there.

The door to the catacombs of the roof was barred by Chinese police who confiscated any water, food, cigarettes and cell phones. 

4

The show was filled with interludes of fireworks, and we were told to crouch on the floor every time another burst came. So I quickly mounted a wide angle Canon 5D with 15mm lens on the edge of the stadium, which I could fire remotely every time we had to duck.

5

I set the camera on aperture priority at f8, 200 ISO.

6

REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

We were told we would have to crouch in a sunken part of the roof when the main fireworks and cauldron-lighting occurred, sometime after 10.30 pm.

So we mounted a couple of pool remote cameras to be triggered with zip cord to shoot the Olympic flame being lit. The Chinese police said it would be fine to clamp onto the pole holding their video security camera, so I trained a 70-200 in the direction of the torch, and Ezra Shaw from Getty put a wide angle very near the flame.

"Top secret, no-one will know until the last minute," was the response from everyone when we tried to imagine how the flame would be lit, so we could frame it correctly.

Julie Jacobson from AP suggested we put our Canon Mark IIIs on monopods while we were stuck in our ditch, so we could hoist the pole and shoot using the camera's Live View.

As we huddled and waited for the grand finale, a policeman came over gesturing and shouting in Chinese for us to go down the stairwell and shut the trap door over our heads.

One of the fireworks technicians translated and told us the rail we were sitting next to had been electrified to carry a trolley that would transport the athlete carrying the Olympic torch around the inside rim of the stadium.

7

 REUTERS/Shaun Best

We huddled on a 6x6 ft platform above the stairs. Below us were sheets of glass and below that sat the world leaders watching the extravaganza, known as "The Greatest Show on Earth."

A Chinese policeman who looked barely 20-years-old stood on the stairs. We had a narrow slit through which we could watch the rest of the ceremony. The cop grabbed my arm as the parade of athletes progressed.

"China's coming!  China's coming!" he said as we heard a huge roar from the crowd of more than 90,000.  I could barely make out any of the athletes but saw Yao Ming, who is probably visible from space.

The torch bearer glided around the top of the stadium, passing inches from the narrow gap we were looking out of.  He ignited the flame with a long fuse, outside the frame of my vertical remote which was trained on the massive cauldron. 

8
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

The final firework explosions reverberated around us in our metal cage. 

I had met the head pyrotechnics engineer when I first came on the roof.  When he found out I was from London, he said he really wanted the contract for London 2012 and asked me to put a good word in for him. He didn't seem convinced when I told him I didn't have that kind of clout. I hope he gets the gig.

9

REUTERS/Reinhard Krause

Beijing, August 9 2008
 

August 9th, 2008

from Changing China:

Lucy in the sky with diamonds

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Lucy1Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds was my nickname yesterday.

My Olympic opening ceremony endurance test began with an 8am call to be on the roof of the Bird's Nest stadium for a meeting of photographers. I began my first of three climbs through the maze of steep, narrow catwalks with IOC pool photographers from AP, Getty, AFP and Xinhua. On either side of the path were sheets of glass through which the colored lights of the stadium are projected.

We were told to wear fireproof suits, helmets and climbing harnesses over our clothes. The Chinese fireworks technicians on the roof had sensibly chosen to wear t-shirts and shorts.

It was 90-something degrees Fahrenheit and humid on the ground, but felt a lot hotter on the roof -- especially after lugging three camera bodies, five lenses, a bag of magic arms and 50 meters of remote cable up there.

Lucy5The door to the catacombs of the roof was barred by Chinese police who confiscated any water, food, cigarettes and cell phones.

The show was filled with interludes of fireworks, and we were told to crouch on the floor every time another burst came. So I quickly mounted a wide angle Canon 5D with 15mm lens on the edge of the stadium, which I could fire remotely every time we had to duck.

I set the camera on aperture priority at f8, 200 ISO.

Lucy6We were told we would have to crouch in a sunken part of the roof when the main fireworks and cauldron-lighting occurred, sometime after 10.30 pm.

So we mounted a couple of pool remote cameras to be triggered with zip cord to shoot the Olympic flame being lit. The Chinese police said it would be fine to clamp onto the pole holding their video security camera, so I trained a 70-200 in the direction of the torch, and Ezra Shaw from Getty put a wide angle very near the flame.

                                                  Photo credit (above):  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

"Top secret, no-one will know until the last minute," was the response from everyone when we tried to imagine how the flame would be lit, so we could frame it correctly.

Julie Jacobson from AP suggested we put our Canon Mark IIIs on monopods while we were stuck in our ditch, so we could hoist the pole and shoot using the camera's Live View.

Lucy7As we huddled and waited for the grand finale, a policeman came over gesturing and shouting in Chinese for us to go down the stairwell and shut the trap door over our heads.

One of the fireworks technicians translated and told us the rail we were sitting next to had been electrified to carry a trolley that would transport the athlete carrying the Olympic torch around the inside rim of the stadium.

Photo credit (above): REUTERS/Shaun Best 

We huddled on a 6x6 ft platform above the stairs. Below us were sheets of glass and below that sat the world leaders watching the extravaganza, known as "The Greatest Show on Earth."

A Chinese policeman who looked barely 20-years-old stood on the stairs. We had a narrow slit through which we could watch the rest of the ceremony. The cop grabbed my arm as the parade of athletes progressed.

"China's coming!  China's coming!" he said as we heard a huge roar from the crowd of more than 90,000. I could barely make out any of the athletes but saw Yao Ming, who is probably visible from space.

Lucy8The torch bearer glided around the top of the stadium, passing inches from the narrow gap we were looking out of.  He ignited the flame with a long fuse, outside the frame of my vertical remote which was trained on the massive cauldron.

The final firework explosions reverberated around us in our metal cage.

I had met the head pyrotechnics engineer when I first came on the roof.

When he found out I was from London, he said he wanted the contract for London 2012 and asked me to put a good word in for him. He didn't seem convinced when I told him I didn't have that kind of clout.I hope he gets the gig.

                                                  Photo credit (above):  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

Lucy9

Photo credit (above): REUTERS/Reinhard Krause

February 20th, 2008

from Photographers:

The Super Bowl 2008 - a multimedia blog

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

 Super Bowl

 [quicktime] http://int1.fp.sandpiper.net/reuters/editorial/images/20080220/LucyBlog.mov[/quicktime]

  http://int1.fp.sandpiper.net/reuters/editorial/images/20080220/LucyBlog.mov

Links:
http://www.nfl.com/
http://www.giants.com/
http://http://www.patriots.com/
Composer of 'dub' media day music: Pierre Gerwig Langer

October 27th, 2007

from Photographers:

Notes from a wildfire

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Oranges 

Photo: Lucy Nicholson.

4.30am and traffic is actually moving at the busiest freeway junction in the U.S.  If only I could drive everywhere at this time.

Photographer Mike Blake has been up all night waiting to hear whether he will have to evacuate from his San Diego home with his wife and son.  Luckily the wind has changed direction and the expected firestorm didn't make its way to the coast.

Californian homes burn fast.

Not like brick or stone houses.  A couple of hours after the first spark, all that remains is a pile of shredded paper.  The powdery landscape is broken up by satellite dishes, burnt-out car chassis, metal-framed garden furniture and the odd piece of pottery.  An acrid chemical smell lingers for days.

Survivors often use the word “rage” to describe the fire blown through their neighborhoods by 100+ mph winds.  It cruelly levels some people's homes while leaving their neighbors' untouched.

 Car

Photo: Lucy Nicholson

I arrive in San Diego and call our fire photography guru, Reuters freelancer Fred Greaves.  I've been listening to local AM radio for the last couple of hours and have called the San Diego fire service command center.  While there are countless home evacuations and miles of brush burning, there are also no recent reports of homes on fire.  I ask Fred’s advice on where to go.  “Follow the black smoke,” he says.

Greaves is close to the Mexican border, I am in the east, Mario in the west, and Mike is covering the evacuation centers.

I can't see any black smoke through the thick grey smoke.  Just a beautiful deep red sun rising.

Smoke

 Photo: Mike Blake.

Immediate mandatory evacuations have been ordered in a rural area out east, so I head that way.  I cross a police roadblock with my press pass and my car is the only one driving east as I pass miles of traffic queuing to evacuate in the other direction.  The wind pounds my car and I finally see black smoke on an Indian reservation in the distance.

 Rincon

Photo: Lucy Nicholson

I drive through an eerie deserted landscape of burnt-out cars and buildings.  A few people are running.  An empty casino is untouched.  I see a burning home in the distance, so I stop the car.  The wind is swirling, throwing sparks from the flames onto the trees in every direction.  I run through a field towards the intense heat, shoot 4 frames with my camera then run back to the car.  There are no firefighters in sight.

 Rincon home

Photo: Lucy Nicholson

Further down the road a woman is watching her neighbor's trailer home burn to the ground as her husband sprays their yard with a garden hose.

Rincon woman 

Photo: Lucy Nicholson

Next stop is an affluent area in the hills further west.  There is a fire truck in every other driveway.  I head toward a plume of black smoke where I find firefighters trying to put out a fire in a private vineyard while pushing the flames away from homes.

Meanwhile, Mario has come across a neighborhood just as the fire hits and makes great photos of firefighters battling to save homes.

 Firefighter

Photo: Mario Anzuoni

When I first began to shoot fires in California, Fred Greaves took me to be outfitted in a firefighter suit and helmet with an emergency fire shelter, and told me to wear jeans and cotton clothes underneath and leather shoes.

The shelter is a reflective sheet which you are supposed to whip out and crouch underneath if fast-moving fire heads your way.  A photographer from USA Today told me he had to use his once and ended up in the burns unit.  He had to ask his wife to peel crispy skin from his back every night for weeks.  "That's love," he told me.

Lucy

Lucy in firefighter outfit

All the stores are closed, so I sit outside a gas station in my yellow outfit to transmit photos.  My face is smudged with soot, and my hair is matted.  A woman rests her hand on my shoulder, tells me "God Bless," and offers me a sandwich.  I tell her thanks, but I'm not a firefighter.  "You're working hard out there though," she says, but retracts my sandwich.  It looks so good.

Prisoners are used a lot for fighting wildfires in California.  They stand out in their orange suits.  The women work together and most of them chain-smoke as they do the physically exhausting job of clearing brush for a dollar an hour.  I once came across a group of male prisoners attacking bushes on a hillside with chainsaws as they tried to prevent a flare-up.

As the sun sets, I see some National Guard troops protecting an evacuated neighborhood from looters.  A soldier, who told me he was glad to be home from Iraq, was politely asking residents to park their cars and stand in line.

The area was heavily hit by the fire and there are hundreds of people lining up.  I ask a cop what is going on and he says they are escorting people to their homes to collect medication.  I asked him if they needed to show a prescription, but he is taking the humane approach.  He tells me that as long as people tell him they are going to get medicine, he will let everyone be escorted to see their home.

Most people do not mind being photographed - some are indifferent, some excited to be in print.

One woman who has lost her home starts screaming at a local newspaper photographer taking her picture with a long lens.  He apologizes again and again but she continues her tirade.  I apologize too, even though I wasn't photographing her, and she walks away.  He seems upset, so I tell him he wasn't doing anything wrong, that most people appreciate us being there to tell their story.  I also tell him he probably made her feel better, by allowing her to vent at someone, even though I'm not sure if this is true.

350 miles after the beginning of the day, I scrub the soot out of my ears, wash my hair, wrap it in a towel and fall asleep before I remember to take the towel off.

Firefighters sleep 

Photo: Lucy Nicholson

Mike and I are flying to Denver to shoot World Series baseball this weekend.  I'm not normally excited about high altitude (1 mile above sea level) and temperatures just above freezing, but it will be good to breathe again.

Firefighter in wind

Photo: Fred Greaves

Bike 

Photo: Mario Anzuoni

Ruins

Photo: Mike Blake

June 18th, 2007

from Photographers:

Through the hoops

Posted by: Lucy Nicholson
Tags: Uncategorized

Los Angeles Senior Photographer Lucy Nicholson reports back from the 2007 NBA Finals

Growing up in England with 4 tv channels, I didn't get to watch much
basketball.

The first game I ever saw was during the 2001 NBA Finals when I worked
as a runner for Agence France-Presse in Los Angeles, taking disks from
the photographers and keeping the editors happy with beer.

Allen Iverson was darting all over the court for the Philadelphia
76ers.  I was mesmerized by his energy and acrobatics and quickly
became hooked on the game.  With its breakneck pace and emphasis on
rhythm over rules, it was instantly more attractive to me than reading
through 'The Complete Idiots Guide to Baseball' and 'American Football
for Dummies.'

I've photographed every subsequent NBA Finals as basketball trickles
its way across the Atlantic.

There are now three British players in the NBA - Ben Gordon, Luol Deng,
and Ugonna Onyekwe, all on the Chicago Bulls - as well as a smattering
of talented players at U.S. colleges and Spanish clubs.  They add up to
potentially the first-ever remotely competitive British basketball team
at the London 2012 Olympics.  Former NBA bad boy Dennis Rodman even
played last year for my hometown Brighton in the British Basketball
League.

First stop for the 2007 NBA Finals is San Antonio, Texas.  First
challenge is to carry most of my camera equipment onto the plane as
hand luggage.

Fortunately U.S. airlines don't yet weigh hand luggage, so I walk past
the boarding gate pretending my bags don't weigh more than I do and
then find a guy to lift them into the overhead bin.

Straight to the arena to set up remote cameras...

These finals orbit around Cleveland Cavaliers player LeBron James.  The
U.S. media are crowning him King James and hailing him as the next
Michael Jordan.  If Cleveland wins (or even if they dont) the Reuters
photo report will be heavily weighted with pictures of LeBron, so
shooting multiple angles of him in action with remote cameras makes for
a varied edit.

On an overhead catwalk I mount a 400mm lens which I will trigger when
players jump for a rebound via a button attached to one of my hand-held
cameras.

 Jessica Rinaldi and focus cardJessica Rinaldi from the roof

Dallas-based Reuters photographer Jessica Rinaldi (top) holds a
focus card.

Photographer Mike Blake set up an overhead remote during the recent NHL
playoffs with a Canon 5D camera and a USB cable attached to a computer
running the Reuters Paneikon editing software.  I decided to try the
same thing so that the editors could have a live feed instead of having
to wait until the late-night end of the game.  We used Paneikon for the
first time at an NBA Finals with Gary Hershorn, Peter Jones, and Mike
Blake editing from New York, Toronto and San Diego respectively, and
everything ran really smoothly.

 remote camera set up

The Canon 5D, 400mm lens and pc computer set up with a Sprint card
& Paneikon.

The story of Game 1 was how the Spurs Tim Duncan dominated LeBron
James and the overhead camera came through with a good illustration of
his aggressive defense.

 Foul

Cleveland Cavaliers LeBron James (L) is fouled by San Antonio
Spurs Tim Duncan as he goes up to shoot.  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

The NBA only allows one camera behind the glass for the finals (in
addition to the NBA & Sports Illustrated cameras), so Reuters, AP,
Getty, EPA, and AFP take turns to set it up and we pool the images.  We
shoot Game 2, which produced a photo of finals MVP Tony Parker.

Lucy sets up remote

Lucy setting up the camera behind the glass.

 Tony Parker

San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker goes up to score during Game 2. 
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

I was shooting with the new Canon Mark III cameras for the first time
and they were pretty impressive in low light.  This is a crop of a
third of the full frame of LeBron James sitting in a dark corner
waiting to be interviewed, which I shot at 3200 ISO.

 LeBron

LeBron James at 3200 ISO.  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

This finals was one of the dullest, most unemotional Ive seen.  It
ended abruptly in Cleveland as the Spurs won four straight games with a
defensive lockdown on LeBron James magic.

 LeBron tongue
Cleveland Cavaliers LeBron James reacts during their Game 2 loss
to the San Antonio Spurs.   REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi

The only spark came from Tony Parker, the diminutive point guard from
France, who energized Game 4 as he became the first European player to
earn the NBA Finals most valuable player award.

 Parker kisses cup

San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker of France kisses the NBA
Championship trophy as he holds the MVP trophy in the locker room
defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 4.  REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

Spurs celebrate

San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker (R) celebrates with owner Peter Holt
(C) and Fransico Elson (L) after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in
Game 4.  REUTERS/Hans Deryk

Lucy Nicholson
www.lucynicholson.com