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  #1741  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2010, 4:43 AM
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  #1742  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2010, 5:18 PM
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ahahaha that video made my week!!!
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  #1743  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2010, 7:45 PM
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kudos to brian scot


Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Light & dark

Winnipegger's photo blog explores two sides of our beloved, reviled city

By: Alison Mayes
Posted: 26/08/2010 1:00 AM



BAR ENTRANCE, EXCHANGE DISTRICT, 2008

ANOTHER WOLSELEY WINTER, 2008


WINNIPEG WINTER STORM, 2008


ALBERT STREET, 2008


The lines and textures of Winnipeg's grand old buildings -- banks, churches, apartment blocks, halls of learning -- can be gorgeously photogenic.
But decaying warehouses, abandoned theatres and streets devoid of pedestrian life are constant reminders that this city's boom years are long past.
Bryan Scott's most popular photograph on the Internet, and most purchased as a print, is not an architecture shot. It's an image of ghostly beauty, titled Winnipeg Winter Storm, that he took in Assiniboine Park during a blizzard. The temperature was -39 C. "It was one of those days that makes people really hate Winnipeg," he says.
Scott has licensed his Winnipeg photos for use in annual reports and other publications. The largest user of his images to date is Manitoba Film & Music, which publishes an annual guide to entice out-of-town producers to film in Manitoba locations.
Here's a sample of the kind of heartfelt comment that gets posted on Scott's blog: "I have a very strange relationship with Winnipeg... Over the last few weeks of following your blog, I have actually been moved to tears by some of your photos. The beauty you show me in a place that's shown me so much ugliness can be overwhelming. I just wanted to thank you."


We've got magnificent examples of neon and painted signs from decades gone by, but that's partly because economic stagnation prevented many commercial buildings from being torn down or spruced up.
Winnipeg: we treasure it and despise it. We escape it and then, in some hard-to-articulate way, we miss its ugly/beautiful, gritty/graceful character.

"That's something that all Winnipeggers can relate to," says photographer Bryan Scott. "Everybody's got those mixed emotions. The love and hate are kind of wrapped up in each other."
Scott, 36, is attracting a following with his blog Winnipeg: Love & Hate (www.winnipeglovehate.com), on which he invites the world to explore "the most beautiful, most repulsive city in the world" through his photography.
Launched two-and -a-half years ago by the part-time, architecture-loving lensman, the blog has grown to some 1,300 images.
"I hope that the photos presented here depict a Winnipeg that often goes unseen and unnoticed; a multi-layered, architecturally rich city that is more than just the snow and mosquitoes for which it is (sadly) most well-known," he writes.
About 200 visitors engage with Scott's images each day. The photos are usually captured downtown, empty of human life and dominated by architecture or signage. People write comments describing them as "magical," "stunning" or "hauntingly beautiful."
The site receives hits from all over the world, but is most visited by current Winnipeggers and homesick ex-Peggers in cities like Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary.
"Some of the posts go viral and spread like wildfire," says the dark-haired, mild-mannered Wolseley resident, who spends an average of two hours a day shooting and editing photos.
"I've gotten a lot of emotional responses. A recent one said (the photos) brought tears to her eyes. I think that kind of thing always comes from the expats -- the people who hated Winnipeg, and now that they've gone, they miss it. I think most of my print sales come from those people as well."
Prints can be ordered, starting at about $28, through Scott's linked arrangement with the website imagekind.com.
Scott shows signs of becoming a Henry Kalen for the Facebook generation. Kalen, the much-respected local architect/photographer who died in 2004, has been a major influence. "Without his work, I don't know if I would have started shooting Winnipeg. I owe a lot to his book (Henry Kalen's Winnipeg) and his online archives at U of M."
Winnipeg: Love and Hate is stylishly designed by Scott, who works full time as a graphic designer for an advertising company. It includes a rotating roster of quotations about Winnipeg, from wildly optimistic endorsements from the "Chicago of the North" boom years to Guy Maddin's quip, "Demolition is one of our few growth industries."
Scott's biography is pure Winnipeg. He grew up Jewish in Tuxedo, his father the owner of the Wescott Fashions garment factory (makers of Great Scott jeans), his mother a homemaker.
There are other artists in the family, but it took Scott a while to find his path. He earned a BA in film studies at the University of Manitoba, then a degree in architecture (environmental design). That's where his passion for photography and the built environment really took hold. He then went to Red River College and earned a diploma in graphic design.
He doesn't vow to stay in the Peg forever (he confesses that Chicago is his favourite city) but he tied the knot this summer with Jennifer Upton, a fashion buyer. They're moving into their first house in the still-affordable Scotia Heights neighbourhood.
"It's hard being a 30-something creative-minded person living in Winnipeg, after seeing so many people leave," he admits. "I would say 80 per cent of my professional friends have left."
Scott, who shoots with a digital Pentax K-7 camera and is self-taught, processes about half his images with a technique called HDR (high dynamic range). "HDR allows you to expand the tonal range... so you've got detail in the dark spots and bright spots in the photo," he says.
As he puts it on his blog, "It brings out details and textures that get completely lost with traditional images."
HDR can lend photographs a painterly, surreal or supernatural quality. In many of Scott's photos, it makes the sky appear dramatic, buildings look majestic and mysterious, and interior lighting seem to glow invitingly.
Some people hate HDR and find it artificial, Scott freely admits, but "I think I do it fairly well. After years of experimenting... I use it to add a special something, without hitting people over the head."
John Paskievich, another local photographer whom Scott greatly admires, finds the HDR gives some of the Winnipeg: Love and Hate photos a mood of foreboding.
"There's kind of a gothic quality," says Paskievich. "They're disturbing, how he manipulates the light. It gives a kind of 'release the hounds' look... I expect hounds to be running out, either from the University of Manitoba admin building or the North End Salisbury House."
Scott says about his subject choices, "I kind of just chase the light. Lately, I've mostly been going out when there's something spectacular about the sky. I never really know where I'm going."
Scott, who plans to publish a book of his photographs, says he has received the odd complaint that Winnipeg: Love and Hate encourages a negative view. He disagrees.
"I think the overwhelming majority (of the photos) would fall into the 'love' category. A lot of the comments I get are that I've somehow, magically, managed to find the beauty of Winnipeg."

alison.mayes@freepress.mb.ca

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition August 26, 2010 E10
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  #1744  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2010, 8:28 PM
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I have a feed setup via Google Reader and enjoy his pictures.

He's got a side project:
http://www.allthewaytonowhere.com/
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  #1745  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2010, 3:15 AM
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Un-real pictures.


I am astonished.
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  #1746  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2010, 8:38 PM
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MSH Building





It looks like a commieblock being attacked by office towers.
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  #1747  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2010, 9:22 PM
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is that the boutique/condo project?
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  #1748  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2010, 9:39 PM
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On Assiniboine Avenue, yes.
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  #1749  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2010, 12:25 AM
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is it still going forward?
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  #1750  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2010, 12:54 AM
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As far as I could tell, it is on its way to being a stale proposal. I think we've got about a year left before we'll change its status to that on the diagram system, if there is no new news about it.
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  #1751  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2010, 1:23 PM
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Originally Posted by roccerfeller View Post
is it still going forward?

It is still going ahead, from what i have last heard. It is being retooled without the hotel portion. It will remain the same size and height though.
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  #1752  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2010, 1:58 PM
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Hopefully it gets redesigned in the process.
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  #1753  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2010, 3:29 AM
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I was sent this link in an email. It may be of interest to others here: The August 1958 Winnipeg Visitors Guide
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  #1754  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2010, 8:24 PM
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Originally Posted by ihatesquirrels View Post
I was sent this link in an email. It may be of interest to others here: The August 1958 Winnipeg Visitors Guide
Thanks so much for that, it was quite entertaining browsing through the pages.
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  #1755  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2010, 8:55 PM
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Yeah, that visitors guide was neat to check out, especially the old ads. Thanks for posting.
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  #1756  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2010, 9:55 PM
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Did anyone else see this yesterday? When I was coming home from work, walking near City Place on my way to the BP lounge for some drinks, there seemed to be an invasion force taking over downtown comprised of 14-year-old girls dressed as hookers. WTF!?! I was going to investigate further, but then quickly recalled that there was to be a Beiber concert at MTS Centre.

Many of them were amassing behind a rope line by CTV's studios, presumably for autographs. Then while I was continuing down the sidewalk on Hargrave, coming towards me was a small group of outwardly enthusiastic 30-to-40-something year-old women on route to the MTSC, with their tits hiked-up to their chin, carrying signs decorated with hearts, glitter, etc. Such a double-standard, 'eh? Imagine if there were a pack of middle-aged men acting sexually provocative and whooping it up for Nikki Yanofsky or some other 16-year-old female starlet... no doubt, security or even the police would be urgently summoned to deal with them. However, I highly doubt the CMHR will feature this inequality, ha ha.

But I guess that today's feminism is celebrated and executed by dressing acting as trashy as possible. Macleans Magazine even had a good column on this trend recently.

Last edited by DowntownWpg; Sep 15, 2010 at 10:06 PM.
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  #1757  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2010, 10:06 PM
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Originally Posted by DowntownWpg View Post
Did anyone else see this yesterday? When I was coming home from work, walking near City Place on my way to the BP lounge for some drinks, there seemed to be an invasion force taking over downtown comprised of 14-year-old girls dressed as hookers. WTF!?! I was going to investigate further, but then quickly recalled that there was to be a Beiber concert at MTS Centre.

Many of them were amassing behind a rope line by CTV's studios, presumably for autographs. Then while I was continuing down the sidewalk on Hargrave, coming towards me was a small group of outwardly enthusiastic 30-to-40-something year-old women on route to the MTSC, with their tits hiked-up to their chin, carrying signs decorated with hearts, glitter, etc. Such a double-standard, 'eh? Imagine if there were a pack of middle-aged men acting sexually provocative and whooping it up for Nikki Yanofsky or some other 16-year-old female starlet... no doubt, security or even the police would be urgently summoned to deal with them. However, I highly doubt the CMHR will feature this inequality, ha ha.

But I guess that today's feminism is celebrated and executed by acting as trashy as possible. Macleans Magazine even had a good column on this trend recently.
Ha thats so funny and somewhat disgusting you seen that. To further add to that you should attend under age parties it doesn't get any prettier. The only reason I know as I worked as security for a few it made me feel like ripping my eyes out.
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  #1758  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2010, 1:56 AM
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I saw it on Carlton by the MTSC ramp. Cougars on the prowl. Stomach turning.
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  #1759  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2010, 2:48 PM
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I remember sitting on my front step watching girls walk by on their way to the bus stop to see Justin Timberlake ... they were literally disrobing as they walked away from their parents' house.
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  #1760  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2010, 1:51 AM
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Ahh, to be chased by 13 year old girls again. That was the life.
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