Last time I did that, the family was on the river in our little 10’ boat and the downtown fireworks were very nearly overhead. Wild! The boat was full of shell fragments! This year they moved us back. :(
As someone who does it professionally. There is a very real risk being that close. We have shells that go up and don’t explode, we have hang fires where it doesn’t launch when it’s supposed to and then does when the smoldering paper finally touches the lift, and we have some that don’t reach apogee and explode at the wrong height.
It’s a thrill, I know. I love watching them launch and being that close. But it comes with some dangers.
I agreeeeee but i have taken photos of fireworks because they make nice edited pics. Lots of colour, light and abstract shapes to work with.
Saw a tiger recently, less than a metre away from me through a fence. I was the only person to see the tiger rather than see a tiger on a phone screen.
I can look at tigers on a phone at home.
Plus, photos of tigers found on the internet are likely vastly better than the ones you can capture on your phone.
I saw a tiger just now, and I was t
I noticed that even though I don’t take a ton of photos, I never seemed to look at the ones I took. Ended up just using my whole camera photo album as the standby screen on my TV so it just shows random photos and I finally got some use out of them. It’s been oddly fun to see random photos taken like 15 years ago pop up that I completely forgot about.
Same, iphone has a setting to rotate the lock screen image with photos from your library, that’s the only time I’ve actually looked at any of the pics I’ve taken
This is why I have a bunch of Nest Hubs. Right now they’re cycling through pet photos and it’s nice to look at them randomly and be like “oh yeah I remember that”.
The hubs are also nice sometimes for googling things and having my data stolen I guess, but mostly the photos
If you do, please tag what show you saw.
I love finding videos of shows either my friends or I have put on. Pyros do search for their shows.
Our Obsession with Taking Photos May Alter How We Remember Things
Taking photos of an event rather than being immersed in it has been shown to lead to poorer recall of the actual event—we get distracted in the process.Get yourselves married man its the best. Your wife takes all the photos and documents everything obsessively. I can enjoy the moment safe in the knowledge that shes on the case.
Ah yes, because using a phone to record something requires you to physically glue your eyes to the screen, with no ability whatsoever to look up after getting it set up…
Especially now that it’s usually 3 swipes and a button press away…I like the downvotes you’re getting for telling the truth
it’s more to flex on friends and post / share it
If you don’t share it on social media, did it really happen?
I used to believe this. Was very “put your phone down and just experience the moment,” or “there’s 100 other people recording and uploading this, why should I?” As I’ve gotten older and am scrolling 10 years back in my photo library it’s these stupid videos or pictures I didn’t delete that send me back to a moment I’d otherwise forgotten. I make more of an effort now to document stuff even if it’s stupid.
Take a few pictures to remember the event, but then put the camera down and enjoy the moment.
This is it. Capture the moment but not at the expense of the moment.
I knew a kid who was obsessed with watching these on YouTube when she was like 3 or 4.
The brain-dead assholes in Raleigh at ABC 11 decided to preempt Jeopardy to show all the dumb asses freezing said asses off to watch the fireworks. I know I’m a grumpy old man, but for fuck’s sake, who’s gonna watch fireworks for 5 fucking hours? Standing in the fucking cold, no less! Lucky for me I live close enough to Greensboro to catch it on their CBS affiliate at 7:30.
Protip: Take a video of your family watching the fireworks, not only the fireworks.
👆
Or, you know, just enjoy it.











