Monday, September 19, 2005

Storm Expert Captures the Fury of Katrina on Film

from a press release:

ARLINGTON, Texas, Sept. 13, 2005 (PRIMEZONE) -- Veteran storm photographer Martin Lisius battled fierce winds, catastrophic flooding and other obstacles to capture the fury of Hurricane Katrina on film as the historic storm made landfall on the U.S. coast last month. Lisius shoots for StormStock, the world's largest storm footage library. He founded the library in 1993, and serves as Prairie Pictures president. Lisius acknowledges the uniqueness of Katrina: "It was plain to me the day before Katrina made landfall in the Gulf that it had potential to become the costliest storm in U.S. history," he said. "It has since captured that title."

Lisius and his team of photographers positioned themselves at locations along the coast, including Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. Highlights include a high water rescue attempt, storm surge sweeping off the Gulf, and structures failing in the powerful winds. Lisius was accompanied by photographer Brandon Jennings, and recorded dramatic images of Katrina on 35mm motion picture film and HD video. "We were able to capture the usual things like horizontal rain, trees bending over and debris flying through the air and scraping across the ground," he said. "But the most amazing scene we encountered was in Moss Point, Mississippi where we came upon a parking lot that was flooding with storm surge and covering cars. People were stranded inside the hotel there and staring down from the upper floors when a high water rescue team arrived. The team, from the local fire department, battled winds gusting to 110 mph to search each vehicle. It made for some very powerful imagery."

Despite the team's success, Katrina brings an unusual darkness not felt before. "Katrina was an impressive storm from a scientific point of view," Lisius said. "Unfortunately, there is an exceptional level of human suffering associated with Katrina unlike any other U.S. storm since the Galveston, Texas hurricane of 1900. I thought that event, which killed 8,000 people, would not be duplicated again considering our modern ability to forecast, track and effectively evacuate for dangerous storms like Katrina. We did well on forecasting and tracking, but failed to effectively evacuate. That's unacceptable," he said.

The StormStock team photographs weather footage for licensed use in film and television productions. Sample clips can be viewed on-line at http://www.stormstock.com.
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There is a pretty good Katrina clip there showing the height of the water and how fast it moved in. The clip also shows the firemen in the outboard fishing boat going out in the storm to do search and rescue. Evidently they didn't wait for a memo.

Like this says and like I said this was a great and very successful search and rescue operation. Were all the government (local, state, federal) agencies late in helping people? A resounding NO.

To say otherwise is to discount the brave work of many who didn't wait for a FEMA memo, a mayoral request, or a govenor's phone call. They just went out and got it done. I'm not seeing "props" for them like I did for the NYC Police and Fire depts. I hope it is coming. The redtape-makeanofficialrequestorphonecall-waitin'onyou-noI'mwaitin'onyou govt. folks could learn alot from the git 'er dones.

more numbers and agencies here

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