Skip to content

Capturing a competitive business

Scene Through the Lens with photographer Tom Gralish.
Obet Montalvo, a digital strategist with Radicle Digital, finds a quiet nook at the Convention Center on Thursday while attending Netroots Nation, the country’s largest annual gathering for progressive political activists, and organizers. The fan fest is an outgrowth of the blog Daily Kos.Read moreTom Gralish / Staff Photographer

I stopped by the Convention Center for Netroots Nation, which is the country’s largest annual conference and gathering for progressive political activists, organizers, and digital strategists. The event brings together thousands of grassroots organizers to participate in training sessions, panel discussions, and keynote addresses. I was there to check on things after the State Rep. primary election win by progressive Chris Rabb.

In other action, I was pleased to see editors included my ballet photo in this week’s Big Picture gallery of sports photos. Dancers ARE athletes.

After making high shutter speed (1/1000th second) pictures to freeze the action of Blake Metcalf, 15, and the other dancers, I changed things up when he sat out a drill. I slowed my shutter down to 1/13th of a second at f/8, 160 ISO on my 70-200mm f/2.8, putting the Nikon Z6-II right on the dance floor. I used the monitor on the back of the camera to compose and focus and then it was just a matter of luck, as I fired off a whole bunch of frames — until he stood back up — hoping to get the right combination of his expression and the blurred bodies of dancers in motion in front of him (of course making sure my reflection was not among those visible in the mirror).

While on a different assignment I chanced upon Connor O’Shea working the basketball game on the Wildwood boardwalk. It’s where players shoot for a chance to win prizes — and impress their boyfriends or girlfriends.

With a few summers of ball handling under his belt, he’s got the physics of it down. O’Shea, a rising sophomore business marketing major at West Chester University, is going into his fifth season working summers on the Wildwood boardwalk where he now manages three of the six ball booths.

Not sports, but certainly a competitive business — local politics. Mayor Cherelle L. Parker had pushed for added taxes on firms like Uber and Airbnb to help fund schools. Lawmakers had other ideas.

Finally, my visual highlight of the week: these cute little mini-traffic cones at a ribbon-cutting for a new free shuttle service in South Jersey.

Since 1998 a black-and-white photo has appeared every Monday in staff photographer Tom Gralish’s “Scene Through the Lens” photo column in the print editions of The Inquirer’s local news section. Here are the most recent, in color: