I thought it would be a challenge to photograph a woman I heard about who is bed-ridden. What's life like from her perspective? This is Elaine Mayo's story...
- Mandalit
I passed him almost every day on my way to the Capitol. But like most, I scurried past without paying much notice. I never took the time to read his sign. The cardboard that names him -- Rod Amis: writer, raconteur, bon vivant.
Amis is among the scores of homeless people who camp at Union Station in Washington, DC. They watch the commuters and tourists come and go and hope to earn a little change.
Amis sits beside his sign every morning with a paper cup, stoked with a dollar bill. A good day will bring in $15 or $20, he says, enough to buy some cigarettes and a drink. Community groups usually bring food. The shelters will send vans at night to pick up those who need a bed. But Amis would rather stay put.
Amis is a journalist. A journalist who has slowly lost the use of his brain because of a vitamin deficiency often brought on by alcoholism. Now he spends his days panhandling in front of Union Station.
-- Debbie Elliott
Now this doggy coming up here hates me...Watch the dog.
Whether you stroll, bike, bus, metro, or drive to work - chances are you'll regularly pass by one person. If you're lucky, that person will wear a bright orange straw hat. And his name will be Gregory Tyrone Walton. This is an audio slideshow of the Capitol Hill commute through Walton's eyes. -- Tina Tennessen
categories: Slideshows
Ned Wharton, Knight trainee
One of the joys of Knight Training is the opportunity to spend five weeks with a smart, creative, and fun-loving group of NPR colleagues. We paired off to get to know each other even better with the assignment of making audio slideshow "profiles." It was great to learn more about NPR's Debbie Elliott and her family life on the Gulf Coast:
And for her turn, Debbie created this wonderful slideshow where I'm the old codger reminiscing about the days of reel-to-reel tape:
categories: Slideshows
Ned Wharton, Knight trainee
For the past couple of years, my son has been renting a cello from this violin shop in Bethesda, Maryland. There's a wonderfully ramshackle, Old World feel to the place, and when we were given a Knight training assignment to create an audio slide show, Potter's seemed like just the spot. Thanks to proprietor Dalton Potter and his staff for letting me look and listen behind the scenes. (Note: an earlier iteration of this slideshow, sans audio, and with a few different pictures, can be seen here.)
categories: Slideshows
Just months before I moved to Washington, a five-alarm fire nearly destroyed a local landmark here: Eastern Market, which opened in 1873.
The beautiful building housed more than a dozen businesses: butchers, fishmongers, cheese sellers, and florists. Months after the conflagration, the District of Columbia erected a temporary facility across the street. Many of the vendors moved in.
Now, two years later, reconstruction and restoration of the original Eastern Market is nearly finished. At the end of the month, this centerpiece of the Capitol Hill community will be reopened.
--David Gura
categories: Slideshows