The Bluebird - St. Louis
The Bluebird is located at:2706 Olive Street
St. Louis, MO 63103

Tuesday, Oct. 7th 2008
featuring: Street Dogs, Time Again, Flatfoot 56, Benedict Arnold
Doors: 8:00 PM
Cover: $15/ $18
all ages
Most of my music[s] are of the cinematic nature. If you need something, please contact me so we can partner on a project. I have many varied musical influences that include The KLF, Pink Floyd, Skinny Puppy, and Front 242, as well as Classic Rock. I mix music as much for self-expression and keeping my mind sharp because it’s simply etched into My soul. Much Love!! Contact: DjRenigade@proton.me


Tuesday, Oct. 7th 2008
featuring: Street Dogs, Time Again, Flatfoot 56, Benedict Arnold
Doors: 8:00 PM
Cover: $15/ $18
all ages
The steel that the man is welding on is about 1''thick. He is also using a MIG Welding rig.
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 35 mm
ISO Speed: 200
This person was using a Plasma Cutter to place a bevel on this pipe.
Exposure: 0.006 sec (1/160)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 105 mm
ISO Speed: 200
One of the craftsmen using a MIG welding rig to work.
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 35 mm
ISO Speed: 200
I was trying to get all creative with the photo about 1 year ago. It turned out very nice and the Bokeh is nice. Some of you might have viewed this when i first took the photograph.
Exposure: 0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 67.8 mm
ISO Speed: 64
We were at the Bone Fish Bar and Grill in Duck NC. The sun was going down and it was a beautiful sight. I do not think that i could have planned this photo any better if i would have tired to.
Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/400)
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 72 mm
ISO Speed: 125
Forest Park Balloon Glow 2008
Exposure: 0.25 sec (1/4)
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 22 mm
ISO Speed: 200
A "Black-capped Chickadee" eating on my grandparents bird feeder during the summer. This photo has lovely Bokeh with the green trees all blurry and the feeder in the forefront. I used my 70-300mm lens for this photo.
Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/400)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 300 mm
ISO Speed: 400
This was taken using my SAL-1870mm lens or the kit lens that came with my camera. United van lines. It was a big balloon!
Exposure: 0.25 sec (1/4)
Aperture: f/3.5
Focal Length: 18 mm
ISO Speed: 200
F-16 Thunderbirds flying up for their next stunt!
Exposure: 1/3200 sec
Aperture: f/5
Focal Length: 250 mm
ISO Speed: 200
F-16 Thunderbirds
Doing a high speed pass down the front in a 4 point roll.
Exposure: 1/4000 sec
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 160 mm
ISO Speed: 200
I was at the hotel in Orland and i saw him on the back of a car. I thought that it was a good shot. I took this with the DSC-H1 Sony Cybershot 5.1 megapixel. IT was in the early morning before were going to go and visit Epcot.
Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/400)
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 21.1 mm
ISO Speed: 64
F-16 Thunderbirds: taking off and afterburner is on!
I use the surround land and trees to give you a sense of perspective. You cant tell how fast he was going, but i hope that the land gives you a sense of urgency that he was taking off in a big hurry! You can see the fire shooting out of the exhaust and the heat trail behind that. He is only about 30 feet off the ground and is giving it some major power to take off at that pitch.
Exposure: 0.001 sec (1/1250)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 160 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Classic formation. Looking at the belly of the F-16.
Exposure: 1/4000 sec
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 70 mm
ISO Speed: 200
F-16 Thunderbirds: Artistic blur 1.1
The flight crews were lined up to assist the pilot. I thought that an out of focus shot would be nice or interesting. By Me placing them out of focus, i tried to divert the attention and seriousness of the act that was happening and also to make it more surreal about what was going to happen.
Exposure: 1/2500 sec
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 90 mm
ISO Speed: 200
F-15 taking off at Scott AFB on 9.20.2008. I love the after burner and the heat stream that is behind the jet as it is building power to do a vertical climb.
Exposure: 0.001 sec (1/2000)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 150 mm
ISO Speed: 200

People always talk about wanting to conserve energy and some try to do it and green. That is a good thing. What I have noticed is that lots of things can and could be changed to help conserve energy but never gets mentioned.
Take for instance, Going to the grocery store. We all do it and have to. We might get some bread, milk, cereal, and milk or cheese. But wait, how is the mike and cheese kept cold? In a freezer, an open face freezer. All that cold is just falling to the floor. It keeps the products cold, but also the people, the floor and most of the stuff surrounding that isle. Talk about WASTEFUL!! Not to mention the energy costs and refrigerant that is used in the process of cooling.
Hey, I know, let’s open the door of our home and cool the neighborhood! The open faced freezer is the same suggestion. Very inefficient and inadequate for what is needed. I went to the store last night and it just hit me like a ton of bricks. What is the energy cost of this unit while it is running 24/7 and also on the environment? My daughter always complains about how cold it is in that area. No wonder! They are cooling the whole back on the store with the open faced freezers and coolers.
Can people offer suggestion on this topic? Perhaps we can and should close all of the open face freezers and coolers and this would save a tremendous amount of energy and cut down on the store’s electric bill. In my opinion, it is an antiquated way of keeping food products cold and fresh. This is just my thoughts on the energy crisis that we are having…
Forest Park Balloon Glow
Friday 19, 2008
Taken in Manual Mode.
Exposure: 0.25 sec (1/4)
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 45 mm
ISO Speed: 200
This is 1 out of 2 in a photo series showing the "Prandtl-Glauert singularity" on the jet.
Exposure: 1/2500 sec
Aperture: f/4
Focal Length: 100 mm
ISO Speed: 200
B-52 Flying "Dirty" with landing gear and flaps down. It was on a training mission out of Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana.
Exposure: 0.001 sec (1/2000)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 120 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-17
First Russian Jet with Afterburner. Used during the Vietnam War. His "Afterburners" are on during this photo.
Exposure: 1/2500 sec
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 280 mm
ISO Speed: 200
I feel exactly as you do on this one Mac. Thank you for letting me post this to my Blog.
Don't Worry; New Orleans is Safe
This is my audition script for a job with National Public Radio:
After weeks of brewing at sea, mighty Hurricane Ike, bearing Mother Nature's wrath and reflecting the global warming caused by greedy Americans driving cars and working at jobs, thundered ashore on a dark and stormy night, making landfall while wreaking havoc on women and minorities because of an evil CIA plot. Snapping trees like matchsticks, and matchsticks like trees, because people are always snapping matchsticks and saying "See, that sounds just like a pine tree!", the hurricane, an iconic symbol of America's loss of innocence, a storm that defined a generation, left devastation in its wake in places we in Washington never heard of and don't care about, thankfully sparing our most European city and center of culture, New Orleans (cue the saxophones).
Evil, wicked oil companies cruelly pre-left oil production facilities in the path of Hurricane Ike in their pre-abysmal pre-failure to pre-plan the pre-needs of, like, y'know, harp seals 'n' stuff. A select congressional delegation will fly to Las Vegas in taxpayer-funded jets for a week-long investigation into corruption by Big Oil, and to participate in budgeting workshops to consider raising taxes in order to give more money to New Orleans, which was so ravaged by Hurricane Katrina. Leave no child behind. Unless you're Mayor Nagin (cue the sloshing water).
Images of devastation in Galveston, Texas can only suggest to imaginative people a little of what Hurricane Katrina must have been like in New Orleans when President Bush's levees failed (cue the harmonicas).
Learning that every building in Bridge City, Texas, was flooded by the storm surge, with many of them completely destroyed and with whole families' livelihoods destroyed, makes one want to take up a collection for the suffering of New Orleans caused by Hurricane Katrina (cue the zydeco).
Hearing that Bolivar Peninsula is no longer a peninsula but three islands and that the loss of life there is not yet determined makes one feel sorry for those in New Orleans who suffer post-traumatic stress syndrome from Hurricane Katrina (cue loud sniffles).
Pictures of the flooded homes in Beaumont and Orange, sleepy little towns in Texas, make one weep for the tragedies in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina (cue more loud sniffles).
Considering that the homes, businesses, and families of Winnie, High Island, Rollover Pass, Crystal Beach, and other quaint little places occupied by the sort of people who cling to guns and religion will never be the same, with some people having lost everything they ever worked for, leads this reporter to take the front in leading a national day of our-thoughts-and-hearts-go-out-to-you for the people of New Orleans who lost so much more during Hurricane Katrina (cue some vaguely church-like sounds).
-30-
An institute run with such knavish imbecility that if it were not the work of God it would not last a fortnight.
-- Hilaire Belloc (speaking of the Church)