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  • Assistant carpenter and tattooist Louie Soto talks on the phone at his new home in Sacaton, Arizona. (Louie Soto is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Soto built a new home, financed by casino profits and built by the Gila River Indian Community.
    USA_AZ_080825_007_xw.jpg
  • Teenage girls in school uniforms use a cell phone on a busy street characteristic of the fast paced life of Shibuya District, Tokyo, Japan.
    Japan_JAP_060701_046_xw.jpg
  • A barber talks on his mobile phone while shaving a client at a barber shop at Santinargar market in Dhakar, Bangladesh.
    BAN_081216_298_xw.jpg
  • Assistant carpenter and tattooist Louie Soto talks on the phone while his wife prepares food at his new home in Sacaton, Arizona. (Louie Soto is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Soto built a new home, financed by casino profits and built by the Gila River Indian Community.
    USA_AZ_080825_092_xw.jpg
  • Marcus Dirr's father Peter Dirr, also a master butcher, speaks on the phone at his son Marcus Dirr's shop in Endingen, near Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany.  (Marcus Dirr is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    GER_080313_175_xw.jpg
  • The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC]: Seismic Monitor Nuclear test project in The Republic of Kazakhstan. In 1986 the USSR Academy of Sciences allowed the NRDC to install seismic monitoring instruments within a few hundred kilometers of their nuclear test site to verify that the USSR was not testing nuclear weapons underground during the nuclear test ban. By allowing this monitoring on their soil and by monitoring near the Nevada test site in the USA, mutual trust was built that facilitated the end of the Cold War. Karkarlinsk Field lab. Soviet worker making a call from the camp phone. (1987]
    KAZ_SCI_NUKE_18_xs.jpg
  • Shwedagon Pagoda at dawn in Yangon, Myanmar (Rangoon, Burma). The gold-leafed Buddhist Pagoda and surrounding shrines is the most important religious site in the country.
    BUR_120204_253_x.jpg
  • Shwedagon Pagoda at dawn in Yangon, Myanmar (Rangoon, Burma). The gold-leafed Buddhist Pagoda and surrounding shrines is the most important religious site in the country.
    BUR_120204_202_x.jpg
  • Lugano, Switzerland on Lake Lugano. "Lugano is a city in the south of Switzerland, in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino, which borders Italy. The population of the city proper was 55,151 as of December 2011, and the population of the urban agglomeration was over 145,000. Wikipedia"
    SWI_121012_047_x.jpg
  • USA_091030_018_x.jpg
  • Shepherd's Dell State Park near Portland, OR
    USA_121115_02_x.jpg
  • Gijon, Northern Spain.
    SPA_171_xs.jpg
  • Villagers milk goats in a Maasai village compound during drought conditions, yielding very little milk, near Narok, Kenya. Maasai wealth is derived from the ownership of cattle, land and the number of children born to support the family business to look after cattle and goats.
    KEN_090225_024_xw.jpg
  • Shashi Kanth, a  call center worker, sits at his workstation at the AOL call center on the outskirts of Bangalore, India. (Shashi Kanth is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    IND_081208_174_xw.jpg
  • Shashi Kanth, a call center worker, at his workstation at the AOL call center in Bangalore, India. (Shashi Kanth is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    IND_081208_258_xw.jpg
  • Shashi Kanth, a call center worker, with his day's worth of food in his office at the AOL call center in Bangalore, India. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He is 23 years of age; 5 feet, 7 inches; and 123 pounds. Like many of the thousands of call center workers in India, he relies on fast-food meals, candy bars, and coffee to sustain him through the long nights spent talking to Westerners about various technical questions and billing problems. He took a temporary detour into the call center world to pay medical and school bills but finds himself still there after two years, not knowing when or if he will return to his professional studies. MODEL RELEASED.
    IND_081208_441_xxw.jpg
  • Takuya Mizuhara, an 18 year old university student (third from the right) with his friends at his favorite meeting place, McDonalds in Shibuya District of Tokyo, Japan. (Takuya Mizuhara is one of the people interviewed for the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    Japan_JAP_060702_151_xw.jpg
  • Napa Valley, CA at Thanksgiving time 2010 with Menzel and D'Aluisio family. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_101125_150_x.jpg
  • The Holy Land Experience is a Christian theme park in Orlando, Florida. The theme park recreates the architecture and themes of the ancient city of Jerusalem in 1st century Israel. The Holy Land Experience was founded and built by Marvin Rosenthal, a Jewish born Baptist minister but is now owned by the Trinity Broadcasting Network. Rosenthal is also the chief executive of a ministry devoted to 'reaching the Jewish people for the Messiah' called Zion's Hope. Beside the theme park architectural recreations, there are church services and live presentations of biblical stories, most notably a big stage production featuring the life of Jesus. There are several restaurants and gift shops in the theme park. The staff dresses in biblical costumes. Admission is $40 for adults and $25 for youths, aged 6-18.
    USA_121027_232_x.jpg
  • Bradbury Science Museum, Los Alamos, NM. Displays of Manhatten Project that developed the world's first atomic bombs during WWII.
    USA_101002_274_x.jpg
  • Napa Valley, CA at Thanksgiving time 2010 with Menzel and D'Aluisio family. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_101125_155_x.jpg
  • James Conaway, author of two books on the Napa Valley,  talking on his cellphone in his Napa Valley, California, office on the Menzel property with two guard dogs at his sides.
    USA_060927_04_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_065_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_064_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_060_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_051_x.jpg
  • Phillip Greenspun talking on his cellphone on Pu'u Kala beach, Big Island of Hawaii. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_060116_096_rwx.jpg
  • Thordis Bjornssdottir of the Thoroddson family at home in Hafnarfjordur near Reykjavik, Iceland. Thordis is seen here on a revisit in 2004 after the Thoroddsons were originally photographed in 1993 for the book project Material World. MODEL RELEASED..
    ICE_9866_rwx.jpg
  • Aisa Bou Yabes, head of the Kuwait Oil Company firefighting team dispatched to southern Iraq to extinguish oil well fires in Rumaila oilfield. Seven or eight of the oil wells were set on fire by retreating Iraqi troops when the US and UK invasion began. The Rumaila field is one of Iraq's biggest oil fields with five billion barrels in reserve. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_487_x.jpg
  • George Bahna, an engineering company executive and martial arts instructor, in his office in Zamelek, Cairo, Egypt. (George Bahna is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He is 29 years of age; 5 feet, 11 inches tall and 165 pounds. MODEL RELEASED.
    EGY_080324_073_xw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Brandon, who's off from school this week, accompanies Rosemary Revis to shop for their week's worth of food for the food portrait at the Harris Teeter supermarket, a short drive from their suburban home in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    USnc04_3016_xf1b.jpg
  • The Holy Land Experience is a Christian theme park in Orlando, Florida. The theme park recreates the architecture and themes of the ancient city of Jerusalem in 1st century Israel. The Holy Land Experience was founded and built by Marvin Rosenthal, a Jewish born Baptist minister but is now owned by the Trinity Broadcasting Network. Rosenthal is also the chief executive of a ministry devoted to 'reaching the Jewish people for the Messiah' called Zion's Hope. Beside the theme park architectural recreations, there are church services and live presentations of biblical stories, most notably a big stage production featuring the life of Jesus. There are several restaurants and gift shops in the theme park. The staff dresses in biblical costumes. Admission is $40 for adults and $25 for youths, aged 6-18.
    USA_121027_028_x.jpg
  • Bradbury Science Museum, Los Alamos, NM. Displays of Manhatten Project that developed the world's first atomic bombs during WWII.
    USA_101002_277_x.jpg
  • Folsom Street Fair, San Francisco, CA annual event.
    USA_100926_75_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_059_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_057_x.jpg
  • Gunnlaugur Bjornsson of the Thoroddson family at home in Hafnarfjordur near Reykjavik, Iceland. Gunnlaugur is seen here on a revisit in 2004 after the Thoroddsons were originally photographed in 1993 for the book project Material World. MODEL RELEASED..
    ICE_9761_rwx.jpg
  • Chen Zhen (right) a law student with her friend on Nanjing East Road in Shanghai China. (She is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets). The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food in June was 2600 kcals. She is 20 years of age; 5 feet, 5 inches tall and 106 pounds.  Chen Zhen eats at KFC 3 times a week and what she eats depends on the coupons that she and her friends gather to defray the cost of the meal. The rest of her meals in the course of a week are largely Chinese and traditional. She eats simple fare at her university campus cafeteria--soups with rice and vegetables. Her grandparents and father go without meat throughout the week so they can serve it to her on the weekends when she's home from school. MODEL RELEASED
    CHI_060610_848_xw.jpg
  • An outside view of the Ananta apparel factory on Elephant Road, downtown Dhaka, Bangladesh. While nearly half of Bangladesh's population is employed in agriculture, in recent years the economic engine of Bangladesh has been its garment industry, and the country is now the world's fourth largest clothing exporter, ahead of India and the United States. Dependent on exports and fearing international sanctions, Bangladesh's garment industry has implemented rules outlawing child labor and setting standards for humane working conditions.
    BAN_081215_259_xw.jpg
  • Barstow, California telephone and power lines across the desert.
    USA_DSRT_08_xs.jpg
  • Lourdes Alvarez, a restaurant owner and chef with her typical day's worth of food in her family's Mexican restaurant, Los Dos Laredos in Chicago. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food on a day in the month of September was 3,200 kcals. She is is 39 years of age; 5 feet, 2.5 inches tall; and 190 pounds.   She grew up in an apartment above Los Dos Laredos, where she still helps out two days a week. Other days she spends long hours at her own restaurant in Alsip, Illinois. At right: Lourdes takes a phone order, while her daughter, Alejandra, checks her mobile phone after school. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080930_085_xxw.jpg
  • Lourdes Alvarez, restaurant owner and chef takes a phone order in her family's Mexican restaurant, Los Dos Laredos, in Chicago, Illinois while her daughter, Alejandra, checks her mobile phone after school. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food on a day in the month of September was 3,200 kcals. She is is 39; 5'2.5" and 190 pounds. She grew up in an apartment above Los Dos Laredos, where she still helps out two days a week. Other days she spends long hours at her own restaurant in Alsip, Illinois. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080926_566_xw.jpg
  • Lourdes Alvarez, restaurant owner and chef takes a phone order in her family's Mexican restaurant, Los Dos Laredos, in Chicago, Illinois while her daughter, Alejandra, checks her mobile phone after school. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food on a day in the month of September was 3,200 kcals. She is is 39; 5'2.5" and 190 pounds. She grew up in an apartment above Los Dos Laredos, where she still helps out two days a week. Other days she spends long hours at her own restaurant in Alsip, Illinois. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080926_573_xxw.jpg
  • FIRST CONTACT: "FETALFONE" Photo Illustration for the Future of Communication GEO (Germany) Special Issue. Fictional Representation and Caption: The Smith's of Vallejo, California were not certain that the latest hi-tech form of giving their (unborn) child a headstart was effective, but it sure was fun to see Junior react to their voice on his "fetalfone". It was true that the youngster could only use it to listen (even if he could talk, it would very difficult in the amniotic fluid), but they enjoyed the idea that their offspring would be comfortable with a cell phone from Day Minus-90 to Day One when he popped out. The flat screen imaging unit affords the parents (and in this case older sister) the opportunity to track the unborn's development and also watch his reactions when they talk to him on the "Fetalfone". [Fetus with "Fetalfone" shown on "Babewatch", fetus-scan home imaging system can be monitored by absent parent via Internet.] MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_SCI_COMM_02_xs.jpg
  • Jill Tarter. Portrait of Jill Tarter (1944-), American astrophysicist and SETI researcher with a princess phone at a radiotelescope at Stanford, CA. Palo Alto, California. (1988)
    USA_SCI_RT_14_xs.jpg
  • Computerized phone book called the Minitel, which was one of the first online information services accessed by telephone lines. Paris, France. 1980's.
    FRA_012_xs.jpg
  • Sara Akbar, development specialist for the Kuwait Oil Company, makes a cell phone call before joining firefighters from the companies (KWWK: Kuwait Wild Well Killers) as they prepare to extinguish the first oil well fire in Iraq's Rumaila Oil field. After dousing the flames with high pressure water hoses, they sealed the spurting well of gas and oil with drilling mud using what is called a "stinger," a tapered pipe on the end of a long steel boom controlled by a bulldozer. Drilling mud, under high pressure, is pumped through the stinger into the well, stopping the flow of oil and gas. The Rumaila oil field is one of Iraq's biggest with five billion barrels in reserve. The burning wells in the Rumaila Field were ignited by retreating Iraqi troops when the US and UK invasion began in March 2003. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_061_rwx.jpg
  • Men looting copper phone wires. The scrap copper sells for $1.25 a kilo. This photo was taken at the front lines on the north side of Mogadishu, the war-torn capital of Somalia. March 1992.
    SOM_11_xs.jpg
  • Internet Shop Communications. Internet software; Stephan Shambach, 27, president and CEO drives to San Francisco from his San Mateo home. He often stops on I280 to make phone calls or read papers in his Mustang convertible. Model Released (1999).
    USA_SVAL_4a_xs.jpg
  • Silicon Valley, California; Icarian Corporation Software CEO; Doug Merritt, talking on phone in his office, 9 am. Model Released (1999).
    USA_SVAL_214_xs.jpg
  • Silicon Valley, California; 9:15 PM Driving south on Highway 101, C.E.O. Scott Hublou returns voice mail on his cell phone. Scott is returning to the Asimba.com office in Mountain View, California after an evening run. Scott is preparing for an upcoming Ironman competition for which he trains twice a day. Model Released (1999).
    USA_SVAL_207_xs.jpg
  • Theodore Rozak Model Released. IT Conference on computer freedom and privacy in San Francisco, California Theodore Roszak: an author who warns about computers getting out of control..8D. Theodore Roszak, writer, professor at California State University, Hayward, California. Roszak spoke at the conference on a panel discussion on "The Case Against Computers: A Systematic Critique" with Jerry Mander of the Elmwood Institute and Richard Sclove. This portrait is in his office at Cal State, Hayward. Roszak has written a number of books, including The Making of the Counterculture, the book that named a generation. . Roszak said, "Computers are like genies that get out of control." ."The cult of information is theirs, not ours." ."Every tool ever invented is a mixed blessing." ."There never will be a machine that makes us wiser than our own naked minds.".((Roszak was most uncooperative, saying he was very busy and that it was not to his advantage to be in an article in Germany when his recent books are not translated into German. We did a few shots of him holding the TV monitor and then he said he couldn't do it anymore so my assistant wore his jacket for the rest of the shoot while he went off to another office to make phone calls. He gave us 11 minutes of his time. It took several days to get this photo.)) .Model Released. (1995).
    USA_SCI_COMP_03_120_xs.jpg
  • Virtual reality: Jaron Lanier, head of VPL Research of Redwood City, California. Fiber- optic sensors in the black rubber glove Lanier is wearing transmit a user's movements into the computer-generated virtual environment. A user's view of such a world is projected by the computer into 2 eye phones mounted on a headset. Model Released (1990)
    USA_SCI_VR_23_xs.jpg
  • Virtual reality: Jaron Lanier, head of VPL Research of Redwood City, California, photographed surrounded by demonstration images of the virtual, non-real worlds that VPL have created. Fiber- optic sensors in the black rubber glove Lanier is wearing transmit a user's movements into the computer-generated virtual environment. A user's view of such a world is projected by the computer into 2 eye phones mounted on a headset. Model Released (1990)
    USA_SCI_VR_25_xs.jpg
  • Virtual reality: Jaron Lanier, head of VPL Research of Redwood City, California, photographed surrounded by demonstration images of the virtual, non-real worlds that VPL have created. Fiber- optic sensors in the black rubber glove Lanier is wearing transmit a user's movements into the computer-generated virtual environment. A user's view of such a world is projected by the computer into 2 eye phones mounted on a headset (seen unworn at left, on top of the computer monitor). Model Released (1990)
    USA_SCI_VR_24_xs.jpg
  • Virtual reality: Jaron Lanier, head of VPL Research of Redwood City, California. Fiber- optic sensors in the black rubber glove Lanier is wearing transmit a user's movements into the computer-generated virtual environment. A user's view of such a world is projected by the computer into 2 eye phones mounted on a headset. Model Released (1990)
    USA_SCI_VR_22_xs.jpg
  • FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL: "GREENREAD" AND "WASTEWATCHER" Photo Illustration for the Future of Communication GEO (Germany) Special Issue. Fictional Representation and Caption: The first day of school for one-year-olds is less traumatic when the learning guide can monitor their progress with infant-friendly "Greenreads", (friendly retro laptops with green-red monitoring LEDs that display learning progress). Getting a jump-start on education is crucial to the future success of a citizen in this very wired world. Moving beyond the abdominal skin speakers to fetal cell phones became so common by mid-century that many children were able to communicate very well by the time they started school at 12 months, even though they had not mastered verbal speech. Photographed at Headzup Learning Center in Napa, California MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_SCI_COMM_03_xs.jpg
  • Dr. Volkmar Falk performs robotic surgery on a patient from controls in the next room at the Herzzentrum Heart Center in Leipzig, Germany. (Visiting doctors watch surgeon Volkmar Falk perform a coronary artery bypass graft on a patient lying in the adjoining room, using a tele-manipulated surgical system (called a robotic system by some) designed by Intuitive Surgical Corporation of Mountainview, California, at the Herzzentrum, Leipzig, Germany. The assistant surgeon has incised small holes into the patient's chest wall through which the instruments-attached to sterile plastic covered manipulating arms-will pass and be telemanipulated by the surgeon in the next room. The room in which the surgeon is working is a less sterile work environment than that of the operating room where the patient lies. It is much like an office; phones are ringing, there is heavy foot traffic and personal conversation-at times at crescendo level.
    Ger_rs_133_xs.jpg
  • BEDTIME FOR BOZOS WITH THE "HONEYMOONER" Photo Illustration for the Future of Communication GEO (Germany) Special issue. Fictional Representation and Caption: Video phones and teledildactic interactive body gloves facilitated large numbers of long distance relationships among huge numbers of couples in an age where job mobility was crucial to financial well being. But as divorce rates grew, the interpersonal skills for maintaining relationships atrophied, and couples found it easier to have a virtual partner that had a physical presence in the bedroom. No more headaches, bad breath, receding hair or cellulite to worry about. With a "Honeymooner", robotic sex doll, programmable with a PC, all kinds of simulations are possible. Richard "Dick" Kravitz of Sonoma, California,  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_SCI_COMM_05_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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