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  • Worker's snacking on the world's largest snack.
    Cookie 0012 Workers Tastin copy.jpg
  • Founder of the Immaculate Baking Company in Flat Rock, North Carolina, Scott Blackwell.
    Cookie 0006 Scott Vertical.jpg
  • A 100 foot-in diameter chocolate chip cookie manufactured by the Immaculate Baking Company in Flat Rock, North Carolina on May 17, 2003 weighs the same as 4 African bull elephants.
    Cookie 0004 Night Dough.jpg
  • Volunteers work through the night to spread 40,000 pounds of cookie dough to make a 100 foot-in diameter chocolate chip cookie.
    Cookie 0003 Night Dough.jpg
  • Volunteers shovel bricks of the chocolate chip cookie into boxes.
    Cookie 0011 Shoveling.jpg
  • A survey team calculates the diameter for the record books.
    Cookie 0010 MeasuringSurvey.jpg
  • Workers trying to break the Guiness Book of World Record attempt at the World's Largest Cookie, previously held by New Zealand, clean up the giant cookie sheet after a rain storm.
    Cookie 0002 Clean up.jpg
  • A 100 foot-in-diameter chocolate chip cookie manufactured by the Immaculate Baking Company in Flat Rock, North Carolina on May 17, 2003 was the largest cookie ever made.  Proceeds are to fund a Folk Art Museum near the bakery.
    Cookie 0001 Worlds Largest.jpg
  • Chip workers in clean room "bunny" suits, in old town of Austin, Texas. Austin is known for its music and old world charm as well as it's embrace of the technology sector.
    scf4356-430_Chip Makers 0001 Austin.jpg
  • The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by architect Cesar Peli are the world’s tallest buildings and were just being built when I traveled to Malaysia for another story.  Walking around downtown, I could see these strange mechanical arms protruding from the tops of the towers with these men in strange buckets that descended like mechanical spiders from the upper reaches of the building.  There are several teams of fearless window washers employed to clean the tower windows.  Like the painters who paint the Golden Gate Bridge, once they finish they start right back at the other end.  It takes a month to wash the windows of one building.
    Roads 0010.jpg
  • The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by architect Cesar Pelli are the world’s tallest buildings and were just being built when I traveled to Malaysia for another story.  Walking around downtown, I could see these strange mechanical arms protruding from the tops of the towers with these men in strange buckets that descended like mechanical spiders from the upper reaches of the building.  There are several teams of fearless window washers employed to clean the tower windows.  Like the painters who paint the Golden Gate Bridge, once they finish they start right back at the other end.  It takes a month to wash the windows of one building.
    Petronas Towers 0002 Window.jpg
  • The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by architect Cesar Pelli are the world’s tallest buildings and were just being built when I traveled to Malaysia for another story.  Walking around downtown, I could see these strange mechanical arms protruding from the tops of the towers with these men in strange buckets that descended like mechanical spiders from the upper reaches of the building.  There are several teams of fearless window washers employed to clean the tower windows.  Like the painters who paint the Golden Gate Bridge, once they finish they start right back at the other end.  It takes a month to wash the windows of one building.
    scf4327-727petronas towers 0002 wind...jpg
  • The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by architect Cesar Pelli are the world’s tallest buildings and were just being built when I traveled to Malaysia for another story.  Walking around downtown, I could see these strange mechanical arms protruding from the tops of the towers with these men in strange buckets that descended like mechanical spiders from the upper reaches of the building.  There are several teams of fearless window washers employed to clean the tower windows.  Like the painters who paint the Golden Gate Bridge, once they finish they start right back at the other end.  It takes a month to wash the windows of one building.
    scf4327-727_Petronas Towers 0002 Win...jpg
  • There are images that come into my head sometimes and I’m not sure where they come from.  Dreams have always been a rich resource for me and poems too and this shot came through both channels.  One of my assistants in New York was Roy Michaels, a former rock star of sorts whose band, Cat Mother and the All Night News Boys, was produced by Jimi Hendrix.  He used to play concerts with Hendrix, several hundred thousand people screaming fans and now he was painting my studio ceiling - and not in the Michael Angelo sense -  we're talking flat white Sears’ house paint.  A decade plus later Roy was happy with his life, content to live without crowds and the rock star life. He kept a little sailboat in San Francisco Bay called Invictus where he could get away from it all.  I had never heard the poem Invictus and Roy recited it to me as he painted my ceiling.  I had a dream that night and started making this little set in the corner of my loft with seagulls soon after.  These were the days before PhotoShop.  The guy in this photo, another assistant is actually hanging there suspended with seagulls tied to his wrists – he wasn’t dropped in later by a computer.  I guess this set looked pretty strange even to the artists in the building who would pass by my loft and ask what I was doing.   Some of these same artists would paint some pretty strange imagery while working through various neuroses but it’s one thing to paint a fantasy, its quite another to actually build it.
    Deja Blue.jpg
  • The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by architect Cesar Peli are the world’s tallest buildings and were just being built when I traveled to Malaysia for another story.  Walking around downtown, I could see these strange mechanical arms protruding from the tops of the towers with these men in strange buckets that descended like mechanical spiders from the upper reaches of the building.  There are several teams of fearless window washers employed to clean the tower windows.  Like the painters who paint the Golden Gate Bridge, once they finish they start right back at the other end.  It takes a month to wash the windows of one building.
    Roads 0010-2.jpg
  • The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by architect Cesar Peli are the world’s tallest buildings and were just being built when I traveled to Malaysia for another story.  Walking around downtown, I could see these strange mechanical arms protruding from the tops of the towers with these men in strange buckets that descended like mechanical spiders from the upper reaches of the building.  There are several teams of fearless window washers employed to clean the tower windows.  Like the painters who paint the Golden Gate Bridge, once they finish they start right back at the other end.  It takes a month to wash the windows of one building.
    Petronas Towers 0042.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1993
    scf4327-053-carnotaurus 0003 bonapar...jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1992
    scf4327-052-carnotaurus 0002 bonapar...jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1992
    scf4327-052_Carnotaurus 0002 Bonapar...jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1993
    Carnotaurus 0003 Bonaparte.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1993
    Carnotaurus 0001 Bonaparte.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1992
    Carnotaurus 0002 Bonaparte.jpg
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