The Studio 2.8 photography and videography service is producing photographs of the 2020 COVID19 corona virus pandemic, documenting the panic and crisis with extensive documentary photographs and video. The gallery of Studio 2.8 photography photos above, exams life for homeless people, photos of houseless people, living on the streets, some sleeping in tents, some sleeping on the sidewalks on little more than some cardboard with a blanket.
Studio 2.8 photography and videography is documenting the 2020 COVID19 corona virus pandemic, panic, and crisis, producing extensive documentary photographs and video as the pandemic unfolds and evolves. The gallery of Studio 2.8 photography photos above, presents Studio 2.8 photos of closed storefronts around the Pacific Northwest, photos of the Pacific Northwest's closed and boarded up storefronts, including storefront in and around Seattle, Washington.
This Studio 2.8 photography corona virus pandemic documentary photograph of the Sephora cosmetics store's storfront, in Seattle's South Lake Union neighborhood, was produced in Seattle during the month of May 2020. The Studio 2.8 photography service is documenting the 2020 COVID-19 corona virus pandemic with detailed photographs and extensive video.
This Studio 2.8 photography corona virus pandemic documentary photograph of The Devil's Triangle Gentlemen's Club strip club in downtown Seattle adjacent to the amazon.com headquarters buildings was produced in Seattle during the month of May 2020. The Studio 2.8 photography service is documenting the 2020 COVID-19 corona virus pandemic with in-depth photography and extensive video.
This Studio 2.8 photography 2020 corona virus pandemic documentary photograph of The Diller Room in Seattle was produced in downtown Seattle, WA on May 13, 2020. The Studio 2.8 photography service is documenting the 2020 COVID-19 corona virus pandemic with detailed photographs and extensive video.
This Studio 2.8 photography 2020 corona virus pandemic documentary photograph was produced in downtown Seattle, WA on May 13, 2020. The Studio 2.8 photography service is documenting the COVID-19 corona virus pandemic with detailed photographs and video.
This Studio 2.8 photography 2020 corona virus pandemic documentary photograph was produced in downtown Seattle, WA on the after noon of April 18, 2020. The Studio 2.8 photography service is documenting the many impacts of the COVID-19 corona virus pandemic with detailed photographs and video.
This Studio 2.8 photography photograph was produced on Saturday December 7, 2019 at McGraw Square in Seattle, WA, during a Pearl Harbor Day commemoration event. In this Studio 2.8 photograph, a young woman with a communist political counter-protest group euphemistically named the "Sparkle Brigade" banged a pair of wooden sticks together as though they were a type of musical instrument called claves. At various times during this young woman's angry counter protest activities, she shouted rants on various topics. In the accompanying fair use video clip below, produced by Cody Adams, from a longer video published on the youtube video publication platform, the woman in this photograph shouted:
You are a fascist if you do not stop your leader from putting people in concentration camps!
This communist sparkle brigade counter protester shouted these sorts of angry rants repeatedly during the time the Pearl Harbor Day event was present at Seattle's McGraw Square park on Saturday December 7, 2019.
In this Studio 2.8 photography photo series, produced on Saturday December 7, 2019, during a Pearl Harbor Day commemoration event at Seattle's McGraw Square, the pictured anarcho-communist counter-protester shouted and ranted loudly. The counter-protester in this series of Studio 2.8 photographs, with accompanying high definition video below, wore a pink themed outfit that included garish, pink themed, heavy facial makeup. The pink attired anarchist counter-protester ranted that "...
In this December 7, 2019 Studio 2.8 photography photo, produced during a political event at Seattle's McGraw Square to commemorate Pearl Harbor Day, among the anarcho-communist counter-protesters was infamous anarchist Nicholas James Armstrong, aka "Nikki" Armstrong, aka "Jaymie Jameson".
Seattle area anarcho-communist terror cell network participant Nicholas Armstrong aka Jaymie Jameson seems to have first appeared within, and joined, the local anarchist network terrorists who call themselves "antifa" sometime in May 2019, after a political controversy arose regarding events called "Drag Queen Story Hour" that were being held at branches of the King County Library system. Since then, Armstrong has been radicalized with anarcho-communist ideology, participating with only anarchist committing violence, assaults, intimidation, libel, and harassment of anyone and everyone the Seattle area anarchists view as their "enemies". When Nicholas Armstrong isn't engaged in anarchist terrorism, Armstrong produces income as a prostitute. Nicholas Armstrong is also a fugitive from justice in Idaho, wanted on two arrest warrants, one misdemeanor arrest warrant and one felony arrest warrant, issued by Ada County, Idaho.
This Studio 2.8 photography photograph was produced on Saturday December 7, 2019 at McGraw Square in Seattle, WA, during a Pearl Harbor Day commemoration event.
Jamal Oscar Williams, a violent Seattle anarcho-communist political activist was jailed by the Seattle Police Department on September 29, 2019. This Studio 2.8 photography photograph was produced on Sunday September 29, 2019 at downtown Seattle's Westlake Park, where a group of Seattle Republicans held a political rally and march.
This gallery of Studio 2.8 photography photographs was produced on Sunday September 29, 2019 at Westlake Park in the heart of downtown Seattle, Washington, where a group of Seattle Republicans had organized and held a political rally and march that day. A group of Seattle area anarcho-communists counter-protested the event, including participants in the Seattle area anarcho-communist domestic terror cell network known as the "Antifa Black Bloc" (sic).
In this Studio 2.8 photograph from a political rally and march in downtown Seattle on Sunday July 14, 2019, called "United Against Political Violence", a counter protester with curly hair dyed a clownish bright red color gesticulated wildly and maniacally at the main event attendees, as though she were an escapee from Washington's Western State mental hospital.
This Studio 2.8 photography photograph was produced early Friday evening June 28, 2019 on Capitol Hill in Seattle as attendees there gathered before the Seattle 2019 Trans Pride March, pride weekend event, along Capitol Hill's Broadway thoroughfare.
In this Studio 2.8 photograph, a group of attendees held up posters, including one attendee who held a poster with the phrase "Kill Bezos" on it, apparently in reference to billionaire amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, whose wealth is estimated at over $110 Billion dollars. The other posters in the Studio 2.8 photograph above include the phrases: "LGBT cops make my pussy dry", "No Pride In - cops, cages, corporations", and "This is Hell! All We Want is Total Freedom! Poverty Is Violence!".
The fair use video clip below, from the 2019 movie Joker depicts a fictional scene in which a crowd of angry protesters held up posters that included a sign with the phrase "Kill the Rich" on it. The 2019 Joker movie wasn't released until October 2019. The "Kill Bezos" poster above represents an example of a reality, and begs the existential question about whether fiction imitates reality and sometimes vice-versa. In this instance, the political messages in the photograph above represent the start reality of what Seattle has become, with its bifurcated economy in which high-technology employees garner annual salaries of $250,000.00 and up, plus stock options, living in million dollar downtown Seattle condominiums, while people who have failed to prepare for the stark reality of the bifurcated West Coast U.S. economic extremes, can barely eat and house themselves on a $15.00 per hour minimum wage, or are, worse yet, sleeping on cardboard under blankets on the sidewalk, in front of the very skyscraper condo towers that are home to the tech economy's affluent employees.
So many Seattle residents signed up and wanted to testify at the Seattle City Council meeting on March 18, 2019, held about the city's Real Estate Regulation ordinance known as Mandatory Affordable Housing, that not all the Seattleites who wanted to be heard had an opportunity to be heard.