Best Test Answer, Ever.
As most of you know, I’m a Pittsburgher transplanted to Eastern North Carolina. Growing up around the ‘burgh, you hear a lot about sports legends of the area, particularly of the 1960’s and 70’s. Family members speak fondly of the likes of Terry Bradshaw, Franco Harris, Willie Stargell, Lynn Swann, Bill Mazeroski, the list goes on. But one name stands out above the others: Roberto Clemente. The right field wall in PNC Park stands 21 feet tall to honor him (he wore #21 and played RF) and the bridge crossing the Allegheny River beyond the outfield wall of stadium was renamed the Roberto Clemente Bridge. There is even a huge statue of him standing just outside of the PNC Park. Pittsburgh is full of rightful remembrances of a man who’s Hall of Fame career was cut short by a tragic plane crash while delivering supplies to earthquake stricken Nicaragua on New Year’s Eve of 1972. There’s so much to say about Clemente that it could fill up multiple blog posts on its own.

My wife, a fifth grade teacher, decided to teach a unit on Roberto Clemente. I think it’s awesome to be spreading a story about a Pittsburgh sports icon to kids here in Eastern NC who likely never heard of him. What’s cooler is what the students took away from the story. Check out this answer that a girl wrote on her worksheet-

Sometimes kids can make the most profound comments. The answer that the sheet was looking for was something along the lines of ‘He was going to Nicaragua to help deliver supplies to earthquake victims.’ But how can you mark something like this wrong?
My wife sent me this cell phone picture of the test in the afternoon and I shared it on Twitter. By that evening it had nearly 100 retweets, something that never happens to stuff I post. The next day, it found it’s way onto Pittsburgh Magazine’s website. Thanks to everyone who took interest in this, it goes to show that the right answer is not always the best answer.
Gotham City | Pittsburgh, PA
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Pictured is Fifth Avenue Place in Pittsburgh, rising above the Roberto Clemente Bridge. You may or may have not seen some awesome images this past summer of this building sporting a bat signal as The Dark Knight Rises was being filmed in the city. This was shot during a predawn photowalk with Dave DiCello and Ben Beard over the Christmas holiday.
I shot this with my Nikkor 50mm lens with a 20 second exposure at f/22. I love the detail and the shape of the flares that this lens is capable of creating. I admittedly don’t use it much, but these cityscapes make for a great time to break it out of the bag.
The Shot: Nikon D90, Nikkor 50mm f1.8 lens. Single exposure, 20 seconds, f/22, ISO 200.
I Love This City | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
I’m going back to Pittsburgh for today’s photo. I don’t know what more to say than, ‘I love this city.’ It’s so strange to me that in the 24 years that I lived there, I spent very little time exploring the city. Now that I’ve moved over 500 miles away, I find myself wishing that I had. Every time I visit home I make sure to take at least one photowalk around the city. This image was shot on one such walk. The Roberto Clemente Bridge is in the foreground and behind it, PNC Park. Perfect.
The Shot: Three exposures, hand held. Tonemapped in Photomatix and finished in Photoshop using Nik Color Efex and Viveza plug-ins.
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City of Bridges | Pittsburgh, PA
Shot during a walk around downtown Pittsburgh, this is the Roberto Clemente Bridge. It is one of three parallel bridges spanning the Allegheny River. The “Three Sisters,” as they’re known as, are very well known as the only trio of identical bridges and the first self-anchored suspension bridges built in the United States. On Pirates and Steelers game days, the bridge is closed to traffic and makes for a great view for fans who use it as a pedestrian bridge from downtown to the stadiums.
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©2011 Zach Frailey, please do not use without permission.




