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11 images Created 22 Jun 2013

Editorial

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  • Performers with the Cole Brothers Circus dance suspended from wires Sunday at the Pitt County Fairgrounds. (Jason A. Frizzelle) This collection of images represents more than a decade of work at newspapers and wire services throughout North Carolina. I now practice my style of story-telling photography for weddings community events as well as portrait sessions ranging from brides to local authors. After graduating from Randolph Community College I spent more than a decade documenting communities throughout Eastern North Carolina with a camera. My passion for capturing story-telling images has allowed me to witness everything from High School Football to Hurricanes and even Presidential visits.<br />
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My award-winnng photography has been published internationally, appearing in publications such as The Atlanta Journal Constitution, The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, The Guardian of London, and Time Magazine.<br />
<br />
As a child I loved the writing of Ray Bradbury, who was often noted for “tuning the ordinary into the extraordinary.” That’s the approach I take to every assignment, finding the priceless moments in everyday life. Weather I’m capturing a high school touchdown celebration or a bride’s final minutes before saying “I do,” I’m preserving an extraordinary memory.<br />
            <br />
Whether I'm documenting a diverse community or capturing a couple's first dance, I'm photographing something extraordinary!
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  • Wiping away tears Esther Taft looks at a picture of her son, Christopher Foggs, who was fatally shot on Sixth Street in Ayden, N.C. Because of the shooting, local institutions founded a task force that combats youth violence in Pitt County. This collection of images represents more than a decade of work at newspapers and wire services throughout North Carolina. I now practice my style of story-telling photography for weddings community events as well as portrait sessions ranging from brides to local authors. After graduating from Randolph Community College I spent more than a decade documenting communities throughout Eastern North Carolina with a camera. My passion for capturing story-telling images has allowed me to witness everything from High School Football to Hurricanes and even Presidential visits.<br />
<br />
My award-winnng photography has been published internationally, appearing in publications such as The Atlanta Journal Constitution, The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, The Guardian of London, and Time Magazine.<br />
<br />
As a child I loved the writing of Ray Bradbury, who was often noted for “tuning the ordinary into the extraordinary.” That’s the approach I take to every assignment, finding the priceless moments in everyday life. Weather I’m capturing a high school touchdown celebration or a bride’s final minutes before saying “I do,” I’m preserving an extraordinary memory.<br />
            <br />
Whether I'm documenting a diverse community or capturing a couple's first dance, I'm photographing something extraordinary!
    portfolio12.jpg
  • East Carolina University Diamond Dancer Laura Gencarella cheers on the baseball team as the starting lineup is announced during the team's game against N.C. State. Gencarella, a junior has danced with the team for three years. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
    editorial03.jpg
  • Rena Billeda, age, 13, rests her head on the shoulder of her grandmother Ruth Miller as the two and John Hill listen to the funeral service of Billy Ray Greene. Greene died from injuries after an automobile accident that also claimed the life of Greenville Police Officer Jason Campbell, the first Greenville Police Officer to die in the line of duty since 1952.
    editorial04.jpg
  • Joshua Fischer, left, and Keith Cooper react to comments made by Nancy Colville during the County Commissioners' public hearing on the renaming of U.S. 264 Bypass for Martin Luther King Jr. Fischer and Cooper disagreed with the commissioners vote in favor of the City Council's decision to rename the bypass instead of Fifth Street which is partially named for King.
    editorial05.jpg
  • J.H. Rose's Maurice Weaver, center, celebrates a touchdown with Morgan Randall, back, and Bryan Deans late in the fourth quarter of the North Carolina High School Athletic Association 4-A Championship game at Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh N.C. The Rampants won the game 21-0 giving the team their third straight state title. This collection of images represents more than a decade of work at newspapers and wire services throughout North Carolina. I now practice my style of story-telling photography for weddings community events as well as portrait sessions ranging from brides to local authors. After graduating from Randolph Community College I spent more than a decade documenting communities throughout Eastern North Carolina with a camera. My passion for capturing story-telling images has allowed me to witness everything from High School Football to Hurricanes and even Presidential visits.<br />
<br />
My award-winnng photography has been published internationally, appearing in publications such as The Atlanta Journal Constitution, The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, The Guardian of London, and Time Magazine.<br />
<br />
As a child I loved the writing of Ray Bradbury, who was often noted for “tuning the ordinary into the extraordinary.” That’s the approach I take to every assignment, finding the priceless moments in everyday life. Weather I’m capturing a high school touchdown celebration or a bride’s final minutes before saying “I do,” I’m preserving an extraordinary memory.<br />
            <br />
Whether I'm documenting a diverse community or capturing a couple's first dance, I'm photographing something extraordinary!
    portfolio09.jpg
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  • A dog injected with Euthasol lies on the floor as Rabies Control officers Steve Peele, right, and Fred Wade carry a euthanized dog out of the Pitt County Animal Shelter. 1,900 cats and dogs were ?put down? at the shelter between July 2006 and March 2007.
    editorial06.jpg
  • Roland Whitted, a seasonal Park Ranger at Cape Hatteras Light Station on the Cape Hatteras National Seashore, raises an American flag before the park opens.	<br />
	Whitted, originally from Marquette, Michigan, cites learning as his motivation for work. ?I enjoy coming to a new place and learning things I didn't know.? Though Whitted hails from a state with 116 lighthouses he admits, ?I knew nothing about lighthouses until I came to work here.? <br />
(Jason A. Frizzelle)
    editorial09.jpg
  • The Rev. Richard G. Elliott, III of St. Andrews on the Sound Episcopal Church gives a sermon Sunday during the Wrightsville Beach Community Sunrise Service at Wrightsville Beach. The combined Easter sevice consisted of the six churches of Wrightsville Beach.   (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • (MOMENTS COLUMN)<br />
Lauren Noll, right, covers her face and Jessica Duensing, left, watches as Ashley Joswick pulls a nail out of the wall at Mudslinger's Coffee Co. on Evans Street in Greenville. The three, all seniors at East Carolina University, will graduate in May with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic Design and where preparing for a senior show of their work. "It's been a long run," said Noll, "five years in the making, " added Joswick. With a quick glance at the work on the wall Noll admits, "it was worth it.? (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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