Sunday, November 4, 2012

The good ol' hockey game



Exploding car in the street ©Cat Ashbee
                                               

Indescribable were the sensations of being caught in the erratic flow of the Vancouver riot.  It was like a tight flock of sandpipers, changing direction in a tight flurry of close uniformity, minus the grace and innocence, and surrounded by showers of broken glass, thick black smoke and the sounds of a thousand roars and alarms.  Lose your footing and you are trampled.  They say a mob takes on a mind of it’s own.  What I saw was a sick twisted mentality, and it showed me the very worst in human behavior.  I was lucky enough to witness this insanity, in the company of my camera.
Judge me if you will, call me part of the problem for showing up, because without convergence there would be no mob.  But without participation, there would be no riot.  My role as observer and photographer might be frowned upon by some, but being in the heart of the beast and seeing the things I saw, were worth all the ridicule I may get. 
It’s easy to lose oneself when looking through the lens, but the key to survival is having both eyes open and being on constant high alert.  Like a paranoid ninja chimpanzee on cocaine, I can thank years of mosh pit photo experience for honing that weird niche of a skill.  Although I am certain that I was on the good side of luck and chance that night to have escaped unscathed.
The hockey game was ending and I was sitting at home in South Vancouver when I heard those words on the television that sparked this desire inside me.  There is a police car flipped over and on fire downtown.  My photographer’s bucket list consists of few things: Lightning, projectile vomit and burning cars.  So against all sane judgement, I grabbed my camera and hopped the train into the eye of the storm.  I was not prepared for the things I saw, heard and experienced that night.

Smoke filled streets ©Cat Ashbee

Car alarms, building alarms, fire alarms, shattering glass, explosions, fire, smoke, chanting, yelling, random objects flying through the air and even a couple of people beating hand drums to set a dark rhythm to the riot.  It was sensory overload all for senseless violence.
There were many times that night where I stood and watched things unfold without taking photos.  It was too appalling to look away for me and I stood paralyzed as newspaper boxes were repeatedly thrown into the windows of a fast food restaurant as the staff stood behind the counter with petrified expressions.  Fear, confusion and piles of shattered plate glass.(Were you going to loot the deep fryer?) People were taking anything they could get their hands on.  Mannequins included. 

Unreal behavior ©Cat Ashbee

It was human nature like I had never seen it before.  While most of the mob was a mindless eruption, there were the misguided voices of protestors.  Their screams of reason fell on deafened ears.  As effective as yelling at a river to stop flowing.   Resisting  was like adding fuel to the fire for some of these participants.
The air was thick with adrenaline and toxic smoke.  I could only handle so much before I had to seek air and serenity. Seeing a man stabbed and bleeding in front of the art gallery reminded me of the severity of the situation.  To higher ground, I went.  Away from the smouldering dumpsters, unpredictable unstable people and out of the flowing rivers of garbage and piss.  

Riot police ©Cat Ashbee


As I watched from a distance the converging walls of riot police containing and diffusing the chaos, I thought about the build up to all this.  Flashing back memories of earlier that day seeing every liquor store with line ups out the door and the blocked off streets full of ‘fans’ in hockey jerseys.  Oh right, this was all about hockey…. The Canucks lost the Stanley cup final in their home city.
I can honestly say that there were times during that night that I had experienced feelings I have never felt before.  Something I could only describe as true fear consumed me at one point.  With one arm wrapped around my camera and the other shielding my head, I ran in a shoulder to shoulder tight mob away from a danger unknown to me.  A rain of glass fell on us and all the sounds became a blurry roar.  My mind created a numbness of senses at this point. 
It’s something I hope to never go through again.  But you can guarantee that I am not one to pass up an experience like this in the future.  My only regrets are the things I have not done.  Human beings at their worst or at their best are the fodder that nourishes my passion to keep shooting.
 Keep up the chaos, humanity.  I’ll still call you in the morning. 

Cat Ashbee

Extinguished.  The streets were full of the charred aftermaths
©Cat Ashbee

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Let's get this party started

With all the recent and ongoing experiences and opportunities that keep flooding their way into my life, I have decided to start a blog that's easy to update from the road.  I keep finding myself in surreal situations and along with the photos, I'd like to share the stories behind them.  I have been working with some legendary people and doing some amazing things.  
I'll update as they happen, but will also flashback to some memories of the past few years.  
Stay tuned for posts. 
I'll share some gooders about my personal experiences with GWAR, Steel Panther, Agnostic Front, Death Sentence, Motorhead, Powerclown, Dayglo Abortions, SNFU, Dead Kennedys, Macabre, NOFX, The Vancouver hockey riot 2011, Dirty Rotten Imbeciles, DOA, and more memories that will resurface randomly.  As they often do.