
- THE CAMERAMAN JUST KEPT RECORDING OMGWHUT FULL
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That night, his riverside camp was visited by three hungry grizzly bears. When filming in Alaska, he found himself in a rubber dinghy just eight feet from a dozen 30-ton humpback whales as they rose to the surface. Just another day in the office for Keith. He was then plucked from the mountain and flown back to base camp while hanging below the chopper. In another still of Keith working on the same programme, he is suspended thousands of feet up with one foot on a rock the size of a house brick for stability.Īnd when he had finished a day's filming on the Eiger, Keith had to unclip himself from his safety rope, leaving himself momentarily unharnessed on the side of the mountain, before grabbing a line dangling from a waiting helicopter, the rotors of which are spinning just metres from the rock face. In one picture of him filming for a documentary called Beckoning Silence: North Face Of The Eiger, in which the team recreated a tragic 1936 expedition on which four climbers died, Keith is balancing on the sheer rock face on the tips of his boots as he films the action. "When we do these films, we have fantastic teams of experts and everything is checked and double checked so we eliminate as much risk as possible."īut to the outside observer, Keith's work looks about as far removed from asafe office job as possible. Keith, who lives in Lower Largo, Fife, with his wife, Andrea, and children, Jamie, four, and Erin, 16 months, said: "It isn't dangerous because we all know what we are doing and we take every safety precaution imaginable. But while viewers marvel at the amazing scenes of sunrises turning Arctic snows pink, the magical icy blue world hidden beneath glaciers and the insides of treacherous caves never before seen by man, it's not often anyone thinks about how these incredible pictures are brought to our television screens.īut now we can meet the man behind the images, and unbelievably the 42-year-old shrugs off any suggestion that what he does for a living is dangerous. He has also worked on films such as the multi-award winning Touching The Void and Hollywood sci-fi flick Alien Vs Predator.

The results have been watched by millions around the world in such documentaries as The History of Climate Change, Venom Hunter, Extreme Dreams, Lost Land Of The Jaguar and even Top Gear.
THE CAMERAMAN JUST KEPT RECORDING OMGWHUT FULL
He has coped with blizzards, tropical storms, temperatures well below zero, 1000ft climbs up sheer rock faces and the most basic camping conditions imaginable.Īnd Keith has done it all with a camera in his hand and a pack full of photographic kit on his back. In the last 18 months, he has scaled an ice-covered mountain with ex-footballer Ian Wright, climbed down an Alaskan snow hole, conquered the terrifying north face of the Eiger, explored unchartered water caves in Papua New Guinea and hunted down the most venomous spiders, snakes and bugs in the Brazilian rainforest. Her attorney filed two motions to dismiss, but the judge denied both motions.ADVENTURE filming is cameraman Keith Partridge's bread and butter.
THE CAMERAMAN JUST KEPT RECORDING OMGWHUT TRIAL
I never touched him, never raised my hands at him and I didn’t curse at him.” During the trial for her alleged crime, the Charleston prosecutor argued that Hupp was guilty of obstructing the officer because she did not listen to Cook when he told her to move. And he saw the fact that I never did anything to the cop to be obstructing. And when he saw the video, he thought something was wrong. “In my case, he said it was ridiculous that there was even a trial in the first place, especially when there’s a video of it.
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Schles agreed to defend her pro bono after her crowd funding attempts to raise money for another attorney fell short. After PINAC posted its story, Charleston attorney David Schles reached out to us and we put him in contact with Hupp. “Talk about being a mouse in a trap,” Hupp said after learning of the conflict of interest. But it was PINAC investigator Felipe Hemming who discovered Bradley Snodgrass was Seth Cook’s boss. ” She then began hearing rumors that Snodgrass was married to a West Virginia state trooper, which raised questions of a conflict of interest. I refused to take a plea to something I didn’t do. She kept saying I had to take a plea bargain or I might end up in jail for up to a year.

“She just kept saying our best chances were to take a plea bargain. Hupp found herself disgruntled when her assigned public defender Lori Snodgrass insisted she take a plea deal.
