![]() ![]() Franke was one of NASCAR driver Tony Stewart’s first sponsors in the late 1970’s.Ĭolumbus, Ind., Dairy Queen owner Bob Franke (left) looks at an ad for the restaurant from the 1970’s featuring future NASCAR driver Tony Stewart with his daughter Julie Comer.Īn ad for the Columbus, Ind., Dairy Queen the 1970’s featuring future NASCAR driver Tony Stewart. I’ve never seen a Dairy Queen more packed with people, much less for lunch!Ĭolumbus, Ind., Dairy Queen owner Bob Franke (right) walks with regular customer Dwight Groons of Columbus after lunch.Ĭolumbus, Ind., Dairy Queen owner Bob Franke talks with regular customers during lunch. Bob still works behind the counter daily, and was tending to a bevy of lunchtime regulars when I walked through the door. 74-year-old Bob Franke, who’s owned the Dairy Queen for 46 years, was one of Tony Stewart’s first racing sponsors in the late 1970’s. Columbus is also quintessentially “small-town Indiana,” so I wanted to show that as well.Īfter my architectural gems were in the can, I headed to the first official location on my list, Dairy Queen. Columbus has a history of being very progressive architecturally, something that continues today with new construction. I arrived in Columbus around noon and immediately shot a very neat-looking bridge I drove over while heading into the city’s downtown area. ![]() It meant that I could arrive in town and just vibe off of the surroundings, capturing whatever felt pertinent to the story.ĭavid Lynch of Columbus, Ind., walks under the Crump Theatre marquee in downtown Columbus. ![]() As I said, however, I’m completely fine with these types of assignments. Other than these addresses (and my knowledge of the Stewart story), I didn’t have much else to go by. Writer Josh Peter, who I’d be working with on the story, forwarded me a list of addresses for possible photo locations from his scouting in town prior to my arrival. The angle of the story was to gather thoughts (and photos, of course, on my end) on the situation from folks in town who know Stewart personally. Stewart, who was raised in Columbus and still resides there, has been in the news quite a bit after being involved in an incident at a small race last weekend which claimed the life of a fellow driver. The courthouse square in downtown Columbus, Indiana.Įarlier this week, I traveled three hours south to Columbus, Indiana, to shoot a story for USA Today on the home town of NASCAR driver Tony Stewart. I had just such a loosely planned shoot recently, and it was for a national newspaper. It means that I’m free to adapt a plan I create on the fly as a shoot evolves, molding it to best fit my subject and the story. After all, how can once excel at anything without direction? How can one come away with anything worthwhile without a plan?įor me, being forced to come up with my own direction or plan when one isn’t provided to me up front (or is very loosely in place) is actually quite creatively freeing. Here’s a contradictory thought that I’d like you to ponder for a few moments: “As a photographer, I thrive on lack of direction.” On the surface, this phrase doesn’t make much sense. Driver Kevin Ward was killed when Stewart’s car hit the young driver while confronting Stewart on the track. NASCAR celebrity Tony Stewart, who grew up in Columbus and still resides there, was involved in a fatal accident at a Sprint car race Saturday in New York. Stewart Bridge in Columbus, Ind., Wednesday, August 13, 2014. ![]()
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