RIP Peter O’Toole

Today an old friend from whom I hadn’t heard from in years reached out via email to say that upon hearing the news of the passing of Peter O’Toole, he had to chuckle at my verbal parry with the actor many, many years ago when I was a teenager. The story went something like this:

It was on the set of MASADA, shot on location in Israel. O’Toole was between takes and required the makeup artist. But instead of sitting on his assigned chair, he approached me and asked my permission to share the apple box that I was sitting on.

“Mr. O’Toole, it’s all yours,” I quickly said. To be honest, I was flustered. I mean we’re talking Peter O’Toole here, OK?

“Nonsense!” said O’Toole with affected innocence. “I merely wish to share your seat! Come now. There you go!”

Indeed. There I was: a total valley girl sitting butt cheek-to-cheek on an apple box with Peter O’Toole and completely freaking out. I pretended to keep reading a paperback book but I couldn’t concentrate and he kept making small talk.

Suddenly, the situation became so untenable it was impossible to ignore.

“What? What? What is that smell?” said O’Toole, looking at me mischievously.

Could this really be happening? Peter O’Toole just farted and acted like it wasn’t him. No, not him at all!

I slammed my book shut. While I felt intimidated, I also felt provoked and looking into his impish blue eyes (and indeed they were very piercing) I could tell he wanted me to bring it on. So I did.

“Mr. O’Toole, did you just cut the cheese?” I blurted out; absolutely gobsmacked that the man who played the inimitable “El Aurens” was a pooter polluter.

“My dear, I nevah cut the cheese!” he boomed with his great thespian voice and a bright gleam in his eye.

“Well, sir, you sure spread it pretty thick!” I shot back.

“Ha!” guffawed O’Toole so uproariously that I couldn’t help but flinch. “Somebody buy my new little friend here a drink!”

When I told him that I was not of drinking age he told me not to worry — that in Israel a girl becomes a woman by the time she is 13 and that by the looks of it, I was “definitely a woman…a young woman to be sure…but nevah-theless, a woman!”


Spooky Cemetery in 360° Panorama – Virginia City, Nevada


Happy Halloween, e’erbody! Above is a 360° image of a graveyard taken at the Silver Terrace Cemetery located on a windswept hillside of Virginia City, Nevada.

Virginia City, a former boomtown once famous for the Comstock Lode and the television show “Bonanza“, is today probably more infamous as one of the most haunted towns in America. Practically every saloon, hotel and business along its picturesque streets offered glimpses into its colorful history of ghosts. 
Whether Virginia City is really haunted or just a marketing plan developed by the city’s chamber of commerce I can’t really be sure, but a lot of ghost hunters swear this place is the real deal.
Intrigued, I trudged up to the local cemetery to see if I could capture an image of a spirit — whether it be a supernatural orb or a perhaps even a full apparition like the ones I’d seen as a girl at the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland.  
What I found instead was a stunningly photographic old graveyard, built in the 1860s, by a number of fraternal, civic, immigrant and religious groups including the Masons, Pacific Coast Pioneers, Knights of Pythias, Firemen, Wilson and Brown, Improved Order of Redmen, and Roman Catholics.  
This image features the final resting place of Mr. Solomon Noel and his wife Catherine L. Noel (nee Mofett) and a soulful search on the Interwebs resulted in the following information about the couple:

Solomon Noel
Birth: Jun. 16, 1837 Alsace, France
Death: Sep. 22, 1895 Virginia City. Storey County, Nevada, USA

Born in Alsace, France in 1837 the son of a well to do government banker. He later married Miss Catherine Mofett (Date unknown). They fled France during the Franco-Prussan war of 1870-71 as their city was occupied by the Germans. They came to America in the 1870 and settled in Virginia City, Nevada where Solomon was an investment broker and owned parts of many of the local mines in the area. He died Sept. 22nd 1895 of heart failure at age 58.

Catherine L. Noel (nee Mofett)
Birth: Apr. 5, 1848 Bourgogne, France
Death: May 20, 1896 Virginia City, Storey County, Nevada, USA

Born in Bourgogne, France in 1848. Later she met and married Solomon Noel, a banker. They fled France during the Franco-Prussan War of 1870-71 and came to America settling in Virginia City NV where Solomon open a investment company. Solomon died in 1895 and Catherine followed him a year later dying of complications from diabetes on May 20th 1896 at age 48. She was laid to rest next to her husband in what today is one of the biggest monuments in the Virginia City Cemeteries.

Burial: Silver Terrace Cemeteries,Virginia City, Storey County, Nevada, USA
Plot: Odd Fellows Section 

The Gould and Curry Mill  (1867)
Virginia City, Nevada by Timothy O’Sullivan

I have to confess, I was inspired to go sepia in the post-processing of this panorama after seeing a series of images from Timothy O’Sullivan, an American photographer who carted a covered wagon dark room around the Wild West on behalf of the U.S. government in the late 1800s.

The Silver Terrace Cemeteries are located at the end of North E St., northeast of the C St. business district in Virginia City. The cemeteries are open to the public daily, but close at dusk except on Halloween when the site is monitored for 24 hours in an effort to prevent vandalism.

I’ve got a couple more images from the Silver Terrace Cemetery that I’ve put up as photospheres on Google Maps.  Go check them out and have a spook-tacular Halloween! 


Facts About Covered California’s Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP)

Due to my previous posts about California’s health insurance marketplace, I’ve received a couple of requests from owners of entertainment production companies in my network to cover health insurance for small businesses.

In response, the topic of today’s blog post will be Covered California’s Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP). The information provided here is applicable to all California small businesses and not specific to the entertainment industry.

In case you’re just tuning in, my previous blog posts discuss how the Affordable Healthcare Act affects Californian’s include Finding Affordable Health Insurance Through Covered California and The Basics of Medi-Cal and Covered California for 2014

This will conclude my introductory series designed to educate my readers about Covered California, the state’s new health insurance exchange and I hope I’ve demystified the whole she-bang for you.

If you get nothing more out of this series at least take this with you: you maybe able to find the exact same health insurance coverage (for those of you who are already insured) but may also qualify for tax credits or assistance with your premiums ONLY if you go through Covered California. If you are currently insured or choose to purchase coverage directly through an insurer, you may not know about these tax credits or premium assistance as your current insurer is under no obligation to inform you and that could cost you money.

At the bottom will be links to obtain more information than I am able to provide.

Small Businesses Requirements to Provide Health Insurance

First, let’s define what a small businesses is in the eyes of the law. Under the Affordable Care Act, a small businesses has 50< full time employees and as such, is not required to provide health insurance for their employees.

Covered California’s small-business program is designed for any business with up to 50 eligible employees. You must have at least one employee other than yourself who receives a W-2 tax form at the end of the year.

Note: If you are self-employed without any employees, you are not eligible for the small-business program but should look into the individual marketplace operated by Covered California.

Employers with 50≥ full-time-equivalent employees or more that do not offer these employees (and their dependents) the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential health coverage may be subject to penalties beginning in 2015.

Businesses with 50< full-time employees are not subject to these penalties.

SHOP Tax Credits for Small Businesses

Small-business owners may qualify for a tax credit to help offset their contribution to their employees’ premium. The tax credit you receive as an employer will depend on a number of factors, including the number of full-time-equivalent employees and the amount you contribute to your employees’ insurance premiums. 
Generally, businesses with 10< full-time-equivalent employees and yearly wages averaging less than $25,000 will qualify for the highest credits. 
There are two phases of tax credits as I’ve outlined below:
  • Starting in 2010 and lasting through tax year 2013, there is a tax credit for businesses with 25< full-time-equivalent employees who are paid an average annual salary of less than $50,000. During this first phase, qualifying employers can receive a tax credit of up to 35% of premium expenses (25% for nonprofits). 
  • Starting in 2014, the maximum tax credit increases to 50% (35% for nonprofits) and is available for a total of two consecutive years. 
To qualify for any tax credit, employers must contribute at least 50% of employees’ premium costs.

When is the enrollment period for SHOP?

Unlike individuals and families, there is no designated open-enrollment period for SHOP. This gives employers the option to enroll either according to their current policy’s renewal date or by another effective date of their choosing. Employers can enroll in Covered California’s SHOP throughout the year.

Here’s some milestones to keep in mind:

  • In 2014, Covered California will begin offering health insurance plans to employers with 50< employees eligible employees, for coverage effective Jan. 1, 2015.
  • In 2015, Covered California will expand to offer health insurance plans to employers with 100≤ employees eligible employees, for coverage effective Jan. 1, 2016.

Conclusion

That’s a wrap, folks, on my three-part blog series introducing fellow Californian’s to the salient points of the Affordable Care Act and how it pertains to Covered California, the state’s new health exchange.

Please remember what I said earlier. It’s worth repeating: you maybe able to find the exact same health insurance coverage (for those of you who are already insured) but you may also qualify for tax credits or assistance with your premiums ONLY if you go through Covered California. If you are currently insured or choose to purchase coverage directly through an insurer, you may not know about these tax credits or premium assistance as your current insurer is under no obligation to inform you and that could cost you money.

If you have any questions, just feel free to contact me and I’ll help you out as best as I can but your best bet is to go the website. If you prefer to talk to a real human bean, you can find a Certified Enrollment Specialist here, or contact an insurer at the State Health Benefit Exchange here.

It’s been a pleasure exploring the options for health insurance together with you!


This series of blog posts including Finding Affordable Health Insurance Through Covered CaliforniaThe Basics of Medi-Cal and Covered California for 2014 and Facts About Covered California’s Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) is dedicated in loving memory to Martin Bosworth.

The Basics of Medi-Cal and Covered California for 2014

This is a follow-up to yesterday’s blog post “Finding Affordable Health Insurance Through Covered California“.  Today I continue to provide information on options for obtaining affordable health insurance and health care in California, specifically as it pertains to Medi-Cal.

If you get nothing more out of this topic at least take this with you: you maybe able to find the exact same health insurance coverage (for those of you who are already insured) but what’s more: you may qualify for tax credits or assistance with your premiums ONLY if you go through Covered California.

If you are currently insured or choose to purchase coverage directly through an insurer, you may not know about these tax credits or premium assistance as your current insurer is under no obligation to inform you and that could cost you money.

Medi-Cal Basics

In addition to Premium Assistance there is also Medi-Cal which is free health coverage for those who qualify including people with disabilities and those that meet certain income criteria. See my Medi-Cal eligibility chart below.

You may be eligible for Medi-Cal in 2014
Note: if you already have affordable insurance from your employer or government program like 
Medicare or Medicaid, you will not be eligible for financial assistance through Medi-Cal.

What Services Will Medi-Cal Provide?

Medi-Cal covers doctor visits, hospital care, and pregnancy-related services, as well as nursing home care for individuals age 21 or older. The ACA ensures all Medi-Cal health plans what is called as essential health benefits. Essential health benefits must include:

  • Ambulatory patient services
  • Emergency services
  • Hospitalization
  • Maternity and newborn care
  • Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Services including Behavioral Health Treatment
  • Prescription Drugs
  • Rehabilitative and Habilitative Services and devices
  • Laboratory services
  • Preventive and wellness services & chronic disease management
  • Pediatric services (including oral and vision care)

Effective 2014, mental health and substance use disorder services will expand to better meet the needs of individuals eligible for Medi-Cal.

This expansion also allows coverage for parents who would lose coverage under current rules if their income slightly exceeds the federal poverty level (refer to my above chart).

All Medi-Cal beneficiaries who qualify will be able to receive the following mental health benefits through Medi-Cal Managed Care Plans and Medi-Cal Fee-For-Service:

  • Individual and group mental health evaluation and treatment (psychotherapy)
  • Psychological testing when clinically indicated to evaluate a mental health condition
  • Outpatient services for the purposes of monitoring drug therapy
  • Outpatient laboratory, drugs, supplies and supplements
  • Psychiatric consultation
  • Specialty mental health services currently provided by County Mental Health Plans will continue to be available.
  • Substance Use Disorder Services Benefits:
  • Voluntary Inpatient Detoxification
  • Intensive Outpatient Treatment Services
  • Residential Treatment Services
  • Outpatient Drug Free Services
  • Narcotic Treatment Services
  • Dental care, vision services and speech therapy are generally available only to children and youths under age 21, but certain adults and pregnant women are also eligible for these services. Dental services will be available to all adults starting May, 2014.

FAQ’s about Medi-Cal and Covered California

► If I already have Medi-Cal benefits, do I need to reapply? 

No.  If you already have Medi-Cal coverage, your Medi-Cal benefits will continue until your next regularly scheduled annual redetermination date.

► If I currently receive Medi-Cal benefits, will my benefits change in 2014? 

No.  Medi-Cal will continue to provide the same benefits under the ACA as it provides you today. At your annual redetermination, Medi-Cal will determine what health insurance program you and your family are best suited for.

► Is Medi-Cal changing its criteria to receive benefits?

Yes.  Medi-Cal eligibility is now simpler than ever.  For most individuals, Medi-Cal eligibility will be based on your household size and your income.  Medi-Cal will also attempt to verify your information electronically so you may be found eligible for benefits without ever having to provide paper verifications.

► How does Covered California work with Medi-Cal?

Covered California will act as a “one-stop shop” for health insurance.  Through Covered California, you will be able to apply for Medi-Cal benefits electronically and receive a real-time eligibility results.  You will also be able to report changes online and receive real-time customer support 24 hours a day. 

###

If you have any additional questions regarding the Affordable Care Act and how it expands health care coverage, including Medi-Cal in 2014,  visit California’s Department of Health Care Services website at www.dhcs.ca.gov

This series of blog posts including Finding Affordable Health Insurance Through Covered CaliforniaThe Basics of Medi-Cal and Covered California for 2014 and Facts About Covered California’s Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) is dedicated in loving memory to Martin Bosworth.

Finding Affordable Health Insurance Through Covered California

Covered California
800-300-1506   |   TTY: 888-889-4500

In this introductory blog post I will teach you about Covered California, the state’s new health insurance exchange and marketplace where individuals, visual and performing artists, and entertainment professionals will be able to purchase health insurance for 2014.

In a following blog post I will discuss Medi-Cal and how it can help obtain affordable health insurance and health care in California for those who qualify.

The final post in the series will cover the state’s Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP). The information provided here is applicable to all California small businesses and what the law requires for these employers.

If you get nothing more out of this series at least take this with you: you maybe able to find the exact same health insurance coverage (for those of you who are already insured) but what’s more: you may qualify for tax credits or assistance with your premiums ONLY if you go through Covered California.

If you are currently insured or choose to purchase coverage directly through an insurer, you may not know about these tax credits or premium assistance as your current insurer is under no obligation to inform you and that could cost you money.

Let’s begin.

Affordable Care Act and Covered California

Earlier this month the Affordable Care Act (ACA) rolled out. It is the most significant regulatory overhaul of the nation’s healthcare system since the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965 by LBJ and Congress.

Now my mother once told me some sage advice that applies to social situations but it also ostensibly makes sense in social media: to avoid arguments and bad feelings never discuss politics, religion and money.

Being a good daughter (and having learned from experience that my mother is right), I won’t be commenting about the politics of the ACA but I do want to share some information I learned from the Actors Fund. If you want to learn more than what I can provide in this blog post, call the Actors Fund Covered California Information Hotline at 855-491-3357.

OK. I’ll start with the facts as it pertains to me as a U.S. citizen and a California resident.

Under the ACA, all American citizens are required by law to have health insurance in 2014 or pay an annual penalty of $95.00 per adult and $47.50 per child. These penalties will increase significantly in 2015 and beyond.

How can health insurance be obtained for Californians such as myself? The answer is: either through an employer, a government program or privately.

Covered California is the state’s implementation of the American Health Benefit Exchange provisions of the ACA. On the Covered California website (https://www.coveredca.com) California residents can explore health insurance options and enroll in a plan.

Only legal residents of California who do not have health insurance from their employer or government program can obtain health insurance through Covered California.

Assuming you are a resident, you will be able to purchase the same quality health insurance from Covered California that is available on the private market.

Here’s some things you should also know:

  • Under Covered California you cannot be denied coverage for a pre-existing condition. 
  • Premium Assistance is available to those how purchase insurance with an income of 400% of the Federal Poverty Level which is $45,960 for individuals and $94,200 for a family of four. 
  • The initial enrollment period is from October 1, 2013 through March 31, 2014
  • If your enrollment date is on or before December 15 your coverage begins on January 1, 2014.
  • The annual enrollment period is October 15, 2014 through December 7, 2014 and every year thereafter.

What Health Insurance Covers

All health plans offered in the individual and small-group markets must provide a comprehensive package of items and services, known as essential health benefits. These benefits fit into the following categories:
  • Ambulatory patient services
  • Emergency services
  • Hospitalization
  • Maternity and newborn care
  • Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment
  • Prescription drugs
  • Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices
  • Laboratory services
  • Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management
  • Pediatric services, including dental and vision care

Premium Assistance and Covered California

Premium Assistance is a tax credit to help reduce your monthly insurance premium and are immediately applied when you enroll to pay for health insurance but only if you do so through Covered California.  You will not obtain these credits if you go directly through an insurance provider 

Times are tough for several of my friends and colleagues who have lost their jobs and livelihoods, I realize that. Many of you may be paying for health insurance privately while you search for a new job. Or if maybe you’re like one single mom that I know who is struggling to get medical care for one of her two sons who has a pre-existing condition.

So what I want to emphasize to those who are undergoing financial stress is that the only way to receive Premium Assistance is to purchase a Covered California Health Plan through their website. As I understand it, Premium Assistance cannot be grandfathered in with your current health plan or COBRA plan. It is necessary to switch to a Covered California plan.

Again: the only way to receive Premium Assistance is to purchase a Covered California Health Plan through their website.

While there, you will find a calculator to determine your eligibility for Premium Assistance. You will also be able to compare plans, select a plan and enroll. Enrollment can be accomplished on-line, over the phone, in person or by mail.

How To Obtain Health Insurance through Covered California 

Now determining what the best plan is for you and your family can be confusing, so Certified Enrollment Specialists are vetted by the state to help.

Another great resource is Artists Health Insurance Resource Center (AHIRC).

I’ve found them to be completely unbiased. They do not accept advertising or commercial endorsements.

The only thing they promote is the healthy artists with full access to health care. Their mission is insure every artist in the United States by 2014.

For more information, call 323-933-9244 ext. 32 or visit their Covered California e-learning center here: https://ahirc.org/categories/CA/view


This series of blog posts including Finding Affordable Health Insurance Through Covered CaliforniaThe Basics of Medi-Cal and Covered California for 2014 and Facts About Covered California’s Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) is dedicated in loving memory to Martin Bosworth.

Woohoo! I’m the new Featured Photographer on Sphere!

The Sphere for iOS and Android

Great news today in my in-box from Jamison Ross, the content curator at Sphere, the premiere 360° panorama photography app for mobile devices.

In the email, Ross announced: “We’re celebrating the folks who contribute the most beautiful and engaging content on Sphere and we’ve chosen you to be one of the few photographers we’re featuring.”

Woohoo! This is so amazingly very cool because the Sphere delivers the best possible “remote travel” platform for iOS devices. In fact you can download their free app by going to this link: https://bit.ly/sphere-ios.

On an Android? No worries. It’s also available for free in Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sphere

The Sphere selected to feature my panorama entitled “The Junk Art Sculpture Garden” in Olancha, California (above). Here’s more about it:

Located just off of Highway 395 near Walker Creek is a pop-up public art gallery of metal sculptures and other junk art, including a piece that accepts and offers gifts, and another labeled “Be Kind, Not Right.” The largest piece features a hitch hiking girl with a suitcase. The most colorful sculpture features a plaque with instructions that read: “Give and Take. Put something in give container then retrieve something from take container. You can give without taking, But not the other way around. If you choose to take without giving, the mirror will make you face yourself and the eyes will follow you for ever and ever. Just like in real life.”  Directions: Off of Highway 395 in Olancha. Dirt road on the west side of the highway, just north of Walker Creek Road. Look for the Walker Creek Road sign (yellow and black sign) and then look for the dirt road. Admission: Free.

Many thanks to the Sphere team!

UPDATE: Oops! It appears I’m mistaken about the featured panorama. Sphere is featuring me and my portfolio so when you visit their site you may see other panoramas I’ve taken in addition to the one in this post.

“Archways” Commissioned Public Art by Mark Grieve & Ilana Spector – Santa Clarita, California


“Archways” Commissioned Public Art by Mark Grieve & Ilana Spector – Selected Sculpture for City of Santa Clarita, California

It’s always fun to catch up with dear friends so when artist Mark Grieve and his crew came down from the Bay Area to install his latest public art piece “Archways” for the City of Santa Clarita, I jumped at the chance to catch up and take this photo sphere.

Mark (featured above) had just completed the project and was giving it a fond “goodbye” hug before heading back home.

“Archways” was awarded to Grieve and his partner Ilana Spector as a Selected Sculpture for the City of Santa Clarita and installed at the McBean Transit Center.

Due to construction, the pedestrian sidewalk from McBean Parkway into the McBean Transit Center is closed and will remain in effect until further notice.

Universal Studios in 360° Panorama

Earlier this summer, Google Maps launched a product called “Views” — a global photographer community featuring some of the best panoramic photos worldwide. Google calls these images “photo spheres”, their new and catchy phrase for panoramic photos. This new product really seems to support the Google brand as most of the images I’ve seen were taken with Android devices. However, for panographers such as myself that take higher quality images on a DSLR, Google has provided a workaround solution so that I can share my photos as well.

So far my social experience on Views has been utterly delightful. I’ve met so many other panographers around the world and when I view their work, it’s like a heightened form of armchair travel.

However one thing I’ve noticed is that (at least to me) photo spheres appear better on the Chrome browser rather than my default Safari and I’m not sure quite why.  Could it be a frenemy thing? I don’t know for sure but my best guess is “yes”. So if you’re viewing a photo sphere on your Mac laptop or desktop, I recommend using the Chrome or Firefox browser for an optimum viewing experience.

Above is an image of Universal Studios Hollywood that was taken in the winter of last year. Universal Studios is one of the oldest and most famous Hollywood movie studios still in use. It was also one of the first to offer tours to the public of the real sound stages and sets.

Universal is noteworthy in my family history as my late father got his “break” in Hollywood as a set designer on the original Battlestar Gallactica which was the first of many productions for him at the studios. He went on to be a respected art director in Tim Burton’s Big Fish. It’s also worth mentioning I spent a summer as a tour guide there during my teens and it was so much fun.

Update March 2016: This post originally featured a virtual tour of Universal Studios City Walk using the embed codes of Google Maps Views. The embeds no longer work and are considered “mix content” for Bloggers’ latest security update “HTTPS”. This basically means the two Google products don’t work well together. So I’ve updated this post to reflect a working solution.

The Sepulveda Dam in 360° Panorama

Built and maintained by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 1942, the Sepulveda Dam has been used for locations for countless films and commercials including “Escape From New York”, “The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai” and most recently “Gattaca”, “Bones” and “Iron Man II”.  Last year the Deadmau5 music video “Professional Griefers” was lensed here.

Today the dam is part of the Sepulveda Basin Wildlife Refuge.  In December 2012, on the other side of the spillway featured in this image, the Army Corps of Engineers clear-cut an estimated 80 acres of what some say were mostly native shrubs — and homes for many local and migratory birds. Environmentalists say the damage was done in excess of posted plans, and without opportunity for public input. But the Corps says it was necessary to help police an area known for homeless camps and lewd behavior.

While taking images on this side of the spillway I observed a group of teenage boys and girls sliding down the sides of the concrete embankment on folded chairs while others circled around on skateboards carrying torches of burning branches presumably found on the river banks. These adolescents were generally friendly but they seemed to be in an altered state.  I didn’t stay much longer after dark for fear of my personal safety and the remoteness of the location.

It is my intention to “shoot the truth” in my panoramas, that is to say WYSIWYG. However in this instance, I photoshopped out and removed a huge painted phallus on the side wall here only because it was in poor taste plus it was an incredibly bad artistic rendering (if you could even call it art).  Since minors visit this blog and the social networks in which my panoramas are featured, I felt this censorship was necessary.

Additional images of the Sepulveda Dam in 360 can be viewed here and here.

The Spirit Tree of Joplin, Missouri

Spirit Tree - Joplin, MO
The Spirit Tree of Joplin, Missouri

The “Spirit Tree,” was one of the many trees in Joplin, Missouri destroyed by a deadly tornado that struck on May 22, 2011. This 40′ tree on 20th Street near the Kansas City Southern Railway tracks was painted with vibrant colors inspired by Native American spirit stick art. It was done by Dolores and Darrel Bilke and members of the Tank, a public art group that has worked on other public murals in the city.

The young woman beneath the tree is my niece, a student and an artist, whose most recent work was featured at the SEK Art Fest 2013 and sponsored by the Joplin Globe.

Last year, I originally posted this image as a 360° panorama. In today’s blog post I’ve taken the same image and manipulated it into what’s known as a “little planet” or “stereographic” projection wherein a equirectangular image (such as my panoramas) is wrapped around itself using the “polar coordinates” filter in Photoshop to create a circular image that seems to wrap the panorama around a planet. Hence the name “little planet”.

You can also achieve the same effect with Gimp if you’re inclined to open source image editing.