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  • Frequent flyer astronaut Alan Watts is presented to the media and space industry commentators by Sir Richard Branson during the Wired NextFest science fair, at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, New York City in his north London home, England. Alan, 51, runs an electrical company and qualified for a free space space flight after being contacted by Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space company, having accumulated 2 million air miles on the Virgin Atlantic flight network. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness. Flights start around 2009/10 at the new Philippe Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin05_1.jpg
  • Space-suited frequent flyer astronaut Alan Watts plays moon-walker at his north London home, England. Alan, 51, runs an electrical company and qualified for a free space space flight after being contacted by Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space company, having accumulated 2 million air miles on the Virgin Atlantic flight network. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness.   Flights start around 2009/10 from a Mojave desert test facility but therafter, at the new Philippe Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million headquarters and mission control facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin04_1.jpg
  • A portrait of space-suited frequent flyer astronaut Alan Watts in his north London home, England. Alan, 51, runs an electrical company and qualified for a free space space flight after being contacted by Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space company, having accumulated 2 million air miles on the Virgin Atlantic flight network. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness. Flights start around 2009/10 from a Mojave desert test facility but therafter, at the new Philippe Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million headquarters and mission control facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin02_1.jpg
  • A portrait of space-suited frequent flyer astronaut Alan Watts in his north London home, England. Alan, 51, runs an electrical company and qualified for a free space space flight after being contacted by Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space company, having accumulated 2 million air miles on the Virgin Atlantic flight network. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness. Flights start around 2009/10 from a Mojave desert test facility but therafter, at the new Philippe Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million headquarters and mission control facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin01_1.jpg
  • In the kitchen on a Sunday morning, space-suited frequent flyer astronaut Alan Watts reads the Sunday newspaper while his wife empties the dishwasher in his north London home, England. Alan, 51, runs an electrical company and qualified for a free space space flight after being contacted by Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space company, having accumulated 2 million air miles on the Virgin Atlantic flight network. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness. Flights start around 2009/10 from a Mojave desert test facility but therafter, at the new Philippe Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million headquarters facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin03_1.jpg
  • The Washburn Expedition in 1870 named Old Faithful for its nearly regular schedule of eruptions. It is the grand old geyser of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, because of its frequent and predictable eruptions. The intervals between eruptions average between 45-90 minutes and the average duration is about four minutes. To predict the next eruption, its first continuous surge is timed until the final splash.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_AA.jpg
  • The Washburn Expedition in 1870 named Old Faithful for its nearly regular schedule of eruptions. It is the grand old geyser of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, because of its frequent and predictable eruptions. The intervals between eruptions average between 45-90 minutes and the average duration is about four minutes. To predict the next eruption, its first continuous surge is timed until the final splash.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_Z.jpg
  • Virgin boss, Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Galactic directors Will Whitehorn and Stephen Attenborough, talk to the media during the unveiling of their SpaceShipTwo concept model's unveiling at the New York Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center.  Now under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like a Stanley Kubrick movie set from '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than the future for everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starts in around 2009.  <br />
Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness.<br />
Launched in September 2004 by Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Galactic will invest up to $250 million to develop the world’s first commercial space tourism business with the building, testing and flying of five space shipShipTwos and two mother ships.  It is expected that within the first full year of commercial operations Virgin Galactic will enable 500 people to fulfil their dreams of becoming astronauts; in the last 4 decades the world has seen fewer than 500 astronauts. Flights start around 2009.<br />
28/09/2006
    baker_virgin11_1.jpg
  • Designer Phillippe Starck standing at the nose of Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo during its unveiling at the New York Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. Starck is design consultant for Virgin's space company and for SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA.  Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness.  Flights start around 2009/10 from a Mojave desert test facility but therafter, at the new Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million headquarters and mission control facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin08_1.jpg
  • Ordinary husband and wife Mark and Christine Easterfield stand awkwardly with their Volvo car outside their large home near Cambridge, England. They are among the thousands of people who have each paid the $200,000 fare for seats on Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space flights. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness.   Flights start around 2009/10 from a Mojave desert test facility but therafter, at the new Philippe Starck-designed SpacePort America, New Mexico, USA. a 27 square mile, $225 million headquarters and mission control facility near Las Cruces.
    baker_virgin07_1.jpg
  • As bright sunlight shines through the window of an airliner, a sleeping male passenger reclines in his seat on a generic transatlantic flight. Sitting in the window seat of this transatlantic flight, the man has a large tummy protruding over his seat belt as he slumbers with a hand resting on the seat arm. The sun is over the port (left) wing as it continues to fly back towards Europe from the USA.
    airliner_passenger01-17-11-2000_1_1.jpg
  • The back of  famous greying-blonde head belonging to Sir Richard Branson of Virgin Galactic is seen during SpaceShipTwo's replica model unveiling at the New York Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. Galactic. Under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than future everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starting in 2009/10. Aboard the space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each paying $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience 6 minutes of weighlessness.
    baker_virgin15_1.jpg
  • Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson and former Apollo (11) astronaut Buzz Aldrin chat after Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo's unveiling at the New York Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. Under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than future everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starting in 2009/10. Aboard the space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each paying $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience 6 minutes of weighlessness.
    baker_virgin14_1.jpg
  • Sam and Eve Branson, son and mother of tycoon Sir Richard, relax together on a roof terrace in Manhattan, New York. Both are queueing to join the hundreds already having paid their $200,000 for Virgin Galactic's space tourism rides in 2009. Launched in September 2004 by Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Galactic will invest up to $250 million to develop the world’s first commercial space tourism business with the building, testing and flying of five space shipShipTwos and two mother ships. It is expected that within the first full year of commercial operations Virgin Galactic will enable 500 people to fulfil their dreams of becoming astronauts. Aboard the space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each paying $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience 6 minutes of weighlessness.
    baker_virgin13_1.jpg
  • A computer-generated astronaut lies down on board a space flight on Virgin Galactic's  SpaceShipTwo's,  unveiled as a replica model during Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, New York. Under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than future everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starting in 2009/10. Aboard the space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each paying $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience 6 minutes of weighlessness. From these circular portholes, astronauts will see 1,000 miles having taken off from the new Spaceport America, New Mexico.
    baker_virgin12_1.jpg
  • Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson sits in the replica model of the Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo during its unveiling of at the New York Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. Under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like a Stanley Kubrick movie set from '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than the future for everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starts in around 2009. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom paying $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness. From these circular portholes, astronauts will see 1,000 miles having taken off from the new Spaceport America, New Mexico.
    baker_virgin10_1.jpg
  • A replica model of the Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo during its unveiling Wired NextFest at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, NYC. Under construction by Burt Rutan in Mojave, California and looking more like a Stanley Kubrick movie set from '2001 A Space Odyssey,' than the future for everyday holidays, SpaceShipTwo is a re-usable orbiting vehicle that will become an important tool for Man's leisure time in space when affordable commercial space tourism starts in around 2009. Aboard the re-usable space vehicle will be 6 passengers, each of whom will have paid $200,000 for the 40 minute flight to 360,000 feet (109.73km, or 68.18 miles) and to experience just 6 minutes of weighlessness. From these circular portholes, astronauts will be able to see 1,000 miles having taken off from the new Spaceport America, New Mexico.
    baker_virgin09_1.jpg
  • Local residents and visitors frequent town centre shops on 17 September 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. There was a substantial increase in new COVID-19 cases in the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead between 7th-13th September, rising from 30 cases the previous week to 57 for a total to date in September of 107 positive coronavirus cases as compared to 83 in the whole of August and 23 in July.
    MK-20200917-COVID-19-coronavirus-spi...jpg
  • Roberto fonseca and band. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7908.jpg
  • Layering water reed on to the roof of a Suffolk cottage, traditional thatchers work together in afternoon sun. While in the background new straw is brought up onto the roof while in the foreground another thatcher leans into the ladder and the roof’s slope. Using a thatching tool called a Leggett, Legate, bat or dresser to position the thatch on the roof. Typically one end is treated so as to catch the ends of the reed used. This tool is used by the thatcher to dress the reed into place and ensure an even finish. Using techniques developed over thousands of years, good thatch will not require frequent maintenance. In England a ridge will normally last 10–15 years. Thatching is the craft of building a roof with dry vegetation such as straw, water reed, sedge, rushes and heather, layering the vegetation so as to shed water away from the inner roof.
    thatchers02-16-08-1993_1_1.jpg
  • Two queens and one princess, members of the British royal family are depicted on a postcard rack in central London.  On the left is Queen Elizabeth (known as the Queen Mother (born Bowes-Lyon) who died at the age of 101 in 2002. Her daughter is the present Queen Elizabeth the second and to her right is Princess Diana, the Princess of Wales who died tragically in Paris in 1997. The three are seen on sale outside a tourist shop in Whitehall in the borough of Westminster where revenue-earning foreign holidaymakers frequent to see major landmark sites such as Parliament and Buckingham Palace. While the Queen wears a formal crown, the Princess is with a tiara and all three are on sale for 30 pence (£0.3)
    royal_family-06-09-1997.jpg
  • Next to a beach bather, water pours from an outlet pipe on a tourist beach on Coloane island Cheoc Van beach, Macau, China. With his face towards the course sand, the bather lies with his head towards a large wall, whose large stone blocks accommodate the pipe at the bottom. Apart from a pair of brief swimming trunks and a sun hat, he lies with ankles crossed, as if in paradise. But this seemingly industrial landscape is far from the idyllic place other tourists might wish to frequent. We do not know how filthy or indeed how pure, this water that pours out from the ground is, but the suspicion is that the pollution may affect human health. The once-Portuguese colony of Macau is now administered by China as a Special Economic Region (SER) and the official languages are Portuguese and Chinese.
    beach_pollution01-10-08-1994_1.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4151.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4135.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4066.jpg
  • Tehkhand Slum, Delhi , India.  A man sorts through the scrap metal he and his family have collected from the streets and rubbish tips to sell to local dealers.  Many slum dwellers earn a living from recycling old industrial waste and live well below the poverty-line.  His whole family survives from this work.  This is very dangerous work and injuries are frequent.
    India-Slum-Dwelling-3872_1.jpg
  • Local residents and visitors frequent town centre shops on 17 September 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. There was a substantial increase in new COVID-19 cases in the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead between 7th-13th September, rising from 30 cases the previous week to 57 for a total to date in September of 107 positive coronavirus cases as compared to 83 in the whole of August and 23 in July.
    MK-20200917-COVID-19-coronavirus-spi...jpg
  • Common toad sitting in the grass on 20th June 2020 in Studley, United Kingdom. Common toads are amphibians, breeding in ponds during the spring and spending much of the rest of the year feeding in woodland, gardens, hedgerows and tussocky grassland. They are famous for their mass migrations back to their breeding ponds on the first warm, damp evenings. Common toads tend to breed in larger, deeper ponds than common frogs, but still frequent gardens.
    20200620_common toad_001.jpg
  • Common toad sitting in the grass on 20th June 2020 in Studley, United Kingdom. Common toads are amphibians, breeding in ponds during the spring and spending much of the rest of the year feeding in woodland, gardens, hedgerows and tussocky grassland. They are famous for their mass migrations back to their breeding ponds on the first warm, damp evenings. Common toads tend to breed in larger, deeper ponds than common frogs, but still frequent gardens.
    20200620_common toad_002.jpg
  • Roberto fonseca and band. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7897.jpg
  • Havana Club signage. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7798.jpg
  • Peculiar warning sign to buses for Rutting, worn road surfaces. The pun is centered around the word 'Rutting' which also involves the innuendo of sexual activity - or 'the mating of a stag'. travellers wait for buses at this bus stop on Waterloo Bridge in central London. It's located on the Southbank, known in history as a destination for brothels and places of ill repute and Londoners from the City on the north bank would take a river taxi to frequent these places. But the sign also warns bus drivers of the danger from an uneven road surface, a result of partially melted or displaced tarmac causing ruts in the road - hence the pun.
    waterloo_rutting05-09-09-2015.jpg
  • La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7912_1.jpg
  • Roberto fonseca and band. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7689_1.jpg
  • Drummer details shot. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7681_1.jpg
  • Using techniques developed over thousands of years, traditional thatcher lays straw on a barn roof in Suffolk, England. Balancing across the width of the roof’s surface, the man uses a Shearing Hook to lay the straw into the outer weathering coat of the roof’s slope. Using techniques developed over thousands of years, good thatch will not require frequent maintenance. In England a ridge will normally last 10–15 years. Thatching is the craft of building a roof with dry vegetation such as straw, water reed, sedge (Cladium mariscus), rushes and heather, layering the vegetation so as to shed water away from the inner roof. It is a very old roofing method and has been used in both tropical and temperate climates. Thatch is still the choice of affluent people who desire a rustic look for their home or who have purchased an originally thatched abode.
    thatching01-16-08-1993_1.jpg
  • Fruit and buyers in the narrow streets of the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. A local woman across the narrow, high-sided street, yawns while an orange and apple seller looks for her next customer on the cobbled lane. <br />
Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a different personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    lisbon_market02-22-03-1994_1.jpg
  • Fish and buyers in the narrow streets of the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. Locals inspect the catches of the day, caught in the seas off the Portuese capital and coasts. In the background are crowds of visitors in the narrow, high-sided street. Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a different personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    lisbon_market01-22-03-1994_1.jpg
  • Mrs Vineela Bhardwaj, a middle class resident of Vasant Kunj, a prosperous area of New Delhi, telephone's the Delhi JAL Board, the body responsible for water distribution. Vasant Kunj is one of many places in New Delhi that has frequent loss of mains water.
    SFE_070427_0050.jpg
  • Housewives in the Vasant Kunj area wait for water to be pumped into their water tanks from a JAL Board tanker. Vasant Kunj is one of many places in New Delhi that has frequent loss of mains water and relies on such infrequent tanker deliveries. New Delhi, India
    SFE_070427_0035.jpg
  • Details of a mystical creature on the walls of the ancient city of Babylon.<br />
Babylon, an ancient city mention in the Bible is dated at around the 24th Century BC. <br />
In 1985, Saddam Hussein started rebuilding the city on top of the old ruins (because of this, artifacts and other finds may well be under the city by now), investing in both restoration and new construction. To the dismay of archaeologists, he inscribed his name on many of the bricks in imitation of Nebuchadnezzar. One frequent inscription reads: "This was built by Saddam Hussein, son of Nebuchadnezzar, to glorify Iraq".
    SFE_020501_0064.jpg
  • An original Victorian shopping arcade in the seaside resort town of Great Yarmouth on the English east coast. Daylight floods in through overhead skylight roof glass  as shoppers walk past local ladies fashion displays seen behind beautiful curved windows, in the style of late 19th century. Tiles flooring acts as a pavement to resembled an upper-class covered street to keep visitors dry from frequent coastal showers. The shops are local too - without branded chains occupying the site and forcing hardship on local businesses.
    victorian_arcade01-01-07-1992_1_1.jpg
  • Layering water reed on to the roof of a Suffolk cottage, a traditional thatcher works in afternoon sun. Balancing across the width of the roof’s surface, the man uses a Shearing Hook to lay the straw into the outer weathering coat of the roof’s slope. Using techniques developed over thousands of years, good thatch will not require frequent maintenance. In England a ridge will normally last 10–15 years. Thatching is the craft of building a roof with dry vegetation such as straw, water reed, sedge (Cladium mariscus), rushes and heather, layering the vegetation so as to shed water away from the inner roof. It is a very old roofing method and has been used in both tropical and temperate climates. Thatch is still the choice of affluent people who desire a rustic look for their home or who have purchased an originally thatched abode.
    thatchers01-16-08-1993_1_1.jpg
  • Officer pilots of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, lean against a wing of their Hawk jet in a pre-flight briefing while a member of their ground crew positions some wheel chocks. The highly-skilled engineer is known as a 'Blue' but the 'Reds' discuss  flight plans. Eleven trades skills are imported from some sixty that the RAF employs and teaches. It is mid-day and only their flying boots and red legs are seen with the RAF roundel emblem is on the underside of the wing. The better-educated officers in the armed forces enjoy a more privileged lifestyle than their support staff. In the aerobatic squadron, the Blues outnumber the pilots 8:1. Without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly. Some of the team's Hawks are 25 years old and their air frames require constant attention, with increasingly frequent major overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows174_RBA_1.jpg
  • Engineer airframe specialist Junior Technician Barry Pritchard of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, forms part of the team's highly-skilled group of support ground crew who outnumber the pilots 8:1. Here J/Tech Pritchard straddles the fuselage of  the Hawk jet aircraft performing a Ram Air Turbine (RAT) jack change in the squadron hangar. Eleven trades are imported from some sixty that the RAF employs and teaches. The team's aircraft are in some cases 25 years old and their airframes require constant attention, with frequent overhauls needed. In these shelters were housed the Lancaster bombers 617 Dambusters squadron who attacked the damns of the German Ruhr valley on 16th May 1943 using the Bouncing Bomb. The Red Arrows nearby offices as their administrative nerve-centre for the 90-plus displays they perform a year.
    Red_Arrows030_RBA_1.jpg
  • Ornate iron gates of the original New Scotland Yard, headquarters of London's Metropolitan Police at 4 Whitehall Place. The buildings are in banded red brick and white portland stone on a granite base in the Victorian Gothic style, and are located upon Victoria Embankment next-door to Portcullis House. The North Building is Grade I listed and designed in 1887. Scotland Yard has become internationally famous as a symbol of policing, and detectives from Scotland Yard feature in many works of crime fiction. They were frequent allies, and sometimes antagonists, of Sherlock Holmes in
    scotland_yard02-27-01-2013.jpg
  • Scheduled maintenance on a Hawk Mk 1 jet in the hangar of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team. Engineering specialists called the Blues perform routine maintenance in the Red Arrows team hangar. They are ground-based back-up crew (so-called after their distinctive blue overalls worn only during the summer) and perform routine engineering tasks in the hangar at RAF Scampton, then while on tour, keeping the jets serviceable and ready to display. The Blues outnumber the pilots 8:1. Without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly. Some of the team's Hawks are 25 years old and their air frames require constant attention, with increasingly frequent major overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows482_RBA.jpg
  • Spare wheels belonging to Hawk aircraft of the 'Red Arrows', Britain's Royal Air Force aerobatic team are stored in the team’s hangar at RAF Scampton. On a shelf are the front and rear tyres (tires) and wheel of the Hawk jet aircraft that perform across the UK in the summer months. Since 1965 the squadron have flown over 4,000 shows in 52 countries and are an important part of Britain's summer events where the aircraft perform their manoeuvres in front of crowds. Their spares collection is therefore a vital element to the team’s presence at air shows and fly-pasts. This version of the BAE Systems Hawk is primitive, without computers or fly-by-wire technology. Nevertheless, the team's aircraft are in some cases over 20 years old and their air-frames require constant attention with increasingly frequent major overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows022_RBA.jpg
  • Country and Western singer George Hamilton IV performs in front of British Christians during Mission 89, a series of evangelical revival rallies in London, England held by Baptist Christian Billy Graham. Hamilton is a Singer/guitarist/songwriter of country, rock, folk, Christian and gospel songs with 40 on Billboard's country music charts in 1960s and '70s. He is a member of the Grand Ole Opry with best-sellers like Abilene and A Rose And A Baby Ruth. George has been a frequent guest singer with the Dr. Billy Graham Crusades such as this in 1989.
    george_hamilton-14-06-1989_1.jpg
  • Russian Anastasia Dobromyslova (from Tver, Moscow) is the highest-ranking ladies' darts player, having beaten the 7 times champion Trina Gulliver. Here, she competes in an England Open tournament at the Bunn Leisure Holiday Park in Selsey, near Chichester on the south coast of England. Attractive and feminine, she is confident and at ease with her game amid many lesbian women who frequent darts matches like this. She concentrates on each dart thrown and is oblivious to the audience's noise behind her in an upstairs pub at the holiday park. This is one of her many tournaments she travels to during the darts events calendar although she needs to repeatedly renew her visa to gain re-entry into the UK.
    anastasia_dobromyslova02-12-04-2008 ...jpg
  • Russian Anastasia Dobromyslova (from Tver, Moscow) is the highest-ranking ladies' darts player, having beaten the 7 times champion Trina Gulliver. Here, she competes in an England Open tournament at the Bunn Leisure Holiday Park in Selsey, near Chichester on the south coast of England. Attractive and feminine, she is confident and at ease with her game amid many lesbian women who frequent darts matches like this. She concentrates on each dart thrown and is oblivious to the audience's noise behind her in an upstairs pub at the holiday park. This is one of her many tournaments she travels to during the darts events calendar although she needs to repeatedly renew her visa to gain re-entry into the UK.
    anastasia_dobromyslova01-12-04-2008 ...jpg
  • Workers hose off dust accumulated on the titanium and glass exterior of the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, on 10 December 2011.   Dubbed by locals as the "Egg", the opera house was designed by French architect Paul Andreu. Construction started in December 2001 and the inaugural concert was held in December 2007, the building needs frequent cleaning as the exterior easily accumulates and shows dust and pollution.
    QS111210Beijing133.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4122.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4116.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4111.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4099.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4072.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4070.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4069.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4063.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4040.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4031.jpg
  • Tehkhand Slum, Delhi , India.  Plastic bottles that a family have collected from the streets and rubbish tips to sell to local dealers.  Many slum dwellers earn a living from recycling old industrial waste and live well below the poverty-line.  Her whole family survives from this work.  This is very dangerous work and injuries are frequent.
    India-Slum-Dwelling-3897_1.jpg
  • Tehkhand Slum, Delhi , India.  A man sorts through the scrap metal he and his family have collected from the streets and rubbish tips to sell to local dealers.  Many slum dwellers earn a living from recycling old industrial waste and live well below the poverty-line.  His whole family survives from this work.  This is very dangerous work and injuries are frequent.
    India-Slum-Dwelling-3892_1.jpg
  • Roberto fonseca and band. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club, the Fox and the Raven jazz club, Vedado, Havana. This is the most famous jazz club in Havana and one of the most important in the World. It has been there since way before the revolution, when gangsters, flappers and Americas rich and famous used to frequent it. The music is still of the highest quality now, though it is a favourite with tourists it is well worth a visit.
    _MG_7861_1.jpg
  • restored walls of the Temple complex in the ancient city of Babylon.<br />
Babylon, an ancient city mention in the Bible is dated at around the 24th Century BC. <br />
In 1985, Saddam Hussein started rebuilding the city on top of the old ruins (because of this, artifacts and other finds may well be under the city by now), investing in both restoration and new construction. To the dismay of archaeologists, he inscribed his name on many of the bricks in imitation of Nebuchadnezzar. One frequent inscription reads: "This was built by Saddam Hussein, son of Nebuchadnezzar, to glorify Iraq".
    SFE_020501_0072.jpg
  • A lone figure stands silhouetted against a hangar belonging to the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team at RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire. Two huge hangar doors are ajar revealing an orange glow spilling on to the concrete outside. A Hawk jet aircraft is parked awaiting overnight maintenance. Engineers talk inside as the door travels along its track. The men are the team's support ground crew and eleven trades are imported from some sixty that the RAF qualifies. The hangar dates to World War 2, housing Lancaster bombers of 617 Dambusters squadron who attacked the damns of the German Ruhr valley on 16th May 1943 using the Bouncing Bomb. This version of BAE Systems Hawks are low-tech, without computers nor fly-by-wire technology, Some of the  team's aircraft are 25 years old and their airframes require frequent overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows074_RBA_1.jpg
  • Scheduled maintenance on a Hawk Mk 1 jet in the hangar of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team. Engineering specialists called the Blues perform routine maintenance in the Red Arrows team hangar. They are ground-based back-up crew (so-called after their distinctive blue overalls worn only during the summer) and perform routine engineering tasks in the hangar at RAF Scampton, then while on tour, keeping the jets serviceable and ready to display. The Blues outnumber the pilots 8:1. Without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly. Some of the team's Hawks are 25 years old and their air frames require constant attention, with increasingly frequent major overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows479_RBA.jpg
  • Towing bars on the ground in the hangar of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team. Seen from above in the hangar at RAF Scampton the team's base (but once the hangars of the famous Dambusters 617 Squadron), the engineering specialists called the Blues perform routine maintenance in the Red Arrows team hangar. They are ground-based back-up crew (so-called after their distinctive blue overalls worn only during the summer) and perform routine engineering tasks in the hangar at RAF Scampton, then while on tour, keeping the jets serviceable and ready to display. The Blues outnumber the pilots 8:1. Without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly. Some of the team's Hawks are 25 years old and their air frames require constant attention, with increasingly frequent major overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows475_RBA.jpg
  • Officer pilots of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, lean against a wing of their Hawk jet in a pre-flight briefing while a member of their ground crew positions some wheel chocks. It is mid-day and the officers are deep in conversation with the RAF roundel emblem is on the jet aircraft. The better-educated officers in the armed forces enjoy a more privileged lifestyle than their support staff. In the aerobatic squadron, the Blues outnumber the pilots 8:1. Without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly. Some of the team's Hawks are 25 years old and their air frames require constant attention, with increasingly frequent major overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows177_RBA.jpg
  • A tray of sardines fry on an outdoor grill in the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. We see in detail 16 fish (sardinhas assadas in Portuguese) all lying in the sunlight on their sides in neat, parralel rows with their clouded eyes staring up towards the viewer. They still have their silvery, scaley skin and Portuguese sardines are traditionally be served with finely-chopped potatoes, considered to be the sweetest and fattest sardines in the world. In Portugal, more than 60 percent of the national sardine catch is consumed fresh: 12 pounds a person, on average, compared to only 2 pounds of the fish canned. The sardine season - when the fish are plump and juicy - lasts from the end of May to the end of October, although the fat fish can keep coming until December. Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a diferent personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    RB-0199.jpg
  • High above the streets of Old Lisbon, we see a Portuguese lady leaning out of her window to hang out her washing on the line that is attached to her home's exterior wall in the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. Items of underwear, socks and other miscellaneous clothing have been strung out on the line that is now pegged along the crumbling wall's surface with faded, peeling plaster and paint. A TV aerial has also been fixed precariously by the window and it's shadow can be seen in the sunshine which is strong and side-lighting the scene which has a warm, morning glow about it. Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a diferent personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    RB-0194.jpg
  • Workers hose off dust accumulated on the titanium and glass exterior of the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, on 10 December 2011.   Dubbed by locals as the "Egg", the opera house was designed by French architect Paul Andreu. Construction started in December 2001 and the inaugural concert was held in December 2007, the building needs frequent cleaning as the exterior easily accumulates and shows dust and pollution.
    QS111210Beijing132.jpg
  • Workers hose off dust accumulated on the titanium and glass exterior of the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, on 10 December 2011.   Dubbed by locals as the "Egg", the opera house was designed by French architect Paul Andreu. Construction started in December 2001 and the inaugural concert was held in December 2007, the building needs frequent cleaning as the exterior easily accumulates and shows dust and pollution.
    QS111210Beijing131.jpg
  • At home with controversial British comedian Jim Davidson at his Surrey mansion. After huge success in the 1970's and 1980's, Davidson's fame and popularity have dwindled due to his stand up act proving too much for many audiences. Davidson has been known to make offensive jokes about ethnic minorities, homosexuals and disabled people in his stand-up act, which has made him a subject of negative media coverage and frequent criticism.
    023H4055.jpg
  • Tehkhand Slum, Delhi , India.  Cardboard boxes of out of date food collected from the streets and rubbish tips to sell to local dealers.  Many slum dwellers earn a living from recycling old industrial waste and live well below the poverty-line.  Her whole family survives from this work.  This is very dangerous work and injuries are frequent
    India-Slum-Dwelling-3933_1.jpg
  • Tehkhand Slum, Delhi , India.  A woman sorts through the scrap metal she and her family have collected from the streets and rubbish tips to sell to local dealers.  Many slum dwellers earn a living from recycling old industrial waste and live well below the poverty-line.  Her whole family survives from this work.  This is very dangerous work and injuries are frequent.
    India-Slum-Dwelling-3912_1.jpg
  • Tehkhand Slum, Delhi , India.  Plastic bottles that a family have collected from the streets and rubbish tips to sell to local dealers.  Many slum dwellers earn a living from recycling old industrial waste and live well below the poverty-line.  Her whole family survives from this work.  This is very dangerous work and injuries are frequent.
    India-Slum-Dwelling-3900_1.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0672.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0521.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0554.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0486.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0480.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0475.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0437.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0366.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0751.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0589.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0584.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0514.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0491.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0459.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0422.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0408.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0416.jpg
  • Protesters against a possible third runway at Heathrow and aviation in general for contributing to climate change stage a flash mob die-in and  theatrical ‘Frequent-fliers-high-polluters club theater at terminal 2 at Heathrow, London, Oct 1st 2016.
    AB9A0552.jpg
  • Multiple McDonalds arch logos seen through a central London bus shelter. Multiple reflections of the logo is seen through the glass of a central London bus stop where buses frequently pause, again repeating the pattern and design across the scene. McDonalds are again increasing their presence in the capital, this time on a prominent corner of Cambridge Circus in the West End. Two women walk past, their bodies partially obscured by the golden arches.
    mcdonalds_signs10-15-04-2015_1.jpg
  • Multiple McDonalds arch logos seen through a central London bus shelter. Multiple reflections of the logo is seen through the glass of a central London bus stop where buses frequently pause, again repeating the pattern and design across the scene. Macdonalds are again increasing their presence in the capital, this time on a prominent corner of Cambridge Circus in the West End.
    mcdonalds_signs04-15-04-2015_1.jpg
  • Locals are caught up in downdraught as ZA939, a Westland SA-330E Puma HC1 helicopter belonging to the RAF's 230 squadron, lifts off after a five minute touch down in Ruskin Park, south London. The RAF frequently make reconnaissance flights to this Lambeth open space for crew training purposes.
    park_puma1-21-10-2011.jpg
  • An AgustaWestland AW101 makes a controlled landing in a south London public park. After circling for 5 minutes in windy conditions and hovered metres above the ground n Ruskin Park, south London. Autumn leaves flew in all directions in this regular landing point for the Royal Air Force and army. The RAF frequently make reconnaissance flights to this Lambeth open space for crew training purposes. The Merlin is a medium-lift helicopter used in both military and civil applications. It was developed by joint venture between Westland Helicopters in the UK and Agusta in Italy and was named the EH101 until 2007.
    merlin_houses03-01-11-2012.jpg
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