Sunday, March 27, 2011

Recent WSJ Work: Japan Earthquake

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A woman carrying her baby around in the town of Ishinomaki, Northeastern Japan. She was looking for any supplies she could find in the rubble.

A day after a massive earthquake and tsunami hit Northeastern Japan, I hopped on a plane to Tokyo and then to Fukushima airport. From there we visited various areas: one where people were sleeping on the stage of an auditorium waiting to hear whether their hometown had been contaminated with radioactivity; one where rotten fish were strewn on the ground -- a reminder of an industry that used to feed the people in that neighborhood; another one where someone was wading through mud, headed towards their destroyed houses to find the dogs they had left behind. It was a three-day-long stay; three very full days.

There are many things I've learned.
Practical things, like 'don't wear sneakers when you're covering the aftermath of a tsunami'.

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Don't save on little things, like 'utility belts' for lenses, extra batteries, a good wind jacket, etc. They make a big difference when you work on little sleep and in difficult environments.

But more importantly I learned that grilling a fish with your pals in a middle of the road after you've lost everything can be incredibly uplifting. So can 5 pieces of chewy candy that a stranger offers you, mumbling the word "candy" in broken English.

Anyhoo, here's a selection of the videos I produced from there (I'm on my second trip here now, so expect more to come):

A video about the economic repercussions of the tsunami for a town of ship building companies and food processing facilities:






A video about the reunion of a family after days of being disconnected:






A video about evacuees from near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant:






And some photographs:

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