Late last year, I spent a day inside a Sunny Delight plant for a Wall Street Journal story about companies using federal business improvement money to grow their business without creating new jobs. One of my images was used for both the print edition (page B1 of the Jan. 17, 2012, Wall Street Journal) and online. You can read the article at WSJ.com: Man vs. Machine, a Jobless Recovery
You can see more images from the shoot in the Recent Work section of this website: Inside a Sunny Delight plant for the Wall Street Journal
A photo from a recent portrait shoot for MIT’s News Office was featured on the homepage of MIT.edu on January 26, 2012. You can read the story here: Solving energy problems, one molecule at a time

Screenshot of MIT.edu on 12 December 2011. Portrait of Antonio Torralba by M. Scott Brauer for MIT News
A picture from a recent assignment for MIT News was used as the homepage for MIT on Dec. 12, 2011. The image teases a story on Dr. Antonio Torralba’s work to develop image-interpreting artificial intelligence.
Education Week is rapidly becoming a favorite client. Their assignments always cover interesting subjects and the editors (Nicole and Charlie) love to see creative takes on those subjects. Most recently, I traveled in Smithfield, Rhode Island, to photograph urban school children on a nature walk at an Audubon site. You can see a few images from the shoot in the recent work section of this website or in my archive.
I get sidetracked into thinking of my photos only in the context of newsstand papers and magazines, so I’m always happy to find unconventional uses for them. One of my pictures, from Showdown Ski Area in central Montana, was featured in this year’s Winter Guide (available in hotels and tourist locations in the Western US and as a free PDF) published by the Montana Office of Tourism. You can see other images from Showdown in my archive or elsewhere on this site.
A selection of my images from the Occupy Boston demonstrations has been featured on SocialDocumentary.net. I’ve gotten to know SDN founder Glenn Ruga since moving to Boston, where he’s also the executive director of the Photographic Resource Center, and he thought the images would be a good fit for the site.
You can see more images from Occupy Boston at my archive here: coverage of the Occupy Boston demonstrations
I recently photographed an intriguing story for the Wall Street Journal. The article focused on a small, family-run motel in Tewksbury, Massachusetts, that is the center of a legal battle using federal asset forfeiture laws to seize private property. The laws were intended to be used to fight drug cartels, but conservative legal activists are targeting the motel–the cheapest place to stay for miles around–as a piece of property linked to crimes. The police are called to the motel periodically, mostly domestic violence and small drug offenses, and the legal challenge would use those small crimes to seize the property. The motel owner, whose father built the place in the 1950s, now stands to lose his business, despite not being charged with any crimes. You can read the story here. My pictures were used in print (including on the front page!), in a slideshow accompanying the article online, and at the Wall Street Journal’s photo blog Photo Journal (screenshot above). Thanks, as always, to Matt and the rest of the crew at the Journal’s photo desk.