Dinner on the fly.
On Saturday, May 25, 2019 at 1:25:12 PM UTC-5, Sheldon wrote:
>
> It only takes a second to snap a pic, I'll usually snap 2-3, then
> later or the next day is when I'll edit and choose one to post....
> sometimes none are post worthy then I'll delete. I always keep my
> camera nearby for the critters and for when the light is right
> outside.
>
I don't keep my camera nearby nor do I keep the batteries in it when not in
used. Snapping pictures of food or animals is just not on my bucket list.
>
> For me the food pics are for initiating a discussion
> on methods, everyone will cook the same food differently. And some
> will cook an interesting sounding dish but iunfortunately they ruin it
> with lousy photography and awful plating (Sir Ukelele).
>
Although I enjoy looking at others pictures, it's just not something I feel
compelled to do. Whether to share or have my efforts mauled, I'm just not
a camera person.
>
> And I really
> don't appreciate it whan someone describes their dinner but then posts
> an URL with the recipe and the image... that screams out liar because
> most everyone with a cell phone has a camera handy... and modern cell
> phones have excellent cameras, and these days ordinary digicams are
> dirt cheap, no film or processing needed,
>
Yep, I have a cell phone but it stays off for perhaps a few times per month.
My cell phone is for emergencies only and not as an entertainment venue for
anyone. I was just at a site a few minutes ago and to be able to access it,
the turds had to send me code by text. I have to go get my phone, turn it
on, wait for it power up, unlock the screen, and THEN see the code they
sent.
I did say I was not a camera person and I'm not phone, cell or landline,
person either. I just don't get this fascination at looking at everybody's
food; it's like all dogs have to smell each others butts before they're
accepted.
|