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  • about | clients | portfolio
    This is my personal space for creative experimentation and sharing my original work, artistic collaborations, photographic inspirations and general adventures in picture making.
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  • COMMENT

    21

    Jun

    To The Nines

    Filed under eNewsletter | No Comments

    Once again, with the assistance of my friends Licheng and Andy, Issue #9 of my SCOTT eNewsletter rolled off our virtual press and arrived in thousands of inboxes around the world this week.


    From a fashion advertising campaign for online fashion retailer Gnossem shot high above the Singapore skyline, to an advertisement for MasterCard made onboard a private jet to luxury travel and lifestyle features photographed in Singapore (VOGUE), Malaysia (WISH) and Cambodia (American Express Centurion), I've been very fortunate to create a wide variety of work over the past few months.


    If you (or someone you know) would like to receive future issues of my quarterly SCOTT eNewsletter directly to your inbox, then please take a moment to subscribe to my mailing list.


    The previous eight issues of my SCOTT eNewsletter -- showcasing a variety of my travel, portrait, fashion, lifestyle and advertising photography over the past two years -- remain online and you can peruse them here.

  • COMMENT

    11

    Jun

    Priceless

    Filed under Advertising | No Comments

    First started in 1994, the Great Singapore Sale (GSS) is an annual shopping event organized by the Singapore Tourism Board.  Aimed at promoting both the retail and tourism businesses in Singapore, and with the goal of establishing Singapore as an Asian shopping destination, the GSS attracts both locals and tourists to malls and shops across the island.


    This year, for two months from 25 May to 22 July 2012, "shopaholics from the region and beyond flood to these shores to get their hands on bargain buys...at the main shopping belts and in suburban shopping malls throughout Singapore".


    MasterCard is the Official Card of the GSS and is offering card members an opportunity to win a "priceless trip"to Sydney, London, Beijing or Dubai by using their MasterCards during the GSS.  A couple of months ago MasterCard's advertising agency, McCann Worldgroup in Singapore, contacted me about shooting the advertisement to communicate this promotion.  My brief was to photograph a young couple on an airplane as they departed on their second honeymoon to one of these exciting destinations.  We decided to shoot this ad on a private jet in a hangar in Seletar, Singapore.

    Having never personally been aboard a private aircraft (let alone shooting an advertisement inside one), this was an exciting experience for me.  It was also a technically challenging shoot for me and my team to produce because we were only permitted to shoot at night and there is very limited cabin space inside a private jet.  Therefore, we had to light the interior of the aircraft using only artificial light originating from outside the airplane.


    Working with the hangar staff, we wrapped three 20' x 20' sheets of diffusion fabric around the entire body of the jet. Then, using three Broncolor Scoro 3200w power packs and six flash heads set up outside the windows along each side of the aircraft, we were able to fill the entire cabin with soft "daylight".  Finally, using only a single Nikon SB-800 speedlight set-up off-camera inside the plane's cabin, we were able to light our main subjects for the advertisement.


    I had fun collaborating with a great team on this shoot. Maybe next time we shoot in a private jet we'll actually get to leave the ground.


    Browse more of my advertising photography portfolio here.

    Credits


    Client: MasterCard Asia/Pacific

    Agency: McCann Worldgroup Asia-Pacific

    ECD: Todd Waldron

    CD: Emma Savage

    Art Buyer: Karen Leong

    Account Service: Hedvig Lyche

    Production: Ugly Duckling Projects

    Executive Producer: Annette Fausboll

    Producer: Maureen Audetto

    Styling: Sheh Alkaddri

    Hair & Make-up: Andrea Claire

    Photographer's Assistants: Zam, Halid & Jun Yang

    Digital Imaging: Dave Phung / Procolor

  • COMMENT

    07

    Jun

    @penguinstagram

    Filed under Advertising, iPhoneography | No Comments

    Instagram, the wildly popular mobile-only photo sharing social network, is my favourite app for sharing my iPhoneography.  And although I enjoy posting my images on Instagram for my friends and followers to see, I enjoy even more viewing the photography that other people around the world are making.  I find it incredibly inspirational to see the places people live, work and visit and how they interpret these spaces, moments in their days and the people they encounter along their way.


    A few months ago I stumbled upon an Instagram user called @penguinstagram.  I was immediately taken with the imagery on the Penguinstagram feed, but what really caught my attention was how the photographs were coupled with extended captions -- in fact, passages from books -- helping the viewer actually visualize the literature.


    Upon closer review, it became clear that Penguinstagram's photographs were actually crowdsourced from the Instagram community, with the work of many different photographers exhibited on the feed, coupled with relevant excerpts from books written by Penguin Books' authors.


    Created for Penguin Books India by Ranadip De, Edwin Tam and Suhaimi Saadan from digital agency Futurist in Singapore, Penguinstagram is actually a clever, interactive marketing campaign.

    According to Ranadip, the creative challenge facing their client is that the printed word now competes against a vast digital landscape including videos, blogs, tweets, and other online news.  Futurist's creative brief, therefore, was to devise a campaign that would help Penguin Books India stay relevant to a digitally savvy audience with short attention spans.


    Futurist's consumer insights where that "humans are social animals -- or rather they’re social media obsessed animals -- who love consuming bite-sized web content on the go. And people visualise what they read."


    Thus, Penguinstagram was born as a ‘stealth’ social media campaign that meets these challenges and "celebrates the beauty and power of the written word, and the pictures they conjure up in our imagination."


    Uniquely, Instagram users can not only comment and 'Like' Penguinstagram's photos, but they can also collaborate on the project.  In fact, Ranadip recently contacted me and asked if I would be interested in contributing some of my iPhoneography to the Penguinstagram feed.  In the spirit of collaboration and community, I agreed.


    Alongside around a dozen other talented Instagram users, a handful of my photographs have appeared on the

    Penguinstagram feed so far.  It's been exciting for me to see my work paired alongside literary passages, often casting a different light on my imagery and giving new meaning to my photographs than perhaps I intended when I originally made them.


    I love the digital world we live in.  Our ability to connect and share (photography, literature) with like-minded individuals, whether around the world or in our own backyards, is a wonder of our modern time.  It is incredibly exciting that I can find creative partnerships anywhere. What's more exciting is sometimes they even find me.


    Browse my Instagram feed @scottawoodward or see more of my iPhoneography on Flickr.

  • COMMENT

    05

    Jun

    A Homage to the Resurgent Phnom Penh

    Filed under Luxury Lifestyle, Published Photography, Travel | No Comments

    There is no Asian destination more in vogue right now than Cambodia.  "The Kingdom of Wonder" is on everyone's lips, and every major luxury travel and lifestyle magazine is bestowing the country's virtues upon their readership.


    I have traveled to Cambodia on various photography assignments six times in as many months.  It is an extremely dynamic and exciting destination; an adventurer's paradise and a true photographer's delight.


    And, as author Rodney Bolt writes in "A Homage to the Resurgent Phnom Penh" -- my most recent photography commission for the Summer 2012 issue of American Express' Centurion Magazine (UK) -- "[a]fter barely a decade of political stability, Cambodia's capital of cool bustles with an energy all its own; [a] heady mix of of youthful ambition, glorious architecture and bewitching cuisine."


    For this specific feature I spent five wonderful days in Phnom Penh, visiting and photographing the city's most storied and luxurious hotels (Raffles Hotel Le Royal), new urban boutique resorts (The Plantation), popular eateries (Tepui), fashionable designer shops (Eric Raisina's Haute Texture) and magnetic personalities (celebrity Chef Luu Meng).

    This type of editorial travel assignment is among my favourite to shoot since it allows me the time to truly experience a city, and the opportunity to creatively document whatever and whomever I encounter along the way.


    Phnom Penh was a beautiful and eager subject for me -- a city steeped in colonial heritage but maturing in real time, the landscape and it's residents stylishly and visibly evolving from one day to the next.


    Browse more of my recent work for American Express' luxury lifestyle and travel magazines: "Sleepless in Singapore" in Selects (Germany) and "A Tale of Two Cities" in Centurion (UK).

  • COMMENT

    28

    May

    Singapore Grows Up (Redux)

    Filed under Luxury Lifestyle, Published Photography, Travel | No Comments

    Last year I was commissioned by Condé Nast Traveller (India) to photograph a feature about "sexy, stylish, sophisticated Singapore".


    The assignment had me criss-crossing Singapore, shooting more than two dozen locations for the story, from the tiny independent boutiques lining Haji Lane to the mega Marina Bay Sands resort and casino towering over the city's skyline.


    It was a fantastic opportunity for me to explore further my own city and experience many of Singapore's best and brightest bars, restaurants and hotels.  It also gave me an opportunity to meet and photograph some of our city's more interesting finance, society, hospitality and culinary personalities.  It was a fantastic assignment, and one that I thoroughly enjoyed shooting.


    The feature, titled "Singapore Grows Up", appeared in the August/September 2011 issue of CN Traveller (India).


    Then a few months ago SELF (China) -- another title in the Condé Nast family of magazines -- reprinted the feature in their magazine (December 2011).


    And very excitingly, just this month another Condé Nast title -- this time Vogue (China) -- reprinted the feature in their magazine (May 2012).  This is the Vogue (China) layout.

    As the feature's writer, Puja Disha Bharwani, writes in the article, "Singapore is now becoming a sexy, sophisticated destination."  Clearly the Chinese agree.


    It is always a pleasure to receive positive feedback on the work that I create, but none more than a situation where the client reuses my photography repeatedly across a variety of their titles.  And what bigger compliment than to have my photography appear in the prestigious Vogue magazine?


    See more of my lifestyle and travel photography on my website.

  • COMMENT

    14

    May

    Penang's Time Capsule

    Filed under Luxury Lifestyle, Published Photography, Travel | No Comments

    Sydney-based writer Anthony Dennis and I have been friends for years, often partnering on features for various luxury travel and lifestyle magazines.  'Penang's Time Capsule', published in the The Australian's May 2012 issue of WISH Magazine, is our latest collaboration.


    As Anthony details, in 2008 George Town "was awarded UNESCO World Heritage listing, granting it membership to an elite South-East Asian club that includes once forgotten but now fashionable old town treasures such as Hoi An in Vietnam and Luang Prabang."  Thus, in the past few years, "George Town has been undergoing a renaissance."


    Indeed, it is an exciting time to visit Penang, as this renaissance lends itself to a rapid and real-time "rise from obscurity, recognition, revival, restoration and then a kind of gentrification.  The latter is driven by the arrival of enterprising Westerners, and then locals, to establish tourism businesses."


    It was this hunt for George Town's flourishing dining, retail café and art scene, as well as its "sensitively designed boutique accommodation in traditional shop-houses" -- and the enterprising individuals behind these initiatives -- that lured us to Penang for this story.

    "Typically low-rise old towns...lend themselves well to small-scale, boutique-style hotel developments", and Penang is no exception.  The old town is filled with "extraordinary and distinctive colonial architecture, street after street replete with rows of dilapidated but intact shop-houses", some of which notable conservationist entrepreneurs like Christopher Ong and Narelle McMurtrie have lovingly and beautifully renovated and restored.


    Over the course of three days this past January, I visited with Christopher and Narelle, documenting Christopher's Muntri Mews guesthouse, a former stable and carriageworks, and Narelle's Straits Collection and China House, an eclectic mixture of retail spaces, restaurants, galleries and guest residences.  I also photographed Clove Hall, an Edwardian Anglo-Malay bungalow converted into a beautiful boutique hotel, and the century-old Eastern & Oriental Hotel.  In my spare time, I wandered the narrow streets, capturing images of "Technicolor shop-houses with multiple shuttered-windows and weathered terracotta rooftops."


    UNESCO declares that George Town is among “the most complete surviving historic city centres on the Straits of Malacca with a multicultural living heritage originating from the trade routes from Great Britain and Europe through

    the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent and the Malay archipelago to China...[constituting] a unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in east and southeast Asia."


    But don't just take UNESCO's word for it.  Visit Penang and experience this glorious and colourful time capsule for yourself.


    See more of my luxury lifestyle and travel photography on my website.

  • COMMENT

    07

    May

    Gone With The Wind

    Filed under Advertising, Fashion | No Comments

    Many years ago -- while casting for a Reader's Digest Magazine cover I was shooting -- I met Canadian model, Lisa Crosswhite.  We chatted as I flipped through her portfolio, and I quickly realized that Lisa was an extremely talented and creative young woman with an entrepreneurial spirit.  Although we didn't work together on that specific shoot, we did stay in touch.


    Since then Lisa (the model) has starred in many of my images.  From advertisements for GlaxoSmithKline and Meritus Hotels & Resorts, to editorial work for Condé Nast Traveller, to personal creative projects such as "Orphan", I have photographed Lisa numerous times over the years, and we have become close friends as a result.


    But when Lisa (the entrepreneur) recently launched Gnossem -- a Singapore-based online fashion retailer -- and asked me to shoot the brand's launch campaign, I was excited for the opportunity for our friendship to grow into a creative partnership.


    Lisa wanted the imagery for her inaugural Gnossem campaign to convey a strong sense female empowerment, yet maintain soft, romantic undertones.  Together we chose to shoot the photographic collection at Ku De Ta restaurant and lounge.  Perched atop Marina Bay Sands, teetering 56

    stories in the sky, Ku De Ta offers one of Singapore's most spectacular vistas, providing us with a backdrop Lisa felt would "enhance the feeling of celebration and ownership of one’s being."


    Featuring fashion artisanship from a handful of independent designers from across Asia-Pacific, including Pepsi Herrera (Philippines), Trioon (Singapore), and Fang Fong Projects (Hong Kong), it was a fantastic day of aesthetic collaboration with Lisa and another fellow Canadian, hair and make-up stylist Andrea Claire.


    Watch a Gnossem-produced behind-the-scenes video here and browse more of my advertising photography portfolio here.

  • COMMENT

    01

    May

    Returned From The Road: Sam's Reflections On His Journey

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | 2 Comments

    In the final installment of Sam McGoun's cross-Cambodian adventure, our hero -- whom over the past few weeks has had time to reflect on his epic adventure -- pens an open letter to his friends, family and supporters.


    Dear friends,


    It is with the deepest heartfelt gratitude that I thank each and every one of you for supporting me and the students of Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School over these past several months.  Your messages of encouragement gave me the strength to continue in my physical challenge, and both your time and financial contributions will power us forward well into the future.


    As I reflect upon my journey across Cambodia to benefit the students of this special school, I am often overcome with emotion -- all very positive and all very powerful.


    Today, as I will do for many days, weeks and months to come, I am attempting to process these emotions.  That is, I am attempting to draw out the deeper meaning -- a conclusion or revelation, perhaps even a philosophy -- that I can use to help guide me going forward.   As we all know, a profound life experience is often the best opportunity to learn and grow as an individual.

    So what then, are the conclusions, revelations or philosophies that have resulted from my running, biking and swimming 670km across Cambodia to benefit the students of Sala Bai?  There are many; below I share two.


    True happiness requires a purpose and passion in life

    From my perspective, the only definition of success is true happiness.  And while true happiness eludes many of us, I am pleased to share that I’ve found it with the help of Sala Bai and its inspirational students.  My true happiness is knowing that I have both a purpose and a passion in this life much bigger and far more important than me.


    My purpose is helping others -- giving more in this world than I could possibly ever take.  My passion is Sala Bai, and more specifically, giving young Cambodian women access to education and employment in the hospitality industry.


    My true happiness, therefore, is the result of helping others, and in particular, the students of Sala Bai.


    To be clear, there are other core ingredients required for true happiness -- ingredients that I am blessed to already have present in my own life: my health, my family and my friends.  And indeed, while everyone is different, I feel confident that true happiness will continue to elude us if we

    don't have a purpose or a passion or if we do not make these about other people or other things that benefit humanity overall.  For me, this is eliminating poverty and fighting human trafficking by educating and employing the students of Sala Bai.  For you, it may be raising your children with a value system that enables them to be good (and happy) adult human beings.


    Two things are for certain:  one’s purpose and one’s passion are individual choices, and these are two ingredients required for our own true happiness.


    Smiles have no language barrier

    Smiles are universal signs of welcome and respect.  I speak exactly three words of Khmer (Cambodian).  Most rural Cambodians speak about the same amount of English.  Our ability to speak each other’s language has absolutely no bearing on our ability to welcome one another or show a simple sign of respect. Throughout my 670km journey, I was the beneficiary of literally hundreds of smiles.  Little did I know that such a simple gesture could have such a profound and positive impact upon my own outlook.


    Without a doubt, the smiles of Cambodian men, women and children gave me the motivation and strength to finish my days' physical commitments.

    The reality is that most of the smiles I received during my journey came from people who earn less than USD$50 per month, who barely have enough food to survive, who work in harsh conditions more than 12 hours per day, who have little or no education and who have little or no access to even the most basic healthcare.  These kind people welcomed me into their communities and respected me in the process with genuine smiles.


    Truthfully, most days I’m so “busy” getting from point A to point B that I walk around with a blank facial expression that is so unwelcoming you’d think I didn’t have facial muscles to form a smile.  What’s my excuse?  Clearly, there isn’t one.  Enough said.


    It is time to smile.  It will welcome others within your immediate surroundings and show them a sign of respect.  And if you need another reason:  I promise it will make you much happier in the process.


    My journey has just begun

    While I have completed the physical journey of crossing Cambodia to benefit the students of Sala Bai, the emotional journey and my lifelong commitment to fighting human trafficking with education and employment in hospitality has only just begun.  You can follow and join this journey

    by 'Liking' Touch Sala Bai on Facebook, by visiting the Touch Sala Bai website or by writing to me directly at smcgoun@touchsalabai.com.  We will ensure that you receive periodic updates from Touch Sala Bai about upcoming events, important developments on the fight against human trafficking and the progress of past, current and future Sala Bai students.


    And while I have several more reflections that I look forward to sharing with you in the future, it's time to bring this chapter to a close.


    I would like to thank the three people who have given a voice to this cross-Cambodia journey, and more importantly, the students of Sala Bai: Scott Woodward, Mike Rogers and Meghan Shea are the truly gifted professionals who lent their talents to giving voices to those individuals who do not have them. Through their still and moving images, they have told a story that connects not just our minds, but also our hearts, to something far more important than ourselves.  Without them, none of this would have been possible.  Scott, Mike and Meghan, thank you for following your own dreams -- you continue to inspire me, and others, to do the same.


    And finally, on behalf of Jean-Paul and Emmanuelle

    de Thomas, the students of Sala Bai and the members of Touch Sala Bai, I thank you all for making a difference.


    - Sam


    To help celebrate Sam’s journey and to support the fight against human trafficking, please donate to Touch Sala Bai today.  Donations to Sam's cross-Cambodian journey will close on Monday 7 May.


    Did you miss our daily "Reports from the Road" during Sam's cross-Cambodian journey?  Catch-up on all of Sam's adventures and experiences here.

  • COMMENT

    06

    Apr

    Report From The Road: "We Can Do Anything"

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | 3 Comments

    Kep to Sihanoukville

    We spent last evening on the beach following a seafood barbeque, serenaded into dreamland by a local Cambodian wedding and a chorus of wild barking dogs.  Falling asleep after midnight did not keep Sam from setting out at sunrise on the final day of his cross-Cambodian odyssey.


    Sam ran along the seaside in Kep, a sleepy coastal town once a glamorous resort destination founded as a French colonial retreat.  The town reached the height of it’s popularity in the 1960s, and today is dotted with the select few French-style villas which survived the Khmer Rouge regime.


    Sam departed Kep with his sprits high, pounding the pavement and making great time as he arrived 16km later in Kampot, a small city renown in couture culinary circles for it’s pepper.


    Stopping for our last lunchtime picnic just outside Kampot, Sam was fueled-up for the final stretch of his race by indulging in bologna, cheese and jelly sandwiches. Seriously.


    Sam brought a deep reservoir of focus and strength to the final segment of this journey, which included 80km on his

    mountain bike followed by a further 20km on foot. Somewhat ironically, the steepest terrain of Sam's entire journey was to be found in the final half of today’s trek.


    Our crew expanded in the final hours with the welcome addition of Sam’s mother and father who traveled from the States to help watch Sam complete his race and support his venture.


    We arrived in the coastal city of Sihanoukville just as the sun began to sink into the sea, casting the city in a triumphant golden hue.  Sam was single-minded in his focus to finish his journey at the exact beach that the Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School students visit during their annual graduation celebration.  To reach this beach, Sam conquered seemingly unending inclines and deftly navigated streets packed with tourists, motorcycles, and touting restaurateurs.


    At the brink of total exhaustion, Sam arrived at the waters' edge and dove into the Gulf of Thailand, still wearing his running shoes, Sala Bai shirt and a newly-born feeling of exaltation.


    For Sam, diving into the ocean completed his circle: he had followed the actual journey taken by one recent graduate,



    Khatna, from her floating village in Mechrey on Tonle Sap Lake to the sandy beachfront of Sihanoukville.


    It was an emotional few moments after Sam emerged from the water and embraced his parents on the beach, remarking with conviction, “Anything is possible. We can do anything we put our hearts to; all we need is a little support from our friends and family”.  Sam is a proof that a committed individual can accomplish anything.  After these brief and eloquent words, Sam hugged each of his parents and left the beach for a well-deserved hot shower and comfortable night's sleep.


    Over the course of seven days, Sam cycled 503 kilometers, ran just over four marathons, swam in one lake, and crossed one river.  Sam has completed his journey.


    To help celebrate Sam’s journey and to support the fight against human trafficking, please donate to Touch Sala Bai today.


    Did you miss our previous posts?  Read the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh installments of Sam's adventure.


    - Meghan Shea

  • COMMENT

    05

    Apr

    Report From The Road: Eat, Pray, Kep

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | No Comments

    Takeo to Kep

    We fell asleep last night in a Takeo ricefield to the hums of the resident farmer tending to his fields perched atop his tractor (at 1am).  Joy.  Sunrise came quickly, and Sam took advantage of our auspicious location next to a pagoda by finding a moment to kneel, pray and reflect on his journey before setting out on day six of his cross-Cambodian adventure.  Following this brief spiritual reprieve, Sam bounded out of the campsite and into the town of Takeo. Scott and Mike were equally spry this morning and dove out of their tents to take full advantage of the beautiful golden hour sunlight.


    After departing camp we explored Takeo, a lakeside city that was a stronghold for the Khmer Rouge Regime until 1996.  Sam’s route took him past the grounds of one of the most infamous residents of the city, former Khmer Rouge Commander Ta Mok.  Ta Mok served as the Khmer Rouge’s Chief of Staff in the 1960s and constructed a chilling Brutalist residence in Takeo surrounded by a moat and accessed only by a long, wooden footbridge.


    Sam ran across the bridge and circled the property, now decaying and currently employed as a police training facility.  Behind Ta Mok's home we watched women

    gracefully gliding across the property’s moat in their palm boats collecting lotus flowers; it was difficult to reconcile this serenity with the horrific atrocities committed by the home’s former resident.


    Sam left Takeo, heading for the ocean village of Kep, biking in (literally) asphalt-melting conditions.  After nearly a week on the road, unrelenting heat, and countless kilometers, Sam has developed severe saddle sore on his backside.  It required immediate (and agonizing) attention at lunch to prevent infection.  We were in disbelief that, following a brief lunch break, Sam was ready to pedal for another 20km.


    We took our question to the source, asking Sam where on earth his energy came from, to which he responded, “Honestly, I‘m not entirely sure where [it] is coming from.  It’s just kind like [I am] on a mission now; it’s uncomfortable but [I] just do it.”


    We tipped our hats to Sam as he strode in Kep; six days down and one to go.


    Our goal is help Sam raise USD$15,000 for Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School before his adventure is over.


    As we write this, Sam has raised $10,245 with 24 more hours to go.  If you haven’t yet donated, please do so today.


    Did you miss our previous posts?  Read the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth installments of Sam's adventure.


    - Meghan Shea

  • COMMENT

    04

    Apr

    Report From The Road: Resolute & Resilient

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | 3 Comments

    Sa Ang to Takeo

    We picked-up where left off last night, grateful to be hosted in a local (and active) pagoda in Sa Ang.  Upon our arrival late last evening, Sam explained to the pagoda’s head monk that he was running across Cambodia to expose the risks of human trafficking, after which the monk promised to accompany Sam to the river's edge when he embarked on his swim across the Mekong River this morning.


    We awoke at dawn amidst the hum of monastic rituals; the night rain had purged the air and for a few splendid morning hours we were dust-free, and the countryside was bathed in ochre-colored light.  We set-out early to meet the river that was our current-laden foe mere hours earlier. It was a quite a team that stood on the shores of the muddy Mekong, ready to support Sam’s swim: a scruffy-looking documentary crew, seas of curious onlookers, vans and pick-up trucks waiting in the wings, and a lone monk cloaked in a glorious orange robe, offering his blessing to Sam's journey.  Sam dove in and crossed the Mekong, keeping pace with a rustic plank-style barge, emerging on the other side strong and prepared to begin running, biking, and sweating.


    For the second part of day, the photography and video teams split from Sam and headed back into Phnom Penh to

    learn first-hand about the realities of human trafficking from survivors themselves.  Thanks to our friends at the Cause Effect Agency, we were able to connect with some incredible women who are part of the Voices For Change program with the Somamly Mam Foundation and AEFSIP.


    As explained on her website, the Somaly Man Foundation is “modeled after Somaly’s life example...[and] Voices For Change is designed to give survivors an opportunity to help themselves by helping others, to have their voices heard in the courts of law and public perception, and to have influence and impact on effectuating change...Each one of these women has lived through horrific conditions, and has emerged as young leaders, for Voices for Change.


    “Co-founded by sexual slavery survivor, Somaly Mam, the foundation works to eradicate human trafficking, liberate its victims, and empower survivors so they can create and sustain lives of dignity."


    We were honored to have the chance to interview such courageous and strong women.  They have lived through unimaginable atrocities and have survived to inform and educate others on the realities of trafficking.  These interviews will feature in the forthcoming documentary by Persistent Productions about Sam's cross-Cambodian

    journey, articulating why this cause is important and why Sam wants your support to help prevent sex trafficking before it starts.


    Donate to support Sam, Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School and the fight against human trafficking.


    Did you miss our previous posts?  Read the first, second, third, fourth and fifth installments of Sam's adventure.


    - Meghan Shea

  • COMMENT

    03

    Apr

    Report From The Road: From Rice Field to River's Edge

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | No Comments

    Skun to Sa Ang

    Sam began his journey early this morning by running through the small village of Phao Chum in An Lon Chey Commune.  Local residents were curious about the blonde man jogging through the center of their kampong, but no one more than the community children.  Sam collected a small entourage of 4, 5 and 6 year-olds who joined him for a mid-race stretching session, followed by a heated foot race.  Arriving at the Mekong River midday, the wide water vista was a prelude for this evening's face-off with river.


    We rolled into Phnom Penh at lunch hour and Sam was quickly bobbing and weaving through the web of urban traffic, running past grand French colonial architecture, local markets, Independence Monument and The Royal Palace, all the while encircled by the buzz that is Cambodia's capital.  It seems that every new day usurps the traffic insanity of the previous ones: exhaust, haze, dust and smog abound, causing Sam to exclaim mid-run, “I think I’ve eaten an engine today.  At least a V8.  On second thought, make that a V12”.


    Today Sam’s shirt reads “Stop Human Trafficking Before It Starts”.  He chose to wear this shirt while running through Phnom Penh as it is the destination for many

    trafficked women.  Organizations like Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School aim to help prevent trafficking before it begins by giving young women and men the opportunity for an education and employment.  ECPAT Cambodia (End Child Prostitution, Abuse and Trafficking in Cambodia) reports that as many as one third of the trafficked victims in prostitution are children.  Learn more about the severity of human trafficking in Cambodia here and here.


    The latter part of the day was spent battling the rain as Sam cycled out of Phnom Penh and headed for the river crossing where he planned to swim across the Mekong.  The showers were relentless, and soon it was thundering and the crosswinds were howling.  It was 7pm by the time Sam arrived at the river, and the mighty Mekong's currents were strong and the water was inky black.


    Sam was determined to swim, but the risks were immense. Local boats refused to cross because of the strong currents, and the crew appealed to Sam to reconsider, expressing our concern for his well-being.  After a long and painful deliberation, Sam decided to postpone the swim.  The team will resume the river crossing tomorrow morning at dawn; this evening we are happy to report

    that Sam is safe, and we’ll be counting our blessings as we make camp at a local pagoda in Sa Ang District.


    Donate to support Sam, Sala Bai and the fight against human trafficking.


    Did you miss our previous posts?  Read the first, second, third and fourth installments of Sam's adventure.


    - Meghan Shea

  • COMMENT

    02

    Apr

    Report From The Road: The Dust Bowl

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | 3 Comments

    Prei Kuk to Skun

    We awoke by the river in Sambor Prei Kuk in northern Kampong Thom and spent the morning exploring 7th century pre-Ankorian temples before Sam hit the road.


    He cycled through town, keeping a strong and steady pace, while the menagerie of traffic barreled past him.  Sam shared the road with apathetic cows, mobile farm equipment, scooters piled sky-high with bamboo and 8-seater vans carrying more than twenty people, including a half dozen travelers perched precariously on the roof.  In the midst of this controlled chaos was Sam’s bright orange shirt emblazoned with the words "Front Office", paying homage to the Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School student group he ran for today.


    Following a brief respite at a local restaurant, Sam hit the pavement.  Steadfast in his commitment to the Sala Bai students that his running segment be at least 20km a day, he began his run at 7pm and was guided into camp by the beaming headlights of a motorcycle escort glowing softly through the dust.


    After another long day on the road, Sam will curl-up under the stars, bedding down tonight in a rice field in Skun.

    Donate to support Sam, Sala Bai and the fight against human trafficking.


    Did you miss our previous posts?  Read the first, second and third installments of Sam's adventure.


    - Meghan Shea

  • COMMENT

    01

    Apr

    Report From The Road: The Journey Must Go On

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | No Comments

    Kampong Kdey to Prei Kuk

    Today day was filled with dusty roads, rural villages and a significant serving of determination.  We began the morning with breakfast overlooking the idyllic 12th century Kampong Kdey Bridge.  After dining in front of this ancient architectural structure, Sam set out on his bicycle.


    Today’s ride took us past lively vignettes in the village of Khoum Damrey Slap: baths with water buffalos, rice farming, volleyball games and a most cinematic scene of village women and girls schnok-ing where they plunged fully clothed to the bottom of a muddy river, throwing down their nets and bamboo traps and, moments later, dredged-up their catch of trey phtok, a local freshwater fish.  This all-women group flowed rapidly down river and we found ourselves racing to keep up with this delightful cacophony of laughing, catching, and swimming.


    Today’s physical journey was a testament to Sam’s will and resolve; a mid-morning routing faux pas had Sam riding an additional 30km in oppressive midday heat.  With temperatures high and a profound amount of dust on the road, Sam had to work hard for each kilometer.  Resolute in his commitment to physically power himself the entire way,

    Sam pushed on until well after dark explaining, “What’s important is that I do the journey no matter what happens. Mistakes, incorrect [routes], it doesn’t matter.  Not everyone can just jump in a car and go.“


    Sam was unwavering in his commitment to the students of Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School and is determined that this race help fundraise for their program.  He was on the road today for 140km over the course of 13 hours.  It was a powerful thing to behold.


    Donate to support Sam, Sala Bai and the fight against human trafficking.


    Did you miss our previous posts?  Read the first and second installments of Sam's adventure.


    - Meghan Shea

  • COMMENT

    31

    Mar

    Report From The Road: The Race Is On

    Filed under Adventures, Philanthropy, Travel | 2 Comments

    Mechrey to Kampong Kdey

    The team awoke this morning on a floating crocodile farm to the cock-a-doodle-doo's of the resident rooster; and from there, the day got increasingly colorful.


    The reason for our aquatic overnight was because Sam began his race at Mechrey, a floating village on the Tonle Sap Lake, and the hometown of Khatna, one of Sala Bai's graduates.


    After a ceremonial visit with Khatna and her parents, we said goodbye to her family, and Sam set out to take the first plunge of his cross-Cambodian challenge.


    Sam bravely dove into the cloudy snake-filled waters of Tonle Sap and, as the largest freshwater lake in Southeast Asia, he had the tall task of negotiating it's strong currents. Thankfully, there was only one casualty from our nautical morning: Mike’s Nikon AW 100 camera sadly plunged to the bottom of lake during a rogue inflatable kayak incident.


    After conquering the swim, and following a quick change on the boat, Sam stepped foot on dry land and began his run for, and to, Sala Bai Hotel & Restaurant School, where more than 50 students lined the street and energetically cheered him on.  After greeting him, the students became a

    bicycle entourage and joined Sam for the rest of his run, cycling by his side through the streets of Siem Reap. This lively entourage journeyed from Sala Bai to the Angkor Wat Temples, dotting the dusty roads with their bright orange shirts and even brighter smiles.  It was a striking and emotional scene: Sam running, students cycling, all against the backdrop of some of the world’s most spectacular ancient temples.


    For most adventurers this would have been enough action for one day (month, year, etc), but not for Sam.  After the temples, Sam bid adieu to the students, hopped on his bicycle and, battling the sandy back roads of rural Cambodia, pedaled another 70km to Kampong Kdey. Nearly 17 hours after he began, Sam successfully completed the first day of his adventure.


    Did you miss yesterday's post?  Read the first installment of Sam's adventure here.


    Donate to support Sam, Sala Bai and the fight against human trafficking.


    - Meghan Shea

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