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The journey to the Mentawai was the most strenuous trip I have ever attempted in my life. Frankly, if I ever top it, I will be deeply surprised. Not only was it mentally shattering but physically arduous. I thought I knew what I was getting myself into when Joey mentioned the trip months ago, but nothing I could’ve done would’ve adequately prepared me for the trip. Plans had actually been on and off for 4 months while Joey and I both waited on potential clients to come through. However, 2 days before I was to head home for my 23rd b-day, I found out Indonesia was happening 100%. This put me in complete crunch mode as I had to finish the Relient K documentary and a Tiger Army Webisode. I ended up taking 3 hard-drives to Oklahoma just to finish the work load before I left for Indonesia.

The day came(August 7th) and I took my pack, camera, and computer. Only taking the bare essentials. Meds, a couple pairs of clothes, socks, and underwear. My trip started as I left two of the most important women in my life crying. I was going to an island halfway around the world to stay with tribes, having absolutely no communication, and basically no information about exactly what we’d be doing. After a 1 hour trip to Tulsa, I boarded my 3 hour flight to LAX. I changed from the domestic airport to the international airport. During the 5 hour layover I spent most of the time talking to an ER Nurse named Justice, who was moving back to the Philippines to go to medical school. She wants to be a surgeon. Right before I boarded my 15 hour flight to Manilla, the airline informed us we would not be stopping in Guam, but flying straight to our destination. It would put us in Manilla at 3am, instead of 6am. This presented a big problem because my friend Apy was picking me up from the airport at 6am. I had no way of calling her so I sent a quick Facebook message hoping she would get it. I landed at 3am, went outside the airport, and sat on a railing just hoping she got my message. Well 6:30 rolled around and I finally see Apy. She told me she didn’t get my message. My flight to Jakarta didn’t leave til 10pm that night so I spent the whole day in Manilla hanging with Apy, Derrel, & Benjo(2 of her awesome friends). We went straight to get breakfast where they made me try local food. I had chicken and steak at 7am. Although it was good, it was way too early for steak and chicken. After breakfast we visited some historical spots, market places, and the slums. The slums were just visually depressing. Sheds stacked on sheds, stacked on sheds. We walked around there for a bit and they warned me not to take my phone nor my wallet.  Supposedly people will just straight up snatch em. We had lunch, relaxed for a while, and then we all went and got Thai massages. It was exactly what I needed. It was $3 for a hour! Derrel told me at the parlor the girls were fighting over who would massage the American. It is insane how much I stood out there. Not only because I am a foreigner but my piercings and tattoos were so interesting to them. They kept grabbing my arm and touching my tattoos. After the massage we went to the mall of Asia to eat some seafood. I started to feel sick after dinner. Pretty sure it was due to exhaustion. I hadn’t slept but 3 or 4 hours since I left Oklahoma. They took me to the airport for my 8pm flight and we said our goodbyes. I had such an awesome day there. I miss Apy, Derrel, & Benjo. As I waited for my flight, I bounced in and out of sleep.



Derrel and Benjo


The lovely Apy.



$3 an hour. It was so good!

I took a 3 hour flight from Manilla to Jakarta where I was met by Willem and his friend Wilma. Quick backstory. Will lived in Indonesia for 6 months with a group of other students. He speaks Baja Indonesian fluently. Very cool. So at 12pm, we drove an hour to her house where Joey was already asleep. I was afraid for my life on the drive to Wilma’s house. Her friend drove so fast, and of course there are no traffic laws. We sped past everyone, weaving in and out of lanes. I already had anxiety from all the flights, and the insane driving multiplied it. After a couple hours of sleep we had to be up and make the hour drive back to the airport by taxi. From Jakarta we took a one hour flight to Padang where we met our guides Ricky and Charles. We drove an hour before we had breakfast, where we discussed our plans for Siberut. We thought we were staying the night in Padang before we went to Siberut but last minute we found out we were taking a ferry that night. We went to Ricky’s uncle’s to consolidate our gear. Take the bare minimum. Joey and Will came from a workshop in Australia so they had extra gear that wasn’t necessary to bring. We all went to the island with a couple pairs of clothes, but the main bulk was obviously our gear. We left his house to hit up a bank. The economy is so bad here, the banks maximum accounts were between $1000-$1500 American. While waiting at one bank, Will and I fell asleep in the lobby. We still hadn’t had a break in traveling. After the bank we went to the local market for food and supplies for Siberut. We bought rice, noodles, cheese, some condensed milk, sugar, and a lot of tea. We also got beads and tobacco to give as gifts to the tribe’s people. The entire time we were there someone stared at us. It was worse than Manilla. I have never felt so uneasy. Will would talk with everyone and they would get this surprised look on their faces. Everyone stared at his gauged ears and touched our tattoos.

We made it to the docks that night to catch the ferry. I got very nauseous just by looking at the boat. It’s a big wooden clunker that was packed with at least 200 people. Mainly locals with a few surfers, and tourists. The crowd of 200 people completely packed this ship shoulder to shoulder. There was absolutely no space left. To even walk down the main corridor you’d have to be like Indiana Jones and plan each step so you wouldn’t set off a booby trap. One wrong step and you are stepping on a strangers face, hand, leg, or stomach. If that wasn’t bad enough, it got even worse. Extreme heat and the smell of rich diesel gasoline burning through-out the entire boat. I told Joey I felt sick and I rush to the bow of the boat so I could hopefully find a spot and breathe fresh air. The back of the boat had comfortable room for 15, but there was probably 50 or more people back there. Most of the tourists and surfers attained space in the back, along with 8 muslims straight from Pakistan. They were having discussion with a minister who I later found out lives about 10 minutes from me in California. We were both very shocked. I stood in the middle of the crowd waiting for someone to relinquish their seat or make space on the bench. A muslim ,named Nasiem, saw me fanning myself so he moved over creating a spot for me. All of them smiled when you looked at them, and they gave everyone food and offered them places on their prayer mats to sit down. I found myself in between two of the muslims while one of them fanned me. Much relief, air! The boat ride was a 10 hour over night cruise. About 30 minutes into the slow churning of the boat, a woman pushed me aside to start throwing up over the side. Now anyone that knows me well knows I hate throw up more than ANYTHING. At that moment, I knew I was in for one hell of a night. After an hour the “throw-up fest” opened up in full force. At one point I counted 15 people throwing up over the sides, 6 of them being the Pakistanis including Nasiem. They were way too close to me. I felt sicker and sicker each time someone threw up. I started talking with Nasiem, between times he was throwing up, and I explained my fear of throw up and he started giving me advice to conquer this. The muslim on the other side grabbed my hands and started rubbing heavily on the space between my thumb and index finger. He said it would help, then right after, he started puking. I couldn’t help but laugh to myself. About 3 hours into the boat ride he told me to sleep and he put my head on his leg. At first I was very hesitant, but I remembered learning that friends are very “touchy” where they come from. Friends hold hands, lean their heads on each other, and wrap their arms around each other. It represents friendship and closeness to their brothers, not anything homosexual. So I laid my head on his lap and I fell asleep for 2 hours. I was woken by loud cracks of thunder and bright flashes of lightening. The ocean acted as a mirror reflecting mother natures fury. Lighting up the entire ocean, highlighting each raindrop. It was beautiful. I put on my rain jacket and got pelted by rain for about an hour while I tried to sleep. Joey woke me to film some stuff while everyone was sleeping, so after filming for only about 20 minutes, I returned to the back where some girl had stolen my seat. I was so pissed! She had been sleeping next to her boyfriend(they were cuddling so I assumed) and now she had her own spot. She didn’t have the decency to move when she saw me sit back down so I weaseled my way back next to Nasiem and fell asleep for about 30 more minutes before I was woken up at 5am to the Muslims praying and singing very very loudly. I decided I wouldn’t be sleeping anymore. After Nasiem got finished praying, I talked with him the til we docked at 7am. We talked about religion, work, family, and love. He was so interesting. I will never forget meeting 8 of the nicest strangers in the world, all muslims from Pakistan, who any other day I would’ve felt uncomfortable just by being around them. Big kick in the teeth and I felt awful for it. As we approached Siberut it was the most beautiful sunrise I have seen to this day. The ocean, dolphins, and a rainbow. The color scheme was just mind blowing. It sounds like a stereotypical of a dream, but I am actually humbled that God could create something so surreal, for those few minutes, perfection had taken completion in my eyes. We had arrived, and Siberut had welcomed us to the island!


Iphone footage showing some traveling to Madobag.



Everyone cramped like sardines. (JoeyL Photo)


Everyone sweating on the boat, it was so hot. (JoeyL Photo)

Puke.

We took a short 15 minute drive to get to our pong pong boats. They are long wooden canoes with small engines. We packed up all of our gear and started our 4 hour ride up the river. Several times along the way it started raining on us. How absolutely refreshing and beautiful it was. We finally made it to Madobag where we met with our other guide Gejeng and cook Peno. He lives there in the government village with his wife. When we arrived we were greeted with hugs and a lot of odd stairs. We took off our wet shoes and socks and all just laid down for a while. We ate some rice and noodles as more and more people started showing up to the uma(Mentawai name for house) we were at. There were probably 20 people on the little porch just watching us. After sleeping a couple hours I was woken from counting sheep around 3am. My stomach had enough. I am sure it was the travel and change of food. I rushed out into the jungle with a bucket of water in the pitch black of night and had pretty terrible bowel movements. Not only was it pitch black and I was in the forest alone/scared, but it was raining. I think that was one of the worst experiences on the whole trip. It was an awful night! I got around 6 hours of sleep which was the most I’d had in 5 days. We met with our Sikere Shaman porters Aman Lala Ogo, Bajak Tarason, and Bajak Toikoik. Intimidation is the first thing that comes to mind when you are staring one of these guys down. Their choreographed full body tattoos, bold jewelry, cut muscles, knives hanging from their pen(loincloth), and if that isn’t enough for you then maybe their sharpened teeth will put the cherry on top. If I was in the woods and came across a Sikere, I’d be sprinting in the other direction before you could blink. We were giants compared in stature but I wouldn’t let that influence your judgement. That morning Joey took photos as I worked on my Letus Extreme. It was the first day and my 35mm converter malfunctioned. Letus + moisture + rainforest = Failure. After Joey took photos we packed our things and headed for our first location. The Atabai! The clan was a grueling 4 hour hike away. Three quarters of the trek involved climbing a mountain. Many variables made this the most difficult hike I’ve ever done. Narrow paths with big drop offs, tree snakes, the heat, heavy packs, and did I mention it was very steep? Bare in mind the rain forest is devilishly slick, making trekking that much more punishing. What amazed me was the architecture of the path. All the paths were either carved rock, carved roots, and strewn out wooden logs. As we engaged in the difficult hike, I couldn’t help but respect how long it must’ve taken to engineer such paths. Most of the wet rocks had bowl like cuts to create steps. Paths running next to trees had been dug deep revealing the roots, to which acted as individual stairs. Then hundreds and thousands of small logs laid across paths, to make it easier to trek through the ankle deep mud. Most logs had machete cut outs every few inches to make walking on them more manageable. The Shaman made us walking sticks after observing our failing attempts to walk naturally. We seriously looked like we were walking across a decrepit wooden bridge crossing a lake of lava. Trudging along, arms out to our sides for balance, looking down at one shoe going in front of the other, tongue sticking out concentrating on every shifting ounce of weight. A walking stick was an absolute necessity. I can’t tell you how many times I would’ve fallen without it.) The Sikere walk around barefoot and can make it over the mountain and back in 3 hours. It took us 4 hours just to make it one way. We had so much gear it took 15 locals from Madobag to get it all there. A quarter way through the trek, it looked like Will, Joey, and I had just gotten out of the shower. Water ran off of us like a rain cloud was cruising over our heads. Not a single Mentawai or Sikere had a drop of sweat on them. We had barely made it up the mountain before we could barely catch our breath. Some of the Mentawai women made fun of us and asked if we needed to be carried over the mountain! We all laughed pretty hard. Its funny, I thought I was in good shape but that mountain made a fool of my confidence. After 4 hours of near falls, many rain showers, losing liters of sweat, thick narrow paths, and staring at the ground, we finally made it to Atabai.


Just arrived to Madobag!


I was eating some very sour fruit he picked from a tree.

Just chillin, eating fruit.


Some of the paths they’ve made. (JoeyL Photo)

Taking a break from trekking. (JoeyL Photo)


After 20 minutes of trekking. (JoeyL Photo)

More of the paths.

In the Atabai , we stayed with Ta Jia Jia. He was the most intimidating of the Sikere in my opinion. His uma was in an stunning location, and it housed his wife and 5 beautiful kids. As tradition goes, the first night guests arrive, they slaughter a pig and we feast! Joey and I were so tired, we actually slept through the squealing pig for about 15 minutes. Will later told us the Shaman made fun of us for sleeping through it. Later I was woken up by Will saying “Hey Joey, they are about to kill the pig, do you want to watch it?” Joey replied, “No, but Cale should film it.” Pretty sure Joey doesn’t remember saying that, but it’s definitely funny now. I got up and watched the fascinating ritual. Ta Jia Jia and the other Shaman sat in a circle and sang as Ta Jia Jia rubbed a chicken on all the Shaman and the planks of the house. They do this to ward of evil spirit. Then they cut the pigs throat and catch all the blood in a bucket they will later boil the pig in. Yes, they boil the pig in its own blood! FTW! It is Taboo for blood to touch the ground, so they make sure it completely bleeds out in a bowl. After the pig is killed, Shaman sing non stop until the pig is cleaned, cooked, and served. This takes around an hour. That night I woke up several times to hear the Shaman singing and talking. I don’t know how they have so much energy. They next morning we left early to go monkey hunting. The Shaman loaded up with their bows, poison tipped arrows, and machetes. I came to later find out, Shaman always stay up the entire night before a hunt, singing and praying, asking for help on the hunt. Half way to our destination Toikoik sung to the spirits to bless the hunt. Soon after we came to a clearing where a big hill was cut out and completely encased by the mountain. In the middle the hill was a hut that most Shaman stay in the night of a hunt. The location is important because it is in the clearing, surrounded completely by a tree line. They stay there overnight and listen for animal sounds, so they know which way they need to trek. It started pouring, just as we arrived. I couldn’t help but stand out in the rain and close my eyes. A perfect unearthly feeling that will never leave my thoughts. We sat in the hut for a couple hours just listening, talking, resting. For once it finally looked like the Shaman were getting tired. Lala fell asleep and drooled all over himself. Joey snapped some good shots of it! Along the way back to Ta Jia Jia’s uma we actually heard some monkey’s calling loudly. Lala said they were too far to track so we just continued on to the uma. At this point we had been constantly doing something since we got there and still lacked any basic hours of sleep. Will and I were quite delirious. That night we named one of Ta Jia Jia’s pigs Mohawk. Then we started debating who was tougher out of Babe or Wilber (Charlottes Web). We debated for about 15 minutes before Will said, “Man Babe would take a s*** in Charlotte’s Web!” I don’t remember the last time I laughed so hard. We both realized our minds had completely strayed off somewhere away from our bodies. That night we went to bed early and got some essential rest.


Ta Jia Jia’s uma.

This is where they cook and boil all the water.

Waiting for the pig to be killed.

Singing while the pig is being cleaned.


Large opening during the hunt.

Joey with the Shaman in the clearing. Epic.


Made it to the hut as it began raining.  (JoeyL Photo)


BLISS. (JoeyL Photo)


Toikoik was asleep. (JoeyL Photo)

Lala drooling all over himself. (JoeyL Photo)

They blend in so well with the jungle. (JoeyL Photo)

Hanging out after the hunt.

The next morning I woke up at around 4:30am. It had rained the majority of the night. The most refreshing thing of each day was walking down to the stream at sunrise and cleaning up. Washing my clothes, taking a river bath, and washing my face supplied me with more joy than I would’ve imagined before the trip. After breakfast we went to another uma where the women were going fishing. We followed them for a while as they caught little minos. I filmed and Joey took photos. He would get neck deep in the water with his Phase One. Crazy guy that Joey. After filming I walked back to the river bed where Ta Jia Jia and Aman Mita Punin were smoking and talking. I pulled out my Iphone and watched their eyes light up. They were so confused by this magical gadgetry I had unveiled. Mita Punin’s face was just priceless. One thing I found particularly interesting is, besides the reflection in the water, these people have never seen themselves. I mean we were only the 3rd white people he’s seen in his life! They are always wanting you to film them and take their photo. Then they want to see them immediately. Last night I turned on my laptop to transfer footage and the black screensaver with swirling lights came on. The entire uma surrounded it and just stared for about 15 minutes. I then thought I would introduced them to PhotoBooth, which they stared at diligently, transfixed on themselves like I had put a spell on them. At first, no-one waved, no-one smiled, and no-one spoke. They just stared at themselves. I tried to grasp this concept, but I couldn’t. I didn’t look in a mirror the entire time on the island, and that itself was weird. Imagine living your entire life and only knowing what you look like from a water reflection. There is no concept of looks and stereotypes. There is no ugly, hot, cute, skanky, preppy, gothic, nerd etc…..no hollywood, no NYC, no celebrities, and no illusion of what America has ordained the standard for the world. There’s absolutely nothing for them to compare themselves to. I find that absolutely beautiful.

His face was priceless when I showed him my iphone.

Uhhh cohmphouter?

Showing them photobooth. (JoeyL Photo)

They joke about everything.

Joey taking charge. Just wait til you see the photos.

Will being Will.

The next night was my worst sleep yet. There are two small mats, less than an inch thick, that Joey, Will, and I take turns sleeping on. Typically one wouldn’t even consider this mat as something to even make a difference, but on the island it was a luxury! That day we decided to kill two chickens for lunch. Ta Jia Jia’s daughter Pet Pet would leave at sunrise(4:30-5am) and not come back til she caught the chicken. We ate chicken three times on the island, and each time it took her about 6 hours to find and catch them in the jungle! One chicken was for us, and one for the Sikere. When the Sikere killed theirs, they involved us in their ritual. They sat Will, Joey, and I down and rubbed the chicken on us. As Ta Jia Jia was rubbing the chicken on us he had a sinister grin as he spoke to the spirits. All the Shaman started laughing loudly. He thought it would be funny to say something like, “Please keep the spirits from this uma and the people here, but if you must, please take your wrath out on the white people.” He said he was kidding and continued to wish well on us. After lunch we found out we would be witnessing a ceremony called “Ulia Sibau” which is when a young Mentawai Sikere becomes a Shaman! The number of Sikere’s becoming Shaman is diminishing rapidly, so we felt extremely fortunate to witness this event in person. That night, while waiting for the ceremony to start, I passed out twice. After they ate, they pulled out some drums and started the “Turug Dance.” The father Bilijo (pronounced exactly like Billy Joe) and son would dance around each other and stomp their feet as the drummers played them on. Joey took photos as I filmed. They would dance for about 10-15 minutes, then break for a little while. They repeat this over and over. After 4 dances, we went back to Ta Jia Jia’s uma. As we slept, the stomping of the floorboards and beat of the drum echoed throughout the jungle the entire night.

Our Beds.

Bilijo’s uma.

View from the front of his uma. Amazing.

Will balancing the big octabank.

Very cool set up Joey did before the Ulia Sibau.

Will’s face says it all.

Singing in-between dances. (JoeyL Photo)

Filming the Turog Dance. (JoeyL Photo)

Aman Tetap performing the Turog. (JoeyL Photo)

Ta Jia Jia secretly cursing us.

Including us in their rituals.

The next day we trekked to a fallen Sago tree so Joey could photography 6 of the Shaman. I tried my best to film, but these conditions are the absolute worst. My hvx has somehow began to malfunction. I would have to put my battery in and out anywhere between 50-80 times. It would automatically record on start-up and none of the camera buttons would function. After popping the battery in and out several times, I could finally film. After that monotonous process, imagine trying to get smooth shots while walking in thick mud, stepping over brush, logs, and plants. An absolute nightmare trying to achieve my shooting style. After we left the Sago tree, we had just made it back to the uma before the heavens opened up and it rained harder than any day before. Thankfully we made it back because we forgot to take our rain covers to the tree. It could’ve been a disaster. The rain and cool breeze had put us into complete relaxation, and then the Uma started shaking violently. As the uma shook for a solid 10 seconds, we all ran outside to look at the trees. We didn’t have to worry about buildings falling on us, but the massive trees in the rainforest. We later found out that earthquake was registered as a 6.7. That first earthquake acted as a portal to what was coming. We had multiple earthquakes every hour, that continued for the remainder of the trip. I went to the national earthquake registry and counted over 60 earthquakes we had while staying in Indonesia. Several were registered over 6.0. I imagined since the Mentawai lived in the Ring Of Fire, they wouldn’t worry too much about earthquakes. It wasn’t until the Shaman said they were scared that made me nervous. They hadn’t had this many frequent earthquakes in years. Something beautiful in my eyes happened every time an earthquake struck. Ta Jia Jia would run through the uma to check on his family. That is the first thing he did every single time. The tribes are very family oriented. It was very evident to see the love they have for each other. Being around them really made me miss my friends and family even more. A couple times I wanted nothing more than to tell them how much I love them. When the earthquakes came they would grab their family and everyone would go outside, most going to the banana grove. This event goes back to an old Mentawai story.

“A long time ago there was a young boy, who was the most skilled builder the tribes had ever seen. He built the most spectacular uma’s in a mind-blowing 24 hours. Other tribe members became jealous and plotted the murder of this young talent. A family bribed him to build an uma in trade for several livestock and durian trees. Upon building the uma, they had him dig the stilt holes extra deep. While digging one they dropped a beam on his head killing him. They then covered him up and planted the beam over him making it “the perfect crime.” They had all but gotten away with it, until the feast held at the uma’s completion. They feast hosted several tribal people including the victim’s sister. While in the uma, she was visited by her brothers spirit who warned her to leave the uma immediately and go to the banana groves. They all mocked her for acting weird as she gathered her food and went to the grove. As soon as she made it to the grove, the earth began to shake knocking the uma to the ground and killing everyone inside. So now, every time there’s an earthquake, they go to the banana grove in respect and remembrance of the atrocity and justice served centuries ago.”

-As told by Aman Lala Ogo

Trying to get good shots…..difficult.

The mighty Sago tree.

Ricky finding out a reflector also doubles as an umbrella.

Joey and Will headed in from the rain.

We had several earthquakes that night.

For the 2nd half of the story, read “Mentawai Part 2″
It will be up in a day or two along with other various content from the trip.
Also be sure and check Joey’s page.  He will be posting stuff from the trip soon and I promise you will want to see the photos.

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Throwdown

posted in Photography, Uncategorized, blog, film Thursday, April 23, 2009

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I just found out my next documentary project will be with the band Throwdown.  I am very excited to get into the studio with these guys!!!
Project actually starts tomorrow!  I have been busy before but wow are things starting to fill up.  I don’t see a rest in work til around October. 
I am very very thankful to be getting so much work with the economy being how it is.  Very thankful.

There will be so much more content to view soon.  A lot of exciting things for me to share soon.  Stay tuned!

Hope everyone is well.
Cale Glendening

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Yes those are real worms in her mouth.  Eep.

Well I am back in the office here at Superhero and it feels great!  Loving the vibe and energy.  Joseph is now in the studio and I am STOKED to have him in Murrieta.  Never thought when we met on DH tour we would soon be living in the same town and working together daily.  God is good.  Sorry it has been a while since I updated.  Last week was a crazy one with Relient K, and then I got pretty sick.  One day I completely lost my voice, but still conducted a few interviews.  Dates got changed so many times, and finally I headed home on a few hours notice from when my flight actually left.  I will be back in Cali for 2 weeks and then head back to Nashville for RK again. Miss you guys already.  More Relient K stuff coming soon!

That is Joseph.  He is a good Christian dude, he plays drums in a band, he can speak fluent French, and is from Belgium, so breakfast in bed with him equals Belgium Waffles.
Oh did I mention…..he is SINGLE.  Amazing dude.  Holler at me for his digits. hahahahahaha

These are a few stills from the five short films I worked on in Missouri (Christ In Youth). I can’t wait to see the finished product.  I hope they make an impact on the viewers this summer!

It was soooooo cold down there.  My good friend Corey(above) was on his knees for about hours and hours on that concrete floor.  Way to stick it out man.   You did a great job.

A little term we call “improvise”

Another good friend of mine Kendrea.  You did awesome!

Director MD talking with Derek and Terry (MacGroober)

I really enjoyed this shoot, although we had to rush rush rush.  I can’t wait to see how it turned out.

Bored on set, so I had the make-up department make me look like death.
I must say they didn’t have to try hard nor use much make-up.

As soon as the CIY vid’s are available I will post em up!

I would also like to make a quick shout out and say I am proud of some things my friends are doing. Moving forward with jobs, getting sweet gigs, graduating, keeping community, and most imporantly being leaders.  You are all awesome and inspiring. Keep it up.

Hope all is well!
Cale Glendening

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Vince Gill dropped by the studio to film for the travel channel.  After long debate and beating myself up, I decided to finally go ask him.  Luckily I had Jon Schneck to help break the ice.  Thanks for being my wing man!  I talked to Vince, explained what we were doing, and asked if he would let me interview him. He happily accepted.  I grabbed one light, and mic’d him up very fast.  I didn’t want to keep him any longer than a few minutes.  I had questions I thought of the night before.  When I heard he was coming to the studio to film, I thought of what I would ask him if, best case scenario, he agreed to shoot.  Well I interviewed him with Jon for no more than 5 minutes!  It was the quickest interview I have ever shot.  Luckily I got all I needed to edit it smoothly.  Vince was so nice about everything, so I am very thankful he agreed to shoot.

 

I hope you enjoy Webisode 2.  It was definitely a long week in the studio, but man are the http://www.relientk.com/ guys so rad.  I have been here with them for 2 weeks, but they make me feel like we’ve known each other for years.  I am thankful for them accepting me in as they have.  The RK job has been going so well, they may extend my contract.  I would be spending more time in Nashville, as well as hitting the road with them for a period of time.  God is so good!  I am very very excited for this project.

 

Nashville has been treating me well.  Been hanging out with Brent and Bethany a lot.  Movies, campfires, and today we went to a lake nearby at dusk  just before it started pouring.  We stood along the shoreline for about 10 minutes just letting the rain bomb us as daylight faded away.  I couldn’t help but close my eyes and just breathe.  I live for moments like those.  I get feelings I can’t even explain.

…..and yes.  I shaved my head.

Btw, I will be in Dallas next weekend for a show.  If anyone from home can make it down, that would be amazing.

Hope everyone is doing well.  
To my friends and family,
I love you and miss you.

Cale Glendening

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RK Webisode 1 of 4

posted in Funny, Music, Uncategorized, blog, film Monday, March 30, 2009

 

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I am very excited going into week two with Relient K.  They are legit dudes.  All of them have made me feel welcome and have been patient with me in getting my shots, and interviews.  I try to stay clear and not distract them in their recording process.  They think so much into what they do, and don’t need another guy just making their time in the studio that much more difficult.  Well, I pumped out the 1st webisode and was stoked the band and manager liked it.  Nothing makes me want to work harder, than when a client gets excited about my art, and what I do.  I am thankful for the chance and opportunity to show them what I can do.

I am staying across the street from Ethan Luck and Josh Hernendez.  Again, more good times.  It has been so awesome just meeting new people and seeing old friends.  Hanging with Chelsea and Hannah, and hoping to see my Chatty friends.  While staying with Brent Okuley, we had a tornado warning.  The sky was so beautiful as it transformed from light to dark.  We packed up some stuff and went into the crawl space under the house.  Then just hung out, listened to sirens, the weather beat down, and the forecasters on the radio.  He brought 3 guns, lights, radio, and some other goods.  I brought my computer, harddrives, and camera.  OF COURSE.  Brent is a cool guy.  He is into military like I am.  It is cool meeting others who share the same views and interests.  He also tour manages and does sound for Underoath.  Again, rad freaking guy.  Its been a blessing being able to stay there.

Well here is the 1st webisode.

 

Well be looking back soon as I will be posting more webisodes.  

To my friends and family.  
I love you and miss you.

Cale Glendening

Mari
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Japan

posted in Photography, Travel, Uncategorized, blog Monday, March 02, 2009
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Well let me just start out by thanking God for giving me the opportunity to travel and experience other culture. Anyone that knows me, knows how much I have always wanted to travel. Let this not be the end, not by a long shot. This will be a long post, so feel free to read nothing I say and just look at the photos. It is all good. I don’t expect you to read my ramblings.  Experience driven posts do no justice to the feelings actually felt.

It seems so hard finding out where to begin, so I might as well start at the beginning. The 13 hr flight to Japan wasn’t near as bad as I thought. I watched 4 movies and 3 episodes of The Office. I also played battle ship, mini golf, and hangman. Each seat had it’s own screen, and everything was free. Movies, tv, games, music…etc. It was convenient to say the least. We landed in Tokyo and even though it was around 2am back home, my eyes were wide open soaking in everything. One thing I noticed quickly was that there are a ton of germaphobes here. A lot of the Japanese were wearing masks. Although it makes sense, those masks really don’t do much at all.

We got to our hotel and made it up to our rooms. First, you walk in, put your key in the little slot next to the door, and it turns the room lights on. Then you notice the Japanese art, the bidet(Which actually violated me once. Another story in itself!), robes, sandals, and a fridge full of interesting Japanese food. Each room also had a tea maker and tea. It was all stowed away, very nice and neat. Best part about the room. EVERYTHING was controlled by a little night stand next to your bed. The radio, alarm, every light, dimmers, and even a “do not disturb/service room” button which when pushed lights up a little digital screen on the outside of your door. Amazing! I took a photo of a few of them. I sure wish I had one in my room!

Night Stand

MARI 1

No Orion in my first room. : (

Yes there were insane about Hello Kitty

Well that night I went down to the bar and had myself an ORION. I have been looking forward to drinking some Japanese Orion for a long time. It is the best!

Next day we woke up, had an interesting breakfast, and then drove an hour to another airport where we flew into Okinawa. Btw, the Japanese flight attendant uniforms are amazing. So stylish. That morning we read the same airline we were taking that day and same flight to Okinawa put 40 people in the hospital the day before from bad turbulence. I was a little on edge. Went through Japanese customs and saw our plane. What a monster, holy crap. Inside the plane they had these big monitors. We watched us taxiing, taking off, and landing from some cameras outside the plane. Very cool perspective. Unfortunately, out of the 300+ people on the plane, someone had a heart attack sitting directly across from us. He was conscious the entire time, but you could tell he was in much pain. They hooked up a defibrillator just in case. I have no idea if he made it or not. I pray he did.

3 seats, 7 seats, 3 seats. My word.

We got to Okinawa, got our rental car and off we were to our new hotel. Our car rental place was underneath this restaurant located in a huge tree. It was massive. Well we got to our other hotel the beds were basically sitting on the floor. Tiny room, tiny bathroom, tiny everything. Which leads me to my next observation. EVERYTHING is small here. I laugh everytime we drive, because the cars, vans, trucks, buses, are the smallest things I have ever seen. My arm span is easily wider than the majority of vehicles on the road here. I could seriously sit in the passenger seat and adjust the driver’s side mirror!!! It is so comical! No wonder they can’t drive when they come to the states. Not used to driving a tank! Well, they had an Orion machine next to my room, so I was happy with that. Dinner was interesting. Based off looks, I didn’t want to eat anything, but I did of course and it was awesome. Breakfast, not so much. Fish in my eggs, with something crunchy….sure I will try it for the cultural experience, but no more for me. I have probably spent more on food than anything. I am all about trying to try new things, and experience the local fair. I am in Japan, why would I not try their delicacies? I have eaten things like Japanese steak, japanese king crab, raw tuna(i am talking about legit raw tuna chunks), pig ear, seaweed soup, yakasoba, tofu soup, moss burgers, okinawa doughnuts, okinawa sugar cane icecream, and the best freaking sushi I have ever had. In all honesty, I haven’t had a bad meal since I have been here. Minus the fish scrambled eggs, I would gladly eat any of that stuff again.

Yeah, pretty cool.

baaaaaaahahahahaha

HAAAAAHAHAHAHAHA

Rainbow Roll - Incredible

Spicey Tuna Rolls with wasabi sauce. OMG! Best I have had.

Hello Japanese food. You tasted good. ORiiiiiiiiiiOOOOOOOOON

We had a day off during the week. We had to drive an hour to our new hotel and our final destination for the remainder of the trip. We drove for a little while, checking everything out, and according to our GPS, we were once driving in water. That was a first among many on this trip! Well we found a place to park, which still boggles my mind how small the parking spots and roads are here. We walked around a bit and found an underground market. AMAZING!!!! There were somewhere around 200 shops at least, and we didn’t even go down each alley way. They had some of the coolest little stores. One isle of what seemed to be limitless trinkets, gizmos, gadgets, whohaws, watchumacallums, and dodaws….. Walking around I came across a few Japanese hipsters, but this girl in particular caught my attention. I walked to her and said “photograph/email” while using my hands as sign language. I can only image she was like, wtf does this dude want. Well, she nonetheless let me photograph her really quick. I took 3 photos, but found one I decently liked. I gave her my business card and said “arigatou gizimos!” She actually emailed me later saying she doesn’t speak english, but used a translator to tell me thanks for taking her photograph. So awesome! Everyone was stylish. They wore Nike Dunks, Slick puffy coats, a lot of cool hats, and seems all the women either wore knee high socks, or slick leggings. Amazing.

I wanted that poster so bad!

Underground Mall

One Isle

Broom player was baller.

Mariiiiiiii

(Above photo LARGE)

3rd and final hotel was insaaaaaaane.  Higher than any of the other building.  My boss was nice enough to book me a room facing the ocean.  I fell asleep outside one night.  Love it.
The view from my room couldn’t be better.  What a beautiful world we live in.  I have been so many places, but in reality only seen about .00001% of the world.  I am in love with our creator.

Entrance to Hotel

Loved the Design

(Above photo LARGE)

And another. View LARGE

(Above photo LARGE)

Pan 1, Overcast

(Above photo LARGE)

Pan 2, this is why I woke before sunrise everyday.

(Above photo LARGE)

Well it finally came time to leave. We left at 9am and then had the following return trip home.
1 hr drive to car rental.
Short bus ride to airport.
Check in bags
Security
3 hour flight from Naha to Tokyo.
Check out bags
1 hour bus ride to international airport in Tokyo
Check in bags
Security
11 hour flight to Dallas
Check out bags
US Customs
Re-check bags
Security
2 hr layover
1 hour flight from Dallas to Tulsa
Check out bags
1 hour drive home to Muskogee.
Whewwwwwwwwwwwww

Plenty of empty seats. Just what I like.

Tokyo

Looking for his house

The has been one of the best experiences of my life. I still can’t get over the mentality of their culture. Everyone bows, which is like shaking someone’s hand. It is honorable. They take honor in everything they do, including their professions. I have never had such good service in regards to anything. Taxi, expensive restaurant, hole in the wall restaurant, fast food, bar, hotel, gas station….etc. Everyone welcomes you when you enter, bids you farewell when you leave, and wears a smile. It makes me feel warm inside. They are also very very clean. I have witnessed them cleaning and nurturing things I never would have thought twice about. For the population per capita being so substantial, I can’t believe how clean the city is. I hardly see any graffiti at all. Their streets are clean, all their cars seriously look brand new. They have vending machines EVERYWHERE. Sometimes in the most desolate places, boom there’s another vending machine. They are all clean, no scratches, no graffiti, no vandalism on them. It is so odd for me. There seems to be absolutely no shame in what they do, and no egotistical propaganda. I wish we ,the US, could be a society revolved around that observation. I would gladly go there again and stay for a much longer time.

I am thankful for such an experience, I pray it is only the beginning.

Sponge

(Above photo LARGE)

Cale Glendening

Okinawa, Japan
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Okinawa, Japan

posted in Photography, Travel, Uncategorized, blog Monday, January 26, 2009

I got word this afternoon I will be traveling to the island of Okinawa, Japan!  Tower Inspection has some work to do there, so I was asked to come shoot some more photos for their company.  The towers are only 700 ft, but I am sure it will have an amazing view of the country and ocean.  I am beyond excited, and rumor has it we are possibly stopping somewhere in Hawaii and Tokyo.  I am so thankful I ‘m getting the opportunity to travel and see the world. Traveling is something I want to do more than anything, and God is definitely giving me opportunity to do so.  The trip isn’t until Feb 16th, but it lasts for 9 days, well 7 if you take away 2 days for traveling.  Please keep this trip in your thoughts and prayers, in hopes it goes smoothly.   Thanks guys! 

Also, if you want to see some of the past Tower Inspection photos, they are in the photo section, under “CAMPAIGNS.”

I will be posting some photos from the past trip to Puerto Rico in this blog tomorrow, so be sure and check back!

Cale Glendening

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