Photographer’s Note
This picture (like one or two that will follow it) is from the Canadian National Exhibition and celebrates my love for circuses, fairs, & carnivals – anything with a midway where you can ride on rides and shoot air guns at paper targets to win stuffed toys. A “carny,” as it is sometimes known.
The carny is all about fun and good times, but it’s a tainted, slightly corrupt kind of good time. There’s no doubt that carnies have an unwholesome side that is both tempting and scary. Carny workers have traditionally lived as outsiders (with their own lexicon), and anything outside the mainstream of society is automatically threatening on a fundamental psychological level. Hell, even the name “carny” comes from the Latin word for “meat” (“carne,” although the exact derivation is uncertain) – not the most reassuring point of reference.
Part of this aspect of the carny, I suspect, comes from the fact that it serves the human id, that side of ourselves that wants desperately to be free from the constraints that our conscience and self-preservation normally put on us. After all, it is the place where you tempt death on rides that make you scream, where you shoot guns at targets, where you get childish rewards like huge toys, and where you eat all the unhealthy food the world has to offer.
The carny’s dark side has made it a natural setting for tales of horror and the supernatural. Amongst the best I will note two. First, Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury’s classic tale of a magic circus that comes to town and is up to no good at all. (It’s a setting he used more than once, for instance in the story The Ocotober Country.) Second, Todd Browning’s Freaks (1932), is a film starring genuine sideshow freaks. That seems like exploitation until you examine the story being told, in which it is the “normal” humans, with their superior attitudes toward the sideshow performers, who are the real freaks. (Freaks is also the source of the famous line “one of us,” transformed into a hypnotic chant representing the bonding of society’s outsiders, in the Ramones song Pinhead:
gabba gabba,
we accept you,
we accept you,
one of us).
And for whatever it may tell us about ourselves, the dark sideshow version of the carny has made something of a comeback in recent years, for instance in the Carnival Diablo.
So here’s a salute to the carny. Great times, bad food, and scary rides. Haunted houses, stuffed toys, and overpriced hot dogs. Everything you need.
Isabelle has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
Furachan
(0) 2005-09-08 18:20
What s stunning pic, Lee. The colors POP (and that'S an understatement), but the angle and general flow is absolutely top rate. Excellent. Love it!
Francis
laurak83
(326) 2005-09-09 0:44
I love the colors. you've gotten an interesting view, and still captured part of what the carnival is about. a very unusual note you have left.
rosiegirl
(2042) 2005-09-09 1:59
Fairs, carnivals, they all scare me. Its a bunch jr. highers that are out late at night without parent supervision, filled to the top with sugar, and out riding the zipper to see who will chuck first. Of coarse not too long ago, I would have wanted to be out with them, so I can't complain too much ;). This is a great shot- I love how briliant the colors are. The scary clown faces kind of sum up fairs for me- desturbing, but you might as well go to see it ( and eat the funnel cakes). Great shot- glad to hear more are coming!
Rosie
erdna
(5348) 2005-09-09 16:20
VERY COLORFUL CARNIVAL FLAG AND A THREATENING SKY. vERY NICE PHOTO AND GOOD COMPOSITION. A VERY ETERTAINING AND INTERESTING NOTE.
aNDRE'
devimeuxbe
(55865) 2005-09-12 9:28
Hi Lee
An interesting perspective on this smiling flag.
Nice colors.
Well done
Bertrand
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Lee Sato (ElSato)
(824) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2005-09-04
- Categories: Daily Life, Festivals, Architecture, Event
- Exposure: f/9.0, 1/1000 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2005-09-08 17:43
Discussions
- To devimeuxbe: Merci bien Bertrand (1)
by ElSato, last updated 09-13 21:15 - To erdna: Thanks André! (1)
by ElSato, last updated 09-09 16:42 - To laurak83: Thanks Laura! (1)
by ElSato, last updated 09-09 16:08 - To Furachan: Hello Francis! (1)
by ElSato, last updated 09-08 19:14








