Riki For Creem Magazine

Buying a house has so taken over my life that I completely forgot I had never shared with you guys all the outtakes from my shoot with an LA based musician named Riki for Creem Magazine. Way back in June I was in LA because I wanted to visit my brother and his family and I had some photos in a Superchief show so that seemed like the perfect excuse to get out there. LA is an expensive trip even when I am sleeping on my brother’s couch, so I reached out to some clients to see if I could find some work out there and one of those was Creem Magazine. 

I have worked for Fred, my editor at Creem, for years back when he worked for Brooklyn Vegan and then later when he was working for Vice and Noisey and now that he’s at Creem we had been looking for a reason to work together but things kept falling through. He wanted me to shoot some photos for the “Creem Dreem” section because it’s about sexy musicians, and I am of course me. So I started reaching out to LA friends about musicians that might work and found two that Creem was interested in. I reached out to both of them and one was on tour and the other I never heard back from. I guess it wasn’t going to work out…

My friend Chad Alva gave me a bunch of great suggestions including Anastasiya who I ended up doing two photo shoots with while I was out there, one of which I still need to publish, but his suggestion they really loved was Riki. I only had her Instagram account and I saw she had never read my message so I reached out to him again to see if he would text her for me in case she hadn’t seen the IG message and it turned out she just doesn’t really mess with social media that much and hadn’t seen it. Unfortunately the day she finally got in touch with me was my last day in town and she was all the way out in San Pedro, about an hour from where I was on the eastside of LA. But fuck it, I was down and I jumped in the rental car and headed out there. 

I probably would have had her meet me somewhere in the middle but she wasn’t quite ready and I knew a great place to shoot in San Pedro. My friend Aiden Ashley lived out there and we did an amazing shoot with Leda Elizabeth out there on an old military base. We shot in right before the pandemic and it’s one of my all time favorite shoots. (You can see the whole thing on Girls of DBB if you are interested in that kinda thing.) So I told Riki to meet me out there…

And of course when we got there it was closed to the public. Fortunately San Pedro is home to the Port of Los Angeles and there’s all sorts of cool stuff out there. Riki had a few outfit changes so we just walked around and took photos for an hour or so. We hit it off great and I think we took some really fun photos and honestly I can’t wait to take her photo again even if it’s not for something as cool as Creem Magazine. Seriously she is such good people and you should go listen to her music

We took a ton of film and digital photos, but this edit is pretty small because it’s more or less the edit I sent to Creem and I think I am fine with just publishing the highlights. Some of the film photos were in my original 2025 35mm post, but there’s new stuff in here plus a bunch of digitals. I hope you dig the photos. 

Now go look at Riki’s Creem Dreem feature and then come back to see all the outtakes below!

2025 Gathering Of The Juggalos Day 2 – 8.14.25

Turns out I have come down with some sort of plague from the Gathering, I tested negative for covid so it’s most likely Clownitis. I am trying my best to get all these photos edited and up, plus I gotta unpack and then repack cause I am going on vacation on Wednesday. Not sure if I can get it all done while I am feeling like hot garbage, but I am trying.

Speaking of hot garbage, the first thing I photographed on day 2 of the 25th annual Gathering of the Juggalos was the Faygo Wet T-Shirt Contest. To be clear, the hot garbage thing was a joke, you know I love my juggalos deeply and I had a couple of friends enter the contest and quickly became friends with a bunch of the babes hosing the juggalettes down. The Gathering is great place to meet hot naked people to photograph, but also no one wants to shoot at the Gathering so, hopefully I will run into some of them one day.  

I shot a million photos of the wet t-shirt contest but I can’t post most of the publically, luckily I have my site Girls of Driven By Boredom which has the full gallery of wet t-shirt contest photos uploaded to it already. Might be worth signing up for because there will be more juggalette content where that came from.

Anyway the contest was chaotic as always. I honestly kinda hate shooting them cause I feel like kinda a creeper and it’s sort of the same thing every year, but it’s such good content I have to. I can’t tell you how many people email me about NSFW juggalette content over anything else I shoot. It’s wild. But yeah, as someone who is a professional naked person documenter, it feels weird to be part of a thraul of people just trying to take photos they can get off to at home. I mean, no shade, but that’s just not what I am about. 

Remember that time two sentences ago when I said it was always the same thing every year? Well not this year. This year the contest was won by an elderly woman who had the entire crowd chanting “Grandma! Grandma!” Turns out she is an OnlyFans model named Linda Hope. What an absolute legend. Seeing her win really warms your cockles. 

I guess day two was just a NSFW day, and a day of me going back on things I just said. Remember a few paragraphs ago when I said no one wants to shoot at the Gathering? Well it turns out I did do a NSFW photo shoot. I photographed a juggalette last year named Lil Filth (the set is up on Girls of DBB) well this year I went up in the hills with her and her friend to take some photos and it turns out we were standing in poison ivy but they were wearing tall shoes so I think everyone was okay. That shoot will be coming sooner or later, but I did post a few previews in this gallery.

Man, we are 500 words into this thing and we haven’t even got into the music and the rest of the day. I only photographed three musicians on day two, ¡Mayday!, Waka Flocka Flame and of course the Insane Clown Posse. I have photographed ¡Mayday! before and they aren’t my thing but people seem to dig them a lot, but I honestly can say that about most of the musicians at most festivals so that’s no slight to them. 

Waka Flocka I have now photographed four times, three times at the Gathering and once at the AVN Awards. Everytime he put on a show and I appreciate the hell out of that shit. This year I ran into him getting his face painted (huge shout out to the juggalette who pointed it out) which made for some fun photos. His set was insane and when he jumped in the crowd I immediately jumped in after him. I covered his 2015 set for Vice after I jumped into the crowd with him so of course I had to do it again. But turns out 35 year old me and 45 year old me are not the same. I got straight fucked up in the pit. I still got some great shots, but I am getting too old for this shit. It was still a blast.

After that ICP performed their first of two sets at the Gathering. I have photographed them so many times, and honestly I alway suck at it. These days I try to stay out of the Faygo rain and just make sure I get a couple decent shots and get out of there before I get too soaked. Didn’t really work out for me this year and my lens got blasted. Between my sticky camera and getting beat up in the pit I decided to call it an early night. I think I was back to my hotel by midnight. 

The only other thing I should mention about day two is that you might recognize Sidam, the ski masked from the YouTube show Channel 5. If you follow me on Instagram you might know I had a recent bone to pick with Channel 5 for using one of my juggalo photos without permission, well let’s just say we had a conversation about that, but I will keep you in suspense until I post the Day 3 photos…  

Now go check out all the safe for work photos from day two of the 25th annual Gathering of the Juggalos. 

Girl Talk – 8.23.09

I want to start this throwback post with an even older tangent. It’s 2004 and I am going to art school in Richmond, VA. In my free time I am managing this two man dance pop band called The Gaskets. They are one of the biggest bands in Richmond, but they have just about zero following anywhere else. So when we got a slot on this electronic music showcase in NYC we couldn’t have been more excited about the opportunity.

We drive up to NYC the night before the show and stay with my friends in downtown Brooklyn. The next day we jump on the subway and see some movies or whatever we did, it was 20 years ago, my memory is a bit hazy. But what I do remember is that when we get back to Brooklyn, our car is gone. Apparently we parked too close to a hydrant and got towed. We have to be at this show and their one instrument, a Yamaha RM1X sequencer, is locked in the truck of the car. Turns out our car is at the impound lot at the Navy Yard and it’s gonna cost $250 to get it out, and that doesn’t include the ticket. The lot closes in in less than an hour. We don’t think we are going to make it but we get on the Subway and get down there as soon as we can. I can only imagine what it looked like to locals when they see three hipsters absolutely sprinting through a pretty bad neighborhood trying to get there before the lot closes. I think we actually got there slightly after it closed but we somehow managed to get it out anyway.

When we get to the show it’s in the basement of the Delancey. There might be 25 people there max. The show was pretty fun anyway. These days when you hear electronic music you are probably thinking EDM, but this was a lot of supremely weird noise acts and the kind of rappers that are more influenced by jam bands than hip hip. The Tom Tom Club because their son was performing. My friend Luca, aka Drop the Lime/ Curses also played that night, but I didn’t we didn’t become friends until years later. There was another artist there who would hit play on his laptop and then just kinda run around the crowd. I didn’t get it at all. He went by the name Girl Talk.

A year later The Gaskets get asked to play this big art party in Richmond. Half gallery, half show at one of the bigger venues in the city. Not a lot of local acts could headline there, maybe us, Municipal Waste and Avail so we just sort of assumed The Gaskets were the headliner, but when the flyers went up, Girl Talk was headlining. I was legitimately pissed. Not only were we not headlining, but we were opening for some guy who played other people’s music and just ran around the club. I didn’t get it. We almost dropped off the bill. But when that night came I finally understood what Girl Talk was all about. 


Girl Talk doesn’t make sense when there are 20 people in the crowd, but when there are hundreds, it is absolute chaos. I have photographed him a half dozen times and his shows are more fun than probably any other DJ although he used to have t-shirts that said I’m Not A DJ so maybe I shouldn’t call him a DJ. But whatever the case he’s so much fucking fun live. 

Okay, now, after all that, we finally get to these photos that I am re-uploading. We go back in time to summer 2009 and the infamous Jelly NYC Pool Parties are on the Williamsburg waterfront, which I guess is now Domino Park. These parties were always a blast, but they also brought out a bunch of randos and as someone who was very serious about being a hipster, they were a little to basic or something for me. I pretty sure that’s a joke, but I would always rather be in some small bar than outside at festival or something. That being said the Jelly parties were legendary. 

Going back through my original blog post apparently it started raining in the middle of the show and that’s why I started shooting the crowd more than the actual performance. I was trying to protect my camera a bit and there was as much chaos in the crowd as on stage. People were pushing through trying to get on stage to join the fun. A bunch of photographers were up there too, ruining my shots so the crowd was the better option anyway. Nothing annoys me more than photographers getting in the way of the show. Stop making that shit about you. The only exception if if you are working directly for the artist or the event, and even then, get your shots and get out of the way. 

Anyway, the show was still a blast and after the show I ran into a bunch of friends. Man I miss just knowing people wherever I went. RIP Curtis. A few of us went over to Brooklyn Bowl for the after party. I honestly just went because Brooklyn Bowl had pretty damn good food and I wanted some BBQ but I did take a some photos there too that are at the end of this gallery.  

These photos really capture a moment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. You can just see the beginning of the end of the short time period where it was the center of cool. The waterfront is still there but apartment buildings were going up where there were factories. The Jelly NYC parties were still happening but they were no longer at McCarren park pool. The crowd was becoming less hipster, and more finance bro. You can just see it changing in these photos. 

Okay, once again I have written 1000 words for no reason. I need to make these shorter and sweeter so I can do them more often, but I like writing and hopefully a few people are getting something out of this stuff. Hopefully I will be back soon but in the meantime enjoy some photos from August 2009.