Photog Suspended After Snapping Pantless Ski Lift Mishap
Poor Marty Odom. Most photographers who work snapping pics of skiers and then hawking them to rich fat cats DREAM of getting the shots he did. When a poor schmuck got his pants stuck on a chair lift and was left dangling bare bottomed and upside down Marty did what ANYBODY would do, he took some great photos. Now it looks like he may lose his job, AND have to apologize… Sorry Marty, great pics though.
From the SmokingGun.com
JANUARY 14–Embarrassed that one of its employees took–and then distributed–photographs of a skier dangling upside down and pantsless from a Vail ski lift, a Colorado firm is threatening legal action in a bid to suppress any further publication of the now world famous images. In a cease and desist letter e-mailed today to The Smoking Gun, SharpShooter Imaging (SSI) claims that its employee took the photos “while on duty” and that he violated the firm’s “commitment to respect the privacy of all resort guests at every resort SSI represents.” The company, which employs photographers to take photos of visitors at various ski resorts and other attractions, contends that it owns the copyright to photos taken by Marty Odom of the January 1 mishap on a high-speed lift in Vail’s Blue Sky Basin. Odom, who initially told TSG and other news outlets that he was not working when he took about six photos of the dangling skier, has since changed his story to say that he was on the SSI clock when he stumbled across the newsworthy incident. Odom was suspended from his job after one of his photos appeared in the Vail Daily News along with a photo credit. Two of Odom’s photos–along with three other images of the dangling skier–were published on January 6 by TSG, triggering stories worldwide about the bizarre Vail accident. The coverage was a black eye for the ritzy Vail ski retreat, which is operated by Vail Resorts, Inc. Since TSG’s publication of the dangling skier story, the firm’s stock price has dropped more than 20 percent (though disappointing early-season visitor numbers at its ski resorts were likely more responsible for that price dip).
