Essential The Official Boxing Random Thoughts Thread...All boxing heads ENTER.

patscorpio

It's a movement
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
116,076
Reputation
11,348
Daps
239,948
Reppin
MA/CT/Nigeria #byrdgang #RingGangRadio
RIP Howard Bingham :wow:

Howard Bingham, photographer of Ali, dies at 77

Howard Bingham, friend and photographer of Muhammad Ali, dies at 77

LOS ANGELES -- Howard Bingham, longtime personal photographer, confidant and perhaps the closest friend of boxing great Muhammad Ali, has died at age 77.

Harlan Werner, Bingham's agent and longtime friend, told The Associated Press that the photographer died Thursday.

No cause of death was given, but another friend, sportswriter Mohammed Mubarak, said Bingham had been in failing health in recent months after undergoing two surgeries.

During a friendship that spanned more than half a century, Bingham took literally hundreds of thousands of photos of Ali that ranged from the three-time world heavyweight champion's many ring triumphs to quiet day-to-day moments with his family.

He captured the young, handsome champion preparing for his first heavyweight championship fight against Sonny Liston in 1964 and, years later, the aging Ali, hands shaking from Parkinson's disease, preparing to light the flame and open the 1996 Summer Olympics.

He photographed Ali greeting everyone from former President Bill Clinton to South African President Nelson Mandela to black Muslim leader Malcolm X. And he was there with his camera when throngs of awestruck fans surrounded the champ on the street.

Photographer Howard Bingham, right, chronicled the life and career of his friend Muhammad Ali, whom he met in 1962 on assignment for a Los Angeles newspaper. M. Caulfield/WireImage
Although known largely as Ali's photographer, Bingham also had a distinguished career as a freelancer.

He photographed the 1967 race riots in Detroit and was at Chicago's Democratic National Convention in 1968, when violence exploded between protesters and police.

In the 1960s, he developed enough trust with the fledgling Black Panther Party that its members gave him free reign to photograph them -- and their weapons stash -- for a feature Life magazine had planned.

After the story was not published -- "They got scared," he later told the Los Angeles Times -- he included the photos in his 2009 book, "Howard L. Bingham's Black Panthers 1968."

"He was one of the greatest storytellers of our time," said Werner. "You look at the history in his photos. And the photos themselves, they're just amazing."

The public has never seen some of the best photos of Ali, Werner added, because the unfailingly modest Bingham never wanted people to think he was cashing in on their friendship. But he did publish a book including some of them in the acclaimed 1993 photo memoir, "Muhammad Ali: A Thirty-Year Journey."

Bingham started off his career in 1962 as a fledgling photographer for the Los Angeles Sentinel, a small African-American newspaper, and was assigned to cover a fight by an up-and-coming young boxer then known as Cassius Clay.

He would tell Ali years later that he had no idea whom he had been sent to photograph, but when he saw Ali and his brother wandering around downtown after the fight, he offered to show them around. Later, he invited them to his mother's house for dinner.

It was the beginning of a friendship that would endure until Ali's death in June.

The eldest of seven siblings, Bingham was born in Mississippi on May 29, 1939, and moved to Los Angeles as a child.

He eventually enrolled in Compton Community College, where he failed a photography class. He blamed it on spending too much time having fun and not enough studying.

But he applied to be a photographer at the Sentinel a few years later and, after repeated inquiries, he was finally hired.

"I went off on jobs, came back with underexposed film, blurred film, no film -- and I always had an excuse for what went wrong," he told the Los Angeles Times.

Eventually, he learned enough about photography on the job to land the Ali assignment.

Bingham is survived by his wife, Carolyn, and son, Dustin. Another son, Damon, preceded him in death.
 

Newzz

"The Truth" always prevails
Supporter
Joined
May 10, 2012
Messages
44,924
Reputation
7,470
Daps
104,632
I agree. I understand the flat fee for regular HBO and Showtime fights, because this fights operate at a loss and it takes the networks to purchase them to make decent purses. But if a fight is big enough for a PPV they should be splits. Fight does well the fighters should benefit the most and eat off their success. If the fight bombs than the fighters shouldn't get paid as much. Just like regular dudes earning a commission on sales.

Pacquiao's last fight showed you why evaluating the fight as a total event matters. In a one dimensional space Broner and GGG are being offered great purses. But the world is more complex. Both fighters also give their opponents monster paydays because of them being the opponent. True cases where the B-Side directly effects the A-Sides pockets. In cases like that I don't see why a split wouldn't be ever not be fair


Exactly. This is how I feel as well.



I'm pretty sure JCC Jr isn't going to accept just a flat fee either:manny:
 
Top