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Motion Pictures Film of the Week: Andy Southard Jr's Home Movies

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Jive-Bomber, Nov 21, 2024.

  1. Jive-Bomber
    Joined: Aug 21, 2001
    Posts: 3,837

    Jive-Bomber
    MODERATOR

    Jive-Bomber submitted a new blog post:

    Film of the Week: Andy Southard Jr's Home Movies

    [​IMG]

    Continue reading the Original Blog Post
     
    AndersF, dwollam, rottenpop and 8 others like this.
  2. Ryan
    Joined: Jan 2, 1995
    Posts: 22,073

    Ryan
    ADMINISTRATOR
    Staff Member

    It was 2009, and I found myself strapped to a phone line for over two hours, caught in the orbit of Andy—a man whose dedication to the craft of photography bordered on religious mania. The call was supposed to be prep for some interview feature, but it turned into a freewheeling symposium on obsession, artistry, and sheer unrelenting grit. Andy was a goddamned dynamo. And I needed to know: how the hell did he take so many photos? What kind of lunatic workflow powers a man like that?

    His reply was simple, almost unnervingly so: “I carried a camera with me at all times. If I was going to dinner, I took my camera. If I was going to the store, I took my camera. My camera was just an extension of my hand for much of my life.”

    An extension of his hand. Like a six-shooter for an outlaw, or a drink for a dying man. That camera was him, and there was no separating the two. I could feel his conviction crackling through the receiver.

    “I try to do that,” I confessed, “but I get jaded. Lazy. And sometimes… well, I feel self-conscious about it. Like, I’ll have this camera swinging around my neck, and I catch people looking at me like I’m some kind of tourist in life, you know? It feels ridiculous.”

    Andy didn’t hesitate, didn’t indulge my neuroses for even a second: “No. I don’t care about any of that. All I care about is getting the shot.”

    That was Andy. A dude. A real dude. No pretenses, no excuses. Just raw, unfiltered drive to capture the world exactly as he saw it—one frame at a time. Dedicated, thoughtful, relentless.

    I really don't know if there was anyone more important to this thing of ours than Andy Southard.
     
  3. Andy Southard Jr. was a family friend since the late '60s . . . My father was also a professional photographer / hot rodder . . . Dad a always used to say that Andy was "the Automotive Photographer's Automotive Photographer".

    I think it's absolutely wonderful that Trent Sherrill is preserving Andy's archives . . . and making them available to the public (and helping Andy's widow Patty).
     
  4. Automotive Stud
    Joined: Sep 26, 2004
    Posts: 4,362

    Automotive Stud
    Member

    Awesome video! Random detail I noticed, I never really thought about hoodies being a thing back then, but there they are on a chilly morning, wearing them under their car club jackets.
     
    Just Gary likes this.
  5. goldmountain
    Joined: Jun 12, 2016
    Posts: 4,665

    goldmountain

    I remember seeing a lot of those cars in magazine articles from when I was a kid. Can even recognize the people in the pictures.
     
    Just Gary likes this.
  6. bschwoeble
    Joined: Oct 20, 2008
    Posts: 1,055

    bschwoeble
    Member

    Great video. Look at all the multi carbed. motors, and they drove them. So many experts today saying multi carbs are too much trouble. It would be interesting to see negative comments on all the things wrong with those rods.
     
  7. El Jefe
    Joined: Dec 12, 2002
    Posts: 743

    El Jefe
    Alliance Member

    Incredible footage and the lives those folks were livin back sure looked glorious. Different world. As watched the video hoping to recognize a a particular hotrod aside from Flat-Top Bob's Cusey Roadster, around 9:51 in the film, BOOM!! there it is in color, the Bill Marshall '32 Roadster with the white top and white upholstered running boards, Screenshot_20241124_211701_YouTube.jpg that now luckily resides in my garage untouched, looking exactly like it did in that film in 1961.
     
  8. @El Jefe . . . I sure love the Bill Marshall '32! . . . eagerly awaiting the next issue of TRJ!
     
  9. Speaking of the Bill Marshall Deuce Roadster (now in Steve @El Jefe W’s stable):


     
    lurker mick likes this.
  10. RodStRace
    Joined: Dec 7, 2007
    Posts: 5,617

    RodStRace
    Member

    Just went back and watched it again. Amazing!
    I was just a kid in Nor Cal at the time, but hoodies were standard outdoor wear near the coast.
    I kind of forgot that over the years, and didn't like the modern connotations of the return in popularity. The movie smacked that bias upside my head.
     
  11. El Jefe
    Joined: Dec 12, 2002
    Posts: 743

    El Jefe
    Alliance Member

    This is all so amazing. Having the history on this car is still so intact. So much of the artifacts related to the roadster are still with it. Trophies, dash tags from all the roadster round ups, original photos, record covers and more.
     
    HEMI32 and lurker mick like this.

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