Anna Nicole Smith's daughter, Dannielynn Birkhead, is a model now

Is the child overexposed?

It's hard to believe, but Anna Nicole Smith's young daughter, Dannielynn Birkhead, is now six years old. She is, though, and guess what? She's also a GUESS model, just like her late mother. New photos of Dannielynn modeling for GUESS Kids hit the Internet this week, and they are stunningly beautiful. I'm not surprised, given her mother's extraordinary good looks.

I have to wonder, as I often do, whenever children are front and center in modeling campaigns, TV shows or films: Is their early fame taking away from their childhood?

It's hard to deny that Dannielynn Birkhead inherited her mom, Anna Nicole Smith's remarkable face and apparently, her ability to model as well. The new GUESS Kids photos show a beautiful little girl dressed to the nines, and loving the attention. Hopefully she loves the attention, because if not, that would be bad for her down the line.

Given the huge paternity scandal involving this gorgeous child, is it any wonder that some question whether Dannielynn's dad, Larry Birkhead, might be exploiting his daughter? The way I see it though, she's just like any other child model, or celebrity kid. Suri Cruise is in the tabloids week after week, no matter what's going on. Jennifer Lopez used her children in Gucci ads. And truth be told, I haven't seen many photos of Dannielynn Birkhead until now.

The important thing here is that Dannielynn Birkhead is enjoying herself. She's six. Six year old little girls love to play dress up. My sincere hope is that Larry Birkhead isn't forcing the little girl into doing this ad campaign, just to make money. If she likes it, and it doesn't interfere with her normal life too much, I don't see the problem, do you?

Being selfish on Thanksgiving

Wanting to spend time with family instead of working.

Maybe I’m being selfish, but hear me out. I thought it’d be a time to relax during Thanksgiving week, hang out with my family and eat my body weight in turkey. I was wrong. My grandmother immediately asked me to take candid photos of everyone throughout the night, since I’m the designated photographer of the family.

Let’s stop here. For some reason, my family consistently thinks that I want to take pictures for them for free, or for well under what I charge. And since they’re family, I’m obligated to. Which I don’t really mind that much, but let’s keep going.

When I take pictures for free, especially on Thanksgiving, I’m giving up my time so I can work. That time can be spent sitting on the couch and catching up with family members or playing outside with the kids. You may be thinking, “Stop being so dramatic! You’re still visiting with family even if your face is behind a camera!” Maybe you’re right. Let’s move on.

These photos are going to take up space on my computer. Yes, I know, I can delete them after I send them to my grandmother, but it stresses me out! I already don’t have enough space as it is!

Probably the biggest reason I hate working for free is editing. It can take HOURS just to edit a 30-minute session! Now, editing isn’t always necessary for free work (after all, it is FREE), but the day after Thanksgiving my aunt decided that I would love to take their Christmas photos for free. If they’re sending out my photos to their friends, do you think I want them to be unedited? Of course not! So I spent an hour working on 10 photos that we took in about five minutes.

Maybe I’m being a selfish jerk? I think in the end I just need to get a little courage and learn to say “no.” 

Nuclear Weapons 6 - Mahattan Project 5 - The Gadget

           While the Manhattan Project was developing plutonium production facilities and producing plutonium at Hanford, Washington in the early 1940s, the Project was also working on the design of a bomb that would utilize the plutonium. It turned out that gun-type design being worked on for a uranium bomb would not work for a plutonium bomb. Plutonium-239 was being produced in reactors but the reactors were also creating plutonium-240 as well. P-240 spontaneously fissions and produces neutrons. In a gun-type bomb, these extra neutrons would cause the bomb to explode early before a full critical mass of plutonium was formed. The resulting fizzle blast would be much weaker than a full nuclear explosion.

           After ruling out the gun-type bomb design, work was begun in 1944 at Los Alamos, New Mexico n a new implosion bomb design. The design was based on a sphere of plutonium with a neutron initiator at its core. The sphere was to be surrounded by conventional explosives that had different burn rates. When arranged properly and triggered in the right time sequence, the explosives would create a compression wave focused inward. This compression wave would compact the plutonium sphere into a smaller sphere that was much denser than the original sphere. Because the critical mass is a function of density in a volume, the amount of plutonium would be a critical mass in the smaller sphere. The neutron initiator was included to insure that the reaction triggered properly.

          On benefit of this design was that it required much less plutonium than the amount of uranium needed for a gun-type bomb. The implosion design only required about fourteen pounds of plutonium. The new design was very complex and pushed the state of the art for creating a compression effect. While the gun-type design was simple and reliable enough that it was not felt that a test was needed, the implosion design was so new and difficult that it was decided to create and test such a bomb before deploying it as a weapon. The test bomb was code named “the Gadget.”

          The Gadget was constructed and a new test site was created in New Mexico near Alamogordo during the first half of 1945. Laboratory leader J. Robert Oppenheimer named the site Trinity in reference to a poem by John Dunne. A one hundred foot steel tower was constructed for the test to simulate the air burst of an actual bomb to maximize effect. The components were assembled in July of 1945.

          Early on July 14th, 1945, the Gadget was detonated in a blast equivalent to twenty kilotons of TNT. The blast created a crater of radioactive glass below the tower. The shock wave was felt over one hundred miles away. The mushroom cloud towered to about eight miles in the sky. The very first nuclear blast ever created by the human race lit up the surround mountains brighter than the sun and awed everyone who directly witnessed it. There were a number of reports in the area of a huge bright explosion which was explained as the explosion of an ammunition magazine to the media. Oppenheimer later remarked that he was reminded of a passage in the Hindu Bhagavad Gita; “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.”

This is a photograph of the Trinity fireball sixteen milliseconds after detonation:

Pages