







West Forty-fifth Street

Piccadilly Line, London
I know it's juvenile and stupid, but I couldn't resist. Sorry. And yes, the brick wall really is that color.
a new level of class!
hahahh! nice series!!!
It's particularly funny for me after the main topic of conversation in my office at the end of last night was a basketball player named Dan Dickau.
"Dickau drives it home!"
"Dickau... exploding in the paint!"
"They're all over Dickau!"
I need help.
you've gone cock-crazy!
Wow, what timing, Mike! Talk about being in the right place at the right time. You should SO submit that series to MAXIM or a similar pub and make some bucks off of it!
It's ok, when ever I take a Piccadilly line train I smirk at Cock(fosters) too, and I was such a serious child! :-)
i was just listening to The Faint - Erection when i came here. fun. kinda. great series.
U are truly adolescent. I congratulate you.
Very adolescent, I love it!
wow! This reminds me of a picture I took of a lady grinning and pointing at a sign that said "C. Dick's on Broadway."
lovely photos.
Funny! Esp. when he bends over. You should run that in a magazine.
cock...yes...cock...extremely distracting...
What is the cross street of this place?
Between 6th and Broadway.
Niced use of pics, words and imagination. The other day I heard somebody with the name of Dick Long, imagine whenever the guy was called at school by his family name first and his antonym last?
Cheers and Happy Shooting!
Hey, I spent most of my childhood in Cockfosters, went to the church, the Scout group, and have family there... Nice to see in some small way, that this still relatively quiet suburb of London has some international appeal... even if it's for the wrong reasons!
I have a passion for photography myself, and do admire your work...
Yours with a slice of funk,
-funkyberry-
Ah the times when you wish you had a camera. In Edinburgh recently there was a huge banner advertising a Titian exhibition, reading TITIAN in huge letters. Underneath the second T there was an arrow pointing to the entrance. Some poor unfortunate was stood directly beneath it. Ah, what a simple crop could have done in those circumstances.