© 2024 WYPR
WYPR 88.1 FM Baltimore WYPF 88.1 FM Frederick WYPO 106.9 FM Ocean City
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

PHOTOS: A Summer Of Community, Despite Social Distance

The annual town meeting in North Andover, Mass., which dates back to 1646, was held outside on June 16 on a high school football field to help keep participants a safe distance from each other.
Jim Davis
/
The Boston Globe via Getty Images
The annual town meeting in North Andover, Mass., which dates back to 1646, was held outside on June 16 on a high school football field to help keep participants a safe distance from each other.

What a strange summer it's been.

All across the United States and beyond, people have changed their daily routines to stay safe during the coronavirus pandemic. An anxious spring spent under lockdown in many parts of the U.S. turned into a summer of continued virtual meetings, financial stress and isolation — along with pent-up desire to seek relief in whatever ways we could. So, plastic partitions went up, town hall meetings moved to football fields, National Parks became even more popular, and indoor movie dates shifted to film nights beneath the stars.

In other words, Americans got creative. Everyday routines and important ceremonies continued around the U.S., but with a very different look.

A workout class at Inspire South Bay Fitness in Redondo Beach, Calif., restricted students to plastic pods in June.
Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty Images
/
AFP via Getty Images
A workout class at Inspire South Bay Fitness in Redondo Beach, Calif., restricted students to plastic pods in June.

With the season drawing to a close, NPR asked photographers to remind us what America has looked like during this summer of social distancing.

Escapes To Nature And Fresh Air

In Phoenix, freelance photographer Ash Ponders spent time at the Salt River in mid-August, a 200-mile waterway on the edge of town that drew locals eager to swim, fish, or go tubing in the sweltering summer months. Though professional tubing operations halted because of the pandemic, the river remained an outdoor escape.

/ Ash Ponders for NPR
/
Ash Ponders for NPR

"Everyone had masks in their pockets," Ponders recalls. When people saw others at the river, "they'd don them ahead of time."

Ponders spoke with a group of friends who had lugged inner tubes and snacks to the river on a Friday night just to watch the sunset. Jacob Willeford, one of the friends, said spending time near the water was better than what he'd be doing otherwise, "sitting at home; furloughed."

At the Salt River, Rachel and Prashan Srinivasan show off the interior of their "pandemic purchase", a 1990s van with a pop-up top and room for sleeping. They bought the van to have a COVID-safe space to travel around in.
/ Ash Ponders for NPR
/
Ash Ponders for NPR
At the Salt River, Rachel and Prashan Srinivasan show off the interior of their "pandemic purchase", a 1990s van with a pop-up top and room for sleeping. They bought the van to have a COVID-safe space to travel around in.


When photographer Chona Kasinger visited a blueberry-picking farm in the Snohomish River Valley outside of Seattle in August, she found field attendants guiding visitors to rows of berry bushes loaded with ripe fruit. The guides were responsible for ensuring that, even on a farm, people remained 6 feet apart and kept their masks on.

This year, Mountainview Blueberry Farm set up designated hand-washing stations, provided sanitized berry baskets, and had customers purchase their berry hauls from clerks stationed behind plastic partitions. Despite the changes to the picking protocol, Keith Stocker, one of the owners, says the farm was as busy as it's ever been.

/ Chona Kasinger for NPR
/
Chona Kasinger for NPR
/ Chona Kasinger for NPR
/
Chona Kasinger for NPR

Kasinger spoke to one group of friends who hadn't seen each other in six months, but arranged to meet to go berry picking — from a safe distance.

"They were just stoked to be able to be together in what they felt was a safe environment," she remembers.


Signs and circles — directing people where to move, stand, or lie down — popped up in many public spaces including in Brooklyn's Domino Park.
Johannes Eisele / AFP via Getty Images
/
AFP via Getty Images
Signs and circles — directing people where to move, stand, or lie down — popped up in many public spaces including in Brooklyn's Domino Park.
Some businesses, including the Los Angeles Zoo, found creative ways to put "6 feet" into context for visitors.
Frederic Brown / AFP via Getty Images
/
AFP via Getty Images
Some businesses, including the Los Angeles Zoo, found creative ways to put "6 feet" into context for visitors.

Celebrations And Milestones Get A Socially Distanced Spin

/ Olivia Sun for NPR
/
Olivia Sun for NPR

Summer always brings important milestones: graduations, weddings and family reunions. Keeping 6 feet apart meant rethinking the logistics of many well-established rituals this year.

Graduating seniors at Lincoln High School in Des Moines arrived at staggered times over the course of a week in mid-June to receive their diplomas. They were each allowed two guests, who watched them cross an empty stage before the new grads posed for photos.

"Parents frequently looked to the floor for clues on where to stand," recalls Olivia Sun, a visual journalist at the Des Moines Register who covered the event. "There was no restless buzz of graduates waiting to begin a final summer with childhood friends." Without the festivities that usually accompany graduation, the weeklong event felt "more like a streamlined appointment than a celebration," Sun says.


(Left to right) Maweya Babekir, Mulugeta Turuneh and June Yoon Kranci take the U.S. oath of allegiance during a drive-through naturalization ceremony on June 26 at Principal Park in Des Moines.
Charlie Neibergall / AP
/
AP
(Left to right) Maweya Babekir, Mulugeta Turuneh and June Yoon Kranci take the U.S. oath of allegiance during a drive-through naturalization ceremony on June 26 at Principal Park in Des Moines.
Sean Widger and his fiancé Lindsey Dale joined a video conference call in Livermore, Calif., with family and friends on May 2. The couple postponed their long-planned wedding until after the pandemic's restrictions ease, but decided to host a socially distant "non-wedding reception" this summer.<em> </em>
Santiago Mejia / The San Francisco Chronicle
/
The San Francisco Chronicle
Sean Widger and his fiancé Lindsey Dale joined a video conference call in Livermore, Calif., with family and friends on May 2. The couple postponed their long-planned wedding until after the pandemic's restrictions ease, but decided to host a socially distant "non-wedding reception" this summer.

A Sense Of Community Preserved

/ Hannah Yoon for NPR
/
Hannah Yoon for NPR

In Philadelphia, photographer Hannah Yoon found Positive Movement, a drumline group, had moved their music and rehearsals outside to be safer. The decision had an unintended effect, giving neighbors — including those confined to home — the opportunity to hear and see the music on the street.

Tony Royster, who started Positive Movement, says the team has been performing since 2014, but expanded their schedule this summer to include drive-by birthday and graduation parties as a way to continue to entertain and lift the community's spirits.

Nat Hilton (left) and Jessica Harmon came out to see the drumline and drill team in West Philadelphia.
/ Hannah Yoon for NPR
/
Hannah Yoon for NPR
Nat Hilton (left) and Jessica Harmon came out to see the drumline and drill team in West Philadelphia.

"We heard the drumline from outside the window and had to come check it out," resident Jessica Harmon said on a weeknight in early August when Positive Movement performed as the opening act ahead of an outdoor movie. "We had no idea there would be a movie night set up right across the street," Harmon says.

She ended up staying to watch the film with others in her neighborhood.

The Scribe Video Center's movie screenings travel to neighborhoods in Philadelphia and Camden. The center has been sponsoring screenings for 23 years, and producer Nehad Khader (right) says they wanted to continue the tradition in 2020. So they limited each audience to a scattered 50 people, to accommodate social distancing.
/ Hannah Yoon for NPR
/
Hannah Yoon for NPR
The Scribe Video Center's movie screenings travel to neighborhoods in Philadelphia and Camden. The center has been sponsoring screenings for 23 years, and producer Nehad Khader (right) says they wanted to continue the tradition in 2020. So they limited each audience to a scattered 50 people, to accommodate social distancing.

Nehad Khader, who works with the Scribe Video Center, which puts on the movie nights, says that need for human connection among neighbors was especially profound this summer. The center has hosted outdoor screenings for over two decades. This year, Khader says, every movie night reached maximum capacity.

Friends Nathan Grace, Hana Chamoun, and Anna McCarthy showed up to watch, too. Chamoun, a graduate student and part-time bartender, is now taking virtual classes and relying on unemployment to make ends meet. The past few months have reminded her of the timelessness of summers in elementary school, she says. For Chamoun and her friends, the outdoor event was a welcome chance to escape indoor life and see each other in a safe way.

It was "a sweet treat," McCarthy says. A summer sweetness that transcended even a pandemic.

People parked their cars outside in a distanced tailgater in June to watch high-wire artists and cousins Nik (left) and Blake Wallenda perform at Nik Wallenda's Daredevil Rally, billed as the world's first drive-in stunt show at Nathan Benderson Park in Sarasota, Fla.
Paul Hennessy / SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
/
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
People parked their cars outside in a distanced tailgater in June to watch high-wire artists and cousins Nik (left) and Blake Wallenda perform at Nik Wallenda's Daredevil Rally, billed as the world's first drive-in stunt show at Nathan Benderson Park in Sarasota, Fla.

Photographers Ash Ponders in Phoenix, Chona Kasinger in Seattle, Olivia Sun in Des Moines, and Hannah Yoon in Philadelphia contributed reporting to this story.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Meredith Rizzo is a visuals editor and art director on NPR's Science desk. She produces multimedia stories that illuminate science topics through visual reporting, animation, illustration, photography and video. In her time on the Science desk, she's reported from Hong Kong during the early days of the pandemic, photographed the experiences of the first patient to receive an experimental CRISPR treatment for sickle cell disease and covered post-wildfire issues from Australia to California. In 2021, she worked with a team on NPR's Joy Generator, a randomized ideas machine for ways to tap into positive emotions following a year of life in the pandemic. In 2019, she photographed, reported and produced another interactive visual guide exploring how the shape and size of many common grocery store plastics affect their recyclability.
Ryan Kellman is a producer and visual reporter for NPR's science desk. Kellman joined the desk in 2014. In his first months on the job, he worked on NPR's Peabody Award-winning coverage of the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa. He has won several other notable awards for his work: He is a Fulbright Grant recipient, he has received a John Collier Award in Documentary Photography, and he has several first place wins in the WHNPA's Eyes of History Awards. He holds a master's degree from Ohio University's School of Visual Communication and a B.F.A. from the San Francisco Art Institute.