A Kiwi memory regarding photography was brought to mind by a recent thread on this site that mentioned the cool digital photography using "painting with light" to achieve amazing effects.
Not to imply that we were the first to do such photography, but at MT in the late '90s, Kiwi led the charge to photograph test cars more vividly than other magazines were doing at the time.
One of the first examples of that was a multiple-day truck torture test in Death Valley.
On the first night of the test after the rest of us had finished up the dusk photo session (and left to take the 50-mile off-road drive back to the hotel for a few hours sleep) Kiwi stayed up, alone, at the desolate location and shot a series of timed exposures of a Jeep with a starry background. His exposures were long enough (over an hour each) to capture the vivid streaking effect of the stars and satellites in the sky.
The Jeep itself, he painted with light from flashlights with colored gels over the lenses.
And that was all done on old school Kodachrome transparency film, without post production digital effects of any kind in our art department. I don't think Kiwi even got any sleep that night, and yet he was raring to go the next day, like always.
I wish I could put my hands on that issue of the magazine, and post the photo. It's very cool.
I remember also, one of our advertising salesmen, after the magazine was printed, came into my office with the Jeep photo in hand and said "Wow, was the sky really doing that when you were there?"
I replied "To Kiwi's creative eye, it sure was."