Skip to content
Search

Chloe Weir on Photographing Her Dad and Dead & Company at the Sphere

Chloe Weir on Photographing Her Dad and Dead & Company at the Sphere

Don’t compare Chloe Weir to a fly on the wall when she’s photographing live music. “Maybe a little mouse on the ground,” she says with a laugh. “I love hiding and shrinking down to get everyone in their element.”

Regardless of the animal, Weir has been a sharp observer of Dead & Company’s residency at the Sphere, capturing her dad, Bob Weir, with his band, along with the many Deadheads who’ve flocked to Las Vegas this summer to experience some psychedelic magic. “I love to document incredible Deadheads doing what they do,” Weir says over Zoom. “Which is being really cool.”


Dressed in all-black attire — usually leggings and a t-shirt — with a photo belt and double harness, Weir spends the entire set capturing the experience on her Sony A7 III (she also shares a Sony A7R5 with her dad). She then spends six to seven hours editing, going through roughly 4,000 photos. During the sets, she doesn’t miss a single song. “I am out the entire time,” she says. “I love to soak up every minute.” 

Weir got her first camera — a Polaroid — when she was seven, and she’d often bring it on tour with her dad. “Today I’m doing a slightly more upscale version of that,” she jokes. She shot the cover of Bob’s 2016 album Blue Mountain when she was 14, then took a photography class in high school. Currently, media studies is one of her double majors in college (alongside anthropology). “I fell in love with film and being in the dark room,” she says. “I love it more than anything.”

Weir became Dead & Company’s official photographer during the pandemic. “They needed a photographer for the livestreams, but because of the bubble, they couldn’t bring anyone in,” she says. “So I was like, ‘I’ll do it!’” She began photographing Bob’s concerts, including his June 2021 shows at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheatre. “My dad’s really supportive and loves that I get to do what I love, alongside him doing what he loves,” she says. “We get to be, at the end of the day, working together.”

Weir credits veteran Dead photographer Jay Blakesberg with teaching her how to shoot digitally. “There aren’t even words to describe how grateful I am for Jay, to have him in my life and to be able to learn from the best,” she says. “He’s not only such an incredible mentor for photography, but he’s also a really hilarious person.” Weir and Blakesberg’s photography — as well as drummer Mickey Hart’s artwork — is currently on display at the Venetian resort’s Dead Forever Experience

In the gallery above, Weir walked us through some of her favorite photographs from Dead & Co’s Sphere residency. “What’s amazing is there’s so many visuals that are dedicated both to the historical moments and to specific song references,” she says. “You’re full of a room of glowing scarlet begonias, or you’re at the historic venues of the Fillmore, Madison Square Garden, Red Rocks, Cornell, and more. My photos only scratch the surface of what it’s like to be at this incredible place. This is only the beginning.”

More Stories

Queens of the Stone Age Cancel Remaining 2024 Shows After Josh Homme Surgery

Queens of the Stone Age Cancel Remaining 2024 Shows After Josh Homme Surgery

Queens of the Stone Age have canceled the remainder of their 2024 tour dates — including a string of North American shows and festival gigs scheduled for the fall — as Josh Homme continues his recovery from an unspecified surgery he underwent in July.

“QOTSA regret to announce the cancellation and/or postponement of all remaining 2024 shows. Josh has been given no choice but to prioritize his health and to receive essential medical care through the remainder of the year,” the band wrote on social media.

Keep ReadingShow less
DNC Brings in Higher Ratings Than RNC All Four Nights

DNC Brings in Higher Ratings Than RNC All Four Nights

The numbers are in, and the viewership of the Democratic National Convention blew last month’s Republican National Convention out of the water. 

Early numbers by Nielsen Fast Nationals indicate that the final night of the DNC garnered 26.20 million viewers across 15 networks, compared to night four of the 2024 RNC Night 4 at 25.4 million viewers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Marketer Behind Fake Quotes in ‘Megalopolis’ Trailer Dropped by Lionsgate

Marketer Behind Fake Quotes in ‘Megalopolis’ Trailer Dropped by Lionsgate

Eddie Egan, a very real marketing consultant, lost his gig with Lionsgate this week after the studio discovered that quotes he used in a trailer for Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis were fabricated, according to Variety.

The conceit behind the teaser, which Lionsgate recalled on Wednesday, was that critics had trashed Coppola’s masterpieces throughout the decades, so why trust them? Except that the critics quoted didn’t actually write any of the pith. A quote attributed to Pauline Kael that was said to have run in The New Yorker, claiming The Godfather was “diminished by its artsiness,” never ran.

Keep ReadingShow less
Fact Checkers Try to Shield Trump From Project 2025’s Abortion Madness

Fact Checkers Try to Shield Trump From Project 2025’s Abortion Madness

One of the odder features of American journalism is that the columnists who hold themselves out as “fact checkers” and review claims made by politicians — calling balls, strikes, and “pinocchios” — are unusually terrible at it.

Fact checkers offered up several botched reviews of content from the Democratic National Convention, but nothing has broken their brains like Democrats’ sustained attacks on Donald Trump over Republicans’ anti-abortion agenda, which is laid out in gory detail in conservatives’ Project 2025 policy roadmap. 

Keep ReadingShow less
Cops Who Falsified Warrant Used in Breonna Taylor Raid Didn’t Cause Her Death, Judge Rules

Cops Who Falsified Warrant Used in Breonna Taylor Raid Didn’t Cause Her Death, Judge Rules

A federal judge in Kentucky ruled that two police officers accused of falsifying a warrant ahead of the deadly raid that killed Breonna Taylor were not responsible for her death, The Associated Press reports. And rather than the phony warrant, U.S. District Judge Charles Simpson said Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was responsible for her death because he fired upon the police officers first — even though he had no idea they were police officers.

The ruling was handed down earlier this week in the civil rights violation case against former Louisville Police Detective Joshua Jaynes and former Sgt. Kyle Meany. The two were not present at the March 2020 raid when Taylor was killed. Instead, in 2022, Attorney General Merrick Garland accused the pair (along with another detective, Kelly Goodlett) of submitting a false affidavit to search Taylor’s home before the raid and then conspiring to create a “false cover story… to escape responsibility” for preparing the phony warrant. 

Keep ReadingShow less