The son of grocers, Pinney was born and raised on the Lower East Side. Pinney caught his first venomous snake, a
rattler, at age 12 while attending Boy Scout camp. He was chastised, but it did not take. He attended high school at
DeWitt Clinton High School, an all-boys public school at that time on 10th Avenue and 59th Street in
New York City with classmates and lifelong friends
Bernard Herrmann and
Abraham Polonsky. In 1928 Pinney learned to use a camera and was employed by
Underwood & Underwood through March 8, 1929. Pinney bagged more than 1,000 venomous serpents all over the planet. The
American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals gave him stray snakes in need of homes and he kept the best for himself. His first love was photography. Pinney was wounded while photographing the
Normandy invasion ("just a piece of shrapnel, nothing serious"), and later shot pictures of the
Yom Kippur War. He sold his work to Life and Look Magazine when they were the pinnacle. He moved on to shooting advertising photos, "where the big bucks are," he explained. He changed his life's course through his collaboration with the nature writer
Ivan T. Sanderson, who brought a different animal to show off to
Dave Garroway, the talk show host, each week. Pinney was Sanderson's producer and cameraman. He went on to work as cameraman for such nature show gurus as
Marlin Perkins and
Lorne Greene. Pinney wrote 2,000 articles and over 20 books, about everything from tribal cultures to how to survive the
atomic bomb. The last was
The Snake Book, published in 1981. He made more than 160 expeditions to remote destinations. A 1971 divorce left him bitter, so he threw away many of his cameras and stopped taking pictures. He once invested his personal savings in a new television series about a 25-year-old zoologist's adventures, shot 39 episodes and couldn't sell it. "She really has a special charisma with animals," he insists to this day. On August 9, 2010 Pinney died at the age of 98, just four days before his 99th birthday. Pinney lived in Sanderson's former apartment, as he had since the divorce, surrounded by artifacts from endangered cultures, an undisclosed number of snakes, and 50,000 aging photographs. ==Herpetology==