Look at, listen to and watch some of this year's best stories told through visual storytelling.
We've rounded up our best visuals of the year from a look into the AJC investigation on the death of Caroline Smalls to a tribute honoring former Braves pitcher Tommy Hanson, who died in November 2015.
Golden Hour at the Jackson Street Bridge: It's not just famous for zombies. The bridge, which offers a killer view of Atlanta's downtown skyscrapers along Peachtree Street, has lately become quite a phenomenon. Photographers have been setting up tripods by the bridge's low rail since the 1960s but with the growth of Instagram and cellphone cameras and of course, AMC's "The Walking Dead," the bridge has turned into a tourist attraction for the city. [Read more]
Meet AJC's 2015 Super 11: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Super 11 team, which is selected each high school football preseason since 1985, is based primarily on the football players' value in high school. Meet this year's team of players in their final season of high school football. [Watch here]
Brian Nichols: AJC reporters remember: Watch as reporters at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reflect on Brian Nichols' deadly rampage more than 10 years ago at the Fulton County Courthouse. Some who covered the rampage like former AJC writer Don O' Briant — who Nichols held up at gunpoint — unwittingly became victims in his trail of fear through the city. [Watch here]
Former Braves player Tommy Hanson | 1986-2015: One of the most promising young talents in the game just five years ago died at age 29 in November 2015. Take a look at this short tribute video for the former Braves pitcher. [Watch here]
Over the line | Did Caroline Small have to die?: The 35-year-old mother died a week after she was shot by police in 2010 after a 20-minute low-speed chase. In part of the dash cam footage of the shooting, an officer is heard yelling, "If she moves the car, I'm going to shoot her." The officers faced no consequences in the 2010 case, but an AJC investigation found that the case was riddled with special treatment. [Watch more]
Classic baseball ballparks still exist: Remember baseball games before large video replays and t-shirts launched into the nosebleed seats from air cannons? The historical Rickwood Stadium in Birmingham will remind you. The ballpark, built in 1910, reminds fans what it was like to watch a baseball game before all of the modern luxuries. [Photos here]
How does lethal injection work?: In 2015, Georgia executed its first woman in 70 years, Kelly Gissandaner, by lethal injection. AJC reporter Rosalind Bentley and freelance animator Chanel Nicholson show how a death sentence in Georgia is fulfilled through lethal injection. [Watch here]
Mike Luckovich draws the news: Trump and the Alamo: Watch The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Pulitzer-winning editorial cartoonist in action as he draws a cartoon reflecting Trump's incendiary comments about Latinos. [Watch here]
15 same-sex couples marry in Atlanta: On June 26, 2015, same-sex marriage was legalized nationwide in the United States. Witness history as you watch same-sex couples in Atlanta step to the front of the Assembly Hall to get married, each by a different judge. [Watch here]
Seeds of change: Read and hear about farming — Georgia's largest industry — and how it has embraced technology while staying true to its old-school methods to try and grow its $70 billion annual impact in this MyAJC special. [More here]