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-- The most depressing photo you've seen
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Posted by Jackson on Apr-20-2005 21:09:
The most depressing photo you've seen
Theres lots of them out there. Heres a few i found
Girl with her family and boyfriend having to Bury her parents after the Asian Tsunami

US Soldier in Iraq saying his last goodbye to his friends Killed in a bomb blast.

Posted by kelly923 on Apr-20-2005 21:12:
thanks dood... u made my day 
Posted by kossack on Apr-20-2005 21:23:
pretty rough, for sure. seen some pretty brutal emotional scenes here too coming down satellite feeds. i think people hafta see this sort of thing though, keep a grip on reality.
Posted by Laux de par on Apr-20-2005 21:26:
whats that infamous picture with (it looks to be a german?) man with a gun to (looks to be Asian?) teens head. You can kind of see bullet penetrating the head...
sorry for the lack of info. the shooter is on the left side of pic, victim on right.
Posted by SlickT on Apr-20-2005 21:27:
the most depressing photo i've seen is that starving kid in africa crawling and there's a bird i think. that photo kills me 
Posted by No one on Apr-20-2005 21:28:

I have no words.
Posted by Jackson on Apr-20-2005 21:29:
| quote: |
Originally posted by kelly923
thanks dood... u made my day |
Hey if you didnt realise it was going to be upseting pictures then buy a dictionary and look up "depressing".
Posted by kelly923 on Apr-20-2005 21:32:
| quote: |
Originally posted by Jackson
Hey if you didnt realise it was going to be upseting pictures then buy a dictionary and look up "depressing". |
i know, and i was kinda being sarcastic... sometimes it takes dejecting pictures like that to make u appreciate what u have
Posted by Jackson on Apr-20-2005 21:38:
| quote: |
Originally posted by kelly923
sometimes it takes dejecting pictures like that to make u appreciate what u have |
*Nods* Very True!
Is anyone actually going to post any pics?
Posted by Cal on Apr-20-2005 21:50:
I found this one on image.google.com

Posted by Jackson on Apr-20-2005 22:47:



Posted by l�cid on Apr-20-2005 22:48:

Posted by l�cid on Apr-20-2005 22:49:
and one more that's surely the most depressing...

Posted by No one on Apr-20-2005 22:49:
Cannot believe a little boy that young is smoking. Like a man.
That little one next to the vulture..man. 
Yup, I'm depressed now.
Posted by occrider on Apr-21-2005 01:52:
I thought this was rather depressing.

Detainees of Khmer Rouge torture center S-21. I believe that out of the tens of thousands that passed through its doors only 6 survived.
Now to lighten the mood slightly (as if that's possible in a war):

Poor pillow 
Posted by enferno on Apr-21-2005 03:40:
| quote: |
Originally posted by Laux de par
whats that infamous picture with (it looks to be a german?) man with a gun to (looks to be Asian?) teens head. You can kind of see bullet penetrating the head... sorry for the lack of info. the shooter is on the left side of pic, victim on right. |
are you talking about the viet-kom execution?
Posted by getfoul on Apr-21-2005 03:51:
this one makes me shed a single tear.
Posted by Laux de par on Apr-21-2005 03:59:
| quote: |
Originally posted by enferno
are you talking about the viet-kom execution? |
you have a pic?
I think I've seen the same man shooting the kid in the head as someones avatar here
it's by far the most hideous i've EVER seen.
is that pic of the child smoking real ?
Posted by occrider on Apr-21-2005 04:15:
| quote: |
Originally posted by Laux de par
you have a pic?
I think I've seen the same man shooting the kid in the head as someones avatar here
it's by far the most hideous i've EVER seen.
|
This photo?
Posted by Laux de par on Apr-21-2005 04:17:
| quote: |
Originally posted by occrider
This photo?
|
yes !!! how disturbing.... who took it?
Will you give me a brief synopsis on the history of this photo ?
Posted by occrider on Apr-21-2005 04:22:
| quote: |
Originally posted by Laux de par
yes !!! how disturbing.... who took it?
Will you give me a brief synopsis on the history of this photo ? |
Photojournalist Eddie Adams took careful portraits of U.S. presidents and world figures. But his best known work is one that was sudden and unglamorous: the 1968 killing of a Viet Cong captive in Vietnam.
Adams' picture of South Vietnam's police chief, Lt. Col. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, shooting the prisoner in the head on Feb. 1, 1968, would became one of the Vietnam War's most indelible images and one that shocked the American public.
Adams died Sunday at his Manhattan home from complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, said his assistant, Jessica Stuart. He was 71.
"Eddie Adams was an enormous talent and an inspiration to generations of AP photographers and staffers. His courage and creativity left a mark that will live forever," said AP President and CEO Tom Curley.
In addition to his photographs of 13 wars, Adams' images of politics, fashion and show business appeared on countless magazine covers and in newspapers around the world. His portraits of presidents ranged from Richard Nixon to President Bush, and those of world figures included Pope John Paul II, Deng Xiaoping, Anwar Sadat, Fidel Castro and Mikhail Gorbachev.
But fame instant, enduring and discomforting resulted from that single execution photograph taken on the embattled streets of Cholon Saigon's Chinese quarter during the communists' Tet Offensive.
Drawn by gunfire, Adams and an NBC film crew watched South Vietnamese soldiers bring a handcuffed Viet Cong captive to a street corner, where they assumed he would be interrogated. Instead, Loan, strode up, wordlessly drew a pistol and shot the man in the head.
In later years, Adams found himself so defined and haunted by the picture that he would not display it at his studio. He also felt it unfairly maligned Loan, who lived in Virginia after the war and died in 1998.
"The guy was a hero," Adams said, recalling Loan's explanation that the man he executed was a Viet Cong captain, responsible for murdering the family of Loan's closest aide a few hours earlier.
"Sometimes a picture can be misleading because it does not tell the whole story," Adams said in an interview for a 1972 AP photo book. "I don't say what he did was right, but he was fighting a war and he was up against some pretty bad people."
Adams won a 1969 Pulitzer Prize for the Saigon execution picture, among the more than 500 honors he received in his career, including a 1978 Robert Capa Award and three George Polk Memorial Awards for war coverage.
Adams served as a Marine Corps combat photographer in the Korean War and became one of the nation's top photojournalists with newspapers, the AP from 1962-72 and again from 1976-80, and with Time-Life, Parade magazine and other publications.
Adams had no social or political agenda, but was at heart "a hard-news photographer, always sharply focused on the picture that tells the story," said Hal Buell, AP's former executive photo editor.
"He was also a perfectionist who would go to the mat over anything he saw in the editing that he felt detracted from the story but he was most critical of himself, for opportunities missed or not up to the high standards he set," Buell said.
Posted by Laux de par on Apr-21-2005 04:28:
| quote: |
Originally posted by occrider
Shedding Some Light On Another Picture That Became An Antiwar Icon
Excerpt from the book Vietnam Insights: Logic of Involvement and Unconventional Perspectives by James M. Griffiths
An incident that occurred during the Tet Offensive of 1968 probably created the longest lasting image of the horror and brutality of the Vietnam War. Vietnamese National Police chief Gen. Nguyen Loc Loan executed Vietcong prisoner Bay Lop in the streets of Saigon by placing a .38 to his head and pulling the trigger. This was done in the full view of the cameras. The still photograph taken by photographer Eddie Adams was flashed worldwide and won Adams a Pulitzer Prize. The film of the incident was broadcast to 20 million Americans on The Huntley-Brinkley Report on February 2, 1968.
This incident had a great impact on U.S. public opinion. A U.S. high school textbook of 1995 describes it this way, accompanied by the famous picture:
Particularly alarming was the savage flavor that the war had taken on. In the midst of the fighting , television cameras recorded the sight of a captured Vietcong guerrilla being led up to a South Vietnamese police officer on a downtown Saigon street. The officer pulled out his pistol and shot the young soldier through the head, leaving him lying dead with his blood gushing onto the street. No single image did more to create feeling among Americans that Vietnam was an immoral conflict.21
This incident does show the horror and brutality of war, but it is examined in this book for another reason. As horrible as the incident was, its brutality then and for the most part up to the present day has been portrayed as unprovoked . What the textbook of today does is repeat the errors of omission that occurred during the reporting of the event at the time.
Photographer Adams later said that he talked to Loan and Loan said "They killed many of my men and many of your people."22 Adams continued referring to the executed Vietcong: "They found out that he was the same guy who killed one of his ---uh---Loan�s officers and wiped out his whole family.23 Adams also expressed regret for what the photograph had done to Loan�s life. |
Wow.. that gave me chills. Thanks Occrider. Very helpful 
Never would I have guessed that there were two sides to this "story." Because first seeing this pic, it was powerful enough to create a story. But who really knows if there were two sides? Loan could have said that to deter anger amongst all or to better his conscious. I wonder what Loan's life was like after the fact the incident was aired on television and this photo was produced in textbooks.
Posted by occrider on Apr-21-2005 04:29:
| quote: |
Originally posted by Laux de par
Wow.. that gave me chills. Thanks Occrider. Very helpful 
Never would I have guessed that there were two sides to this "story." Because first seeing this pic, it was powerful enough to create a story. But who really knows if there were two sides? Loan could have said that to deter anger amongst all or to better his conscious. I wonder what Loan's life was like after the fact the incident was aired on television and this photo was produced in textbooks. |
Heh sorry, changed my post to a more well-written article I found that seems to paraphrase less.
Posted by Laux de par on Apr-21-2005 04:37:
| quote: |
Originally posted by occrider
Heh sorry, changed my post to a more well-written article I found that seems to paraphrase less. |
heh thanks again ! got extra info on Adams now. I'll definately have to check out some other of his work.
If i remember correctly, after once seeing this picture on a large scale, you can see the bullet as it had penetrated into the left side of the face. You can see the actual break of the flesh... eh, break is too minute of a word. Am i just seeing things?
Posted by Ripped Bag on Apr-21-2005 04:40:
| quote: |
Originally posted by occrider
I thought this was rather depressing.

Now to lighten the mood slightly (as if that's possible in a war):

Poor pillow |
Sniper tactic. He was driving out another sniper around the Najaf cemetary area. It was a very, very heated sniper battle. Few were shot and killed or injured by the opposing sniper, and take not the .50 cal sniper rifle on the right.
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