US Armenian photojournalist explains when, why she snapped the most
retweeted photo of Obamas
tert.am
21:03 - 10.11.12
A Slate reporter has spoken spoke with US-Armenian photojournalist
Scout Tufankjian about the photo of Barack and Michelle Obama that has
become the most retweeted ever.
The photo was taken August 15 in Dubuque, Iowa, in the middle of a bus
tour, Slate reports.
`It was the first day that the first lady had joined us so he hadn't
seen her in a couple of days. She came in on a bus that morning - it
was the first event of the day - and they embraced on stage,'
Tufankjian said. `I decided to focus on them rather than taking a
wider shot, because I think I'm not alone in finding their
relationship to be totally aspirational.'
Tufankjian told Slate: `It reflects on the way that people feel about
the Obamas as people, rather than as public figures. The wonderful
thing about working for the campaign is not being with the president
or on Air Force One or any of the things that would happen covering
any president's campaign. Spending time with that family is the thing
that's so wonderful. What the family is and represents to the country
is as much a part of the president's appeal as his policies.
I don't know why they chose it, but that's why I like the choice. As
opposed to him waving in front of a flag or something more
traditionally presidential.'
retweeted photo of Obamas
tert.am
21:03 - 10.11.12
A Slate reporter has spoken spoke with US-Armenian photojournalist
Scout Tufankjian about the photo of Barack and Michelle Obama that has
become the most retweeted ever.
The photo was taken August 15 in Dubuque, Iowa, in the middle of a bus
tour, Slate reports.
`It was the first day that the first lady had joined us so he hadn't
seen her in a couple of days. She came in on a bus that morning - it
was the first event of the day - and they embraced on stage,'
Tufankjian said. `I decided to focus on them rather than taking a
wider shot, because I think I'm not alone in finding their
relationship to be totally aspirational.'
Tufankjian told Slate: `It reflects on the way that people feel about
the Obamas as people, rather than as public figures. The wonderful
thing about working for the campaign is not being with the president
or on Air Force One or any of the things that would happen covering
any president's campaign. Spending time with that family is the thing
that's so wonderful. What the family is and represents to the country
is as much a part of the president's appeal as his policies.
I don't know why they chose it, but that's why I like the choice. As
opposed to him waving in front of a flag or something more
traditionally presidential.'