Condi I need a bathroom break

ZarathosNY

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Reuters picture of Bush at the UN

2005-09-14T201816Z_01_UNS93D_RTRIDSP_2_SUMMIT-UN.jpg



http://photos.reuters.com/Pictures/...-14T201816Z_01_UNS93D_RTRIDSP_2_SUMMIT-UN.jpg
 
I saw this last night, and I'm still trying to figure it out. First off, the obvious question: did Reuters not realize what the president was writing (or that it was legible), or was this picture released to deliberately embarass him?

The bigger question, though - Is that a question mark at the end of his sentence? As in "I think I may need a bathroom break?" Is he actually ASKING whether he needs to go to the bathroom or not? Bush is well-known for being indecisive, but does he actually need help deciding whether his bladder is full?
 
[quote name='Drocket']I saw this last night, and I'm still trying to figure it out. First off, the obvious question: did Reuters not realize what the president was writing (or that it was legible), or was this picture released to deliberately embarass him?

The bigger question, though - Is that a question mark at the end of his sentence? As in "I think I may need a bathroom break?" Is he actually ASKING whether he needs to go to the bathroom or not? Bush is well-known for being indecisive, but does he actually need help deciding whether his bladder is full?[/QUOTE]

Maybe he needs to check with Cheney or Rove first.
 
I love all the qualifiers in there - He "thinks" he "may" need a bathroom break. He's not sure but there could be a possibility he needs to tinkle. Just raise your hand like a big boy, Georgie.
 
This smacks of some desperate, surreptitious written code-language, but what could it possibly mean? ;)

I think I MAy NEED A BATHROOM BREAK?
 
Get a life. I'll call the man on his failures just as quickly as you will, but at least I have the decency to let a man piss without analyzing it.
 
[quote name='MrBadExample']I love all the qualifiers in there - He "thinks" he "may" need a bathroom break. He's not sure but there could be a possibility he needs to tinkle. Just raise your hand like a big boy, Georgie.[/QUOTE]


I just had this mental picture of him with his hand holding his peepee and raising his hand "Miss Condi, may I please go to the bathroom"?

oh and REPOST
 
[quote name='Quillion']Get a life. I'll call the man on his failures just as quickly as you will, but at least I have the decency to let a man piss without analyzing it.[/QUOTE]

Don't you think its the least bit odd that he feels the need to notify people with sophmoric note passing and elementary laguage mastery?

Couldn't he just lean over and say, "I have to pee." ... or would it be "I have to pee?"
 
[quote name='RedvsBlue']I just had this mental picture of him with his hand holding his peepee and raising his hand "Miss Condi, may I please go to the bathroom"?

oh and REPOST[/QUOTE]
Haha, don't forget the wiggling and hopping all around while saying it.
 
[quote name='Kayden']Don't you think its the least bit odd that he feels the need to notify people with sophmoric note passing and elementary laguage mastery?[/QUOTE]
Its not even the fact that he's writing a note that's the problem (after all, he may not be sitting right next to Condi) - passing a note that says "Have to use the bathroom, BRB" would be entirely understandable as an explaination for why he's slipping out of a meeting. Its the fact that he used not one but two qualifiers, and tacked a question mark onto the end (plus the fact that he writes like a third-grader, in giant block letters.) Does he have to go to the bathroom or doesn't he? Why does he need advice from his cabinet on that?

If the position of Secretary of State involves helping the president with 'bathroom decisions', Powell's decision to retire begins to make more sense than ever.
 
Although it is truly a cheap shot, what I love about this photo is that it needs none of the charming Photoshopping that right-wingers often utilize for "comedic" effect.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']Ok, BBC clarified the last line that I (and, from apperances, everyone else) couldn't make out. He's asking "I think I may need a bathroom break? Is this possible?"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4249646.stm

So, basically, he had to ask condi what was appropriate behavior at such a meeting. Still sad, but not as bad as it appeared.[/QUOTE]

Maybe he was passing the note to a translator to let the other world leaders know he was going to go to the bathroom.

You know...sometimes, it's not a bad idea to give Bush credit for some things, politeness and good manners included.
 
[quote name='Mike23']Maybe he was passing the note to a translator to let the other world leaders know he was going to go to the bathroom.

You know...sometimes, it's not a bad idea to give Bush credit for some things, politeness and good manners included.[/QUOTE]

Waking up and realizing he runs your country makes you a lot less likely to give him credit for anything. He's not just the buffoon who run the u.s., he's running the country I live in.

But, I can't honestly think that other world leaders needed to be informed, or even cared, if he left to go to the bathroom. It seems likely he just didn't know if it would be a good idea to go to the bathroom, or maybe they needed secret service or something to escort him.
 
President Bush Bathroom Break Note Photoshopped
By CK Rairden
Sep 15, 2005
The photo of President George W. Bush writing a note about taking a bathroom break during a session at the United Nations on Wednesday was enhanced with a photoshop program according to Reuters. The news agency says that the message was not changed, but enhanced to make the print easier to read.

In response to the attention the photo is getting, Reuters' spokeswoman in London released a two-sentence statement about the picture:

"The photographer and editors on this story were looking for other angles in their coverage of this event, something that went beyond the stock pictures of talking heads that these kind of forums usually offer."

"This picture certainly does that."

That translates into--we will go to any lengths to attempt to embarrass, and attempt to make fun of US President George W. Bush.

Gary Hershorn, a picture editor for Reuters admits he is responsible for zooming in on the note, using photoshop to bring out the words and deciding to transmit the photo.

He denies that it has anything to do with Bush-bashing. "There was no malicious intent," he says. "That's not what we do."

Unless Mr. Hershorn can produce other petty attacks on another politician, he's going to have a tough sell on that.

His childish attack means old media takes another hit.

Link

fake.gif

Obviously totally faked on blow-up imaging.

fake2.jpg
 
[quote name='Sleepkyng']uh, didn't they just enhance it to make the text easier to read?[/QUOTE]

Yes, that's what the article PAD linked to says. Of course it would be better if he actually linked to Reuters saying that, instead of a right-wing website. E&P has more on the story

http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001137788

Reuters Says Bush Photo Not 'Malicious,' Reports Wide Interest
REUTERS/Rick Wilking
U.S. President George W. Bush writes a note to Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice during a Security Council meeting at the 2005 World Summit and 60th General Assembly of the United Nations in New York Sept. 14, 2005.


By E&P Staff

Published: September 15, 2005 4:30 PM ET

NEW YORK With confirmation today that an accidental photo of President Bush at the United Nations on Wednesday, writing a note to Secretary of State Condeezza Rice about a “bathroom break,” was indeed real, newspapers around the U.S. and abroad are now planning to run it widely. But many, it seems, will treat it as something more than a joke.

A source at the Washington Post tells E&P that the paper is considering it for prominent play tomorrow morning, in the context that, at least in some minds, it raises questions about overall perception of the U.S. at the United Nations, right or wrong. Reuters reports extremely strong interest in the photo today.

The fact is, according to Reuters -- and this has not been widely reported -- President Bush did indeed take a bathroom break after passing the note to Rice.

This apparently raised some eyebrows around the room, because American representatives (among others) have a reputation for suddenly bolting, though normally for a far different reason than this latest one. Fair or not, the European press has already had a field day with the photo, often centering on the notion that Bush had to ask Rice for permission.

The Times of London, for example, ran no less than three separate articles about it on its Web site, one at the top of its front page. (It's a Murdoch paper.) One headline reads: "Excuse me Condi, can I go to the bathroom?" Another story, believe it or not, opens: "The need to relieve oneself diplomatically has on occasion determined the fate of nations." The third discusses the sordid history of the particulatar lavatory in question, and contains this passage: "Medical experts said that the 59-year-old President was wise not to wait any longer."

Since the photo first appeared on the Web late yesterday, speculation has centered on whether the bathroom break reference was just a silly joke and who had written and passed the note.

Gary Hershorn, news editor-photos for the Americas at Reuters, told E&P today that the photographer, Rick Wilking, informed him yesterday afternoon that he had observed Bush pass the note to Rice, and a little later, rise from his seat, leave the room, and then return.

And while some have suggested that Wilking, a well-known photographer just back from taking some of the most gripping images in New Orleans, was out to embarrass the president, Hershorn said that the photojournalist had no idea what Bush was writing on the paper. Wilking assumed the president was taking notes on what some other official was saying.

“Rick had no idea what he was shooting, or what Bush was writing,” Hershorn said. “If Rick knew what he was writing we'd have 25 pictures of this, not two.”

The photo was taken at 12:08 p.m. and it was Hershorn, about three hours later, who took the trouble to examine the photo closely. It was only then that he noticed the writing and decided to put it on the wire after 4:00.

The photo, as E&P observed Wednesday night in the first story about the incident, shows Bush scribbling in pencil on a note that already holds the words: "I think I may need a bathroom break? Is this possible." Wilking is a veteran Washington photographer who has long covered Bush campaigns and the White House.

As for transmitting the photo, Hershorn says, "There was no malicious intent. That's not what we do."

There's a simple explanation, even a serious one, for all of this, he adds. Bush, he points out, is not used to attending meetings at the U.N. and probably did not know what the protocol was for exiting a room and returning. His question to Rice was “proper” and not all that surprising, “asking someone with more experience there about protocol,” he said.

Wilking told Gelf magazine today that he has not yet heard from the president—whom he says he knows very well—about the note. “I’m curious to know what the White House thinks,” Wilking said.
 
fucking hilarious.

The dude can't just hold that shit together for like 2 hours?

And wouldn't you fucking think about that shit before hand as you're having at your big gulp and hot dog?

fuck, every news story I read just makes me more depressed.
 
[quote name='PittsburghAfterDark']And last but not least Reuters has acknowledged the photo was Photoshopped.[/QUOTE]

Photoshopped - but not actually changed. They most likely just used a couple of filters to reduce blurriness, adjust the contrast, and crop the photo. Entirely standard things - you'd be hard pressed to find a professionally produced photograph that WASN'T Photoshopped in this way.

Your statement here is clearly designed to mislead. You want people to think that words were put in the president's, um, pen, when this isn't the case. The words written were and are entirely his own.
 
The news agency says that the message was not changed, but enhanced to make the print easier to read.
PAD, that was from the article you provided. It said the message was not changed.
 
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