Posted on 08/12/2011 11:12:03 AM PDT by DManA
Talk to anyone in my business and they'll all say the same thing: No matter how long you write stories and put them in the newspaper, you are never really sure which ones are going to strike a nerve.
[snip]
Requests for the photo, and use of the story, have come from the Department of Veterans Affairs, military publications, Arlington National Cemetery. Soldiers in Afghanistan have inquired about the photo, including some from the Screaming Eagles of the 101st Airborne Division, stationed at Bagram Airfield.
"I sent a good-sized one to a base in Afghanistan because they wanted to build a memorial to members of their unit who had been killed," Glick said.
This letter, from Atlanta, was typical:
"You have no idea just how much this photo and story mean to so many of us who have served. We do not ask for special treatment; we do not ask for your gratitude; we don't even ask for your patience when we occasionally 'geeze' with old stories. We would like to have some understanding just how much service to this great nation means to each of us. Your picture and story show me that some do understand."
[more at link]
(Excerpt) Read more at startribune.com ...
Go to the link I posted above (post#36) and see the earlier June story which tells of the man who took the photo.
While interesting. It’s fake. The shadow doesn’t show the eagle, just the marker.
My computer has a new desktop. Thanks!
I didn’t say duplicate, but added it in case anyone wanted to see more info on this.
“Shock and awe that the Red Star & Sickle would print such a picture that might stir patriotic feelings...”
Agreed - especially after their photogs looked at it and the others that the guy took of the eagle and obviously could tell it was a photoshop job yet deny it. /s
Thank you. I missed that other one. So did a lot of others from the postings here. Worth repeating I think.
The author seems a bit befuddled by the fact that it struck a cord. A normal person would see it instantly.
What an awesome and patriotic photo!!!
Do you have a link where we could view them? The only thing that sticks out to me is the eagle doesn't appear to cast a shadow.
Semper Fi...
Agree
very nice photo, I couldn’t help but wonder how that girl must have felt.
And it could very well be a composite of 2 photos. And in art, that's fine. The other posters comment about the shadow is also a great observation.
Truth vs manipulation is a common topic with photographers, and many accept some processes as a means to a high impact end. Art.
Mary McHugh on her fiance's grave, Memorial Day 2007
I think its a great photo but it is curious. I checked the roll call for Fort Snelling National Cemetery and the two names on the front headstones, M Leone and Ralph J Nelson are not listed, John C Workman is though.
http://files.usgwarchives.net/mn/hennepin/cemeteries/fortsnelling/
I take it back. The shadow is a bit bigger than the other markers I can discern (it certainly is proportionately bigger then the marker at the closest point in the photo). The angle of the sun and the mist would diffuse detailed shadows of the eagle, and the bulk of the bird would roughly match the bulk of the marker.
It would take a sick man to do this to the widow. Does anyone read the articles anymore?
Noah Miles Pier
Noah, 25, of Charlotte, NC, died while protecting freedom on February 16, 2010 in Marjah, Afghanistan. Born on July 28, 1984 in Fairfax, VA, Noah and his family relocated to Charlotte in March of 1995. Noah was an avid outdoorsman and was involved in the Police Explorers Program at CMPD as a teenager. He loved American Freestyle Martial Arts and earned a black belt rank. Noah fell in love with his childhood sweetheart Rachel, whom he was to marry when he returned home.
Ahem....
And ahem...
Shot this fella while coming back from an airboat ride on Lake Kissimmee in Central Florida.
He is eating an armadillo. Or as we call them, "possum on the half-shell."
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.