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There seems to be a general supposition that the man was pushed
Not looked at the picture and don't intend to.
There seems to be a general supposition that the man was pushed but surely it's just as likely (if not more so) that he was leaning out over the track to see the train coming and slipped? Improve station safety? How? 6' unclimbable barriers along the whole length of every platform? IF he was pushed, the photo in question (or, possibly, if the one that's under discussion is part of a sequence) may well have captured the push or at least have the assailant in shot.
Not looked at the picture and don't intend to.
There seems to be a general supposition that the man was pushed but surely it's just as likely (if not more so) that he was leaning out over the track to see the train coming and slipped? Improve station safety? How? 6' unclimbable barriers along the whole length of every platform? IF he was pushed, the photo in question (or, possibly, if the one that's under discussion is part of a sequence) may well have captured the push or at least have the assailant in shot.
Wayne, I was completely up front about not having seen the picture (and by inference the story). I have no desire to see a picture of a man about to be cut down by a subway train. Extremely rarely go to London or anywhere with underground/metro etc, so unaware of any safety measures that may be in place - I certainly don't remember seeing any last time we were up in London.
Not read any more about this then what is wrote on this forum, don't really want to see the picture myself, for those who have read the article how did the paper get the photograph? did the photographer contact them, did they find it on line... etc
Shocking he took the shot, if he then went home and put it on facebook or something that would be even worse so I'm interested to know how the shot got out in public
Not sure what the big deal is about this photo is. Sure it stirs emotion because of the death of the guy but its no different to any other shot that we have seen.
There are none. Having suffered the central line commute im honestly amazed that there arent fatalities every day!
As far as the image in question goes, the tog claims he was running up the platform firing his flash to alert the driver, a very well composed, focused and exposed shot was the end result. Murdoch press though so cant expect much else.
Im not going to argue weather or not the photographer should have captured this image but instead voice my disgust that anyone! Considers this to be news or newsworthy.
There is no story here, man gets pushed into path of oncoming train. That's your scoop, and for a paper, be it gutter press or not, to run this is just insane.
The poor guy is dead, his family have to come to terms with this, what better way to soften the blow by making his obviously terrified and horrific last seconds international. Sick.
I think that anyone with a head on their shoulders understands the dangers of underground rail. Be it human or mechanical, an image is not required to tell of what happened here but obviously a photo of this is worth more that column inches.
Sad, sick, typical and obvious.
joescrivens said:Yes it is.
How often do you see a photograph of someone about to meet their demise from a freak incident. We've seen lots of photos of people dead or dying, but we don't see lots of them where a perfectly healthy man is about to die
I'm not saying there aren't any. But they are not common.
There are quite a few images of war that show the moment before, during or after death. Ok not everyday but this type of image is nothing new.
like I said
"How often do you see a photograph of someone about to meet their demise from a freak incident."
joescrivens said:like I said
"How often do you see a photograph of someone about to meet their demise from a freak incident."
Not very but we have seen them
Not saying it's right, just that it's not a unique incident.
And like I have already said. It doesn't have to be the only time it has happened to make it shocking and affect people. It's still a rare event, even though you can describe another incident 8 years ago. It's not like you can point out 1 incident every week for the last year.
we see these things very very rarely, so they have a big impact when they happen