What Story Does White House Photographer Pete Souza's Photos Tell?

What story do White House photographer Pete Souza's photos tell?
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Pete Souza / Official White House Photo

I saw the headline in FStoppers, “White House Photographer Releases Favorite Images of Obama Through His Presidency,” and got a little excited. Hey, I thought, that will make a great blog post.

Consider: Official White House Photographer Pete Souza has taken upwards of 2 million photos on the job over the last eight years (the White House flickr account has nearly 7,000 images on it). How agonizing would it be for Souza to pick the 55 images that were his favorites? And what kind of story of the Obama presidency would those 55 images tell?

Alas, a closer read of the article doesn’t make it clear that Souza released anything. It cites a recent NPR article, but that interview doesn’t mention anything about Souza releasing a set of his favorite images. A quick Google search of recent articles about Souza found some in the British press saying Souza had released his “55 favorite images,” as well. Those articles cite a website called Twisted Sifter as the source.

Pete Souza / Official White House Photo
You’re unlikely to ever take 2 million photos of any one subject in your lifetime but you very likely will go on a week-long trip and come back with hundreds or thousands of images.

But if you actually read Twisted Sifter, you’ll learn that the 55 photos are the blogger’s favorite images, not Souza’s, despite the misleading headline. (I cry over the state of “journalism” today.)

All of that, of course, is besides my actual point, which is how formidable of a task it would be to mull through a gazillion images to come up with a small set that tell a story.

You’re unlikely to ever take 2 million photos of any one subject in your lifetime but you very likely will go on a week-long trip and come back with hundreds or thousands of images. If you’re going to blog about the trip, which 10 to 20 images do you pick?

Since I don’t have the time or energy to go through the 6,664 images on the White House flickr account, I’ll limit my choices to the 55 images that Twisted Sifter curated. Which are the five I would pick to tell the story of the Obama presidency?

First, I’d want a cover image that is not only one of the best photos of the 55 but tells the story that I want to build. What is that story? Is it hope? Change? Frustration? Success? Failure?

Pete Souza / Official White House Photo

I think Souza’s photos do a remarkable job of showing this president as “human,” as someone with a great sense of humor who is as at ease with foreign heads of state as he is with the average person on the street. I don’t know if that’s actually true, but the photos tell that story. It’s also important to keep in mind that these are Official White House photos and have been screened by some staffer — so nothing truly awful, embarrassing or private is going to be in the feed.

I thought about choosing the image of Obama leading a civil rights commemoration march with hundreds of people behind him. To me that image could be read as Obama being “the people’s president.” But I didn’t choose it for three reasons 1) I wanted an image where Obama was the central focus 2) I wanted to remove politics from the image 3) It was actually taken by Lawrence Jackson. Oops. I also found that another photo I wanted in my top five — the one of the president and his wife at the Lincoln Memorial — was taken by someone other than Souza.

Instead, I went with the photo of Obama stretched out on the floor of the Oval Office holding a child in the air. The scene immediately humanizes him and shows how comfortable he is in his own skin. For the second image, I wanted something that continued my theme but also made a larger point. I went with Obama at a campaign event in the rain. Former presidents and people close to them often talk about how being president puts you an island, how it’s a lonely job at the top. I thought this image captured that feeling while also continuing my theme.

Now, I’m at a pivotal point in my story. Do I go with another image of Obama with a child in the White House? There are some good ones, and it is a consistent theme in Souza’s photography, but that might be too redundant and could tilt my story towards one about Obama’s ability to relate to kids.

His role as husband and father is a strong part of my story. Unfortunately, the choices don’t include any of the first family, so I went with the President and First Lady, settling in to watch a 3D movie in the White House screening room. It’s a wonderful image that shows the most powerful man in the world doing something we’ve all done, though probably not at the White House.

I like to include at least one detail shot in a story. But the choices are somewhat limited among Twisted Sifter’s gallery. There is one, however, that I love — it shows the President sitting on his desk. Well, not the President, just his legs and shoes. It would probably be too much to ask him to take his shoes off here but this still works nicely.

Pete Souza / Official White House Photo

And that brings me to the closing image. This shouldn’t be considered the “fifth best” image, it’s the 2nd most important image of the story behind the lead image. It’s my kicker, the one that sums things up and puts a bow on it. There’s a couple ways I can go here. I can pick the image of Obama and Michelle boarding Air Force One, it’s the ultimate farewell shot but it doesn’t really fit into my theme. I love the image of the President in an elevator removing his bow tie (he could be putting it on). He’s got a huge smile on his face and he’s saying, “My job here is done.” The one of the President in silhouette in the rain is striking but it evokes a little sadness in my mind and that’s not how I want to end this story.

I chose the image of him running down the hallway with his dog, Bo. Whether you are Democrat, Republican or Independent, you can immediately relate. It makes me imagine the President running off into the sunset with his best bud.

That’s my story and I’m sticking with it.

Are these the five “best” of the 55 I had to choose from? No. But then, my 55 photos would have been completely different than the ones I had to choose from. Visual storytelling is choosing images that complement each other, advance your theme and come together in a cohesive, compelling way.

What would you have done differently?

This article was originally posted at Focus on the Story, a blog that explores visual storytelling.

Pete Souza / Official White House Photo

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