Vanity Fair’s extreme photo of Karoline Leavitt is shameful by any standard

The White House is pushing back hard against Vanity Fair magazine after it published a close-up picture of Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt that looked ridiculous.

The photo was published on Tuesday as part of a profile of the Trump administration:

The photo prompted an immediate clapback from the White House.

“It’s clear that Vanity Fair intentionally photographed Karoline and the White House staff in bizarre ways, and deliberately edited the photos, to try to demean and embarrass them,” a White House spokesperson told the Daily Mail.

“Karoline is a beautiful person and truly one of the most incredible people you will meet in politics, and she is doing an extraordinary job serving the American people as the White House Press Secretary,” the spokesperson added.

The public similarly accused Vanity Fair of purposefully making Leavitt look bad:

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Leavitt herself pushed back by publishing “behind-the-scenes” photos of herself at the White House.

 

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A post shared by KAROLINE LEAVITT (@karolineleavitt)

Christopher Anderson, the photographer who took the picture, defended his work.

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“Style is for others to judge,” he told Newsweek. “My objective, when photographing the political world, is to make photographs that cut through the staged-managed image to reveal something more real, and for the images to honestly portray the encounter that I had at that moment. Being very close is part of how I have been doing this for many years now.”

“Some on the internet have expressed shock that I chose not to retouch blemishes, injection marks, wrinkles, etc. From my perspective, it should be shocking if I did indeed retouch these things out,” he added.

“Very close-up portraiture has been a fixture in a lot of my work over the years,” Anderson likewise told The Independent. “Particularly, political portraits that I’ve done over the years. I like the idea of penetrating the theater of politics.”

“I know there’s a lot to be made with, ‘Oh, he intentionally is trying to make people look bad,’ and that kind of thing – that’s not the case. If you look at my photograph work, I’ve done a lot of close-ups in the same style with people of all political stripes,” he added.

Vanity Fair’s profile of the Trump administration also provoked anger because of its out-of-context quotes, especially from White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles.

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The way Vanity Fair took Wiles’ quotes out of context, you’d think she believes President Donald Trump is this, that, and the other.

But according to Wiles, Trump himself, and also Leavitt, this narrative is complete bull:

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Vivek Saxena

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