Any way Brian you keep voting for togs to take photos whilst the peoples families look on in horror.. and the tog walks off chimping the back of the camera....
In English?
Any way Brian you keep voting for togs to take photos whilst the peoples families look on in horror.. and the tog walks off chimping the back of the camera....
He's just said he wasn't being homophobic. Words have duality of meaning. Jew and jew.
Ironically, the issue with projective terms aren't the words themselves, but people like you who insist that everyone should be outraged.
Just wanna a jump in before the thread gets locked and say thanks everyone for being so entertaining.
FWIW I think the Pulitzers are very worthy and valid.
OK, continue.
If you whacked up a couple of Corrida pics we could get some really heated discussion going!![]()

I don't insist anyone be outraged. I'm outraged myself.
While the term in question can also refer to meatballs and bundles of small sticks there was no duality in Daryl's use of it.
That it has become such an everyday part of his vocabulary that he thinks it is not offensive speaks volumes for the type of person he is.
You are funny...... so the guy gets $10k and you think that's ok?
I've seen people carved up by violence and car crashes but SOCOS don't get awards and papers do not publish pictures... But because they are from half way around the world it's all ok......
He should say thanks but no thanks.....
No wonder this Country has got so soft. No one can sing a song or say anything now with out the happy clappy brigade coming to the rescue....
I said sorry and I did not think anything of that word.... Because Brian of War, I dont think racist or anti gay. So I don't get offended by any thing as such.
He should say thanks but no thanks.....
Massoud Hossaini is the first Afghan to win the Pulitzer Prize. His work captures the horror of violence in Afghanistan.
He won the breaking news photography award for a picture he took after a suicide bombing in Kabul.
His is also the first Pulitzer Prize awarded to a photographer for the Agence France-Presse (AFP) news agency.
In the picture, a girl dressed in green stands among a crowd of dead and injured people.
Blood runs down her face as she screams in shock.
The scene was also shocking for the photographer.
Hossaini captured the scene on 6 December 2011. It was the Shia Muslim festival of Ashura, the day Shias mourn for Imam Hossain, their third imam and the grandson of Prophet Muhammad.
Sitting suicide bomber
The imam was killed with his family during a war in 680 CE.
Massoud Hossaini (left) is embraced by a colleague after winning a Pulitzer Prize for photography
To mark the day, children wear green dresses to show their sympathy with the imam's children, who were also killed.
Taraneh, the girl in the photograph, "had begged her parents to get her a green dress for Ashura", Massoud Hossaini, the 30-year-old photographer, told the BBC.
Though the family is not wealthy, they granted her wish.
It was the green dress that attracted Hossaini's attention at the start of the festival, a parade through the streets of Kabul.
Shortly after, a suicide bomber sat down in the middle of the crowd and blew himself up.
The bombing killed at least 54 people, and appeared to be part of a co-ordinated attack.
Injured by shrapnel
At about the same time, another bombing in a Shia mosque killed four in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Continue reading the main story
Start Quote
I still can't go back and look at the pictures I took that on that Ashura day
End Quote
Massoud Hossaini
AFP photographer
Taraneh survived. Her brother, the family's only son, died. So did her aunts and uncles.
Hossaini was injured by flying shrapnel.
"It was a tiny and deep injury on my left forearm," he said.
Despite his injury, he started taking pictures.
It was then he saw Taraneh again.
"She was screaming in shock," he said.
He captured that photo, and many others.
"Then, I asked my driver to take me back to my office because the pain was getting unbearable," he said.
Hossaini called his brother, who is a doctor, and began uploading the pictures to the wire.
"I was working only with one hand," Hossaini said.
His brother treated his wound, and Hossaini then went to his parents' home.
"I needed to be with my family," he said. "My wife was not in the city that day. I couldn't be alone."
After three hours, AFP called him to let him know that three major American newspapers had published his picture.
"It's a big deal for a photographer to see his picture on the cover of newspapers like New York Times, Los Angeles Times and Washington Post," he said.
A few days later he contacted Taraneh and her family. He also put the family in touch with his brother, Assef Hossaini, the doctor.
"For the past two, three months, we have provided help to the family," Dr Hossaini told the BBC.
The Pulitzer is the third award that Hossaini has received for this picture.
Before his Pulitzer, he won the Pictures of the Year International award for best news picture, and took second place for Spot News in the World Press Photo 2012 contest.
But the accolades cannot repair the trauma Hossaini feels when he thinks of the blast.
"I still can't go back and look at the pictures I took on that Ashura day," he said.
No wonder this Country has got so soft.
What an incredibly feeble excuse. Never mind the fact that your little rant there about the "happy clappy brigade" totally voids your obviously insincere "apology" and reveals you for the bigot you clearly are. If you weren't a homophobe, you wouldn't have used that particular perjorative term in an insulting context. You sure as hell wouldn't go into a bar in Soho and start using that word, because you know it's hateful, just like you wouldn't go for a stroll around Compton in LA and shout a certain perjorative word for Africans either.
I can't believe you didn't get banned for that. In fact, I'm disgusted that you didn't.
And for the sake of being on topic, a lot of controversial photography has been highly influential in social and cultural attitude changes over the years, especially when it comes to public opinion on war. And frankly I'd much rather these prestigious awards go to provocative images that inspire debate than insipid images that are forgotten instantly.
This is pretty much where I am. Accepting this prize, for me, negates any impact, significance, or validity it might've held as a standalone documentary of the scene.
What an incredibly feeble excuse. Never mind the fact that your little rant there about the "happy clappy brigade" totally voids your obviously insincere "apology" and reveals you for the bigot you clearly are. If you weren't a homophobe, you wouldn't have used that particular perjorative term in an insulting context. You sure as hell wouldn't go into a bar in Soho and start using that word, because you know it's hateful, just like you wouldn't go for a stroll around Compton in LA and shout a certain perjorative word for Africans either.
I can't believe you didn't get banned for that. In fact, I'm disgusted that you didn't.
And for the sake of being on topic, a lot of controversial photography has been highly influential in social and cultural attitude changes over the years, especially when it comes to public opinion on war. And frankly I'd much rather these prestigious awards go to provocative images that inspire debate than insipid images that are forgotten instantly.
Right. Because none of those things (impact, significance and validity) are what is celebrated by a Pulitzer in the first place.
I feel torn over this.
On one hand, I think it's extremely important that controversial images like this are showcased, so I have no issue with this receiving a prize. Photographs of atrocities serve the essential function of educating the wider world without the taint of media bias; the Vietnam War era springs to mind as another period of shocking imagery - like the harrowing photography of the massacre at My Lai, or Nick Ut's photo of the children running from the napalm attack on the village of Trang Bang, which was actually the first image I thought of when seeing this one, as this echoes many of the same feelings and is likely to prompt much of the same debate, which leads me to...
... on the other hand, it is rather gauche. I know I couldn't just stand there and photograph a scene like that. While I recognise our duty as humans to record atrocities, I also can't help but wince at the insensitivity shown here. However, it's important to bear in mind that we don't know what happened afterwards; in the case of the aforementioned Vietman photo, the photographer rushed the little girl in his photo to a hospital to get treated for the burns she had suffered. It's entirely possible that the photographer here reacted similarly after taking the shot. But in all honesty, it still makes me uncomfortable, and had I been in his place, I don't think I could have taken the shot.
I give it two days till this thread is filled with "He should have put the camera down and done something to help" v "He was doing his job, the world needs to see these things" arguments, a few people will take it all too personally, the insults will fly and then the thread will get locked.
Hey, Joxang, do you understand the concept of individuality? As in, do you understand that when someone advances an opinion, it could be within the context of their own viewpoint?
Did you notice the part where I said "for me"?
It's a really important, nay, integral part to comprehending what I wrote.
.I quite happily call my gay friends a mixture of faggot, queen, raving woofter, poof, fairy and a number of other things; in Soho, in Trafalgar Sq at Pride and a lot of other places. They give back just as good as they get (the straight insults are far less printable).
Have you actually ever been to a gay club? They are one of the bitchiest (and also funniest) places I've been.
Lol...I never understand this, why people on forums get really touchy when someone disagrees with their opinion. I respect your right to think the way you do, but 'for me', and 'in my opinion', there's a fundamental mistake in your reasoning...
I have individuality as well you know.
You didn't disagree with my opinion, because I didn't give an opinion, I gave a reaction.
I also didn't ask you if you have individuality, I asked you if you understand the concept of it.
Read->comprehend->post
It's an incontrovertible formula.
But, as with many perjorative terms, it's all about context. I call my gay friends queens and poofs too.
You've got to be kidding. Go read back what you said, and read what I wrote. You said that, in your opinion, accepting this prize negated its impact and significance.
I said that the whole point of the prize is awarding impact and significance. Please stop with the touchiness and actually answer the content of my post instead of getting all offended.