Fake Photos
I posted this photo yesterday for the 4th of July, because of the flag in the background, of a diver at a swim meet at Berea College, Kentucky. Unfortunately, as reader Bigbilly pointed out, the photo is a fake: it has been Photoshopped.
Here's the original photo. It was taken by LIFE photographer Joe Scherschel for a photo set called "Ohio State Swim Meeting" taken on March 30, 1953. Not only was the photo faked by removing the swimsuit, the other information about the photo was fake, too. The swim meet was not at Berea College, Kentucky; it was at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.
Unfortunately, fake photos like this can contribute to the spread of fake history: a distorted or outright false view of what happened in the past. It is true that men and boys used to swim naked together in high school and college and the YMCA when there were no women or girls present. However, the narrative has been spread that there were also some naked swim meets with women present.
Bigbilly belongs to a group that has exhaustively researched those claims, and they have found them all to be false, with only a couple of possible exceptions, and those were outdoor long-distance swimming marathons, not regular swim meets, and even in those cases, participants covered their genitals from spectators until they were in the water.
What do we learn from this? Surprise, surprise, not everything you see on the Internet is true.
This isn't the first time I've encountered fake nude photos on the Internet. The photo above claimed to be from the yearbook of New Trier High School, New Trier, Illinois. Note the photos of the swim team and swimmers, even showing frontal nudity. Would a high school yearbook publish such photos?
No, they wouldn't and didn't. Here's the original yearbook page, with everyone wearing a swimsuit.
What makes that faked yearbook page extremely ironic is that students at New Trier High School actually did swim naked, and we have a photo to prove it, taken by LIFE photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt. The caption says the students are warming up for water volleyball. This would have been a boys' gym class with no girls present. The photo above was published in the Oct. 16, 1950 issue of LIFE magazine and is definitely not a fake. LIFE sometimes published photos of rear nudity, but it never published frontal nudity, and neither would a yearbook.
Here's another faked yearbook photo, from the yearbook of Clarion State College in Clarion, Pennsylvania.
And here's the real yearbook page.
Why do people create these fakes? Just for the hell of it, I guess, and because Photoshop makes it easy to do.
But, again, the irony is that it's not necessary to make fake photos of nude swimmers when there are plenty of real ones around. Above is a photo taken in 1938 by LIFE photographer William Vandivert of Michigan State swimming coach Matt Mann talking to a swimmer.
In 1937, LIFE photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt did a photo set on Yale University swimmers. Here are the Yale boys in the shower.
And even the coaches had no need for modesty when in an all-male environment. This is Eisenstaedt's photo of Yale swim coach Bob Kiphuth. This and the previous two photos were never published in LIFE magazine, but the LIFE archive of 4 million photos taken by LIFE photographers is now available online for us to view, including some gems like the ones above.
12 comments:
interesting!
It never occurred to me that that pic was photoshopped. It's a crummy thing to do, because in a sense, it violates the privacy and misrepresents the subjects of the original photos. Imagine the embarrassment of those high school boys were they to see that photoshopped pic of themselves. Terrible.
Even though photos of nude Yale swimmers were never actually published in LIFE magazine, it is interesting to note that photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt took a photo of the Yale swim team naked in the showers. Why did he do this, knowing that the photo would never be published? Was he collecting his own personal archive of nude college guys? Inquiring minds want to know!
I mean, I pretty sure most of them are dead. The APHA stopped recommending nude swimming in 1962, or 61 years ago. When you consider some of the originals were from the 30s, meaning the boys would be a least in their late 90s now...
Photoshop fakery is very annoying.
In those times it was mandatory to swimm naked because the filter systems weren't efficient so wearing a bathing suit would bring some material that could break the system.
Men were seperated from women so no offense to swim with other men.
@Anon - Why did Eisenstaedt take nude photos of the Yale swimmers? Professional photographers take many more photos that they ever expect to use. Eisenstaedt took 80 photos of the Yale swimmers, of which only a handful were nudes. Basically, Eisenstaedt would have been snapping away at anything of interest, with the expectation that the LIFE editors could select what they wanted to use in the magazine. Eisenstaedt knew that the magazine did sometimes publish photos with rear nudity, and if some of the photos showed frontal nudity, the editors might crop out the frontal nudity and use the rest of the photo. So, nothing was off limits for the photographer.
As I said in a comment yesterday, I take a VERY DIM view of photoshopped pictures that depict inaccurate history. I have read accounts written by men and women who, in their youth attended swimming meets or practices where the boys were nude. It made me think that MAYBE there was a healthier attitude about nudity at one time in some places in the United States. Of course it is FACT that a lot of Europe, and especially the Nordic countries DID have a very healthy attitude towards male nudity, especially in the 1900s.
I want that nude coach!!!
Now with AI-generated photos fake is trend
Does anyone know of an online chat group or something like that where guys chat (text) about images like these in real time? I love this sort of stuff - would like to have others to chat with while looking at it!
I have done some photoshop by carefully circumcising an uncut dude to show "before and after" affixing someone else's member, scaled to fit the original model's (aligning exposed gland corona to the origina's corona through foreskin) and then blending the skin. But I would not publish such unless there is clear "before and after" and indicatiuon it was done by Dr Photoshop.
when working off these blogs, one problem is that the low resolution of images can easily hide the tell tale signs of putting different body on a head (the neck is generally where you see such) and these fakes can become insidious because there is no way to know.
I applaud you for having done the research and finding the original !
I have to admit that it is fun to do and get skin tones right etc. (I have also done the reverse a few times giving a cut guy a long foreskin).
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