NewsPhotography

Pittsburgh Penguins Photoshopped Masks onto Fans, Sparking Backlash

The Pittsburgh Penguins NHL team is facing backlash after one of its staffers Photoshopped masks onto people in an image shared on social media. The original photo featured multiple people either not wearing masks or wearing them incorrectly.

The image and associated tweet were shared on March 3 and were designed to thank fans for their loyalty and support during a time where public gatherings have been either banned or limited in much of the country.

The photo was published after the Penguin’s first game since the pandemic began where fans were allowed back in the stands (Tuesday, March 2, 2021). The issue is that the photo above has been altered, and the original image (by Getty) depicts multiple fans either not wearing masks or wearing them incorrectly.

The woman in the upper right who is not wearing a mask was cropped out of the picture entirely, while the man on the lower center and woman on the upper right were edited to look as though the masks were being worn properly.

The choice to edit the faces and publish the image sparked controversy as many fans point out that it was easier for the team to adjust reality rather than properly enforce mask-wearing rules.

Following the backlash, the Penguins issued the following apologetic statement:

While perhaps well intended, our staffer should not have altered a wide crowd photo to adjust masks on faces of even a few fans who were not strictly following the rules. Our social media team should never send out altered photos to our fan base. This is a violation of our social media and safety policy, and this staffer has been disciplined.

Penguins CEO David Morehouse also told Pittsburgh’s local CBS affiliate that the organization was happy to have fans back in the arena and most people were wearing masks.

This is not the first time adding masks in post has caused controversy. Last year, Disneyland briefly tested a program where masks would be digitally added to photos of guests on rides if they were not wearing them or not wearing them properly. The company eventually suspended the practice but did not cite any reasoning for doing so.

(via KDKA 2)


Author: Jaron Schneider
Source: Petapixel

Related posts
Cleantech & EV'sNews

Einride deploys first daily commercial operations of autonomous trucks in Europe

Cleantech & EV'sNews

ChargePoint collaborates with GM Energy to deploy up to 500 EV fast chargers with Omni Ports

Cleantech & EV'sNews

How Ukraine assassinated a Russian general with an electric scooter

CryptoNews

Day-1 Crypto Executive Orders? Bitcoin Bulls Brace for Trump's Big Move

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!