Tourist guy

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The infamous picture of the "tourist guy" standing on the roof of the World Trade Center, seemingly seconds before the plane hits the tower.
The infamous picture of the "tourist guy" standing on the roof of the World Trade Center, seemingly seconds before the plane hits the tower.

The tourist guy, also known as the accidental tourist (a joking reference to the novel and film The Accidental Tourist), Waldo (a reference to the Where's Waldo? franchise), WTC Guy, or tourist of death, is an Internet phenomenon consisting of a photograph of a tourist that has appeared in many photoshopped pictures after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

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[edit] 9/11

Soon after 9/11 an image showing a tourist on an observation deck of the World Trade Center while an airliner was about to hit the building beneath him circulated on the Internet. While it was claimed that the picture came from a camera found in the debris at Ground Zero, there were digital compositing errors in the photograph as well as serious logical inconsistencies with the facts of the 9/11 attacks. [1]

[edit] Inconsistencies

Hoaxapedia from Museum of Hoaxes's online encyclopedia [2] listed some of the inconsistencies the photo had:

  • "It stretched credulity to believe that a camera could have survived such a fall.
  • September 11 was a warm day. The temperature was in the high sixties that morning. And yet the man in the photo was wearing heavy clothing.
  • The man would have been standing on the south tower of the world trade center—the building with the observation deck. And yet the north tower was the first tower to be hit. Therefore, if we are to believe this picture is real, we must assume the man was happily posing for his photo as the other building was burning off to his side.
  • The plane that hit the south tower approached from the south. However, it is evident from the landmarks behind the man that the plane in this photo is approaching from the north.
  • It’s the wrong type of plane. Both of the jets that crashed into the World Trade Center were 767s, whereas a 757 is shown in this photo.
  • If the plane is approaching at high speed, why isn’t it blurry in the photo?
  • If someone saw a plane about to hit the building where the picture was taking place, why would he/she continue to take the picture?
  • The plane hit the south tower at 9:03 am, at which time the observation deck was closed. It only would have opened at 9:30 am."

— Hoaxapedia, Tourist Guy

Also, the original photo of the plane that was 'Photoshopped' in the picture, can be found at http://www.airliners.net/open.file/0131660/M/.

[edit] Later appearances

The picture became one of the most widely known examples of Internet humor. As its fame spread, other people started to use the same tourist for other pictures. They included the tourist present at the sinking of the RMS Titanic, at the John F. Kennedy assassination, the destruction of Air France Flight 4590 and at the Hindenburg disaster. Other pictures show him present at disastrous events in movies, like the destruction of the White House in Independence Day or as the bus driver in Speed. There are also pictures of him together with people from other famous photoshopped pictures, such as Bert or Rodger Degagne, a man holding a huge cat named Snowball (in reality, Snowball was a normal-sized cat named Jumper, and Degagne's real name is Cordell Hauglie). There even appeared a picture of the Yalta conference where Stalin is replaced by the man with the cat, with the tourist and Bert on the background.

[edit] The real tourist

The first person who claimed to be the tourist was the Brazilian businessman José Roberto Penteado.[3] When Penteado started to get media attention, including an offer to be in a Volkswagen commercial, a 25 year old Hungarian man named Péter Guzli came forward as the real tourist. Guzli says, however, that he does not want publicity and did not originally release his last name.

Guzli took the photo on November 28, 1997, and was also responsible for the initial edit. He edited the image for a few friends, not realizing it would spread so quickly across the Internet. He first provided the original undoctored photo and several other photos from the same series as proof to a Hungarian newspaper.[4] Later on, the show Wired News examined the evidence and confirmed that Guzli was the real tourist guy.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Snopes: Tourist on World Trade Center
  2. ^ Tourist Guy
  3. ^ Tourist Guy. Museum of Hoaxes. Retrieved on 2006-03-20.
  4. ^ Egy magyar turista kalandjai a cybertérben (Hungarian). Retrieved on 2006-03-20.
  5. ^ Benner, Jeffrey (2001-11-20). He's the Real Tourist Guy. Wired News. Wired. Retrieved on 2007-02-18.

[edit] Pictures