Fifty-nine years ago today, Malcolm Browne, an @AP correspondent, photographed the shocking and horrific self-immolation of a Buddhist monk in Saigon. I talked to Malcolm about his iconic photo in 2011 when I was the international picture editor @TIME...🧵
There are two photos from that day that are the most widely seen. A heavily-cropped version of the image above, and this one, made just before. Malcolm told me he used a “cheap Japanese camera," referring to his 1962 Petri 7s rangefinder with a 45/2.8.
Malcolm had received a phone call from a monk the night before alerting him that something big was going to happen. The photos leading up to that shocking moment are eerily peaceful. Here is a partial contact sheet (Malcolm told me he shot about 10 rolls of Tri-X):
On June 11, 1963, a monk named Thich Quang Duc calmly exited a car and sat on a cushion in an intersection. A younger monk drenched him with gasoline. "He got out a matchbook, lighted it, and dropped it in his lap and was immediately engulfed in flames. Everybody was horrified."
Malcolm Browne's iconic photo was, surprisingly, not used by the @nytimes. They went with another, less graphic, photo of Malcolm's from that day instead:
However, Malcolm's photo DID appear in the @nytimes on June 27, 1963. In a full-page ad purchased by a group of clergymen.
In fact, the "burning monk" photo wasn't all that widely published in US newspapers (the @washingtonpost didn't use it). And when it 𝘸𝘢𝘴 published, it was inside, not on front pages. Here is the @BostonGlobe and the @latimes on June 12, 1963:
@LIFE magazine published a spread with Malcolm's photos in the June 21, 1963 edition.
@TIME and @usnews published the "burning monk" photo small on the inside (I tried but couldn't find @newsweek).
And I'm sure a lot of people first saw Malcolm's iconic photo on the cover of Rage Against the Machine's debut album released on November 3, 1992. cc: @tmorello
The photos from the aftermath of the self-immolation are surreal. President Kennedy, said of Malcolm's iconic photo: "No news picture in history has generated so much emotion around the world as that one."
I'm forever thankful that I was able to talk to Malcolm back in 2011. He was gracious with his time despite the fact he'd just broken his neck and was suffering from Parkinson's. Malcolm died in 2012. RIP🙏🏻time.com/3791176/malcol…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
The @nytimes covered Trump’s "gig" at McDonald's in at least seven articles but missed this photo by Bucks County Herald freelance photographer Sara Pinkus.
Pinkus, a retired bank manager who describes herself as a “photo enthusiast,” made the most telling image of the day.
The image of a politician dishing out food is nothing new, yet Trump’s McDonald’s stunt was all about trolling his opponent. This photo was taken by @dougmillsnyt
Trump took his trolling to new heights in Wisconsin yesterday, sporting an orange vest while riding in a Trump branded garbage truck, a response to a recent gaffe by President Biden. @dougmillsnyt was again in the mix…
One year ago the @nytimes published what is arguably the most graphic photo in their 171-year history. Bravely taken by @lynseyaddario, the image shows a Ukrainian woman, her two kids, and another man dead in the street, victims of a Russian mortar strike. #UkraineRussiaWar 🧵
Images of clearly identifiable dead bodies on the cover of newspapers are rare. This was a bold statement by the @nytimes. Other photographers captured the aftermath of the attack on March 6, 2022, including @dherreraphoto for @europapress:
This photo of Vladimir Putin was taken by Platon in 2007 for @TIME. Fifteen years later, it remains one of the most singular portraits of a world leader ever made, transcending photography. It has become a symbol. 🧵
Putin was @TIME's Person of the Year in 2007. Platon photographed him at his private residence outside of Moscow. "I was about an inch and a half from Putin's nose...I could feel his breathing on my hand." Platon told @CNN in this video from 2014.
Here's a good interview with Platon from 2008 about his experience photographing Putin, made after the image won a @worldpressphoto award.
Fifty years ago today @AP photographer Nick Ut made this photo of a young girl screaming in pain, fleeing a napalm attack in Vietnam. It is one of the defining moments of the Vietnam War. It is one of the defining moments of all wars. 🧵
The girl in the picture, Phan Thi Kim Phuc, became known as "Napalm Girl". "I saw her skin coming off and I stopped taking pictures." Nick told @VanityFair. "I didn’t want her to die. I wanted to help her." Nick drove Kim Phuc to the hospital. (This is the uncropped version.)
Nick shot the photo with a Leica M2 and a 35/2 on Tri-X. This is the original, hole-punched negative. Nick's older brother, Huynh Thanh My, was an @AP photographer killed in the war. Nick called him bảy, which means 7 in Vietnamese. His iconic image is frame number 7. Amazing.
The greatest protest photos of all time were taken 33 years ago today. On June 5, 1989, six (not four) photographers captured a lone protester facing down a column of tanks near #TiananmenSquare. This version of the“Tank Man” photo was made by @StuartAFranklin for @TIME...🧵
I interviewed Stuart in 2009 for the @nytimes. He told me he shot the photo from the balcony of the Beijing Hotel and that his film was "smuggled out in a packet of tea by a French student and delivered to the @MagnumPhotos office in Paris." The contact sheet is fascinating:
Charlie Cole was working for @Newsweek next to Stuart on the balcony. His version is much tighter (taken with a 300) and won @WorldPressPhoto. He hid the film in his hotel room, attaching it to the flush chain in the tank of the toilet. Sadly, Charlie died in 2019. RIP 🙏🏻