All Attempts To Keep This Awkward Photo Of French President Francois Hollande Private Have Completely Failed

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French President Francois Hollande was visiting the Michelet school in Denain, Northern France yesterday when photographer Dennis Charlet snapped a picture of him for French news agency Agence France Presse.

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Unfortunately, something was wrong with the photo. Just a few hours after it was published, the agency - which reportedly gets almost half of its income from government contracts - ordered a mandatory kill on the photograph, citing "editorial problems."

Hollande Mandatory Kill

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What was wrong with the photo? The AFP claim that Hollande's government did not ask them to remove the image, but it was removed due to an internal editorial decision. Hollande's government has also come out to deny asking for the picture to be removed.

Whatever the reason behind removing the photo, the backlash has been swift. Slate.fr is holding a caption contest on the image ("When I'm happy I vomit" is currently the winner), while the Times of London says he looks like a "village idiot." Le Point said that the photo has achieved the "Streisand Effect" - referring to Barbara Streisand's counterproductive efforts to suppress photographs of her Malibu home in 2003.

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The "mandatory kill" seems to have been ultimately futile anyway. Rival agency Reuters has a very similar photograph of Hollande currently available for download:

Hollande France

Denis Charlet/Reuters