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Reason: None provided.

I've done film lighting, know differences between it and TV lighting. and there is a dead giveaway in the set lighting in this. It is actually TV-lit, though usable for still photos too. That is NOT the actual Oval Office, whose lighting is different, way different. Clues are the shadows within the flag surface textures, and the reflection on the desktop. Also there is a special flatness in luminosity here typical of TV set lighting. And yes, the windows are a giveaway too. Fake set, not the real White House.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I've done film lighting, know differences between it and TV lighting. and there is a dead giveaway in the set lighting in this. It is actually TV-lit, though usable for still photos too. That is NOT the actual Oval Office, whose lighting is different, way different. Clues are the shadows within the flag surface textures, and the reflection on the desktop. And yes, the windows are a giveaway too. Fake set, not the real White House.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I've done film lighting, know differences between it and TV lighting. and there is a dead giveaway in the set lighting in this. It is, actually TV-lit, though usable for still photos too. That is NOT the actual Oval Office, whose lighting is different, way different. Clues are the shadows within the flag surface textures, and the reflection on the desktop. And yes, the windows are a giveaway too. Fake set, not the real White House.

3 years ago
1 score