11:01am
August 21, 2014
I don’t think so. This is something really specific to staff/client photos, and it’s not just the smile, it’s the body language towards the client. It’s hard to explain though.
Notes:
bmo-the-communist likes this
gingerautie reblogged this from withasmoothroundstone and added:Is it the total onesidedness of it? Like, she had her arm around you, was grinning, and you aren’t actively...
soilrockslove likes this
quixylvre reblogged this from madeofpatterns
frazzledlimebeast likes this
walkingsaladshooterfromheaven likes this
madeofpatterns reblogged this from withasmoothroundstone and added:Yes. Herding and ownership is part of it. Part of it is views from above, too. It’s also… so clear that they’re not...
withasmoothroundstone reblogged this from madeofpatterns and added:That’s a really good comparison, and one I hadn’t thought of, but very apt. There’s a privilege gap going on there that...
rogerfedererofficial likes this
lesbipocalypse likes this
withasmoothroundstone likes this
dendriforming likes this
imnotevilimjustwrittenthatway likes this
thaxted said: It’s absolutely a thing. I learned to do it. I can’t quite describe it either, but it comes from a specific attitude/expectation of how you’re “supposed to look” as a staff person. I was faking and it was uncomfortable.
quixylvre likes this
flamethrowing-hurdy-gurdy said: I know what you mean about the discomfort of clients, I’ve noticed that, too. But I also think staff are trained to smile and act positive no matter what. They have to represent the place they work for after all. They might be told this is correct.
natalunasans likes this
Theme

25 notes