Friendship is a two-way street, and sometimes we need to assess a friendship to see if what we’re putting into it is worth what we’re getting out of it. Does it seem like you’re always the one bending over backwards for the other person? Does your friend routinely flake on plans or suddenly seem to disappear when you need them the most?
Or even more importantly, do they take bad pictures of you?
That’s what a guy named Jeff (@JeffJoseph96) ran into recently when he was apparently out for a bike ride with his friend Reed.
https://twitter.com/JeffJoseph96/status/1001589012698722304
As you can see, Reed practically looks like he was being photographed for the cover of a cycling magazine. Poor Jeff, on the other hand, was clearly not prepared for the photo. He seemed to be in mid-speech as it was being taken. The photo was also taken from an unflattering angle and with bad lighting.
Seriously, what the hell, Reed?
Another user attempted to help Jeff out by adding some basic Photoshop wizardry, but even then—not great, Bob!
Add some filters. Lower the contrast and brightness and it’s not all lost. pic.twitter.com/6uvxtlqEyh
— Eddie Valentine 🇵🇸🎨 (@Thrash_Minded) May 30, 2018
As Jeff’s tweet began to go viral, others came forward to empathize with their own examples of friends not reciprocating good candid photography.
https://twitter.com/lexgts/status/1001985045047971840
When i take a picture of my friend vs when my friend takes a picture of me pic.twitter.com/3C2koJyPk3
— madi b ♛ (@madibartonn) May 25, 2018
https://twitter.com/zmitchell7/status/1002055145931395072
https://twitter.com/KelseyTuckerrr/status/1002037359028981760
One person even admitted to being that friend on at least one occasion.
@yesiamjulianna pic you took vs what I took pic.twitter.com/IxPCO2X81E
— MJ Wood (@mariongurrrl) May 30, 2018
Let’s get with the program, people. Friends don’t take bad pictures of their friends.