I know there has been much controversy about President Obama and his use of a teleprompter. I've seen the equipment several times when covering the President's visits. Once in Kansas and then again in Iowa. For what it's worth, I don't think there is anything wrong to with using a teleprompter. Considering that I used to travel so much that it was hard to remember exactly where you were staying for the night and once tried to use a hotel key to enter the room I'd stayed in the week previous, I can certainly understand the need to use a teleprompter when you are scheduled to be in two or three locations a day.
When you cover an event where the President is going to attend, the process for getting in place to do your job generally means you have an hour or so of time with little or nothing to do before he arrives. You can walk around in your designated press area and maybe photograph or interview members of the public that are streaming in to find their places. With so much structure and being corralled like an animal, it's hard to do anything much but wait.
Well, while standing around in Cedar Rapids I see the teleprompter equipment with no one at the controls. There is always a Secret Service agent close or sitting at the controls, but this time the chairs were empty. So I, and another photographer, took the opportunity the grab a few shots of the equipment. Within seconds, a White House staff person descended on us and said that we could not photograph the equipment. Well... He was too late! Directly below is the super secret teleprompter that can't be photographed.
Upon the President's arrival, but before he walked to the podium, a three ring binder was removed from the lectern and brought to the table where the teleprompter equipment was located. The Secret Service agent provided the person with the binder some updated pages that were inserted and then the folder was placed back on the lectern.
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