the curious incident of the diner at midday

Here’s one of those photography ethics things. I was sitting in a booth in a quintessential American lunch-car diner with my camera on the table. While looking at the menu, I heard the sound of stressed voices coming from across the diner. I glanced over, saw two women who I thought had a family resemblance staring at each other. The light was nice and the scene had some drama. What to do?

  1. Mind your own business?
  2. Turn your camera on the table and shoot a quick photo without looking?
  3. Pick up your camera and photograph the situation?

Obviously, the most ethical thing to do is 1) Mind your own business. I had no idea what the situation was, it had nothing to do with me, and the two women involved would almost certainly prefer to be ignored.

But if you’ve ever practiced street photography–or if you’ve ever wanted to practice street photography–you know that people are often most interesting and most honest during emotionally charged moments. And those moments are almost always worth photographing. So some/many photographers would at least consider options 2 and 3.

You have to be a complete asshole to choose option 3; to pick up your camera and openly, deliberately invade their privacy. Option 3, however, has the dubious advantage of being honest and direct, whereas option 2 is, let’s face it, sort of underhanded. The thing about option 2–shooting without looking, without composing–is you’re allowing the fickle Gods of Photography determine if you get a decent shot or not. If the shot sucks, then it will get binned and nobody has to think about it.

If the result works as a photograph, then both options 2 and 3 set up a secondary ethics challenge: do you further violate the privacy of these two women by posting it? If you choose to post it, do you post it on a very public social media platform (like, say, BlueSky or Instagram) or on a significantly less popular platform (like, say, your blog)?

Obviously, I chose option 2. Well, sort of. I mean, it’s not like I sat there and considered all the ethical questions. I took the photograph without considering anything at all, completely unhindered by any thought process. I turned the camera on, turned it toward their table, touched the shutter release, turned the camera off, and didn’t think about it again until I got home and looked at my photos.

And hey, I got lucky. It’s a pretty good shot (in my opinion).

This is the shot in question.

Obviously, I decided to post the photos here, on my personal blog. I’ll also post links to the blog on Facebook and BlueSky. How do I justify this? I’m relying on the Men in Black defense. If you’re in a public place: don’t start nothing, won’t be nothing. If you raise voices in a public setting, the public will look at you. Sure, few of them will take your photo, but a photograph is essentially nothing more than an extended look. You don’t have a reasonable expectation of privacy in a public setting.

Another thing: I’ve no idea what these women were talking about. I don’t know if they were arguing, if they were upset with each other or with something else, if their distress was sincere or in jest, if one was distressed and the other wasn’t. I don’t know because I didn’t pay any attention to them (other than to note their voices were momentarily raised). They could have been outraged by the portions or the size of their bill, for all I know.

That said, it’s important (to me, at any rate) not to fully absolve myself. The women may not have had a reasonable expectation of privacy while talking to each other in a very public diner, but I didn’t have to pay attention to them. While I didn’t make any effort to take a good photograph, the fact remains that by taking any photograph I invaded what they probably thought of as a private moment.

Was it worth it? I don’t know. I think it’s an interesting photograph. The chance that either of them will ever see this…or that anybody they know will ever see this…are incredibly slim. I could probably legitimately make the ‘No harm, no foul’ argument. But maybe this type of photography is a social harm in and of itself. I don’t know.

Here’s the thing: I spent several years as a private investigator. Much of my work (which was primarily criminal defense investigation) involved making ethical decisions in the immediate moment–and there was rarely any obviously correct decision in those moments. So I’m used to questioning my ethics. It’s easier with photography. With photography, you can always take the shot and delete it later IF you decide it was inappropriate or unethical. In photography, you have that leeway.

Looking at the photo, I don’t think the level of tension between the two women is terribly obvious–unless you’re looking for it. I don’t think there’s any ethical reason NOT to publish it. Others may disagree, but I’m comfortable with my decision.

5 thoughts on “the curious incident of the diner at midday

  1. It’s an interesting question. I’ve been the one in the heated situation in the diner; sometimes things just happen. Long road trip, with 2 rowdy little kids, everybody tired and cranky. We sat in a booth, a stupid argument broke out. He shoved my shoulder where I was sitting at the edge of the booth and I literally fell out of the booth onto the floor. (It hurt.) Paul and the kids started laughing (I’m sure it looked pretty comical) and everyone else was staring, shocked. I was SO ANGRY. Madder than a wet hen, was the phrase used later. I managed to get up and I just… left. Walked out of the diner just like that and started walking away in this little mountain town. Tried to think what to do next but just couldn’t even think straight. Just kept walking. Stomping, really. So angry.

    About the time I was realizing I couldn’t just storm off and start a new life, at least not without the kids, a car and some money, they all drove up behind me in the van and were all profusely apologetic and scared and more apologetic and whatnot. Didn’t make it all better but, you know.

    Anyway, if some yahoo had been taking pics of the whole incident I’m pretty sure I would have ignored them in the moment; everyone was staring anyway, there was no expectation of privacy, really. It would have added to the humiliation factor a bit more, probably. But sometimes the private arguments and whatnot just spill over into public spaces. So when that happens, if the yahoo in question wants a photo, being a bit discreet about it would be appreciated.

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    • Aw, man, that’s an awful moment. I’ve done something similar. Was off somewhere with my brother (who was driving) and we had an argument and I insisted he stop and let me out. And he did. I walked off in a fury; he drove off in an equal fury.

      But he eventually turned around and tracked me down. We laughed about it later, but we were both murderous at the time.

      I’d have hated to have my photo taken at the time, though I suspect it would have been a good photo.

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      • It does seem better to stomp off than to actually murder them in the moment. And when I looked back on my incident later, I thought what a great set of images it would have made- the mom falling, the kids’ openmouthed reactions, the whole thing. Man.

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