I see (fake) dead people.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuzAinIy5x_yMAF31X1efn1m0r5rH57oyJRYbsd4aJK91BX1Hz4EOLuhf3VIHoCp0WLsndKyFnlGnsdY8e6NNvBUAdxN8iZJwe7QeX-oj-4k9sgX1wy2GUzD-lyFulVc4bg7s5CA/s200/st-john-ambulance-3.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5XpB7k9rGYdcMbAU2TdkDCyvec-dxY0w4D_P4M0ByFFZ_Z1Xa_wNxpL_ST_N_Fb4cdD5TGhl5MEMZwx-5L1x3gWEUvFuDoyHn0oHwA7lbxjO7MBCxvcb_-nFpGgzgDLwyfMW4vQ/s200/st-john-ambulance-1.jpg)
(click ads to read copy, via) These executions for the UK's St John Ambulance—a charity that teaches first aid—have been out for a few days, and have been universally gushed over by the taste-making ad blogs. Photographer Nadav Kander shot these fictional serene death portraits for London agency BBH. Well, they certainly take the fake testimonial to a new macabre place. I guess using real recent accident corpses was out of the question—a good make-up artist can work miracles, though. Won't someone please think of the (fake dead) children?!?
1 Comments:
How old are these? "Hard slaps on the back."? Or has Britain not imported the Heimlich yet...
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