100 MOST INFLUENTIAL IMAGES OF ALL TIME

Lunch Atop A Skyscraper, 1932
Photographer: the photographers Charles C. Ebbets, Thomas Kelley and William Leftwich were all present that day, and it’s not known which one took it.  The picture, taken on the 69th floor of the flagship RCA Building (now the GE Building), was staged as part of a promotional campaign for the massive skyscraper complex. I chose this picture because it looks cool to be on a skyscraper without any safety measure and its crazy to believe that people work under these conditions.
Mushroom Cloud Over Nagasaki, Lieutenant Charles Levy, 1945
Photographer: Lieutenant Charles Levy Three days after an atomic bomb nicknamed Little Boy obliterated Hiroshima, Japan, U.S. forces dropped an even more powerful weapon dubbed Fat Man on Nagasaki. The explosion shot up a 45,000-foot-high column of radioactive dust and debris. I chose this picture because it is crazy to imagine the power of nuclear weapons being used on humans and it is a way to show people what a nuclear weapon is capable of.
A Man On The Moon, Neil Armstrong, Nasa, 1969
Photographer: Hasselblad The story behind this photo is that there was a group of astronauts and Hasselblad was responsible for taking all the pictures on the moon and he capture when Neil Armstrong was standing on the moon and you can see the other astronaut in the reflection. I chose this picture because the moon is a place where few people have been on and its interesting to see what it would be like to be on the moon

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