When I was a little kid, I kinda hated getting my photo taken. Going to the seaside was about the sea and not keeping my hair nice for twenty minutes while my father was getting a hold of his new camera. Christmas was also a drag. I mean, exchanging presents and sitting at the table was wholesome, but organizing everyone in front of the damn tree so nobody would fall out of frame — not so much.
However, family photos aren’t just for the people in them but for future generations as well. Someday, my children, nieces, and nephews will look at them and realize that my crooked smile doesn’t mean I hate them. They’ll realize I’ve had it since forever. And hopefully, it’ll make it easier for them to get along with my grumpy old butt. They’re about creating memories, documenting growth, and revealing character.
Awkward Family Photos is an online celebration of these things. It’s a place that invites people to submit all the funny, cringy, and of course, awkwardmoments their family has caught on film, proving that we all know how to make a fool of ourselves, and our descendants will certainly get to enjoy that.
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Recently, Awkward Family Photos even released Cringeworthy, an outrageous adult party game of painfully hilarious, unbelievably awkward situations. But you could say the road to where the project is today started way back.
Mike Bender, one of the main people behind Awkward Family Photos, has always had a connection to awkwardness and comedy. “As a kid, I was very aware of awkward situations,” he told We. “I didn’t exactly want them to happen but when they did, I was excited to have a new story to tell. I think it led me to become a writer after graduating college. I wrote my first movie at age 22 called Not Another Teen Movie and continued to work as a screenwriter for about 13 years.”
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When the film business began to shift, Mike started to search for opportunities online and saw there was a lot of potential for creative expression there. “Around that time, in 2009, I went home to my parents’ house for the weekend and saw my mother putting up what was for me an awkward family photo from my teenage years. She had framed it and was going to hang it in the wall.”
“I thought that was such a peculiar idea — to memorialize this awkward moment. But I also thought it was intriguing. So I met with my writing partner and friend, Doug Chernack, who I grew up with in New Jersey, and he told me that his childhood home was full of awkward family photos. And so we decided to start a website and our only hope was that if we posted our awkward pics, others would do the same.”
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There were only a few blogs built on user-submitted material at that time, so the guys put up the site and within a week, it blew up, blowing them away, too. “We started receiving awkward photos from all over the world! It felt like something big was happening.”
Now, Mike is 45, married, and has two kids. Awkward Family Photos gets hundreds of photos a week, focusing on the most surprising ones. Mike thinks their project got so big because we all can relate to these photos in some way. “Even if it’s not their family. they see their family in others and there’s something comforting about knowing that you’re not alone.”
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