PatsFans.com Menu
PatsFans.com - The Hub For New England Patriots Fans

Brady Courtroom Artist Responds!


Status
Not open for further replies.
Odds that she will be back in that courtroom tomorrow...given her professional response to this attention?

Fringe-S3x12-Outlook-not-so-good.jpg
 
Well those are two schools that suck because she can't draw for ****.

I've had precious little training but I know damn well I could sketch something that would at least bear some legit resemblance to TB.

I think I'll be joining in on the Photoshopping fun...
 
Art exists in the eye of the beholder...

INOW one mans premium is anothers "dud suds"....
 
https://sports.vice.com/en_us/artic...-with-the-deflategate-courtroom-sketch-artist

Jane Rosenberg has been a courtroom sketch artist for decades, having drawn scenes from high profile cases such as the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, as well as others involving celebrities such as Woody Allen, Martha Stewart, and John Gotti.

On Wednesday, she was tasked to do courtroom sketches for Wednesday's settlement hearing in the ongoing #deflategate saga. Her sketch of Tom Brady in the courtroom went viral almost instantly, and not all of the attention was flattering. Many people on social media criticized her depiction of the quarterback. VICE Sports spoke to her over the phone as she was leaving the courthouse and first experiencing the bizarre whirlwind of everything that comes with her painstaking work being turned into a viral meme. It was yet another bit of nonsense from a whole case full of nonsense. Rosenberg was just doing her job and certainly wasn't looking for the attention.

Rosenberg seemed a bit flustered on the phone as she was dealing with having unexpectedly become part of the day's news.

tell-tom-brady-im-sorry-qa-with-the-deflategate-courtroom-sketch-artist-body-image-1439409784.jpg


What kind of response have you seen to the sketch so far?

Well I haven't seen any. People are emailing me and calling me and trying to interview me. I don't do Twitter or Facebook so social media is not my thing. But obviously it's gone viral. Some people are like sending me snippets though––things, complaints, that I made him look like Lurch or whatever. Tell Tom Brady, I'm sorry. He's a very good looking guy and if I didn't make him look good enough, I'll try harder next time.

When you are doing the sketches, how realistic do you try to make it look? And how much are you just trying to capture a mood?

I'm working very quickly. Obviously I have a lot of pressure on me, and it's time pressure. It's lucky if I have a few minutes. So I'm just trying to grab onto something, just as quick as I can. Now, this Tom Brady thing, I did this whole wide shot with a million people in it. And everybody's focusing on that one little fraction of the whole picture, of Tom Brady. But it's really a big wide composition. There's a lot of people and the whole courtroom in it.

When you have a case like this with a highly recognizable person, do you feel any more pressure?

Yes, I do. I do feel more pressure. It's horrible. You hate that. Especially when they're good looking, that's the worst. I'd rather do famous terrorists or something.

Do you plan on looking up any of the reaction when you get home?

I don't know. I don't do Twitter. I don't even know if I could. I don't know how I'm going to see it all. I'm sure it's horrible. Maybe I'll be depressed tomorrow, who knows? Right now I'm not reacting.

Does it bother you if people are making fun of it or anything like that?

Does it bother me, people making fun of me? I don't know. It hasn't sunk in yet. I might be very depressed. I'm my biggest critic, myself. So I feel terrible when I do a bad sketch. So when the whole world is criticizing me, I might just kill myself. Or I might just laugh it off. Who knows?
 
https://sports.vice.com/en_us/artic...-with-the-deflategate-courtroom-sketch-artist

Jane Rosenberg has been a courtroom sketch artist for decades, having drawn scenes from high profile cases such as the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, as well as others involving celebrities such as Woody Allen, Martha Stewart, and John Gotti.

On Wednesday, she was tasked to do courtroom sketches for Wednesday's settlement hearing in the ongoing #deflategate saga. Her sketch of Tom Brady in the courtroom went viral almost instantly, and not all of the attention was flattering. Many people on social media criticized her depiction of the quarterback. VICE Sports spoke to her over the phone as she was leaving the courthouse and first experiencing the bizarre whirlwind of everything that comes with her painstaking work being turned into a viral meme. It was yet another bit of nonsense from a whole case full of nonsense. Rosenberg was just doing her job and certainly wasn't looking for the attention.

Rosenberg seemed a bit flustered on the phone as she was dealing with having unexpectedly become part of the day's news.

tell-tom-brady-im-sorry-qa-with-the-deflategate-courtroom-sketch-artist-body-image-1439409784.jpg


What kind of response have you seen to the sketch so far?

Well I haven't seen any. People are emailing me and calling me and trying to interview me. I don't do Twitter or Facebook so social media is not my thing. But obviously it's gone viral. Some people are like sending me snippets though––things, complaints, that I made him look like Lurch or whatever. Tell Tom Brady, I'm sorry. He's a very good looking guy and if I didn't make him look good enough, I'll try harder next time.

When you are doing the sketches, how realistic do you try to make it look? And how much are you just trying to capture a mood?

I'm working very quickly. Obviously I have a lot of pressure on me, and it's time pressure. It's lucky if I have a few minutes. So I'm just trying to grab onto something, just as quick as I can. Now, this Tom Brady thing, I did this whole wide shot with a million people in it. And everybody's focusing on that one little fraction of the whole picture, of Tom Brady. But it's really a big wide composition. There's a lot of people and the whole courtroom in it.

When you have a case like this with a highly recognizable person, do you feel any more pressure?

Yes, I do. I do feel more pressure. It's horrible. You hate that. Especially when they're good looking, that's the worst. I'd rather do famous terrorists or something.

Do you plan on looking up any of the reaction when you get home?

I don't know. I don't do Twitter. I don't even know if I could. I don't know how I'm going to see it all. I'm sure it's horrible. Maybe I'll be depressed tomorrow, who knows? Right now I'm not reacting.

Does it bother you if people are making fun of it or anything like that?

Does it bother me, people making fun of me? I don't know. It hasn't sunk in yet. I might be very depressed. I'm my biggest critic, myself. So I feel terrible when I do a bad sketch. So when the whole world is criticizing me, I might just kill myself. Or I might just laugh it off. Who knows?

In context or out of it, this has to be one of the most bizarre quotes of this whole bizarre saga:

Especially when they're good looking, that's the worst. I'd rather do famous terrorists or something.
 
How could Brady have had his phone in the courtroom? The reporters phones were confiscated. That's why they could not live tweet. (Stephen Brown was tweeting from the media room.) They wouldn't allow the participants to have a phone in the courtroom! Also, if Brady had been checking the phone, Berman would have called him on it.
 
I don't buy the notion that Brady spent much of the hearing checking his cell phone. That would be the height of disrespect. The courtrooms I'm familiar with don't even allow cell phones for anyone to be turned on (unless the phone contains some evidence and is needed).

Federal courts, especially post-911, do not allow cellphones inside federal courthouses (let alone a judge's courtroom), and if they are brought in, they are confiscated by the US Marshall Service and returned to the owner when they leave the building.
 
Painted to Brady to be a villain, literally.

Lied that Brady was checking his cell phone.

I get it. She must work for...the NFL!
I know you meant that as a joke....and it was funny. But my first reaction was that the NFL has a hand in this.

The NFL has been trying to present Brady as a bad guy for the last 6 month with a great deal of success, despite the fact they have no evidence of a crime, let alone Brady was involved. Depicting Brady as ugly villian just furthers the NFL's agenda. They knew that the scum sucking media would take it viral in a nano-second, and within an hour THAT picture will lead every sports segment across the nation, while ESPN will run with every half hour. What a coincidence.
 
Also, if Brady had been checking the phone, Berman would have called him on it.
You mean Berman would have phoned Brady and told him to put his phone away? If that happened, I'll bet Brady would've "destroyed" his phone on the spot and said, "What phone?"

I think I just described a Three Stooges-style courtroom sketch.
 
Last edited:
Honestly though, what was gained from this drawing? Seems like a pointless job.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: eom
Status
Not open for further replies.


Patriots Kraft ‘Involved’ In Decision Making?  Zolak Says That’s Not the Case
MORSE: Final First Round Patriots Mock Draft
Slow Starts: Stark Contrast as Patriots Ponder Which Top QB To Draft
Wednesday Patriots Notebook 4/24: News and Notes
Tuesday Patriots Notebook 4/23: News and Notes
MORSE: Final 7 Round Patriots Mock Draft, Matthew Slater News
Bruschi’s Proudest Moment: Former LB Speaks to MusketFire’s Marshall in Recent Interview
Monday Patriots Notebook 4/22: News and Notes
Patriots News 4-21, Kraft-Belichick, A.J. Brown Trade?
MORSE: Patriots Draft Needs and Draft Related Info
Back
Top