edit: I can't believe I have to warn that this is satire, but it seems I do. This is satire.
Here's a first-hand account from one of the sailors. :-)
http://www.lasvegasmercury.com/2004/MERC-Jun-10-Thu-2004/24052231.html
<snip>
My name is Paul Whetsel and I'm a seaman-second class aboard the aircraft carrier USS Lincoln. I work on the flight deck in what we call fire control. It's a dangerous job, but I love it. It was April 28, 2003, and we were three days out of San Diego when word was passed that President Bush would be landing on our ship.
Well, we were plenty excited, let me tell you. But our excitement soon gave way to concern when we heard that the president's advance team hadn't had time to set up a proper photo op. The rumor on the ship was that they were gonna photograph the president--our president, mind you--with no regard for a beautiful, stirring background that might lend itself to campaign contribution brochures. Let me set you straight about something...my president isn't gonna be photographed against a bland apolitical backdrop. Not on my watch, Mister.
Well, me and my buddies decided right then and there to do something about it. You think you know what's inside a guy when you work with him every day over a 10-month deployment. But until you go through hell with a guy, you don't know nothing about him. And until we started plotting, I had no idea my best friend on board, Ensign Steve deMarco, had been a set designer in Hollywood. Now he tells me.
Steve said if he were staging it, he'd put the president on the forward deck, before a half-circle of officers in their working khakis. That way, Steve explained, the president's regal blue suit would really stand out against the drab, tan foreground. Man, I didn't even know you could think of stuff like that. Steve said he'd shoot the president from below, with the carrier's island structure just over Bush's right shoulder. According to Steve, the image was instantly readable symbolism for strength and leadership.
more...