President Barack Obama pretends to be caught in Spider-Man's web as he greets the son of a White House staffer in the Outer Oval Office in October |
This is President Obama as we have never seen him before - caught unaware as he walks out of the Oval Office by none other than Spider-Man - or at least a very mini version of Spider-Man.
The intimate photograph taken by White House photographer Pete Souza shows the President joking around with one of this staffer's children, who - dressed up as the super hero - pretends to shoot a spider web at Obama - who in turn reacts by pretending he is caught up in the imaginary trap.
It is just one of the many behind-the-scenes pictures Mr Souza takes every year which show a more down-to-earth and touching side of the man who has just been named as TIME's Person of the Year for 2012. It is the second time he has had the honor in four years.
Other pictures released by Souza, some of which have been seen before, show the President enjoying touching moments with his family - a loving father hugging his daughters Malia and Sasha at this year's DNC, an affectionate husband pulling his First Lady Michelle tight as they watch a sunset over Chicago city skyline at Lake Michigan and as a big kid running around a swimming pool with a large water gun while daughter Sasha squirts water at him.
We also see a happy but exhausted Obama as he pulls off his bow tie in the mirror of the elevator to the Private Residence of the White House after a long day which included being sworn in as President in January 2009, followed by ten inaugural balls.
The sports-loving President is also seen practicing his golf swing with Vice President Joe Biden on the White House putting green, standing in as coach for his daughter Sasha's basketball team and clutching one of his favorite American footballs as he listens intently during a White House briefing.
President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama dance together during the Governors Ball in the East Room of the White House, Feb. 21, 2010 |
TIME magazine cited the president's historic re-election last month as symbolic of the nation's changing demographics amid the backdrop of high unemployment and other challenges.
'He's basically the beneficiary and the author of a kind of new America - a new demographic, a new cultural America that he is now the symbol of,' TIME editor Rick Stengel said as he announced the choice on the Today show on Wednesday.
'He won re-election despite a higher unemployment rate than anybody's had to face in basically 70 years. He's the first Democrat to actually win two consecutive terms with over 50 per cent of the vote. That's something we haven't seen since Franklin Delano Roosevelt.'
The 'Person of the Year' accolade is given to the person or thing that has most influenced the culture and news throughout the year for good or for ill.
President Obama talks with his daughter Malia on the swing set outside the Oval Office |
In its latest edition and cover story, TIME explained its decision to name Obama as the winner.
'We are in the midst of historic cultural and demographic changes, and Barack Obama is both the symbol and in some ways the architect of this new America,' the editors wrote.
'In 2012, he found and forged a new majority, turned weakness into opportunity and sought, amid great adversity, to create a more perfect union.'
In a cover story for the edition, TIME's White House correspondent Michael Scherer explained the 'Obama effect'.
The president stretches during a meeting with senior advisers in the Rose Garden |
'It could be measured - in wars stopped and started; industries saved, restructured or re-regulated; tax cuts extended; debt levels inflated; terrorists killed; the health-insurance system reimagined; and gay service members who could walk in uniform with their partners,' he wrote.
Scherer added that after this year's election, Obama started working on a '40,000-foot' list of issues to tackle in his second term in the White House.
The list included climate change, the soaring cost of college, electoral reform and prison reform.
Scherer also spoke about his personal attributes - and how Republicans struggled to be negative against him.
'There was almost nothing that would stick to this guy, because they just liked him personally,' Romney deputy campaign manager Katie Packer Gage told the magazine.
President Obama tries to block a layup shot by his former personal aide, Reggie Love, at Fort McNair in Washington, D.C. |
Sasha spies on her father in the Oval Office |
The president waits to board Marine One at the Westchester County Airport in New York |
The two coaches for Sasha Obama's basketball team couldn't make it to one of her games, so the President and his then personal aide, Reggie Love, filled in as coaches in February |
President Obama joins in a water gun fight with daughter Sasha during her 10th birthday celebration at Camp David in Maryland |
The President and First Lady look out at the city skyline and Lake Michigan after arriving at the Burnham Park landing zone in Chicago |
President Obama and Vice President Biden share a laugh before an event at Strawbery Banke Museum in Portsmouth, New Hampshire on September 7 |
President Obama greets daughters Sasha and Malia at the Time Warner Cable Arena before delivering remarks at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte |
Obama high-fives an adorable kid on the links at Andrews Air Force Base during a golf outing |
President Obama lifts up a baby on April 4, 2009, during the U.S. Embassy greeting at a Prague hotel |
President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden practice their putting on the White House putting green April 24, 2009 |
President Barack Obama listens during a briefing with advisers in the Roosevelt Room of the White House May 4, 2009
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