a elevator buttons and signs
Photograph ©2022 by Brian Cohen.

What Is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 174

This article might also give you a lift.

Yes, we have another photograph taken in an elevator since the most recent one for this article in this series of What Is Wrong With This Photograph? articles — and this time, the photograph was taken in one of the elevators at The St. Regis Atlanta hotel property.

What Is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 174

a elevator buttons and signs
Photograph ©2022 by Brian Cohen.

For this edition of this popular game, can you guess what you believe is wrong — or, at least, seemingly quite bizarre — with this photograph?

Please submit your answers in the Comments section below — and I enjoy reading creative answers.

Thank you in advance. As always, I cannot wait to read your answer and feedback.

Access to Past Articles in the What is Wrong With This Photograph? Series

You can refer to this definitive list of past articles of the What is Wrong With This Photograph? series of articles — which also includes articles which reveal the answers — and that list will be continuously updated as additional articles are written and posted here at The Gate. This is to ensure that future articles in this series are not encumbered with a long list of links — especially when viewing and reading them from a portable electronic device.

This will hopefully be considered a positive step towards the reading experience of The Gate on portable electronic devices. Your constructive input as a reader of The Gate is always appreciated.

Final Boarding Call

You are encouraged to submit photographs of your own for this feature at The Gate. When you do, please let me know if you want to have photography credit attributed to you — as well as what is the photograph; and when and where it was taken. If your photograph is selected, it will be featured in a future article here at The Gate.

If you would like to submit a screen shot, please give the source — as well as a link to the source.

In the meantime, the answer — or answers — to this article will be included in the next article of answers to the most recent five articles in the series of What is Wrong With This Photograph? articles.

Photograph ©2022 by Brian Cohen.


Please note that I receive compensation for affiliate links posted at The Gate With Brian Cohen effective as of Sunday, January 1, 2017. You are not required to use these affiliate links; but if you do use them, your support of The Gate With Brian Cohen is greatly appreciated — and using affiliate links will not cost you any extra time or money.
  1. More like, “What’s wrong with this hotel?” Other than being a Marri-rot hotel.

    -No B levels: B1; B2….
    -Floors 1-3 or 2-3 missing
    -Very few floors for guest rooms
    -Destination locations not in braille.
    -Mirrored glass looks beat up; scratched.
    -No room key card sensor.
    -It’s Atlanta; no pictographs for those that are illiterate.

  2. @ Kiki — These racists are just mad that their moron Senate candidate Herschel Walker is about to lose. Poor Herschel will have to go back to his old job driving the abortion clinic shuttle bus.

  3. The Georgia Literacy Commission (GLC) was formed after a Deloitte study revealed the potential crisis looming for Georgia’s businesses that are struggling to identify an educated and literate workforce for jobs now and in the future. As a result, the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, the Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education, and Literacy For All have partnered to create the GLC.

    ​Business leaders, education experts and a variety of other key stakeholders (see About page) convened statewide hearings during summer 2017 to address the state’s trajectory in improving low literacy for Georgia’s adults and children. The GLC is led by co-chairs Sandra Deal, Georgia’s First Lady; Teya Ryan, president and CEO of Georgia Public Broadcasting; Wendell Dallas, VP, Operations, Atlanta Gas Light; and Phil Jacobs, retired president AT&T, Georgia.

  4. looks like if you want to use the boardroom, you push the close the door button. I guess that makes the elevator the boardroom…

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