a sign on the wall
Photograph ©2025 by Brian Cohen.

What Is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 328

This was getting tire-ing.

For this edition of this popular game, can you guess what you believe is wrong — or, at least, seemingly quite bizarre — with this photograph part 328?

Waiting at a automotive shop for tires to be replaced can be rather boring — especially when the tires are for a vehicle belonging to someone else — so in addition to working on my laptop computer, I looked around the area and saw an illuminated indoor overhead sign.

What Is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 328

a sign on the wall
Photograph ©2025 by Brian Cohen.

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.

Answer to What is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 327

a screenshot of a computer
Source: Delta Air Lines.

During the last days of the most recent shutdown of the federal government of the United States, the current secretary of transportation of the Federal Aviation Administration of the United States ordered a directive for a reduction of flights by up to ten percent at 40 major airports throughout the country — and Delta Air Lines posted a list of those airports on its official Internet web site before the Federal Aviation Administration finally posted them

…but according to that list, Louisville is in Louisiana; and both Washington Dulles International Airport and Baltimore are in the District of Columbia. Also, the list is not in alphabetical order. Multiple errors that are this sloppy are rather uncharacteristic of Delta Air Lines.

Favorite answer by Jennifer: “Louisville is in Kentucky”

Favorite comment by Jim F.: “First, ‘DC’ isn’t a state and Baltimore isn’t a city in it!”

Submit Your Own Photographs and Screen Shots For the What is Wrong With This Photograph? Series

You are encouraged to submit photographs of your own for this feature at The Gate With Brian Cohen. When you do, please let me know:

  • If you want to have photography credit attributed to you
  • What is the photograph
  • When and where the photograph was taken
  • If submitting a screen shot, please give the source — as well as a link to the source

If your photograph or screen shot is selected, it will be featured in a future article here at The Gate With Brian Cohen.

Final Boarding Call

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. That list will be continuously updated as additional articles are written and posted here at The Gate With Brian Cohen 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.

I am considering incorporating answers to previous articles in past individual articles as I have done with more recent articles in this series.

Your constructive input as a reader of The Gate With Brian Cohen is always appreciated.

Photograph ©2025 by Brian Cohen.

  1. Hmmm…there’s no other way (unless one is driving in reverse) to enter a “wet surface” other than with the front tires (which, as indicated by being colored red, are the worn tires in a 2-tire replacement. But I can see how it could be counter-intuitive for someone focusing on the graphic, to think that traction is better with the worn tires hitting the “wet surface” first, especially if one is driving a front-wheel (or all-wheel) drive vehicle. Also, the color red usually indicates “danger” or is used to highlight what is changing. But in this case, the color black is used to indicate the replaced tires.

  2. The motto “let’s get you taken care of” sounds like a Mafia type threat.

    The actual reason for new tires in the rear is a bit different. Deep treads tend to lose traction later. It’s harder to control a car where the rear tires are skidding as compared with the front tires losing traction. Another way to describe it is that rear tires losing traction creates an oversteer condition, which is more of a challenge than an understeer condition.

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