White House accused of Barack Obama 'green screen' trickery By Alex Spillius, Washington 7:00PM BST 18 Oct 2011 The White House has been accused of digitally adjusting President Barack Obama's weekly address to the nation to give the impression he was sitting in front of a car assembly line in Detroit. Experts in video effects said Mr Obama's talk on boosting employment had actually been recorded in front of a neutral "green screen" and the factory background filled in later. They said the edges around the president's head and shoulders were too sharp. "The shot is obviously a composite and a 'weatherman quality' one," one professional in the field told BigGovernment website. "President Obama doesn't blend into the scene at all." The White House denied the accusations. The claim followed a recent case where Michelle Obama was photographed shopping in everyday wear in a branch of the mass market Target store where an AP White House photographer conveniently happened to be. It also came as the president set off on an "American Jobs" tour that has been dogged by snags and attracted criticism from Republicans that the president was campaigning on taxpayers' money, rather than using his re-election funds. It emerged yesterday that a van containing ÂŁ125,000 worth of speakers and the presidential podium had been stolen from a hotel car park in Virginia, where he is due to speak tomorrow. It is not known if thieves knew what was inside the truck, which was soon found abandoned in another car park. The president's three-day tour is taking him through North Carolina and Virginia, two crucial swing states that he won in 2008, where he is delivering a hard-hitting message against Republicans who refused to pass his