Vote for your favorite image below:
Vote for your favorite image below:

Jose Jacome / EPA
Volcano's mighty power - The erupting Ecuadorian volcano Tungurahua, seen from the village of Cotalo on May 8, keeps generating explosions and expelling incandescent boulders, which roll down its flanks.

Lucas Jackson / Reuters
A miracle survivor is pulled from Bangladesh's rubble, an explosion rocks Turkey's border, the pope releases a dove, a large rubber duck floats off Hong Kong, and more.
Editor’s note: We're testing out a new voting process so it will no longer be necessary to log in to Facebook. This week, vote for your favorite image with just one click. Feel free to let us know your thoughts in the comments. Happy voting!

Gary Hershorn / Reuters
Moonlight becomes you - A full moon rises over New York City's Manhattan island, sending a swath of light along famed 42nd Street.
Editor’s note: We're testing out a new voting process so it would no longer be necessary to login to Facebook. Vote for your favorite image from The Week in Pictures: May 2 – 9 with one-click. Feel free to let us know your thoughts in the comments.
This story was originally published on Fri Feb 22, 2013 3:05 PM EST

Ammar Awad / Reuters
A Palestinian protester gets blasted with pepper spray, a Texas twister hits Dallas, the Kentucky Wildcats celebrate their basketball championship, lawmakers celebrate the end of another legislative session in Georgia and more.
We generally resist including more than one photograph from a news event in The Week in Pictures. That has something to do with the idea that we’re attempting to show images from the whole world each week. I realize that is laughably impossible. There is no way to show it all. Our goal is a little like navigating via the North Star. You know you’ll never get there, but it’s a good guide.
So, when we include more than one picture from an event we’re recognizing its importance, as we did this week with pictures from the tornados in Texas. The three picture sequence begins with an image pulled from video. It shows a semi-trailer being flung hundreds of feet into the air. Watch the video on that slideshow page. It’s incredible. The second tornado picture is Tom Pennington’s photo of a young couple sitting among the wreckage of their destroyed home. I’m attracted to this photo not because it shows strength, but because it shows love. It’s an example of how we cling to each other during the worst of times. We end the sequence with Khampha Bouaphanh’s wide view of the storm damage in a Lancaster, Texas neighborhood. The awful randomness of the path of destruction makes me wonder. It’s incredible that no one was killed in this storm.
The storm photos are incredible, but the image I’ll remember from this week is Stew Milne’s photo of Nicholas Weichel attending his father’s funeral. Nicholas’ dad is the Rhode Island National Guardsman who was killed while saving a child in Afghanistan. During my time as a news photographer I’ve had to cover a few funerals. It’s so difficult. You have to put your emotonal reactions aside and somehow make publishable pictures. It’s probably one of the most difficult assignments a photographer can get. Milne’s photo is a sensitive portrayal of a son’s loss without being intrusive.
Related photo features:
Previous episodes of The Week in Pictures from 2012

Ryan Pierse / Getty Images
A dawn plunge in Australia, a soldier's homecoming in Alaska, a fiery firehouse in New Jersey, a tearful farewell in California and more.
Winter gets me down. The short days, cold temperatures, and all that time cooped up inside weighs on me by the time we’re getting ready to flip the calendar to April. Participating in this week’s picture edit provided a little break from the winter blues.
Spring comes on strong in this episode of The Week in Pictures. Photographer Scott Anderson gets us going with his picture of a robin catching her lunch in Wisconsin. Kimimasa Mayama made a great picture of the boys of summer at the first Major League Baseball game of the year, and Gary Cosby Jr. closes the slideshow with his lovely picture of Opal Cosby riding her bicycle right into an Alabama sunset.
As always, there are some difficult pictures in this week’s slideshow. Casey Christie’s image of a grieving woman at her fiancée’s funeral breaks your heart. It reminds me of how precious life is and how sometimes people are taken away before we get the opportunity to appreciate them.
Previous episodes of The Week in Pictures from 2012

Bill Tiernan / The Virginian-Pilot via AP
A tearful farewell at a military base in Virginia, a daredevil plunge from 71,500 feet above New Mexico, a fiery festival in Spain, a crumbling monument in Bulgaria and more.
When my colleagues and I look at a week’s worth of unfiltered news images (about 50,000) we begin to see repeating visual themes. For example, every week we see pictures of military personnel deploying to or coming from dangerous places. We see hundreds, sometimes thousands, of political protests. We see images of defenseless people, including children, caught up in horrific world events. We see powerful natural disasters, the change of seasons, attractive celebrities and sporting events of every kind.
The occasional cynic in me sometimes flirts with the idea that photographers have run out of ideas. In my worst moments I wonder why we spend our lives retreading the same ground week after week.
But then I remember that pictures often serve as visual shorthand. I believe they provide a bridge over the the chasm of time, distance and unfamiliar culture. When you see a picture of a military wife’s hands clinging onto her husband’s head in the moments before he deploys to war it reminds you of that person you miss so much, and you empathize. A photographer can help us care in a way that a writer often struggles to achieve.
Related photo features:
Previous episodes of "The Week in Pictures" from 2012

A student protester is subdued by police in Colombia, hostesses serve tea to delegates in China, the Northern Lights put on a dazzling display over Iceland and more.
There were a lot of difficult pictures in this week’s edit. Images of conflict in Syria, the West Bank, Baghdad and Afghanistan made it into the final edit, and several of those made it into the published slideshow.
It is difficult to evaluate the visual value of conflict pictures against funny or beautiful images. It’s something we wrestle with almost every week. We often have to keep telling ourselves that the goal is to feature great news pictures. We’re not trying to retell the top stories of the past seven days.
The formal side of our training and picture editing experience is attracted to meaningful moments, great composition and interesting light. Our humanity responds to tears of loss, the love of a precious child or sometimes even an interesting bug. Somewhere in the middle of all that is rational news judgment and a cold desire to be objective, but that is hard because pictures make you care.
Related photo features:
Previous episodes of "The Week in Pictures" from 2012

Mike Hensdill / AP
Children dance at a Cinderella ball in North Carolina, a man herds hundreds of sheep through a snowy field in Switzerland, protesters lob firebombs at police in Greece and more.

The Week in Picture vote on Facebook
The Week in Pictures, TWIP, was one of the first regularly occurring msnbc.com editorial products that successfully used interactivity. Back in the late 1990s, we included a vote page using a simple interface that allowed people to vote for their favorite image. It was an uncomplicated idea that was executed well, and our users engaged with it by the thousands.
As good as that has been, we’ve always wanted to have more give-and-take with the TWIP audience. So we enabled users to “email us” and “email this” several years ago. The buttons are still in the top-right of every TWIP slideshow. Because of those two things, we’ve been aware of and participated in a rich conversation with a few TWIP audience members each week. However, that conversation is stiflingly limited by its one-on-one email nature.
It is surprisingly difficult to create a space where a public conversation can happen around TWIP. The challenges are that you need a robust, scalable system that is easy to use on both the editing and audience side. You shouldn’t need to read a manual in order to use it.
We’ve also discovered through our experience in PhotoBlog that commenting and community is tricky. We’ve learned the hard way that anonymous commenting is practically useless. It allows the outrageous few to hijack what would otherwise be thoughtful conversation, creating a wasteland of radical political agendas, hate speech and personal attacks. That’s difficult to watch when it’s sometimes directed at the subject of a photograph or the photographer. Because of these challenges, we left TWIP out of msnbc.com social networking efforts. That felt like the right choice three years ago, but it doesn’t anymore. It’s time for TWIP to join the conversation.
In order to foster an honest, respectfully engaged community, you either create an entirely new system and hope people will sign up, or you take your idea to an existing community that already works. That is why we’ve moved the TWIP vote to Facebook. The slideshow we produce is just the jumping off point. When you “Like” our page you not only get to vote. You can share your vote with your Facebook friends. You can also comment on the whole slideshow or individual pictures. If you don't want to share your choice or express your opinion then you can simply vote. Our goal is to create an engaging place where you can share what you like or don’t like about pictures. Join us. Tell us what you think.

Protest fire in Cairo, a "Soul Train" salute in New York, a tie-and-jacket tussle in Turkey, a police strike in northeastern Brazil and more.

Gary Hershorn / Reuters
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady leaves the field after their loss to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLVI in Indianapolis, Ind. on Feb. 5, 2012.
There were a lot of “almost in” pictures during this week's edit. An “almost in” is a picture that an editor sort of likes, but isn’t passionate about or can’t convince the other editors of its worthiness.
My “almost-in” this week is the picture of Tom Brady leaving the field after his team’s Super Bowl loss. The picture is well composed, and I like the way Gary Hershorn captured Brady turning away from the celebration. It’s a story-telling picture.
Related:

Ali Ali / EPA
Palestinian playtime in the Gaza Strip, a chilly plunge in Maryland, fleeing a bull in Mexico, young Gandhi lookalikes in India and more.

Reuters
A soccer fan flees from a fire at Cairo Stadium on Feb. 1, 2012. Crowds set parts of the stadium on fire in reaction to play on the field during a soccer match held at the Egyptian city of Port Said. At least 70 people were killed and hundreds of others injured on Wednesday after a soccer pitch invasion in Port Said, healthy ministry sources said, in an incident that one player described as "a war, not football".
The final edit for The Week in Pictures can sometimes be a little unpleasant. Each of us often has a favorite picture or two, and we lobby hard for them. We do our best to keep it professional, but photography is a visceral thing - it makes you care. Having a group of photo editors choose the best pictures each week sometimes boils down to personal perspectives and how well someone can argue their point during a fluid discussion. Sometimes I struggle to find the words during our editing sessions. That usually means one of my favorite pictures doesn’t make the cut.
I believe each of us would admit that losing one of those arguments isn’t easy; but we’re convinced that the final product is better because of the process we follow. We often say to each other, “This should hurt a little.”
The picture (at right) of the soccer field riot in Egypt is the one that I regret not having in this week’s slideshow.
Watch the video below to see more background on The Week in Pictures.
Learn how The Week in Pictures started, see highlights from its first decade, and find out how we choose the pictures.
This week’s edit was surprisingly difficult. My favorite images are Mike Eliason’s picture of the dramatic car wreck rescue, Kevin Frayer’s picture of a man waiting in his underwear while a street tailor alters his pants, and Robin Loznak’s perfect visual joke of the chicken that crossed the road.

Robin Loznak / Zuma Press
Fowl play in Oregon, a marathon sled dog race in France, a street tailor in India, a wrecked cruise liner in Italy and more.
View the slideshow and vote for your favorite picture.
Explore “The Week in Pictures” archive.
See the best picture from last year in “The Year in Pictures: 2011”

Athit Perawongmetha / Getty Images
Devotees of the Chinese shrine of Jui Tui carry a Chinese god on a palanquin as firecreckers explode during a procession of the Vegetarian Festival on Oct, 14 in Phuket, Thailand.

Petr Josek / Reuters
A fish hangs from a net during the traditional fish haul of the Velky Tisy pond at the village of Lomnice nad Luznici near the south Bohemian town of Trebon, during the traditional carp haul, Oct. 13.

Thomas Mukoya / Reuters
An endangered black male rhinoceros with its horn partially cut-off stands in a cage after a radio transmitter was implanted in its horn before translocation at the Lake Nakuru National park in Kenya's Rift Valley, 99 miles west of the capital Nairobi, on Oct. 12. After implanting radio transmitters into the horns to track the animals and notching their ears, KWS is translocating 10 black rhinos to the Tsavo National Park, southeast of Nairobi, to re-establish the population.

Javier Galeano / AP
A man carries a young girl on a bicycle along an empty highway in Los Palacios, Cuba, on Oct. 11.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images
A young boy looks at giant pumpkins in the back of a pickup truck before the start of the 37th Annual Safeway World Championship Pumpkin Weigh-Off on Oct. 11 in Half Moon Bay, California. Ron Root of Citrus Heights, California won the competition with a 1,535 pound pumpkim and took home $9,210 in prize money equal to $6 a pound.

Darren Staples / Reuters
A police dog bites the clothing of a demonstrator from the far-right English Defence League (EDL) during a march in Leicester, central England, on Oct. 9.
We considered these images for The Week in Pictures: Oct. 7 - 14, but they didn't make the cut.
What do you think of how this week's slideshow turned out without these shots?
Be sure to view the slideshow and VOTE for you favorite.
Share your thoughts about this photographic look at the week in the comments below.