Why don't people set the board up properly for photos?
I haven’t just noticed this phenomenon but it cropped up again recently when I was looking for a photo of Diana Rigg playing chess which I had no reason to believe existed. It was for a club match I was playing as she’d recently died and I thought I’d try and link the movie side of it with the chess side of it. Anyway, I found this -

Bingo!
..Or not. No way were those pieces ever set up correctly. At least the board isn’t sideways which it seems to be in more than 50% of situations (See cover picture of The Shawshank Redemption). Of course I wasn’t assuming she played chess but there are a lot of pictures of people appearing to play chess just as promotional or entertainment pictures of which this is one.
It's fair to assume that not everyone pays chess but that it sometimes looks good in a photo. Fair enough, but surely is easy enough to find someone who knows how to put the pieces in at least the starting position and to move them. So why don't they do it?
This was something I’d hoped to find an answer to. I haven’t found one yet and I don’t suppose I will do but I did find plenty other writings about the subject. I don’t want to repeat what has been said a number of times and better than I could elsewhere. Instead I've put a couple of links below to some of my favourite ones. The article about movies getting it wrong extends into the use of chess as a symbol which is, in itself, interesting.
https://medium.com/s/story/why-movies-get-chess-wrong-a1a84750c2d6
https://www.chess.com/article/view/the-11-worst-chessboard-photos
Anyway, if you find an answers as to why people can invest so much into trying to look clever (presumably what the chess is supposed to achieve) but failing to invest anything on the key device (the board), please let me know.