The result was redirect to The Situation Room (photograph). There is consensus that this should not (currently) be a standalone article per WP:BLP1E, but no clear consensus to delete outright instead of merge. Under these circumstances, a redirect without deletion allows editors to sort this out via further discussion and to merge what may be needed from the history. Sandstein 05:33, 18 May 2011 (UTC) reply
Textboox WP:BLP1E. Random policy wonk happens to be in the room when a photograph is snapped, said photograph happens to cause a minor kerfuffle when a foreign conservative religious newspaper censors out her and Hillary' image. Ms. Tomason herself isn't really the subject of the google news hits, it is the photoshopping itself that has become notable. For those that are about to mount a spirited defense of the "but the Director for Counterterrorism for the National Security Council it notable!", I'd note that nether she nor her position is listed at United States National Security Council, and that much of the coverage that does touch on her is of the "wow, she has a Wikipedia article? i.e. here. In fact, that article notes that she was one of a half-dozen low-level people in the vicinity. If she wasn't standing at the right spot at the right time (and happened to be female; a male would not have been 'shopped), there would have been no proverbial 15 minutes. 1E to a T. Tarc ( talk) 17:17, 10 May 2011 (UTC) reply
But what's fascinating is that Tomason wasn't actually the only young staff member in the room, Tommy Vietor, the National Security Council spokesperson, told me. "There is no mystery or story here," Vietor said in an email. "There were at least half a dozen people with similar profiles in the immediate vicinity where that photo was taken." Yet only one has a Wikipedia page. [...] I know the sit room's photograph's moment has passed, but I hadn't seen the presence of so many other staff members like Tomason noted anywhere.
— Madrigal, Alexis (2011-05-10). "The Other Audrey Tomasons in the Situation Room". The Atlantic.