North Korea photoshop fail: Submit your own fake photo.

Now It’s YOUR Turn to Fake Photos of Kim Jong-un

Now It’s YOUR Turn to Fake Photos of Kim Jong-un

Dubious and far-fetched ideas.
Oct. 14 2013 4:47 PM

Let’s Crowdsource the Next North Korean Photoshop Fail

Where will Kim Jong-un show up next? At the VMAs? In Gravity?

North Korea is notoriously bad at photoshopping photos of its supreme leader. An image recently released by North Korea’s state-run news agency showing Kim Jong-un and regime officials standing at a construction site is attracting ridicule for its horrendous doctoring. Clearly, the government doesn’t have the resources to fake photos like it fakes villages. Crowdsourcing to the rescue! Here, for example, North Korean officials are working with Congress to finally iron out a budget deal and get the U.S. government up and running again:

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Here they are providing backup vocals at the VMAs:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen, photo by Getty.

Here they are struggling to return to Earth after a cloud of space debris has destroyed their space shuttle:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen, photo by Warner Bros.

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Here they are planning North Korea’s next missile launch from Fox New’s new Giant iPad Command Center:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen, photo by Fox.

Here they are working out an international meth purchase with a U.S.-based manufacturer:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen, photo by AMC.

Here they are solving the mystery of Stonehenge:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen, photo by Thinkstock.

Here, Kim Jong-un receives legal advice in the brig of the Enterprise after trying to spark a war with the Klingon Empire:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen, photo by Paramount Pictures.

Where will they appear next? With this image, now you can fake your own Kim Jong-un photos:

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Photo illustration by Holly Allen.

Send your submissions to kim.jong.un.anywhere@gmail.com and we’ll feature the best on Slate. Please note that what you send is subject to our discussion and submission guidelines.

Chris Kirk is a web developer at New York magazine and Slate’s former interactives editor. Follow him on Twitter.

Holly Allen is a Slate web designer.