With all the April fool pranks at this time of year
it’s sometimes hard to pick the prank. Here are some photos that I’m sorry to
report aren’t pranks. If these didn’t represent such serious and dangerous
situations they would actually be funny.
Image 1.
Here is a picture
of Kim Jong-il's funeral procession. The state-run North Korean news agency
released a stately, but otherwise mundane, photo of Kim's procession amid
throngs of mourners (the bottom image).
But The New York
Times compared the photo to one taken just a few seconds later by a Kyodo News
photographer, and found that a group of six men, apparently part of a camera
crew standing behind the crowd, were mysteriously omitted from the Korean
version.
Upon closer
analysis, the Times found evidence of digital editing – apparently the group
had been erased from the periphery of the procession.
Perhaps with the
men straggling around the sidelines, a certain martial perfection is lost.
Without the men, the tight black bands of the crowd on either side look
railroad straight.
Image 2a and 2b.
In 2008, Agence
France-Presse released a photo, issued by Iran of a salvo of four
missiles being test-launched by the Revolutionary Guard (2a).
Upon further
inspection and when another photo of the same event came to light – it became
clear that Iran had added an extra rocket and exhaust to cover up an apparently
failed launch (2b).
Image 3.
Here is something
from some remote county in China. A trio of local officials had just visited a newly paved road, but as the Wall
Street Journal reports, the government official who photographed them decided
the background wasn’t impressive enough and so superimposed the image of the
officials on a prettier stretch of asphalt.
Unfortunately, the official's ambition outmatched his skill, and the
result is a picture where the three men appear to hover above the road.
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