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作者:休閑 来源:焦點 浏览: 【】 发布时间:2024-11-10 08:07:59 评论数:

Now here's an image we thought we'd never see.

U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korea's supreme leader Kim Jong-un greeted a large audience outside the U.S. consulate in Hong Kong, hugging and kissing each other to raucous applause.

SEE ALSO:Donald Trump's favorite new picture gets even the simplest detail wrong

Of course, the unlikely duo were impersonators. Both were played by musicians who were there to film a series of videos.

Mashable ImageThe duo was met with an adoring crowdCredit: youtube/hkfp

"I think he's a great leader and he's much like me, he's a dictator," said Hong-Kong based Australian Kim-lookalike who only goes by his first name Howard, in a video captured by Reuters.

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"I think with that in mind, he's going to turn the United States into North Korea 2.0. So we're going to be great friends," he added.

His U.S. counterpart was played by Dennis Alan, a 66-year-old American.

Alan reportedly spent more than a hour spreading on orange foundation and putting on his tailor-made wig.

Mashable ImageKim Jong Un and Donald Trump impersonators, Howard, left, and Dennis, right, (who only give their first name) stand side by side on a train to promote a music video they created in Hong Kong, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2017. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)Credit: APMashable Imageepa05748598 North Korean leader Kim Jong-un impersonator Howard, (L), and US President Donald Trump impersonator Dennis, (C), hold North Korean and American flags in front of the US Consulate General in Hong Kong, China, 25 January 2017. The two actors were posing for photographs with locals and tourists alike near the consulate. EPA/STRCredit: EPAMashable ImageDonald Trump and Kim Jong Un impersonators, Howard, right, and Dennis, left, (who only give their first names) walk side by side in a subway station to promote a music video they created in Hong Kong, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2017. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)Credit: AP

And if you can't get enough of the duo, fear not -- they'll soon be making an appearance in a "politically incorrect" performance in Hong Kong, they said on Facebook.

It'll be a while before we get these images out of our heads.


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