The Rebekka Armstrong Archivesbest types of prank are the ones that are hiding in plain sight ... but somehow still go on unnoticed.
SEE ALSO: This 'passive-aggressive art gallery' is the perfect petty roommate prankJake from Derby, UK, shared the following tweet on Sunday:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Yep, his brother Ben swapped his family photo for a nicely framed pictured of North Korea's supreme leader — and his mum was none the wiser for two whole weeks.
Jake told Mashablehe didn't know where his brother got the idea from, but he was surprised by how much attention the tweet received (60,000+ retweets at the time of writing).
Sadly, though, he also admitted that the tweet's new found attention eventually revealed the truth to his mom.
"Someone showed her my tweet," Jake explained. "But she said if she wasn't shown it then it could of been up there for years and she still wouldn't of had a clue."
This isn't the first time someone's had a similar idea, either.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Let this be a lesson to everyone to take a careful look at your photos — that old picture of you might secretly be a photo of someone else entirely.
Facebook's cryptocurrency could be announced next week with major partnersHow 'Animal Crossing: New Horizons' will bring out the best of the franchiseFacebook's new Libra cryptocurrency: What you need to know12 smartphone camera bumps, rankedReport explains the privacy issues of wearable health data collectionLittle girl sends BBC anxious letter about Big Ben, gets the perfect replyThis heartwarming Christmas ad will have you reaching for the tissuesWoman rescues her attacked pup with a tip she learned on RedditWoman gets horny guy to kiss a tractor for a chance at nude picturesThis photo of 'Superman' Henry Cavill holding a tree is baffling the internetHundreds of people protestSuzanne Collins to pen 'Hunger Games' prequel novel'Plus One' is the romSteven Spielberg's 'West Side Story': Here's the first photoAncestry test customers are sending their DNA data to thirdReport explains the privacy issues of wearable health data collectionSteven Spielberg's 'West Side Story': Here's the first photo'Plus One' is the romWhat's next after VR porn? Hologram porn, apparently.Adult toy store employees fight off armed robber by throwing dildos at him American, Indian by Jaswinder Bolina Periwinkle, the Color of Poison, Modernism, and Dusk by Katy Kelleher An NDN Boyhood by Billy The Art of Distance No. 22 by The Paris Review Be Good by Destiny O. Birdsong Texas History by Jill Talbot The Art of Distance No. 11 by The Paris Review Masks at Twilight by The Paris Review Redux: Thunder, They Told Her by The Paris Review What’s the Use of Being a Boy: An Interview with Douglas A. Martin by Spencer Quong Policing Won’t Solve Our Problems by Alex S. Vitale The Untranslatable by The Paris Review Seeing the Country’s Shadows on My White Husband’s Face by Margaret Wilkerson Sexton What Our Contributors Are Reading This Summer by The Paris Review Redux: When They Could Have Been Anything by The Paris Review The Waiting Game by Hannah Ewens Staff Picks: Gabbert, Guzzler, and Greene by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Sex Work, Cigarettes, and Systemic Change by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 16 by The Paris Review An Open Letter to All the Future Mayors of Chicago by Laurence Ralph
1.7245s , 10106.1640625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Rebekka Armstrong Archives】,Co-creation Information Network