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  • 2019-02-15 (xsd:date)
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  • Is a Risqué Image of Sand Dunes Hidden in 'The Lion King'? (en)
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  • Most Disney fans have come across rumors about disgruntled animators supposedly slipping risqué images into some of the studio's classic films. While some of these rumors are based on real events (such as a topless woman briefly visible in VHS copies of The Rescuers), many of these claims are based on nothing more than fleeting and difficult-to-discern imagery or modern digital manipulations. In February 2019, we received a question on the Snopes Tips Facebook group about an image that supposedly showed not safe for work (NSFW) content in the background of a scene from the 1994 Disney animated classic The Lion King. The scene depicts the character of Zazu (a hornbill) flying past sand dunes, and according to some accounts, Disney animators sneakily placed nipples atop two of the dunes to make them resemble human breasts: Although this image has been included in a number of listicles such as adult moments you totally missed as a kid, WTF moments in Disney movies, and R-rated Disney Easter eggs, the image is not a genuine still frame taken from the The Lion King. The nipples on these sand dunes are actually a digital alteration made by an outsider. This R-rated Disney Easter egg was created in 2013 for a photoplasty contest hosted by the Cracked website. These photoplasty contests involve users submitting digitally manipulated images, and here's how the humor website introduced the contest that produced the nipple sand dunes image (emphasis ours): Cracked.com user RandomHabit employed a still from the musical number I Just Can't Wait to Be King to create his altered version of a Lion King scene. We created a GIF of the scene in question to show that none of the sand dunes was adorned with nipples in the original film: These innocuous sand dunes can also be glimpsed in a sing-a-long version of I Just Can't Wait to Be King from the official Disney YouTube channel, at the 50-second mark of the following video: Here's a side-by-side comparison of the manipulated image (left) and the original: This was not the first fake Disney Easter egg to circulate on social media. We've previously debunked rumors about a silhouette of a sex act in the background of Toy Story 3, a crude drawing in Monsters Inc., and Mickey Mouse's employing an unusual method to make swiss cheese. (en)
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