A Kim Jong Un impersonator making headlines around the world for his various appearances at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics is an Australian man named Howard.
The Melbourne-born man, who has Chinese heritage, is a professional impersonator and satirist.
A group of North Korean cheerleaders were briefly wowed on Wednesday by the apparent sudden arrival of their leader, Kim Jong-un, at a Winter Olympics ice hockey game.
Howard told Channel 7's Sunrise "the cheerleaders were shocked and surprised and some of them even laughed".
But he noted some of the North Korean minders did not find it funny.
Asked about whether it was dangerous to impersonate the North Korean leader, he said "you can't let North Korea hijack these games using these leaders and everything that they put out".
"It's a terrible regime and I need to take the piss out of it," Howard said.
In North Korea, a person impersonating a member of the Kim family would be considered blasphemous.
Images of the North Korean leadership are tightly choreographed and controlled by the reclusive nation's state propagandists.
But Howard noted South Korea does not have such rules.