Khloe Kardashian has been ridiculed online after behind the scenes pics emerged from her recent photo shoot, where she looked very different to the poster.
Khloe Kardashian has yet again been called out for apparent extreme use of Photoshop.
The TV personality, 40, appeared in a recent episode of the family’s Hulu series The Kardashians, in which she could be seen posing for a photo shoot for her new podcast, Khloe in Wonderland.
Viewers quickly took to social media gobsmacked at how different the mother-of-two looked in the final poster, compared to scenes which played out in real time on the show.
One Reddit user posted side-by-side comparison shots on the platform, with the headline, “Was anyone else shocked by Khloe’s photo-shoot comparison?”
“When watching the show they were showing Khloe posing for her perfume photo-shoot and I thought she looked great! But then they showed the actual edited cover they selected and I almost spat my water out. How can anyone approve that? It doesn’t even look like her,” the user continued.
The post was met with hundreds of like-minded comments, with one writing, “i mean I’m not shocked. but it IS shocking to see the difference honestly.”
“This is actually insane. These are two completely different people,” another added.
A third wrote, “She should stop photoshooting and go on a retreat and find herself.”
“She looks better in the first picture,” a fourth chimed in.
Kardashian, who shares two children True and Tatum with ex Tristan Thompson, is no stranger to photo editing controversy.
Most notably, in 2021, a raw, unedited bikini photo of Kardashian at Kris Jenner’s home in Palm Springs leaked online. It was understood to have been privately posted online by Kardashian’s grandmother.
Fans praised the “beautiful” snap for showing another side of the reality star, as the family’s representatives fought a losing battle to have it scrubbed from the internet.
In a lengthy statement released by Kardashian shortly after, the star said she had “struggled with body image her whole life” and argued “you should have every right” to ask that unflattering photos of yourself are not shared.
“In truth, the pressure, constant ridicule and Judgement my entire life to be perfect and to meet other’s standards of how I should look has been too much to bear,” she wrote.
“For a decade now in photos, every single flaw and imperfection has been micro-analysed and made fun of to the smallest detail and I am reminded of them everyday by the world.”