Dennis Rodman is praising North Korean dictator Kim Jong for 'modernizing' the country despite the volatile leader's nuclear threats to the U.S.
The former basketball star is known for making several trips to the controversial country and even becoming friends with Kim, who became 'Supreme Leader' in 2011.
Rodman told Dujor magazine that Kim has done a great deal since coming to power to bring the Asian country into the 21st century.
'It's more like they took down the "Flintstone" age and put in the "Jetsons". Out with the old, in with the new,' referencing the 1960s Hanna-Barbera cartoons take place in the Stone Age and the future, respectively.
Rodman insists, however, that although he is an American celebrity, the same doesn't apply in Pyongyang.
'You think you're a famous athlete over here. But you feel really small when you go over there. People don't even know you,' he said.
'You think that you're cool in America, that you can go anywhere and people recognize you, want your autograph and pictures. You go over there, and they just walk right past you. Rodman has had a very unique relationship with North Korea for years, ever since Kim - who is reportedly obsessed with the team the Chicago Bulls - wanted to meet the former member.
Rodman has visited the country six times since 2013 and appears to be very close with Kim, who holds the title of Supreme Leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).
The Hall of Famer also stated that Kim is a true innovator.
'It's funny, because when I first went there it was so…Communist,' Rodman said.
'Dry and dreary and like, I don't know. Everything is so dead.
'But the third time I went there, wow. [Pyongyang] changed a lot. New buildings were popping up and [Kim] is building all these new condos and hotels.
'He built the largest water park in the world, a ski resort and this big bowling alley. He's doing everything for these people. You could go bowl for a quarter all day or go swimming all day for like 50 cents. Despite Rodman trying to portray a more human Kim, many can't help but wonder how true it is, especially given reports of the despot's cruel and unusual punishments.
In 2013, Kim Jong-un’s uncle, Jang Song-thaek, was accused of being a counter-revolutionary, and was arrested and executed firing squad style.
It was a dramatic fall for a man who was once considered Kim's top adviser.
Such brutal purges of top officials have been a key strategy the leadership uses to keep a handle on power.
Satellite-images have also discovered North Korean's prison-camp system - where as many as 120,000 men, women and children are held.
Prisoners are often subjected to forced labor, torture, starvation, rape and death - although Pyongyang denies that the camps even exist.