SIGforum.com    Main Page  Hop To Forum Categories  The Lounge    With New Style And Graphics, North Korea Gives Propaganda A Makeover
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
With New Style And Graphics, North Korea Gives Propaganda A Makeover Login/Join 
Member
posted
North Korean propaganda is always good for a chuckle. This article details some of the regime's attempts at modernization. Here is the story which at the link has a picture:

There's an evening show on North Korea's state TV that brings soldiers news from their hometowns.

Last September, the show on the regime-run Korean Central Television, or KCTV, was interrupted for an urgent update.

"Another piece of news from our families on the home front, just in from the Kangson steel factory," an announcer says. "Soldiers from Kangson will be happy to hear that," the anchor replies, beaming.

The update: A soldier's father says he and fellow factory workers are so motivated, they will beat production targets by 50%.

The spirited labor message is decades old. But the presentation, including the staged interruption, hints at a change in propaganda tactics.

The news presenters are fresh-faced. Their attire is business casual. Their dialogue is chatty. You might almost think it's a South Korean show. One giveaway that it's not is the anchors' red lapel pins bearing images of old North Korean leaders, worn only in the North.

The program is an example of recent North Korean efforts to give propaganda a makeover. Analysts say it is a response to fierce competition between Pyongyang's narrative — that its foreign and domestic policies are succeeding — and an influx of outside information, in spite of government attempts to completely shut it out.

North Korean authorities "know that they can't go on with the old ways of propaganda and idolizing leaders," Jang Haesung, a former KCTV reporter who defected to South Korea in the 1990s, tells NPR.

"But they have no choice," he says, "because if they admit their failings, the regime could collapse."

In the past, stern-faced anchors stolidly read their scripts, and there were few visuals. For major events, such as nuclear tests, presidential summits and the death of national leaders, the state television would wheel out veteran anchor Ri Chun Hee. She is known for her dramatic spiels, delivered wearing a traditional hanbok dress and in front of a backdrop of the crater atop Mount Paektu, the mythical birthplace of founding dynast Kim Il Sung.


People watch North Korea's state-run television as presenter Ri Chun Hee announces North Korea has test-launched its first intercontinental ballistic missile in 2017.
Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images
In recent months, though, the network's business reports have begun to use digitally designed charts and graphics. Weather forecasters have stood up from their desks. Previously unseen TV studios and control rooms have begun to appear on screen.

North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un himself underwent an on-air makeover for his annual televised New Year's address, ditching his rostrum and his Mao suit of years past. He instead donned a suit and tie and ensconced himself in a book-lined, wood-paneled study, which North Korea watchers say was apparently aimed at making him look more genial and statesman-like.

Proclamation to disregard conventional style

Authorities, meanwhile, have issued a slew of directives to the effect that news and propaganda "should boldly disregard the established customs and conventional way of writing and editing," as the ruling party's flagship newspaper Rodong Sinmun proclaimed in a May 7 article (link in Korean).

Another Rodong op-ed on April 29 called for "fact-based" propaganda, which should never "fail to take into account the general public's cognitive and emotional capabilities."



North Korea's Newest Missile Appears Similar To Advanced Russian Design
In March, Kim Jong Un himself wrote a letter (link in Korean) to propaganda workers, telling them that "mystifying the leader's revolutionary activities to emphasize his greatness will bury the truth." He added: "Only when the people are charmed by the leader as a human and a comrade, will they feel a sense of absolute loyalty."

The statements, analysts say, reflect the fact that North Koreans increasingly have access to alternative sources of information which challenge the leadership's narrative.

"After watching South Korean television, North Koreans can't help but wonder why they can't make programs like those," says Kang Dong Wan, an expert on North Korea media at Dong-A University in Busan, South Korea.

South Korean Women 'Escape The Corset' And Reject Their Country's Beauty Ideals
WORLD
South Korean Women 'Escape The Corset' And Reject Their Country's Beauty Ideals
This is happening despite authorities' best efforts, Kang points out. Few of North Korea's more than 25 million people have access to the Internet, and those who do are limited to surfing a dozen or so government-run sites. Several million North Koreans now have mobile phones, but their calls are believed to be monitored by authorities.

Jang, the former KCTV reporter who is now retired, confides that when he was with the North's network he had access to foreign news and domestic intelligence briefings and, although he couldn't discuss it publicly, he knew pretty well what was happening at home and abroad. He says other North Korean elites are in a similar position.

Increasingly, ordinary North Koreans are also exposed to outside news and entertainment through smuggled DVDs, thumb drives and memory cards, or in broadcasts from foreign media outlets, such as Radio Free Asia and the BBC, accessed by shortwave radios.



In Korean DMZ, Wildlife Thrives. Some Conservationists Worry Peace Could Disrupt It
And it is carried in the minds of North Korean traders and laborers — from seafood merchants in China to lumberjacks in Russia's Far East — who can access foreign media while working abroad.

Even though North Korea's leaders can easily jail their critics, analysts say, they still have to at least appear to care about what people think.

"No matter how much propaganda it puts out," Kang says, "the North Korean government knows that its people know that what they are telling them is not true."

Meanwhile, says Kim Seungchul, president of the Seoul-based North Korea Reform Radio, penalties for accessing banned foreign media are becoming more lenient as more people catch on.

Kim is a North Korean defector. His network broadcasts a couple of hours of news a day via shortwave, aimed at a North Korean audience.

It used to be, he says, that getting caught listening to foreign broadcasts could land you in a political prison, or worse. Now so many people are listening, he says, that getting caught usually just means a fine or a short stint in a detention center.

The influx of information has undermined North Korea's control over the narrative of current events, most notably in February in Vietnam, when President Trump walked out on what he said was a bad deal offered by Kim Jong Un.

Kim Seungchul says that following the summit in Hanoi, Vietnam, North Korean diplomats told workers overseas: "'We have our own position on this. You just wait and see. But in the meantime, don't tell anyone about it. Don't even discuss it with each other.'"

But the news got into North Korea anyway, and after a week of claiming the summit was a victory for Kim Jong Un, state media did an about-face, blaming hard-liners within the Trump administration for sabotaging the summit.

Later in March, Vice Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui argued that public opinion was constraining Kim's policy options.

"Our people, especially our military and munitions industry, are saying we must never give up nuclear capabilities," Choe said, and therefore they opposed Kim making a deal with Trump in Hanoi.

LINK: https://www.npr.org/2019/05/20...anda-gets-a-makeover
 
Posts: 17705 | Location: Stuck at home | Registered: January 02, 2015Reply With QuoteReport This Post
No Compromise
posted Hide Post
Lipstick on a pig...

H&K-Guy
 
Posts: 3720 | Registered: April 08, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
Picture of Perception
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by H&K-Guy:
Lipstick on a pig...

H&K-Guy


I see it more like cracks in the dam. NK leadership tries to shut foreign influence out, but it just isn't possible these days. The North Korean people are ignorant by the design of their leaders, but they aren't stupid and they can see what's going on outside. This change is a sign that the leadership is finally having to admit that the old stuff was bullshit, because the people are becoming educated enough that they see through it. And that makes them question the rest of it.




"The people hate the lizards and the lizards rule the people."
"Odd," said Arthur, "I thought you said it was a democracy."
"I did," said Ford, "it is."
"So," said Arthur, hoping he wasn't sounding ridiculously obtuse, "why don't the people get rid of the lizards?"
"It honestly doesn't occur to them. They've all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they've voted in more or less approximates the government they want."
"You mean they actually vote for the lizards."
"Oh yes," said Ford with a shrug, "of course."
"But," said Arthur, going for the big one again, "why?"
"Because if they didn't vote for a lizard, then the wrong lizard might get in."
 
Posts: 3612 | Location: Two blocks from the Center of the Universe | Registered: December 30, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Optimistic Cynic
Picture of architect
posted Hide Post
"You caught us lying, so we will try to think up some better lies."
 
Posts: 6945 | Location: NoVA | Registered: July 22, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
Picture of Tubetone
posted Hide Post
It's hard to recast oppression as freedom.

Consider this from yesterday about a pseudo-religous movement taking root in North Korea:

"North Korean police issued a decree in Pyongyang ordering all Falun Gong practitioners to identify themselves to the government. Police arrested over 100 people and threatened more severe action against those found after the “grace period” to identify themselves had elapsed." Link

It always seemed to me that President Trump was giving time - time to let Kim repropagandize his people. That seems a Herculean task but a dictator, I suppose, must start somewhere - even while keeping a heavy hand. How does Kim reimagine his "godship" for a more modern world of diverse opinions while figuring out how to still hold on to power?

Letting his people have religion or something religion-like is out of the question but a few graphics and relaxed allowance of outside media is a start.


_______________________________
NRA Life Member
NRA Certified Range Safety Officer
 
Posts: 3078 | Registered: January 06, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
  Powered by Social Strata  
 

SIGforum.com    Main Page  Hop To Forum Categories  The Lounge    With New Style And Graphics, North Korea Gives Propaganda A Makeover

© SIGforum 2024