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FRONTLINE presents 'Secret State of North Korea' premiering Jan. 14, 2014 on PBS.

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Official PBS/FRONTLINE Site

From the press release:

Just two years on the job and armed with nuclear weapons, North Korea’s Kim Jong-un is the world’s youngest dictator, ruling one of the world’s most isolated countries with an iron fist.

Like his father and grandfather, he is trying to maintain tight control over what the world sees of North Korea—and what North Koreans see of the world.

But as FRONTLINE reveals in 'Secret State of North Korea' (Tuesday, Jan. 14, on PBS and online; check local listings), cracks are starting to appear in the regime’s information barrier, and it’s becoming more porous.

Not only are North Koreans illegally smuggling information from inside North Korea out, a growing cohort of defectors are risking their lives to get information about the outside world in.

“Pretty quickly, what surprised me the most wasn’t the poverty and poor conditions people live in—which are, undoubtedly, shocking,” says FRONTLINE director James Jones. “It was the ordinary North Koreans who were standing up to authority.”

And doing so at great risk to themselves. In North Korea:


  • Just being caught with illegal DVDs could mean immediate imprisonment, or even execution.

  • Until recently, it was illegal for women to wear pants instead of skirts or dresses.

  • As many as one in 100 citizens is a political prisoner, according to a recent study—and one prison camp, Hwasong, is three times the size of Washington D.C.
In 'Secret State of North Korea', FRONTLINE shines a light on the hidden world of the North Korean people, drawing on undercover footage from inside the country as well as interviews with defectors—including a former top official—who are working to try to chisel away at the regime’s influence.

There’s Mr. Jeong, the former prison camp inmate who escaped to the South and now smuggles American and South Korean entertainment on DVDs and USBs into the North. He tells FRONTLINE his biggest hit so far is the James Bond movie Skyfall, and says, “Even officials have one or two USBs.”

And there’s Chanyang, the 22-year-old woman who now appears on a weekly South Korean TV show featuring North Korean defectors that is a hot commodity across the border. “My friends back home watch it, and all the children of the party officials in North Korea watch it and say they will defect,” she tells FRONTLINE.

In undercover footage obtained by FRONTLINE from inside North Korea, a speech from Kim Jong-un promising his people a bright economic future is pumped from speakers on a street corner—where it repeats on a loop for three months. In another, a cameraman asks to buy goods in Pyongyang’s Department Store No. 1, which is stocked with imported luxury goods from around the world, only to be told he can’t; it turns out, they’re just for show.

But also captured on camera are stirrings of open dissent: In one instance, a woman running an illegal bus service refuses to bribe a soldier, instead openly screaming at him. And behind closed doors, even members of the North Korean elite have voiced unhappiness with the regime, like one businesswoman filmed at a private lunch debating the feasibility of a rebellion.

How far will the regime go to hold onto power—and how far will the dissenters and defectors go in challenging Kim Jong-un’s authority?

FRONTLINE’s documentary is a rare and unforgettable view inside the 'Secret State of North Korea'.
Teaser Trailer (Youtube Version)
New York Times: Glimpses of a North Korea Seldom Seen in the West; PBS ‘Frontline’ Looks Inside a Notoriously Closed Country
HuffPost Live: Frontline Shines A Light On North Koreans

Check your local PBS listings
Watch FRONTLINE episodes online


Premieres tonight. Who else is going to watch?
 
I find these fascinating but it seems to me that because of the secrecy of the state and restrictions on filiming they all start to sound the same and repeat the same stories.

The stuff on the cracks does seem interesting though.

In undercover footage obtained by FRONTLINE from inside North Korea, a speech from Kim Jong-un promising his people a bright economic future is pumped from speakers on a street corner—where it repeats on a loop for three months. In another, a cameraman asks to buy goods in Pyongyang’s Department Store No. 1, which is stocked with imported luxury goods from around the world, only to be told he can’t; it turns out, they’re just for show.

But also captured on camera are stirrings of open dissent: In one instance, a woman running an illegal bus service refuses to bribe a soldier, instead openly screaming at him. And behind closed doors, even members of the North Korean elite have voiced unhappiness with the regime, like one businesswoman filmed at a private lunch debating the feasibility of a rebellion.
This is interesting as well but I hope the people are either out or their identity is protected. I'd hate to see reprisals on them and their family for the sake of a documentary.
 

AlexMogil

Member
This is interesting as well but I hope the people are either out or their identity is protected. I'd hate to see reprisals on them and their family for the sake of a documentary.

As I was reading that and watching the trailer I was thinking... dead. Dead. Dead. That guy, dead. Dead.
 
With the 24 hour news networks it's easy to forget real journalism exists in America. Thank goodness for FRONTLINE, and PBS more broadly.
 

Plasmid

Member
I kept hearing about this on NPR. I loved the pieces vice did a few years back on North Korea, i hope this is just as good.
 
I find these fascinating but it seems to me that because of the secrecy of the state and restrictions on filiming they all start to sound the same and repeat the same stories.

The stuff on the cracks does seem interesting though.

This is interesting as well but I hope the people are either out or their identity is protected. I'd hate to see reprisals on them and their family for the sake of a documentary.

The comments on rebellion seem interesting but scary. A rebellion of ideas would be wonderful. I'm worried that a real, open rebellion would be deadly. The authority in NK is heavily entrenched and they would like just open fire on everyone.
 
The comments on rebellion seem interesting but scary. A rebellion of ideas would be wonderful. I'm worried that a real, open rebellion would be deadly. The authority in NK is heavily entrenched and they would like just open fire on everyone.

The military would no doubt tear an unarmed rebellion to shreds with little hesitance. But it would probably have a big impact, just an open protest of some hundreds, maybe get some military defectors with guns, Ha, all hypotheticals. It's interesting to think about, absolutely.


I need to watch some Frontline. I haven't watched any in a long time.
 

Enduin

No bald cap? Lies!
Why doesn't the international community do anything here?

NK has a big fucking army and nukes. Despite all the leaks about terrible conditions and people willing to defect there's no guarantee the army or general populace would simply surrender.

Plus no one has anything to gain from it and no county or group of countries could garner the support for such a massive and costly undertaking.
 

TomServo

Junior Member
NK has a big fucking army and nukes. Despite all the leaks about terrible conditions and people willing to defect there's no guarantee the army or general populace would simply surrender.

Plus no one has anything to gain from it and no county or group of countries could garner the support for such a massive and costly undertaking.

Don't forget China.
 

Enduin

No bald cap? Lies!
Don't forget China.

Well that's a whole can of worms cause China seems like they're getting tired of their shit. Not that they wouldn't give them military support in the event of conflict but if NK was the clear aggressor I don't think it would be crazy to think China would just abandon them cause at that point they'd be dead weight. That or overthrow the government and put in a more stable and cooperative, at least with China, puppet government. But that's easier said than done.
 

Kastrioti

Persecution Complex
Thanks for the heads up OP.

North Korea documentaries have always been some of my favorites and the country, to me, is the most fascinating in the world.
 
Should be on in fifteen for the East Coast.


EDIT: Incidentally, I've been watching "1964" on American Experience and that was one hell of a year.
 
About to begin.

I love Frontline. For people who like it as much as me, please check out Man Behind the Mosque episode. It's about the Ground Zero Mosque in NYC and the controversy that volcanoed out of control. It's one of the best Frontline episodes ever produced.
 

BLACKLAC

Member
The guy who smuggles stuff into the north is BAD ASS!

"Of course there is a risk but I want to send them in so I just do it... Heh"

"In North Korea rumor has it that there are a hundred people desperate to get their hands on me. But they don't know where I go, do they."
 
It's trippy seeing the HD Frontline footage followed by the low quality video from the NK government that looks like it's made on a 40-year old camera.
 

Josh7289

Member
That was a fantastic report. I would describe North Korea as a country entirely consumed by tragedy.

EDIT: Incidentally, I've been watching "1964" on American Experience and that was one hell of a year.

Yeah. The story about the cop ruthlessly murdering a black child and holding his gun to the head of another black man who tried to help the child was shocking.
 

Kastrioti

Persecution Complex
I JUST started watching it, and was going to wait till I posted impressions but I had absolutely no idea that filming North Korea from the Chinese border was prohibited. Very interesting stuff already, and there have been a slew of great documentaries on NK.
 
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