Korean Central Television
Country | North Korea |
---|---|
Broadcast area | North Korea Worldwide (via Satellite) |
Headquarters | Pyongyang, North Korea |
Programming | |
Picture format | 1080i HDTV (downscaled to letterboxed 576i for the SDTV feed) |
Ownership | |
Owner | Korean Central Broadcasting Committee |
History | |
Launched | 3 March 1963 |
Former names | Pyongyang Television (1 September 1953 – 1961) Central Television Broadcasting System of the DPRK (1961 – 3 January 1973) |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
Analogue | Channel R12 (223.25 MHz in Pyongyang) |
Digital | DVB-T2 |
Video on demand | Manbang |
Streaming media | |
NK News | KCNA Watch |
Korean Central Television | |
Chosŏn'gŭl | 조선중앙텔레비죤 |
---|---|
Hancha | 朝鮮中央텔레비죤 |
Revised Romanization | Joseon Jungang Tellebijyon |
McCune–Reischauer | Chosŏn Chungang T'ellebijyon |
Korean Central Television (KCTV; Korean: 조선중앙텔레비죤; MR: Chosŏn Chungang T'ellebijyon) is a North Korean television service operated by the Korean Central Broadcasting Committee, a state-owned broadcaster in North Korea. It is broadcast terrestrially via the Pyongyang TV Tower in Moranbong-guyok, Pyongyang, streamed via the government-run internet television service Manbang, and also uplinked via satellite.
History
This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2017) |
KCTV was established on 1 September 1953, as Pyongyang Television after the Korean War ended. Kim Il Sung personally envisioned that the time was ripe for television broadcasting in North Korea, but this was not yet to happen. Thus, the young service began an 8-year period of preparation for commencement of television broadcasts, with the help of the national government.
The station later was renamed as Central Television Broadcasting System in 1961, and conducted on 1 September the same year its first test broadcasts.
The CTBS-DPRK officially began operations on 3 March 1963, at 19:00 (7:00 pm) KST based in Pyongyang, broadcasting two hours between 19:00 until 21:00 KST on weekdays only, and then expanding to 4 and later 6 hours.
The network carried live the whole proceedings of the 5th Workers' Party of Korea Congress held on 1 October 1970.
The CTBS would later be renamed Korean Central Television (KCTV) and was officially relaunched at 17:00 local time on 3 January 1973 (the first working day in 1973 in North Korea). The broadcasting hours were only on weekdays (workdays in North Korea) and closed on weekends and national holidays.
On 1 July 1974, KCTV presented its first colour telecast, in preparation for the 7th Asian Games in Tehran. After occasional broadcasts, KCTV began full-time colour broadcasts on 1 September 1977. The first broadcast received via satellite television broadcasts was the opening ceremony of the 1980 Summer Olympics.
KCTV started broadcasting on national holidays on 1 March 1981. On national holidays, the broadcasting time of each station is the same as weekends save for major ones. The channel was the official host broadcaster of the 1989 13th World Festival of Youth and Students.
In September 2012, China Central Television (CCTV) announced that it had recently donated 5 million yuan in new broadcasting equipment to KCTV, which was to be used to improve its programming and prepare for digital television.[1][2]
By 2015, KCTV had been producing a growing number of programmes in the 16:9 aspect ratio, but its broadcast transmissions were still limited to a 4:3 standard definition format (with such programmes therefore being letterboxed). On 19 January 2015, KCTV began experimental high-definition transmissions via satellite, although only the live in-vision continuity at sign-on and sign-off was presented in HD. All other programming was presented in windowboxed standard definition.[3][4]
Native broadcasts in 16:9 widescreen with stereophonic sound started on 4 December 2017, with KCTV being one of the last state-run broadcasters to do so, albeit several years after other developed and even developing nations have done so.[5]
In May 2024, the KCTV stream on Twitch was terminated for violating their Terms of Service. This was the only free stream publicly available in HD, the latter KCNA Watch available only in SD. They created a new Twitch account called chuo_tv,[6] which later became offline in early-July due to a change in signal from ChinaSat 12 to Russian-based Ekspress-103.
Programming
As of May 2022, KCTV broadcasts for around 13 hours daily, from 09:00 to around 22:40.[7][8] Its sign-on sequence traditionally features the playing of the national anthem "Aegukka", "Song of General Kim Il-sung" and "Song of General Kim Jong-il".[8]
The station's output was dominated by propaganda programs focusing on the history and achievements of the ruling Korean Workers' Party, the Korean People's Army (KPA), its leaders, and the Juche ideology. Locally produced feature films, children's programs, theater, and patriotic musical shows and filmed theatre shows are also shown on the networks. On national holidays, military parades, musical performances and movies, plus more special programs are shown on KCTV with similar programming on its three other sister channels.
Occasionally, dubbed and ideologically safe foreign films and television from allied Russia and China are aired on the network during times of warmer relations with the countries. The Star and The Seventh Bullet were both featured, as was a Chinese television program on the life of Mao Anying from 2010.[9]
By December 2018, KCTV's programmes had begun to gain a more contemporary feel as opposed to the strictly authoritarian style used before, with more programming showcasing the North Korean people. Programmes were observed to have featured more field reporting with visible anchors and production staff, younger hosts and personalities with modern attire, increased use of modern production techniques (such as aerial cameras), more modern graphics, and a looser and more energetic presentation.[10][11][12][13] Kim Jong Un's New Year's address similarly saw the leader delivering the speech from an armchair in the Workers' Party headquarters, rather than from a podium in an assembly hall.[11] Western analysts felt that these shifts in tone were intended to make the programmes' production values more in line with international broadcasters (appealing to those that have managed to access such programmes), and to make them more appealing to younger audiences.[14][13][11][15]
KCTV has broadcast tape delayed airings of international sporting events in a condensed format. For instance, while the country has sub-licensed rights to the Olympic Games from the Seoul Broadcasting System (who serves as rights-holder for all of the Korean Peninsula), KCTV coverage of the 2020 Summer Olympics (which North Korea refused to send athletes to) began two days after the Games had ended, and it did not broadcast any coverage of the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea (despite North and South Korea entering as a unified team during the opening ceremonies, and fielding a unified team in women's ice hockey). Its coverage of the 2018 FIFA World Cup excluded matches involving Japan.[16][17] Coverage of the 2022 FIFA World Cup included all matches, barring a United States —Wales group stage match and the first three matches involving South Korea. The latter's Round of 16 match and loss to Brazil was the first time a game involving the South Korean team was broadcast in North Korea during the tournament. Pitch-side advertising of South Korean corporations Kia and Hyundai was initially blurred out within the first few days before being left unedited.[18] During a broadcast of a women's football match between North and South Korea at the 2022 Asian Games, a scoreboard graphic referred to South Korea as "puppets" (Korean: 괴뢰).[19][20]
One of the few instances in which KCTV broadcasts live is during the annual New Year's Eve concert in Kim Il Sung Square, which was first televised in 2018. The concert is aired in two parts including a roughly 50-minute show from 11 p.m., with the second half comprising the raising of the North Korean flag, the playing of the national anthem, and a fireworks display at midnight. In 2022, a rerun of the special on New Year's Day edited a segment showing an initial failed attempt at unfurling the flag.[21]
In May 2022, following the North's first reported cases of COVID-19 to the public, KCTV extended its broadcast day to begin at 9:00 a.m. daily. Previously, the channel began its broadcast day at 3:00 p.m., and only broadcast from 9:00 a.m. on Sundays, key national holidays, and every 1st, 11th and 21st of each month. This change has persisted as of July 2023.[7][8]
News operation
KCTV broadcasts daily news bulletins under the title Bodo (보도, 'News' or 'Report'), which serve as one of the main propaganda organs of the Workers' Party of Korea. Their content strictly follows the party line, and the day-to-day activities of Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un take precedence over all other headlines. Stories covering the country's military and economy are also featured.[22][13][12][8] Weather reports aired on KCTV place Paektu Mountain, which the country claims to be the birthplace of Kim Jong Il, ahead of all other cities besides the capital of Pyongyang.[23]
North Korean newscasts are long known for being melodramatic; newsreaders use one of five tones: a lofty, wavering one for praising the nation's leaders, an explanatory one for weather forecasts, a conversational one for uncontroversial stories, a hateful one for denouncing enemies of the regime and a mournful tone for announcing the death of a North Korean official or leader. Many North Korean journalists who have defected to the South have noted the contrasts with the more conversational South Korean broadcasting style. Long-time chief newsreader Ri Chun-hee is well known for her melodramatic style, and for typically wearing a traditional, pink Chosŏn-ot dress on-air.[24][25] Ri retired as a full-time anchor in 2012, stating that she wanted to focus more on training a newer generation of broadcasters. She has continued to make infrequent on-air appearances to deliver top-level announcements from the government, such as missile tests, a broadcast discussing the Singapore Summit, and to announce the death of Supreme Leader Kim Jong-il.[24][25][26]
By September 2012, after receiving new equipment from Chinese state broadcaster CCTV, KCTV introduced a refreshed set for its bulletins, which featured a new anchor desk and a video backdrop.[1][2] By December 2018, the bulletins had begun to employ contemporary presentation elements that had previously been avoided by KCTV, such as double boxes, as part of a larger shift in KCTV's programming.[10] Experiments with further modernization occurred in March and May 2019, when economic reports used three-dimensional infographics (including 3D text overlaid into video footage), drone footage, and time-lapse video.[13][12]
KCTV may return to air or remain on-air past its usual sign-off time during special occasions and breaking news situations. On 26 August 2020, KCTV broadcast advisories throughout the day on Typhoon Bavi, including updates from the State Hydro-Meteorological Administration. For what was believed to be the first time ever, KCTV remained on the air overnight, airing a block of films interspersed with the aforementioned updates. The following morning, KCTV broadcast extended coverage of the storm's arrival and impact, including live reports from Pyongyang and Nampo. No other coverage of Typhoon Bavi was seen during KCTV's main news bulletins until 28 August, when a story focused on Kim Jong Un's assessment of damage by the typhoon (as per the aforementioned precedence of his day-to-day activities).[8][27][28] A few weeks later, KCTV aired similar coverage of Typhoon Maysak and Typhoon Haishen, building upon the format it had used for the Typhoon Bavi coverage.[29][30]
Availability
The station began its first colour broadcasts on 1 July 1974, using the SECAM system with 576i scanning lines, in line with most of the Eastern Bloc at that time. This was replaced with PAL sometime around the early-1990s or probably 1994. On the 54th anniversary of Workers' Party of Korea in 1999, KCTV began a satellite television uplink via Thaicom 3. The station is available in Pyongyang, and in other major cities, including Chŏngjin, Hamhŭng, Haeju, Kaesŏng, Sinŭiju and Wŏnsan.
In 2012, KCTV began experimental digital terrestrial television broadcasts, using the European DVB-T2 standard (in contrast to South Korea, which uses the American ATSC standard; to Japan, which uses its indigenously developed ISDB-T standard; and to China, which uses its indigenously developed DTMB standard).[31][32]
Outside North Korea
KCTV was broadcast free-to-air on Thaicom 5 until 25 February 2020, so with the appropriate equipment can be picked up in Southeast Asia, Australasia, Middle East, Africa and Europe.[33] In April 2015, KCTV expanded its satellite broadcast coverage in America and Europe via Intelsat 21.[34] On 18 January 2020, KCTV moved its satellite broadcast on ChinaSat 12 as the Thaicom 5 began experiencing technical difficulties around December 2019.[35] On 29 June 2024, after Russian President Vladimir Putin's visit to North Korea, the satellite signal was moved to a Russian satellite, Ekspress-103, making government agencies and media in South Korea out of reception.[36] As of 2 July 2024, the transmission quality from Ekspress-103 is poor, experiencing audio loss and bad images due to 5G frequency interference.[37]
Since March 2019, KCTV's satellite signal has been relayed with BISS encryption by Koreasat 5A—a South Korean satellite owned by KT Corporation—to allow media outlets and journalists based in Seoul to continue monitoring the channel. The relay was established after 5G NR wireless service began to interfere with the C-band signal.[38][39]
The daily KCTV news bulletin is also distributed online with Japanese subtitles through a Chongryon-supported website. In 2013, British broadcaster Channel 4 offered editions of the daily bulletin with English subtitles as part of its web series North Korea Uncovered.[40]
Test card
The EBU colour bars are shown when the broadcaster is not on air, except in the roughly half-hour period before sign-on, when a modified test card is displayed with patriotic songs or classical musical works of the DPRK as background music. The test cards used were as follows:
- c. 1974 – mid-1990s: modified Philips PM5540/PM5544 hybrid colour testcard without side bars but with digital clock at bottom right. Towards the top of the testcard Chosŏn'gŭl characters for "Pyongyang" are written on either side of an image of the Chollima Statue emblazoned on a blue gradient background.[41]
- mid-1990s – 3 December 2017: modified Philips PM5544 testcard with digital clock. Towards the top of the testcard Chosŏn'gŭl characters for "Pyongyang" are written on either side of a white Chollima emblazoned on a blue background.
- 4 December 2017 – present: modified Philips PM5644 testcard with digital clock. Towards the top of the testcard Chosŏn'gŭl characters for "Korean Central Television" are written below an image of Mount Paektu's Heaven Lake emblazoned on a sky blue background.
-
First 4:3 test card used from at least the 1970s until the mid 1990s. Off-air photo from October 1994.
-
Former 4:3 test card used from the mid-1990s until 3 December 2017
-
16:9 HD Test card in use since 4 December 2017
-
Current 4:3 Test card since 2017
See also
- Censorship in North Korea
- China Central Television
- Korean Broadcasting System (equivalent in South Korea)
- List of North Korean television series
- Mansudae Television
- Manbang
- Media of North Korea
- Radio jamming in Korea
- Soviet Central Television
- Telecommunications in North Korea
- Television in North Korea
- Vietnam Television
Sources
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- ^ a b Williams, Martyn (9 September 2012). "KCTV's evening news gets an update". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 9 July 2021. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
- ^ Williams, Martyn (19 January 2015). "KCTV launches HD satellite broadcasts". North Korean Tech. Archived from the original on 16 September 2015. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- ^ "KCTV's slow move to high-definition, what's taking so long?". North Korean Tech. 15 May 2015. Archived from the original on 16 June 2015. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- ^ "North Korea's KCTV goes widescreen, stereo in big upgrade". North Korea Tech. 5 December 2017. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
- ^ https://x.com/NorthNKAAL/status/1788710599314067764 [bare URL]
- ^ a b Williams, Martyn (1 August 2022). "An expansion of KCTV broadcasting hours". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 28 October 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d e Williams, Martyn (28 August 2020). "We Interrupt this Propaganda...A Dynamic 24 Hours on North Korean TV". 38 North. The Henry L. Stimson Center. Archived from the original on 17 July 2022. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
- ^ "KCTV airing multi-part Chinese drama series". 23 May 2018. Archived from the original on 8 July 2022. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
- ^ a b Cho, Joohee (2 December 2018). "North Korea's state TV gets a quiet makeover, adding neon suits and smiles to newscasts best known for delivering the party line". ABC News. Archived from the original on 19 May 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
- ^ a b c Williams, Martyn (13 January 2019). "Kim Jong Un's New Year's Address: The Art of Propaganda". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ^ a b c Williams, Martyn (7 May 2019). "New graphics in regular use during North Korean TV's economic news segments". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
- ^ a b c d "With New Style And Graphics, North Korea Gives Propaganda A Makeover". NPR.org. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ^ McCurry, Justin (26 March 2019). "Propaganda, but with graphics: North Korea's news bulletins get a makeover". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ^ "North Korean propaganda gets makeover to appeal to youth". CNN. 21 May 2019. Archived from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ^ Williams, Martyn (16 August 2021). "The Olympics are back on KCTV". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 24 September 2021. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
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- ^ Williams, Martyn (5 December 2022). "North Korean TV Coverage of the World Cup". North Korea Tech. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
- ^ Reddy, Shreyas (3 October 2023). "North Korea hails women's soccer victory over South Korean 'puppets'". NK News. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
State broadcaster Korean Central Television (KCTV) steered clear of the phrase "South Korea" in its coverage, referring to the ROK as "puppets" or "the puppet team."
- ^ Williams, Martyn [@martyn_williams] (5 October 2023). "I had to check my recording to believe this. In the Asian Games Women's match between North and South Korea, North Korean TV graphics labeled South Korea as '괴뢰,' or 'puppets.' They beat them 4-1 and went on to thrash Uzbekistan 8-0. Final is Friday where they face Japan" (Tweet). Retrieved 2 January 2024 – via Twitter.
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- ^ Williams, Martyn (3 January 2019). "North Korean Media: KCTV's Coverage of Kim Jong Un's Diplomatic Push in 2018". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
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- ^ a b "The voice of North Korea". The World. 8 December 2009. Archived from the original on 4 June 2012.
- ^ a b "Count on North Korea's 'pink lady' broadcaster for joyful news of bombs and missiles". Washington Post. 5 September 2017. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
- ^ Smith, Nicola; Riley-Smith, Ben (11 June 2018). "North Koreans finally told about Kim Jong-un's Singapore summit with Trump". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 10 March 2022. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
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- ^ 朝鮮中央テレビが24時間テレビ状態で台風情報を夜通し伝える. KoreaWorldTimes (in Japanese). 29 August 2020. Archived from the original on 24 September 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
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- ^ Williams, Martyn (15 April 2015). "North Korean TV expands satellite transmissions". North Korea Tech. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- ^ Williams, Martyn (5 February 2020). "KCTV appears on Chinese satellite". Archived from the original on 5 February 2020.
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- ^ 태균, 김 (2 July 2024). "北朝鮮放送 韓国での受信に障害発生=中国からロシアに衛星変更". Yonhap News Agency. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
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External links
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- Television in North Korea
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