<Anchor>



The focus is on the Korean Peninsula.

North Korea is actively using YouTube for its recent external propaganda.



Reporter Kim A-young summarized how North Korea's external propaganda method differs from internal propaganda.



<Reporter> The



news of a North Korean child YouTuber who speaks British English fluently was delivered at this time, and I brought the video again today.



This video was uploaded to YouTube on the 13th.



The child of a North Korean diplomat, Song-a, known as the gold spoon, visited Moranbong Peak in Pyongyang with her friend.



She's got her so-called selfie gear where she takes herself, and it looks so exciting, right?



Enlarging an image


[Songa: My parents also met here at Moranbong, and I was born in the Moranbong area.] I



also edited the video of finding Moranbong with my family when I was young.



[(I came to Moranbong for the first time with a calf.) Dad, eat a little.

Don't eat too much.]



The Labor Party and Kim Jong-un have never been mentioned.



Perhaps conscious of external hostility, North Korea also mentions system propaganda in YouTube videos, and relatively little.



Instead, it is evident that they are paying attention to maximizing the fun, such as attempting an unconventional direction.



This is a video titled 'Shh, that virgin'.



[The story I am going to tell you now is about a virgin.]



This man, who is monologue in Chinese, is also a North Korean young man.



He came to Moranbong to paint a picture and met a woman who took care of the park. Is it a love story between a man and a woman?



[We also promised to meet every Sunday.

But after that, I did not know that I would never see the girl again.] The other



person sent a letter out of the blue.



[Don't think otherwise.

All of them, including the last known painter teacher and comrade in Pyongyang, are so precious to me.]



He said goodbye, saying he had decided to go to a rural petition for the prosperity of his country.



A broken young man asks a question during a monologue.



[Did you understand the girl's heart?]



Her acting is very awkward, isn't it?



Of course, this seems to be part of YouTube's propaganda strategy.



First of all, she is hardly exposed to the selfie sticks she shows easily, books such as Harry Potter, and the state-run media viewed by North Koreans.



Also, unlike the YouTube method, which secretly promotes the system, it gives out explicit messages to the residents.



[Breaking the stronghold of imperialism…

.

Thousands of miles following the leader...

.]



It's still mostly stereotyped propaganda.



They try to be flexible about this and that, but in the end, it is said that they are limited to external use.