Television broadcasting is managed by the
Central Broadcasting Committee of Korea (until 2009 called Radio and Television Committee of the DPRK). Radio and TV sets in North Korea are supplied pre-tuned to North Korean stations and must be checked and registered with the police, though some North Koreans own Chinese radios which can receive foreign stations. State television is always off-air until its 5:00 pm evening news broadcast, except on weekends, which start at 6:00 am, and in emergency events, live events and national holidays. In August 2016, North Korea introduced an
over-the-top streaming service known as
Manbang (meaning "everywhere" or "every direction"), which carries live TV (including educational station
Mansudae Television), KCTV described the service as a "respite from radio interference". North Korean newscasts are known for their showmanship. KCTV's principal newsreader from 1974 to 2012,
Ri Chun-hee, was well known for the wavering, exuberant tone she used when praising the nation's leaders and the hateful one she used in denouncing countries seen as hostile to the regime. Some North Korean journalists who have defected to the South have noted the contrasts with the more conversational South Korean broadcasting style. All broadcast media in some way promotes the regime's ideologies and positions, such as
Juche, and regularly condemns actions by
South Korea,
Japan,
China,
Israel, the
United States, and other nations. The media in recent years condemns the
United Nations, and its position against the country's nuclear program. Media is generally without
adverts, though some advertisement of local brands occurs on Mansudae Television. Due to the economic conditions in the country and the short broadcast day, radio is the most widely used medium. In 2006, there were 16 AM, 14 FM, and 11 shortwave radio broadcast stations. The main radio stations are the Pyongyang FM Station,
Voice of Korea, and the
Korean Central Broadcasting Station. There is also a
black propaganda station called Propaganda Radio – which purports to be broadcasting from South Korea. Some foreign broadcast radio stations that target North Korea
are often jammed, though this can vary. The authorities designate such foreign media as "enemies of the regime". The system was likely built with infrastructure imported from the
Soviet Union, which operated a similar system known as
radiotochka ("radio socket" in English). The cable radio transmissions are known by North Koreans as the "Third Broadcast" or the 'Third Network. It was reported that the third network was complete in 1982. After
Kim Jong Un's stated the intention of improving 'wire broadcasting', the third network has seen installation in new apartment units, although in the 90s, distribution cables were apparently plundered for scrap metal. Similar to the Soviet wired radio system the radio sets are technologically simple affairs with few electronic components inside them besides a loudspeaker and a control coil for the volume, they have no "off" switch, but can be unplugged. South Korean television programmes cannot be received in North Korea due to incompatibilities between the television systems (
PAL in North Korea and
NTSC/
ATSC in South Korea) and the sets being pre-tuned.
South Korean soap operas, films and Western
Hollywood films according to defectors, are said to be spreading at a "rapid rate" throughout North Korea despite the threat of punishment; As of 2011,
USB flash drives were selling well in North Korea, primarily used for watching South Korean dramas and films on personal computers. North Korean broadcasts have been picked up in South Korea, and are monitored by the
Unification Ministry in
Seoul, which handles cross-border relations and media exchanges. Defectors are also streaming North Korean television broadcasts on the Internet. ==Internet==