North Korean Teen Sentenced To 12 Years Hard Labor for Watching Unapproved TV Show

North Korea, we all know it's not exactly a walk in the park. Living  there is like having a constant overbearing roommate—except that roommate is a tyrannical government, and stepping out of line might as well be an invitation to a world of trouble.

Now, picture this: two 16-year-old boys getting hit with a staggering twelve years of  hard labor. What heinous crime did they commit? Well, they were caught doing something utterly unthinkable in the eyes of the North Korean regime—they were watching South Korean soap operas. Yep, you read that right. The punishment for a little entertainment outside the government-approved playlist? A dozen years of hard labor. Seems reasonable, doesn't it?
 

From Oddity Central: 


In a video obtained by the BBC, two young boys in grey uniforms can be seen on a stage surrounded by hundreds of people as they receive their sentence for the “horrible” crime of watching and distributing K-dramas from the “puppet” South Korean regime. All manner of South Korean entertainment, including television programs, is forbidden in South Korea, and according to a law enacted by the Hermit Kingdom in 2020, watching or distributing South Korean entertainment is punishable by serious prison time or even death. But some people are still willing to risk their lives for a glimpse into the neighboring country.

“The rotten puppet regime’s culture has spread even to teenagers,” a narrator says in reference to South Korea. “They are just 16 years old, but they ruined their own future.”

It’s a devastating sentence for two teenagers, especially considering their “crime,” but they can technically consider themselves lucky. According to a North Korean defector who agreed to talk to the BBC, he was forced to watch a 22-year-old man get shot by a firing squad for listening to South Korean music and sharing it with his friend.

Interstingly, when getting caught watching American entertainment, you can get out of it with a small bribe, but getting caught in South Korean programs is infinitely worse.

“If you get caught watching an American drama, you can get away with a bribe, but if you watch a Korean drama, you get shot,” a North Korean defector told the BBC. “For North Korean people, Korean dramas are a ‘drug’ that helps them forget their difficult reality.”

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