Elements of American show business and North Korean propaganda briefly fused of Friday, when the former basketball star Dennis Rodman told reporters in Pyongyang that North Koreans âloveâ their new leader, Kim Jong-un. âAnd guess whatâ the athlete turned reality TV star added, âI love him â" the guyâs awesome.â
Speaking with the regional knowledge of a man who seemed to believe less than 48 hours ago that the upscale Seoul neighborhood featured in the global pop hit âGangnam Styleâ was not in South Korea but somewhere in the impoverished North, Mr. Rodman parted with these words of praise or the heir to the Kim dynasty: âGuess what His grandfather and his father were great leaders.â
Unsurprisingly, the former Chicago Bullâs visit, along with three current Harlem Globetrotters and a crew from âVice,â the HBO ânews magazine seriesâ that arranged the trip, was extensively covered on North Korean state television, which is no more adverse to reporting on staged events as news than the producers of the American reality television shows Mr. Rodman now gets paid to spice up.
Footage of the partyâs arrival in Pyongyang was broadcast on Wednesday, and Mr. Kim and Mr. Rodman watching an exhibition game together, before adjourning to the leaderâs palace for sushi, was a featured news item on Thursday.
In newsrooms not owned and run by the North Korean government though, there has been some debate about whether any of these stage-managed events could fairly be described as news.
According to the producers of âVice,â their new television program â" inspired by the âthinking manâs lad magazineâ of the same name â" promises to be âan honest approach to documentary journalism.â But you donât have to be Werner Heisenberg to wonder if the fact that they orchestrated this âbasketball diplomacy missionâ so that they could film it raises questions about whether they were observing and documenting life in North Korea as it is, or bringing a new form of reality television to the isolated nation.
As readers who watched the observational documentary âPage One: A Year Inside the New York Times,â might recall that the founder of Vice magazine who led its expansion into filmmaking, Shane Smith â" who is featured in a promotion for the new series â" explained to my colleague David Carr in 2010 that his approach was perhaps more like a form of extreme tourism than journalism. âIâm not a journalist,â he said during a particularly salty exchange, âIâm not there to repor! t.â
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