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SHANE SMITH: Hey, it's
Shane from Vice.
And this show features
all of our best ***
from over the years.
It's some freaky, freaky
business, and we
hope you like it.
Welcome to Vice Presents.
I actually went to North
Korea twice.
The first time we snuck
in, they wouldn't
let me shoot anything.
And then while we were there,
we got drunk doing karaoke
with some generals.
And they let us come in the
second time when we shot.
But when they heard what we had
shot, and when they saw
the documentary, they
got mad at us.
In fact, my PA called me one day
and said, don't come into
the office.
There's two North Koreans
here from the embassy.
Problem is, they don't have
an embassy in America.
So I didn't go into the office,
and I'm sure as hell
not going back to North Korea.
Nobody knows anything about
North Korea, so we were
fascinated by it.
And we tried to get in for a
year and a half but couldn't,
because North Korea doesn't
let anyone in.
They do not want anyone to
corrupt their 100% homogeneous
society that is 100% ruled by
one person, Kim Jong-il.
In the end, we just got so
frustrated that we ended up
flying to South Korea and
saying, well, at least we can
go to the DMZ and put our foot
into North Korea and at least
see a little bit of
it from the South.
Let's go see the DMZ, which is
the Demilitarized Zone, which
is the border between North
Korea and South Korea.
Since the Korean War ended, it's
been the most militarized
zone on earth, with two million
estimated troops on
the North Korean side,
about 500,000 on the
South Korean side.
Missiles pointed at each other,
artillery, tanks.
There's three million mines
on the border itself.
In fact, there are so many mines
that the North Koreans
built invasion tunnels where
they went 70 meters down.
And they're like, we can be in
Seoul in an hour and a half.
Now the CIA and the American
Army have found a number of
these, but they think that
there's even more.
It's been called the end of
the world, and it's the
closest you can get to
seeing North Korea.
Getting to the DMZ isn't easy.
It's only an hour and a half
North of Seoul, but you have
to go through about
15 checkpoints.
Then you have to go through
a United Nations sort of
indoctrination session, where
they're like, don't point,
don't look at them,
don't take any
pictures, don't do anything.
We're only going to be there
for two and a half minutes.
So we're at the last stop
in South Korea before
going to the DMZ.
This here is Freedom Bridge, but
after the Korean War was
the last time the North and
South exchanged POWs.
And on the other side of that
now, a little further back, is
North Korea.
Right here, it's kind of
like a theme park.
But as you see just beyond the
theme park, kind of hidden by
the trees, there's barbed wire
and land mines and checkpoints
everywhere.
So it's kind of a very
bizarre theme park.
So a lot of families come, and
they put up messages or
prayers for their family in the
North that they've been
split and never allowed
to see.
So they all come here and make a
pilgrimage and say, OK, this
is what I'm going to put up.
Someone's put up some
golf balls there.
I think the South's going to
lose pretty damn quick.
They're going to be sort of rave
soldiers, brought up on
PlayStation.
Versus the North Koreans
who eat grass and
sleep with their AK.
And so you get off the bus,
and you look across, and
there's North Korea.
They're like, that's North
Korea, get back on the bus.
You could start World War III.
They really get you terrified.
They let you into one barracks
room, and the barracks room is
half in North Korea, half
in South Korea.
And they set that up so that
they could have talks.
But it's the only place where
you can go and actually set
foot, technically,
into North Korea.
And this is as close as 99.9%
of the people in the world
will ever get to getting
into North Korea.
And people are like,
that's North Korea.
MALE SPEAKER: So that
piece of concrete--
SHANE SMITH: That concrete--
so the gravel is South, the
concrete is the demarcation
line, and the sand is--
MALE SPEAKER: North.
SHANE SMITH: No finger
pointing.
We're like, dude, we have
to get into North Korea.
We have to get in.
GEORGE BUSH: North Korea has a
regime arming with missiles
and weapons of mass
destruction.
States like these and their
terrorist allies constitute an
axis of evil arming
to threaten the
peace of the world.
The United States of America
will not permit the world's
most dangerous regimes to
threaten us with the world's
most destructive weapons.
SHANE SMITH: We couldn't
get in.
We tried through the Embassy,
through press, through Swedish
embassy, British embassy,
Canadian
embassy, German embassy.
And I was saying to myself,
what in God's
name is going on here?
So we were interviewing North
Korean refugees in South
Korea, and a few of them had
said, just go to Shenyang and
bribe the consulate there.
That's what everybody
else does.
So we were in South Korea, and
we said why not, we're here?
So we flew up to China, and
we had nothing to lose.
And we met the consul
in Shenyang, paid
a fee, a visa fee.
And we left our passports there,
and in fact most of our
money, and we went back to
this North Korean hotel.
We had to stay in one of their
hotels in Northern China, and
we were supposed to hear
back from them at
4:00 the next afternoon.
At 6:00 in the morning, there's
a banging on our door,
and we wake up all
discombobulated.
And they're like, we have
to go now, here's your
passport, let's go.
And we're like where
are we going?
Where are we going?
And they don't give you any time
to react, not one second.
They take you right out from
the room at 6:00 in the
morning, get you on the plane.
Shenyang, you know, you've
got to come to Shenyang.
Stay here at the North Korean
hotel with concrete beds.
You're not allowed to bring
anything into North Korea.
You can't bring a cellphone,
you can't bring a computer,
you can't bring any printed
material, any music.
They don't want you to
have anything that
you even leave there.
In fact, they don't want you to
bring any type of camera in
that was too sophisticated.
No telephoto lenses, nothing.
You can bring basically
a point and
shoot, and that's it.
In fact, when you go in you have
to sign a thing saying
I'm not bringing in anything.
And let me tell you, if they
find out that you did, you're
in deep ***.
And then you're flying from
Shenyang to Pyongyang in North
Korea, and you go holy ***,
we're going to North Korea.
And with the express purpose of
shooting, which you're not
allowed to do.
With the express purpose of
making a documentary, which
you're not allowed to do.
This is terrifying.
So from the first minute I got
there, I was *** scared.
SHANE SMITH: First sight of
Pyongyang, pretty dismal.
We're in a hotel that's
about 47 stories tall.
Nobody's in it.
I think there's only one floor
with any people on it.
We're in the hotel, and we've
been told that they're bugged,
that they're listening to us.
I don't know if whispering
is going to help.
That might be where
it all stems from.
Hello?
Hello?
Oh!
Come in.
Come in, Tokyo.
Hello?
Hello?
Hello?
Hello?
We're here.
Right after we get there, we
were taken for our first meal.
And the first time you eat in
North Korea, it's kind of a
sign of the very weird
things to come.
FEMALE SPEAKER:
[SPEAKING KOREAN]
Oh, this is where we go, here?
Table is over here.
FEMALE SPEAKER: Sit please.
SHANE SMITH: We're in the
big banquet room.
As you can see, it's huge.
There's about 20 women, we're
getting ready for our dinner.
First of all, they give you
about three or four courses of
absolutely inedible food.
It's just matter, it's
like fried matter.
And you're kind of going,
yeah, yeah.
But you're waiting for everyone
to fill in, when's
this banquet happening?
When's the banquet?
There is no banquet.
Where is everyone?
It's not very busy here.
They realize they've gotten so
much bad press for not having
food that they want to show oh,
there's plenty of food,
food everywhere.
And they're carefully laying
out the food the whole time
you're eating.
And then as you're leaving you
notice they're pulling all the
things they've just carefully
laid into little tiny trays
they're carefully going
to bring back and keep
for the next day.
And you're just sitting there
by yourself, eating your
matter, going OK, I've
come to crazy land.
Thanks a lot.
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