From February 9-25, athletes and fans from around the world gathered in PyeongChang for the 2018 Winter Olympics. But while the athletes competed for gold, the Olympics also had major political implications, especially after the North Koreans decided to send a high-level delegation to the Games and agreed to field a joint women's hockey team with South Korea.
In this episode of Korean Kontext, host Jenna Gibson spoke with Jonathan Cheng, the Seoul Bureau Chief for the Wall Street Journal, about how he and the Journal's team chose to cover all these different aspects of the Olympics, how Korea prepared for the Games, and, of course, the rise of Korea's famous Garlic Girls curling team.
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Going Together to Address a Pandemic: Marc Knapper
Public Health is Human Rights, Human Rights is Public Health: Ambassador Robert King and Greg Scarlatoiu
The Economic Fallout of a Pandemic: Troy Stangarone and Kyle Ferrier
The Rise, Stumble, and Rise of A Conglomerate: Geoffrey Cain
How Korea and the World Are (and Are Not) Fighting the Coronavirus: Amb. Kathleen Stephens and Mark Tokola
How an Isolated Country Fights a Pandemic: Troy Stangarone
Tackling the Coronavirus is Not Costless: Kyle Ferrier
Can North Korea take on the coronavrius? Not alone: John Grundy
[Rebroadcast] North Korea's Healthcare System: John Grundy
10 Issues for the Korean Peninsula in 2020: KEI Staff
Monetizing The Linchpin: Kyle Ferrier
Building a Better Future with Truth: Min Jin Lee
Representation and Community: Alexander Chee
Korea and the Persian Gulf: Troy Stangarone
Sharing the Burden: Song Min-soon
Impeachment, Part 2: Consequences
Impeachment, Part 1: Precedent
A Team of Their Own: Seth Berkman
The Korean Revolutionary in Cuba: Joseph Juhn
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