Tag: blogging

ROK Drop’s Most Viewed Stories of 2023

Happy New Year to all my readers of the ROK Drop! As part of starting out 2024 I figured I would pull my blog stats and take a look back at the most read postings from 2023. As can be seen below the Overall Top 25 most read postings last year on ROK Drop is pretty well spread out across the past two decades. However, the passing of convicted USFK murderer Kenneth Markle in 2023 was easily the most read story of the year.

Yeonmi Park, juicy girls, room salons, and criminal cases are also popular postings. Some of my older longer form blog posts about USFK camps and GI incidents are still doing very well on Google as well. What is interesting is that despite all the headlines North Korea makes, it is not something people are using Google to look up information for. In my top 25 only one posting made it that was North Korea related. Many years ago North Korea postings were very popular, which shows how numb this topic has become with many people. ICBM launches and nuclear threats used to be big news and now no one really cares because they happen so frequently. What this means is that North Korea is really going to have to up their provocation strategy if they want to capture the world’s attention in 2024.

Top 25 Overall Most Read Postings of 2023

  1. INFAMOUS CONVICTED USFK MURDERER, KENNETH MARKLE PASSES AWAY AT AGE 50 (2023)
  2. HAS YEONMI PARK BEEN EXAGGERATING HER CLAIMS ABOUT HER LIFE IN NORTH KOREA? (2014)
  3. SOUTH KOREA TO “TOUGHEN” SEX CRIME PENALTIES (2011)
  4. GI FLASHBACKS: THE 1992 PRIVATE KENNETH MARKLE MURDER CASE (2015)
  5. PICTURE OF THE DAY: KIM JONG-UN MAKES KIDS CRY (2023)
  6. “BLING RING” LEADER RACHEL LEE DAUGHTER OF NORTH KOREAN IMMIGRANT (2010)
  7. WHAT ROOM SALONS ARE LIKE IN SOUTH KOREA (2015)
  8. KOREA TIMES PROFILES JUICY GIRLS WORKING TDC VILLE OUTSIDE OF CAMP CASEY (2018)
  9. ANYONE WANT TO DATE THIS WOMAN? (2005)
  10. A PROFILE OF US MILITARY BASES IN SOUTH KOREA SERIES ARCHIVE (2016)
  11. WHAT IS A “TENPRO” GIRL IN SOUTH KOREA? (2017)
  12. CONVICTED USFK MURDERER SPEAKS OUT (2006)
  13. GI FLASHBACK: THE 1981 INGMAN RANGE MASSACRE (2014)
  14. AAFES PLANS TO PHASE OUT ANTHONY’S PIZZA BRAND (2021)
  15. A PROFILE OF KOREA’S TEOKGEO-RI VILLE (2011)
  16. A PROFILE OF THE BOSAN-DONG VILLE IN DONGDUCHEON, KOREA (2011)
  17. A PROFILE OF THE “TDC VILLE”, SOUTH KOREA (2007)
  18. KOREAN WOMAN ACQUITTED OF SWITCHING 3-YEAR OLD DAUGHTER WITH HER OWN GRANDDAUGHTER WHO WAS FOUND MURDERED (2023)
  19. PLAYBOY RANKS THE TOP 10 HOTTEST KOREAN WOMEN (2015)
  20. “BIKINI BIKER COUPLE” FACE POSSIBLE CHARGES AFTER RIDING MOTORCYCLE THROUGH GANGNAM (2022)
  21. A PROFILE OF CAMP RED CLOUD, SOUTH KOREA (2005)
  22. DMZ FLASHBACKS: THE 1970 JAL 351 “YODOGO HIJACKING” (2018)
  23. GI FLASHBACKS ARTICLE ARCHIVE (2015)
  24. A PROFILE OF CAMP PAGE, SOUTH KOREA (2015)
  25. A PROFILE OF USFK CAMPS IN DONGDUCHEON, SOUTH KOREA (2007)

Top 10 Posts from Only 2023

  1. INFAMOUS CONVICTED USFK MURDERER, KENNETH MARKLE PASSES AWAY AT AGE 50
  2. PICTURE OF THE DAY: KIM JONG-UN MAKES KIDS CRY (2023)
  3. KOREAN WOMAN ACQUITTED OF SWITCHING 3-YEAR OLD DAUGHTER WITH HER OWN GRANDDAUGHTER WHO WAS FOUND MURDERED
  4. ROK DROP OPEN THREAD – AUGUST 18, 2023
  5. PICTURE OF THE DAY: CAMBODIAN BOY WHO MET WITH FIRST LADY HAD HEART SURGERY IN SOUTH KOREA
  6. PICTURE OF THE DAY: NAKED MARATHON
  7. ROK DROP OPEN THREAD – SEPTEMBER 01, 2023
  8. PICTURE OF THE DAY: AERIAL REFUELING DRILL
  9. SERGEI SHOIGU TURNS UP IN PYONGYANG FOR KOREAN WAR ARMISTICE CELEBRATION
  10. DEATH TOLL FROM KOREAN FLOODS RISES TO 40 PEOPLE

British Expat Vloggers Featured in the Korea Times

The Korea Times has an article about two British expats in Seoul who have a very successful Youtube channel where they conduct short documentary like interviews of random Korean people:

His understanding of Korea and Korean culture is reflected in the roughly 150 videos uploaded to his YouTube channel. Teaming up with his business partner Joel Bennet, they explore Korea to shoot mukbang, have casual discussions about Korea-related topics and create short documentary-style videos. Those videos aim to show the real Korea, starring Bright’s neighbors and other ordinary people he meets. As of Thursday, “Dan and Joel” has some 272,000 subscribers. 

Korea Times

You can read much more at the link, but I started browsing through their videos today. One of the videos I watched that was featured with the article was of them interviewing one of Korea’s ubiquitous cardboard collecting ladies. Definitely a tough life for the elderly people doing that job.

Only In Korea Site Shutdown By Facebook

Here is another reason why I do not move the ROK Drop over on to Facebook:

One of the largest Korea-based online communities disappeared from the internet around 1 p.m. last Wednesday. According to its founder Travis Hull and moderators, Facebook deleted the 28,000-member group “OinK ― Only in Korea” without warning or explanation. 

“Absolutely no word from the folks at Facebook so far,” Hull told The Korea Times. “We have petitioned Facebook to review their decision via a link they provide in their help section, but so far we have received no comment from the company and I’m not holding my breath that we will.”

Blame started flying immediately after the group disappeared, with nobody fully sure what caused the sudden removal. Speculation ranged from too many posts flagged for racism or “anti-racist” moderators limiting free speech, to a discussion about an actual crime, in which a member accused another of a serious crime and threats of retaliation were made. 

There was also speculation Facebook algorithms may have reacted to a new weekly feature allowing users to promote their own social media content, titled “Whore Yourself Wednesdays.”

Korea Times

You can read more at the link.

Blogger Behind Korea’s Fake News Scandal Only Arrested After He Turned On President Moon

Here is the latest on the online opinion rigging scandal in South Korea:

In the latest development of Korea’s own “fake news” case, an influential blogger charged with manipulating comments on the country’s most popular portal site may have collected donations for a ruling party lawmaker, according to files obtained by the police on Tuesday, deepening suspicions that the blogger may have masterminded his campaign on behalf of the Democratic Party.

The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency obtained the files from a USB drive belonging to a close associate of Kim Dong-won, the blogger known online as Druking. The finding is the latest in a police investigation of Druking’s alleged campaign to rig online opinion in favor of President Moon Jae-in during last year’s election.

According to the police, Druking and his team used software to fiddle with the comments section on Naver by increasing the number of “likes” on certain comments and giving the appearance that one opinion dominated on the forum. Druking allegedly used the software to help Moon win the election, but when the president’s office refused to grant patronage positions to some of his acquaintances after the election, the blogger turned on Moon by having his team like comments critical of the president.

The police arrested Druking in March for his anti-Moon campaign, and at his first trial hearing last week, the blogger admitted to the charge. Central to Druking’s online activities was a community he ran called Kyungkongmo. According to files from the USB drive, members of the online community collected over 30 million won ($27,800) to deliver to Rep. Kim Kyoung-soo, a Democratic Party lawmaker with close ties to President Moon. The police are investigating allegations that Kim may have worked with Druking to manipulate online opinion during last year’s election and that Kyungkongmo may have supplied the manpower.  [Joong Ang Ilbo]

You can read more at the link, but I find it interesting that the police only cracked down on Druking after he turned on President Moon.  Why wasn’t he arrested before then?  Was his activities okay as long as they were targeted against Korean conservatives?

Korean Police Raid Blogger’s Company for Rigging Comments in Favor of President Moon

It must be a slow day for the Korean police to warrant raiding a blogger for rigging comments:

Police on Sunday raided a local publishing company run by an influential blogger as part of a probe into allegations that he ran a massive scheme to manipulate online comments in news articles about President Moon Jae-in.

Police sent investigators to search the premises in Paju, north of Seoul, and confiscate evidence, including digital files and surveillance footage, officials said.

Law enforcement authorities are investigating the suspected rigging of Internet news comments by the 48-year-old surnamed Kim, who’s now been charged along with two accomplices over the scandal. Kim, who goes by the nickname “Druking”, is alleged to have used a software program to jack up the number of clicks in support of the president.

The incident has sparked a fierce political dispute ahead of the June 13 local elections, as Rep. Kim Kyoung-soo of the ruling Democratic Party, a close aide to President Moon, is known to have been in contact with Druking for years.

The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency on Friday said Kim had sent Druking messages that contained the web addresses of certain news articles related to the president.  [Yonhap]

North Korea Tech Blog Blocked for Violating National Security Law

This incident makes me wonder if there was some poor translation done by somebody within the South Korean governmental bureaucracy that makes these decisions because I don’t see how the blog North Korea Tech violates the country’s National Security Law?:

A British journalist who runs a website that documents North Korean technology issues said Tuesday that he’ll appeal a decision by South Korean authorities to block his site for allegedly violating the country’s National Security Law.

Martyn Williams, whose North Korea Tech website has been blocked for almost two weeks, said the site does not violate the security law, which bans praising, sympathizing or cooperating with North Korea. The website “doesn’t seek to glorify or support North Korea,” he said in an email.

Williams, who is based in San Francisco, has written about issues ranging from cellphone usage in North Korea and its satellite technology, to a little-known computer operating system developed by North Koreans. He said much of the content on his website is based on announcements made by the North and South Korean governments and reports in the media.

The South’s Korea Communications Standards Commission confirmed Tuesday that it decided on March 24 to block the site because it allegedly violated the security law. The censorship body blocks websites deemed illegal or harmful to society, such as pornography, gambling and North Korea’s official outlets.  [Associated Press via reader tip]

You can read more at the link.

ROK Drop is Back After Technical Difficulties

Thank you everyone for your patience as I have been busy trying to resolve technical difficulties with the site this week.  My webhost provider, Blogs-About who has been hosting the ROK Drop since 2007 I think has went out of business.  I first began to use their service because they were recommended in the WordPress For Dummies book that I used to become knowledgeable on how to use the WordPress blogging software that powers the ROK Drop.  In the past I have never had any issues with them providing needed technical support and the site has run fine for all these years.  However, for this outage I tried to contact them with no success.  For some reason they have not been responding to any of their contact emails or numbers and their support site shows the same error that the ROKdrop.com site is showing.  I am left to conclude that they have gone out of business?

Whatever did happen has caused me to open up a new webhosting account with Bluehost.com which is the largest WordPress webhosting company.  They have so far been great in helping me get the new ROKdrop.net site up running.  Also since they are such a large webhosting company they should not just disappear overnight like Blogs-About has apparently done.  However, they cannot transfer over my 10 years worth of data or my ROKdrop.com web address until it is released from the Blogs-About servers which I have had no success with contacting.  Fortunately I do have an XML backup file of my archives that I download every month.  I plan to eventually get the files uploaded on to ROKdrop.net if I continue to have no success with contacting my old webhosting company.

While I continue to work this issue I plan to continue regular blogging here at ROKdrop.net.  You will see that the new site has the Buddypress social media feature that I have installed.  By registering a username you can create your own social media like presence on the ROK Drop website and post in the Forums I have set up. I receive comments, emails, and Facebook messages with article links all the time that I do not always have time to get to.  The Forums will allow people to post these links there so if I do not get around to publishing the article on the main page readers can still comment on the article in the Forums.

Thank you once again everyone for your patience and if anyone has any advice on how to deal with this frustrating situation feel free to leave a comment or send me an email.

Is the ROK Drop a Korean Hate Site?

Usually I just ignore e-mails critical of me and my site, but this time I figure I would respond and let people who read this site share their opinions on if I am a Korea basher or not. Below is a email I received recently, I won’t publish the name or e-mail address of this person because this person probably means well, but is sending me this e-mail with little information about me or having much of an understanding of Korea in general, and has obviously read very little of my site. So I will give this person the benefit of the doubt unlike what is given to me that I am a automatic Korea basher.

Here is the e-mail:

Hello! I have a few comments about your wesite.

You are obviously an American who has the typical supremacy complex. You feel that anything that isn’t socially acceptable in America, is wrong in other countries. This just shows how egocentric Americans are. I am sure that people who visit America have millions of thoughts describing how ignorant and rude Americans are.

When anyone visits another country, they should be respectful of their culture, not critical.

How would you feel if soldiers from another country, on the other side of the world, comes and tells you what to do and criticizes the way you act – I am sure that you would be angry, offended, disgusted, etc…

About your comments about Seoul… you have obviously never been to New York City, Los Angeles or Chicago. When you describe the problems in Seoul, you would find those same problems in any major city in America.

Gee, Koreans are learning English.. what morons! If you aren’t aware of this… English is the accepted universal language. It is the business language that connects the world. If you have ever taken the time to visit other countries, you will realize that any country that keeps up with the ever-changing global community, learns English. As for their speaking abilities, have you ever tried to learn another language fluently enough to hold a conversation?? If you aren’t aware of this, English is one of the hardest languages to learn and master. In America, we have citizens (who are born and raised here)Â that still can’t speak English correctly. Also, the best time to learn a foreign language is when you are young.

Now, you are probably thinking that I am a pompous Korean… big surprise!!! I am American, who is ashamed that you are the representation of an American GI. You are the reason why everyone else thinks that Americans are stupid.

While I appreciate your ideas and opinions, because everyone has their right to their opinions, please take mine with the same feeling.

I find it interesting when I am accused of having a supremacy complex when the person accusing me is the one saying that Koreans must learn English to be successful in the world. If that isn’t a sign of a supremacy complex I don’t know what is. Obviously this person hasn’t been reading my blog very long.

I have long been saying that Koreans shouldn’t put so much emphasis on children to learn English especially if the emphasis isn’t on speaking ability. Koreans that study English learn to read and write well but have poor speaking skills. If a nation is going to put an emphasis on English than at least emphasize speaking ability. The best and brightest of Korean males are selected to serve as KATUSA soldiers with the US Army in Korea to complete their mandatory service. Many of them when they come to the unit do not speak English well even though they have been studying it since they were little kids. The unit has to train these soldiers to become proficient in English and usually by the time they leave after two years of service they speak English much better and with more confidence compared to the years of English education they received from Korean schools and hagwons. I could take a cheap shot and blame it on foreign English teachers not doing their job well, but I actually blame it on a system that rewards memorization of words instead of speaking ability. I know very well how hard learning English is and that is why I think Koreans should not spend as much time as they do dwelling over learning it.

It is fallacy to believe that the only way to be successful is to learn English. I tend to think that Koreans can be successful speaking Korean, imagine that?  Yet, I am the American supremacist? Japan is no where near as English friendly as Korea and their educational system does not put an emphasis on English education as much as Korea and yet they are a major power in the world with world’s 2nd largest economy. They didn’t become a major power by having their kids coming back from English hagwons at 10PM every night.

I consider Korean culture to be their food, language, history, etc which is something I have never criticized. In fact on this blog I have highlighted Korean history a number of times and if all anyone has to do is look at the What I Like About Korea list to see the number of cultural things I enjoy about Korea. However, I don’t consider Korean culture to be throwing soju bottles and trash all over the beautiful Korean country side, or parking on sidewalks right in front of a no parking sign, or running red lights which has led Korea to be second among OECD nations in car accidents per capita. This fact has led Korea to lead all OECD nations in children fatalities from car accidents.

I also don’t consider the lack of concern for sexual assaults in Korea to be part of Korean culture. The South Korean government giving a billion dollars a year to North Korea in order to fund a regime that continues to keep 250,000 political prisoners in gulags and in turn causes North Korean female defectors to become sex slaves in China, while at the same time refusing to properly fund the US-ROK alliance which has been directly responsible for the development of the ROK for the past 55 years to be part of Korean culture. I could go on and on, but I guess I should ignore all these things because I am being undiplomatic?

As far as criticizing Seoul I almost thought this person was confusing me with Nomad. If anything I have been supportive of Seoul. I am a big supporter of the Cheongyecheon Stream project, critical of things that make the city look ugly, plus I have been strongly supportive of Mayor Oh Se-hoon’s attempt to green Seoul, and turn Yongsan Garrison into a city park. Plus I have complimented the city’s mass transit system including the recent expansion of the subway to Dongducheon. There is a lot to like about Seoul, but anyone who thinks Seoul is paradise on Earth is sadly mistaken. Go ask Nomad, he can provide the details.

Just for the record I have been to Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York and I’m willing to wager I have been to more countries than this e-mailer has been to states in the US. I can read Hangul and have a working knowledge of Korean. I would study Korean even more if it wasn’t for things like deploying to Iraq where I was immersed in Arabic among other countries I have been to for what I like to call combat tourism.

Additionally I have had plenty of conversations with foreign military soldiers stationed in the United States. There are thousands or foreign soldiers in the US either training at US military schools or permanently stationed at foreign bases such as the German Air Force Tactical Training Center in New Mexico or the Singapore Air Force’s flight training squadron at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona. I have had plenty of interesting conversations with these foreign military types and they have expressed criticisms about America to me, which I have always found interesting to talk to them about without accusing them of having a “supremacy complex”. I only became “angry, offended, and disgusted” one time with a foreign soldier when a Saudi officer try to treat me like one of his slave boys back in Saudi Arabia, but that is a whole other story worthy of a blog posting of it’s own one day.

Also, not for a minute did I think this person who e-mailed me was a Korean. Actually at first I thought great, another holier than thou Canadian English teacher sending me hate mail. I have had a few of those. (Note: I don’t think these e-mails are reflective of Canadians in general.) Why don’t Australians send me holier than thou hate mails? Anyway I really wasn’t surprised either when I saw something even worse, a holier thou American (English teacher?). Like I have maintained on this blog, the biggest anti-Americans are Americans themselves and the same thing is true with my hate mail; the greatest GI Korea haters are Americans. The e-mailer obviously has a low regard for herself with statements like, “everyone else thinks that Americans are stupid”. No, “everyone” may just think you are stupid.

This person seems ashamed to be American. It makes me wonder if this person is one of those types of Americans that walks around with a Canadian flag on their backpack? I have never hidden being an American, but I don’t rub it in people’s face either. I have spoken with many foreigners in many different countries that don’t agree with American foreign policy, dislike President Bush, or concerned about global warming for example, but the vast majority like the American people and want to visit the country if they haven’t already. It is possible to disagree with others and have an intelligent conversation without declaring the other side as being stupid.

I receive plenty of e-mails from people thanking me for creating this site which I really appreciate, especially from the numerous Korean War vets and retired soldiers that served on the DMZ before me. Those are guys I really enjoy getting feedback from because the soldiers in Korea today are carrying on a long tradition of service in Korea that started with those guys long ago. I also like answering questions from expats and soldiers that may be coming to Korea. There are people reading this blog right now who have e-mailed me questions about Korea that I have answered for them. However, if someone is going to send me hate mail at least read the site and then post the hate message as a comment on the posting you don’t agree with so I and everyone else can see it plus I can have a better context of what your gripe is.

I’m not a Korea basher and I consider Korea my second home. It just so happens that many of the issues going on in Korea are of a negative type. How can I put a positive spin on recent USFK issues? How can I put a positive spin on some of the nonsense going on with the anti-US groups? How can I put a positive spin on anything North Korea related? These are all major issues going on in Korea that don’t lend a whole lot to be positive about thus the blog reflects that. However, that doesn’t mean Korea is a bad place. Korea is country that has accomplished a lot that most of the world can learn from and hope to see the country do even more and that’s not stupid.