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North Korea’s Folklore, Not Politics | Ep. 373
A monster in a volcanic lake, blue sea dragons along a rugged coast, and a mystery in the sky that drew both Koreas to look up at once—this conversation pushes past headlines to reveal how folklore can connect people who rarely meet as neighbors. With David Solomon of Mythical Creatures Around the World, we explore the living map of Korean myth—stories that predate modern borders yet still pulse through North Korea’s mountains, shorelines, and villages today.
We dig into Heaven Lake’s cryptid, a cousin in spirit to Loch Ness, and talk about why that legend matters: it reminds us that culture outlasts politics. We also trace the Seya, the blue sea dragons that glide through North Korean maritime lore, and consider how sea myths carry universal themes of love, loyalty, and fate. Along the way, we zoom out to the United States to show how our own landscape teems with legends—Bigfoot, Goatman, Roswell, and bay monsters—proving folklore is not an exotic export but a shared human habit. Stories don’t erase differences; they give us a respectful way to cross them.
David shares a creative ethic grounded in representation, faith, and empathy: honor people, approach controversial regions with care, and tell inclusive stories without stepping on anyone to lift someone else. We reflect on how myths migrate with families, how kids learn inclusion faster through tales than through lectures, and why speaking a culture’s “language” opens doors that politics often slams shut. If you care about Korean folklore, North Korean culture beyond geopolitics, or how myth can be a tool for unity, this is a thoughtful, hope-forward deep dive.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves legends, and leave a review telling us the one folklore you want us to explore next. Your voice helps us reach more listeners and keep these stories alive.
Chapter Markers
0:00 Welcome And Global Audience Shoutouts
1:59 Introducing David Solomon And The Controversy
2:32 Why Write About North Korea’s Folklore
5:19 The Lake Monster At Heaven Lake
6:41 Folklore Beyond Politics And Borders
9:36 U.S. Folklore Examples And Immigrant Stories
12:06 Representation, Faith, And Cultural Respect
15:23 Uniting Through Myth Instead Of Division
18:12 North Korea In Global Culture And Olympics
21:10 Interwoven Histories: Russia, Norse, And America
24:20 Goa, Africa, And Speaking People’s Language
26:55 Upcoming North Korea Tales: Sea Dragons And UFOs
28:58 Choose Change Over Vengeance
31:26 Hope, Hollywood, And Telling Hard Stories
35:12 Healing, Survival, And Creating For The Next Generation
38:00 Shared Mission: Inclusion Over Taboo
42:30 Gratitude, Growth, And Bold Calls To Create
#NorthKorea #Folklore #CulturalHeritage #Mythology #Storytelling #KoreanTraditions #LegendsOfNorthKorea #FolkTales #CulturalExploration #NorthKoreanCulture #HistoricalNarratives #FolkloreStories #TalesFromThePast #NorthernMyths #TraditionAndCulture #justiceforsurvivors #VoicesforVoices #VoicesforVoicesPodcast #JustinAlanHayes #JustinHayes #help3billion #TikTok #Instagram #truth #Jesusaire #VoiceForChange #HealingTogether #VoicesForVoices373
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By Founder of Voices for Voices®, Justin Alan HayesNorth Korea’s Folklore, Not Politics | Ep. 373
A monster in a volcanic lake, blue sea dragons along a rugged coast, and a mystery in the sky that drew both Koreas to look up at once—this conversation pushes past headlines to reveal how folklore can connect people who rarely meet as neighbors. With David Solomon of Mythical Creatures Around the World, we explore the living map of Korean myth—stories that predate modern borders yet still pulse through North Korea’s mountains, shorelines, and villages today.
We dig into Heaven Lake’s cryptid, a cousin in spirit to Loch Ness, and talk about why that legend matters: it reminds us that culture outlasts politics. We also trace the Seya, the blue sea dragons that glide through North Korean maritime lore, and consider how sea myths carry universal themes of love, loyalty, and fate. Along the way, we zoom out to the United States to show how our own landscape teems with legends—Bigfoot, Goatman, Roswell, and bay monsters—proving folklore is not an exotic export but a shared human habit. Stories don’t erase differences; they give us a respectful way to cross them.
David shares a creative ethic grounded in representation, faith, and empathy: honor people, approach controversial regions with care, and tell inclusive stories without stepping on anyone to lift someone else. We reflect on how myths migrate with families, how kids learn inclusion faster through tales than through lectures, and why speaking a culture’s “language” opens doors that politics often slams shut. If you care about Korean folklore, North Korean culture beyond geopolitics, or how myth can be a tool for unity, this is a thoughtful, hope-forward deep dive.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves legends, and leave a review telling us the one folklore you want us to explore next. Your voice helps us reach more listeners and keep these stories alive.
Chapter Markers
0:00 Welcome And Global Audience Shoutouts
1:59 Introducing David Solomon And The Controversy
2:32 Why Write About North Korea’s Folklore
5:19 The Lake Monster At Heaven Lake
6:41 Folklore Beyond Politics And Borders
9:36 U.S. Folklore Examples And Immigrant Stories
12:06 Representation, Faith, And Cultural Respect
15:23 Uniting Through Myth Instead Of Division
18:12 North Korea In Global Culture And Olympics
21:10 Interwoven Histories: Russia, Norse, And America
24:20 Goa, Africa, And Speaking People’s Language
26:55 Upcoming North Korea Tales: Sea Dragons And UFOs
28:58 Choose Change Over Vengeance
31:26 Hope, Hollywood, And Telling Hard Stories
35:12 Healing, Survival, And Creating For The Next Generation
38:00 Shared Mission: Inclusion Over Taboo
42:30 Gratitude, Growth, And Bold Calls To Create
#NorthKorea #Folklore #CulturalHeritage #Mythology #Storytelling #KoreanTraditions #LegendsOfNorthKorea #FolkTales #CulturalExploration #NorthKoreanCulture #HistoricalNarratives #FolkloreStories #TalesFromThePast #NorthernMyths #TraditionAndCulture #justiceforsurvivors #VoicesforVoices #VoicesforVoicesPodcast #JustinAlanHayes #JustinHayes #help3billion #TikTok #Instagram #truth #Jesusaire #VoiceForChange #HealingTogether #VoicesForVoices373
Support the show