Korean Broadcasting System
Korean Broadcasting System is the national public broadcaster of South Korea. It was founded in 1927, and operates radio, television, and online services, being one of the biggest South Korean television networks.
History
Beginnings in radio
KBS began as Keijo Broadcasting Station with call sign JODK, established by the Governor-General of Korea on 16 February 1927. It became the Chōsen Broadcasting Corporation in 1932. This second radio station started using the call sign HLKA in 1947 after the Republic of Korea was granted the ITU prefix HL. After doing a national broadcast, the radio was renamed Seoul Central Broadcasting Station in 1948.1950s–1960s – Move into television
Television broadcasts in South Korea began on 12 May 1956 with the first television station HLKZ-TV. It was sold to KBS in 1961.1970s – Expansion
KBS station status changed from government to public broadcasting station on 3 March 1973. Construction of KBS headquarters in Yeouido started in 1976. In 1979, KBS radio began broadcasting on the FM wave with the launch of KBS Stereo.1980s – Advertising started after controversial merger
KBS began accepting advertising in 1980, differing from the norm of advert-free broadcasting by public broadcasters, after the forced merger of several private broadcasters into KBS by the military government of Chun Doo-hwan.1990s – Spinoff of EBS
In 1981, KBS launched KBS 3TV and Educational FM, and on 27 December 1990, the channels split from KBS to form the Educational Broadcasting System.After a revision of the television licensing fee system in 1994, 1TV and Radio1 stopped broadcasting commercials.
2010s
After first broadcasting HD programmes in 2001, KBS completely transferred to digital broadcasting in 2012.In March 2013, computer shutdowns hit South Korean television stations including the KBS. The South Korean government asserted a North Korean link in the March cyberattacks, which has been denied by Pyongyang.
In 2013, KBS World Radio commemorated its 60th anniversary, and KBS World TV celebrated 10 years of its foundation.
In 2014, KBS World 24 was launched, mainly for Koreans abroad.
In 2015, KBS was honored to have its archives of the KBS Special Live Broadcast, Finding Dispersed Families, inscribed on the UNESCO Memory of the World Register. This makes KBS only the world’s second broadcaster to have a broadcast program on the prestigious list.
KBS dedicated to deliver the exclusive Special Live Broadcast, Finding Dispersed Families via its prime channel, KBS TV1. Starting from 10:15 pm on 30 June 1983, the special live programme ended at 4 am on 14 November 1983. This marks a total duration of 453 hours and 45 minutes of live broadcast over the period of 138 days. The whole live broadcast was recorded. The KBS’ archives of Special Live Broadcast, Finding Dispersed Families include; 463 video tapes of the original recordings, and many kinds of associated materials, generated in the course of the extraordinary broadcast, such as the posters carrying the participating dispersed family members’ capsule stories, cue sheets, programming schedules, radio recording materials, and related photographs. A total of 20,522 such assorted materials have been preserved in the archives.
In 2017, KBS launched the world’s first terrestrial UHD broadcasting service.
In 2018, KBS led the operation of the IBC inside the KINTEX, located in Goyang City, as Host Broadcaster for the Inter-Korean Summit, held in April. During the summit, KBS, as HB for the historic event, successfully delivered all the moments associated with the historic summit for more than 3,000 local and overseas media representatives, gathered at the IBC. Throughout the day of the summit, KBS delivered live coverage and the latest developments of the event through its continuous special news bulletins. Also, its prime-time news programmes, KBS News 9 and KBS Newsline provided audiences with highlights and implications of the historic summit through comprehensive and analytical reports. Also, KBS World TV delivered Live Coverage of 2018 Inter-Korean Summit with English subtitles for its audiences across 117 countries worldwide.
In 2019, as the primary public service broadcaster in South Korea, KBS undertook a major reform in its Disaster Broadcast System in order to provide exclusive emergency services for people in the country in times of emergency. To be headed by President and CEO of KBS, the renewed system will allow the use of maximum resources of the organization under emergency circumstances. Under the reform, KBS will focus on; swift and efficient emergency broadcast and coverage; to deliver essential information in innovative ways with the ultimate aim to minimise losses and damages; to strengthen its digital platforms to better serve a wide-ranging audience groups. In particular, KBS signed contracts with nine sign language interpreters in an effort to enhance broadcast services for audiences with disabilities. In addition, KBS is committed to improve its English subtitle services for people from overseas.
Structure
KBS is a public corporation funded by the South Korean government and license fees, but is managed independently. As part of the Constitution, the president of KBS is chosen by the President of South Korea, after being recommended by its board of directors. Political parties in South Korea also have the right to name members of the KBS board of directors.Because of this system, which gives politicians effective control over choosing the president of KBS, as well as its board of directors, people who are critical of the system cite political intervention in KBS's governance as reason for revising the current system of recruiting.
In order to uphold and defend independence, KBS, since 2018, created an ‘Public Advisory Group’, as part of the selection process of new KBS President and CEO. New President and CEO of KBS is recommended by the KBS Board of Governors, once the selection process by the Group is completed. The Group examines Presidential candidates in the form of a presentation, a panel discussion, and an interview. New President and CEO of KBS will finally be appointed by the President of Republic of Korea, after going through the mandatory parliamentary audit by the National Assembly.
Around 49% of KBS' revenue comes from a mandatory television licence fee of 2,500 won, with another 18.7% coming from commercial advertisement sales.
In addition to 18 regional stations and 12 overseas branches, there are eight subsidiary companies such as KBSN, KBS Business and KBS Media, which manage KBS content.
CEOs
Generation | Name | Start | Retirement | Note |
1 | Hong Kyung-mo | February 1973 | February 1979 | rowspan="14" |
2 | Hong Kyung-mo | February 1973 | February 1979 | - |
3 | Choi Se-kyung | February 1979 | July 1980 | - |
4 | Lee Won-hong | July 1980 | February 1985 | - |
5 | Lee Won-hong | July 1980 | February 1985 | - |
6 | Park Hyun-tae | February 1985 | August 1986 | - |
7 | Jung Koo-ho | August 1986 | November 1988 | - |
8 | Seo Young-hoon | November 1988 | March 1990 | - |
9 | April 1990 | March 1993 | - | |
10 | March 1993 | April 1998 | - | |
11 | March 1993 | April 1998 | - | |
12 | 20 April 1998 | 10 March 2003 | - | |
13 | 20 April 1998 | 10 March 2003 | - | |
14 | Seo Dong-koo | 22 March 2003 | 2 April 2003 | - |
15 | 28 April 2003 | 11 August 2008 | Dismissed | |
16 | 28 April 2003 | 11 August 2008 | Dismissed | |
17 | 28 April 2003 | 11 August 2008 | Dismissed | |
18 | 28 August 2008 | 23 November 2009 | rowspan="2" | |
19 | 24 November 2009 | 23 November 2012 | - | |
20 | 23 November 2012 | 10 June 2014 | Dismissed after strike | |
21 | 28 July 2014 | 23 November 2015 | ||
22 | 24 November 2015 | 23 January 2018 | Dismissed after strike | |
23~24 | Yang Seung-dong | 9 April 2018 | Incumbent | rowspan="2" |
- | Yang Seung-dong | 9 April 2018 | Incumbent | - |
Channels
Terrestrial television
- KBS1 - KBS' flagship channel, it broadcasts news and current affairs, education, drama, sports, children's programming and culture. It launched in 1961 as HLKA-TV and is solely funded by the license fee, airing commercial-free. It is available nationally on channel 9, broadcasting via digital terrestrial television. KBS1 also airs public information films and minor entertainment programming, the majority of which is on KBS2.
- KBS2 - KBS' entertainment and drama channel, it was launched in 1980 as a replacement for the Tongyang Broadcasting Corporation, which was controversially merged with KBS. It is available on digital channel 7 via digital terrestrial television. KBS2 also airs live sports coverage, children's programming, public information films and less news and current affairs programming, the majority of which is on KBS1.
- KBS UHD - The Ultra High Definition channel. Airs music videos and re-runs of dramas. It is on national terrestrial digital channel 66.
Cable and satellite television
- KBS N Life - A culture and drama channel, launched in 1995 as KBS Satellite 2. It was renamed as KBS Korea in 2002, renamed as KBS Prime in 2006 before becoming N Life.
- KBS Drama - formerly KBS Sky Drama, launched in 2002
- KBS N Sports - formerly KBS Sports/KBS Sky Sports, launched in 2002
- KBS Joy - a comedy and quiz show channel that was launched in 2006
- KBS Kids - the children's channel, launched in 2012
- KBS W - a channel aimed at a female audience, launched in 2013
KBS World
KBS World is the international television and radio service of KBS. It was officially launched on 1 July 2003. It is broadcast on a 24-hour schedule with programs including news, sports, television dramas, entertainment, and children's. KBS World television is broadcast locally and around the world. As of July 2007, around 65% of its programs are broadcast with English subtitles, it is available in 32 countries, and reportedly more than 40 million households around the world can access KBS World. It has two overseas subsidiaries: KBS America and KBS Japan. KBS Japan is independently operated by a KBS subsidiary in Japan, and most programs are provided with Japanese subtitles.KBS World television is a television channel that mainly broadcasts programs commissioned for KBS' 2 terrestrial networks: KBS1 and KBS2. KBS World television is distributed over several international communication and broadcasting satellites such as IS-19, IS-20, IS-21, Measat 3, Apstar 6 & 7, Eutelsat Hotbird 13A, Galaxy 11, 18 & 23, Badr 6, Vinasat 1, Palapa D, SES 7, Telkom 1, Thaicom 5, EchoStar 15, Anik F3. Local cable and/or satellite operators receive the signal from one of these satellite and carry the signal to end subscribers of their own networks. KBS doesn't allow individual viewer to receive the signal from IS-19, IS-20, IS-21, Measat 3, Asiasat 5, and Galaxy 18. The signal from Badr 6 and Eutelsat Hotbird 13A is Free-to-Air.
KBS World TV commenced its serve via YouTube in 2007. The YouTube subscribers reached 10 million in May 2019, and recorded 13.5 million in July 2020.
KBS World TV is also available on various social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LINE. Its social media surpassed 20 million subscribers in April 2020.
Radio
- KBS Radio 1 - news, current affairs, drama, documentary and culture. Launched in 1927 as Kyeongseong Broadcasting Corporation JODK and it became KBS Radio 1 in 1965.
- KBS Radio 2 - Popular music. Launched in 1948 as HLSA.
- KBS Radio 3 - Launched in 1980 and ceased broadcasting in 1981. It was later replaced by KBS Radio 2's regional radio service and Educational FM. Later re-launched in 2000 as a spin-off from KBS Radio 2. For the first time in 2010, it was launched on FM and restructured as a radio station for the disabled.
- KBS 1FM - classical music and folk music. Launched in 1979 as KBS Stereo, adopted current name in 1980.
- KBS 2FM - popular music. Launched in 1966 as Radio Seoul Broadcasting, renamed as TBC-FM in the 1970s, renamed as KBS Radio 4 in 1980 after TBC-FM forced merger to KBS, then adopted current name in 2003.
- KBS Hanminjok Radio - launched in 1975 as KBS Third Programme
- KBS World Radio - the South Korean international radio service, funded directly by the government.
Branding logo
Programmes
Foreign partners
Americas
Europe
Asia
Oceania
Operational status
Headquarters
KBS carried out a large-scale organizational reform on 1 March, 2019. The focus of the reform is to; further strengthen the KBS’ capabilities of content creation; enhance the organization’s digital work flow; and improve audience services. As part of the new strategy, KBS created Content Production 2 Division, a new integral body, responsible for a highly efficient operation of production, marketing, as well as content businesses. The new division ultimately aims to bring outstanding dramas and entertainment programming by boosting creative nature of the production function, and minimizing its decision-making process.The new reform strategy introduced Public Service Media Strategy team under Strategy and Planning Division. Public Service Media Strategy is mainly responsible for developing KBS’ digital strategies for different audiences to enjoy KBS content via assorted digital media platforms. The reform brought changes in Programming Division as Digital Media department has further expanded its roles under the division. Digital News department attached to News and Sports Division has also strengthened its functions in line with the recent reform initiative. Another significant change in the reform is that new ‘Audience Relations Center’ has become an executive department, to be operated directly by KBS President and CEO. The Audience Relations Center will dedicate its resources to further enhance audience services, and create more opportunities for audiences to take part in various initiatives developed by KBS. And Local Stations Management has been reorganized to be supervised under KBS Executive Vice President, as KBS has a plan to build a regional broadcasting system in response to a growing demand for greater regional autonomy.
- President
- Board of Directors
- * Board of Directors Secretariat
- Executive Vice president
- * Human Resources office
- * Program Review office
- * Gender Equality Centre
- * Audience Relations Centre
- * Inter-Korean Broadcasting Coorperation
- * Local Stations Management
- Auditor General
- * Audit office
- Strategy & Planning offices
- * Strategy & Planning office
- * Budget & Investment office
- * External Affairs office
- * Public Media Institute
- * Media Technology Research Institute
- Programming offices
- * Programming Strategy office
- * Programming office
- * Digital Media office
- * KBS World office
- * Announcers office
- * Camera office
- News & Sports offices
- * Integrated news room
- ** Politics & International News office
- ** Economy News office
- ** Social Affairs News office
- ** Broadcasting News office
- ** Digital News office
- ** News Footage & Archive office
- * News Commentators office
- * Current Affairs office
- * Sports News office
- Content Production 1 offices
- * Current Affairs & Cultural Programs 1
- * Current Affairs & Cultural Programs 2
- * Program Commissioning
- Radio Center
- * Radio Programming & Planning
- * Radio 1
- Content Production 2 offices
- * Entertainment Content Center
- * Content Business office
- * Advertisement office
- * Integrated Events Management office
- Drama Center
- * Drama CP Group
- Technology offices
- * Technology Management office
- * Media Infrastructure office
- * Broadcasting Network office
- ** Media Platform office
- Production Technology offices
- * TV Production Technology office
- * News Production Technology office
- * Outside Broadcasting Technology office
- * Radio Production Technology office
- Management offices
- * Management & Administration office
- * License Fee office
- * Management IT office
- * Asset Management office
- * Facility Management office
Controversies
1980 – Forced merger of KBS with private broadcasters
During the Chun Doo-hwan regime of the eighties, the president passed a law to force several public broadcasters to merge with the public run KBS. After these broadcasters had shown news stories against Chun, he used this law to stifle their criticism of him. It included:- Tongyang Broadcasting Corporation
- Donga Broadcasting System
- Seohae Broadcasting Corporation
- Jeonil Broadcasting Corporation
- Hanguk-FM
Consequences
- TBC television became KBS2, and TBC Radio became KBS Radio 4.
- DBS became the now defunct KBS Radio 5. The frequency is now used by SBS Love FM.
- SBC became KBS Gunsan, now known as KBS Radio 3 Jeonju.
- VOC became KBS Radio 3 Gwangju
- Hanguk-FM became KBS-Daegu-FM.
2011 – Wiretapping scandal at TV license fee meeting
In 2011, Sohn Hak-kyu, the chairman of the opposition Democratic Party, accused KBS of wiretapping the party's closed-door meeting on TV subscription charges.Sohn said, "We believe the firm bugged the meeting to secure information about our party's handling of the TV subscription policy. KBS should admit that it resorted to the deplorable method of gathering information."
The ruling Grand National Party initially sought to put a bill concerning the TV subscription charge to a vote, but failed to do so amid strong opposition from the Democrats.
The National Assembly's subcommittee on culture, tourism, broadcasting and communication, was scheduled to deliberate on 28 June 2011, but the meeting was cancelled due to the Democrats' protest.
The scandal erupted on 23 June when Han Sun-kyo, chairman of the parliamentary subcommittee, criticized the Democrats' opposition to increasing the TV subscription charge during a subcommittee meeting.
The GNP lawmakers eventually approved a bill raising the charge by 1,000 won to 3,500 won at a subcommittee meeting in the absence of Democrat lawmakers. That led to a Democrat boycott of a June extraordinary parliamentary session for half a day on 21 June 2011.
2011 – Praising Chinilpa
Bak Han-yong, head of the Institute for Research in Collaborationist Activities, criticized KBS for censoring negative remarks from a documentary about Chinilpa individuals, and Rhee Syngman, who had pardoned them. This includes the Chinilpa Paik Sun-yup.2012 – KBS journalists strikes and ''Reset KBS News 9''
The journalists working for KBS have protested against the biased journalism practices that favor the Lee Myung-bak government. The new union for KBS headed by Kim Hyeon-seok released a video clip "Reset KBS News 9" on the internet that discusses the Prime Minister's Office Civilian Surveillance Incident and the controversial money-spending on renovating President Lee Myung-bak's alleged birth house on 13 March 2012.2013 – Lee Soon-shin naming scandal
Global Youth League DN filed an injunction at Seoul Central District Court against KBS for using the name "Lee Soon-shin" in the title of the drama. The injunction requested that the broadcast be halted immediately, that "Lee Soon-shin" be removed from the title and that the character name be changed. The group claimed that historical figure Lee Soon-shin, an admiral famed for his victories against the Japanese Navy in the Imjin War during the Joseon Dynasty, is an official national symbol whose status will "deteriorate" when associated with the "weak and clumsy" protagonist that lead actress IU plays. KBS and production company AStory responded that they had no plans of changing the title or character name. Instead, they altered the original drama poster where several cast members are sitting on a pile of 100 won coins that have an image of Admiral Yi, by digitally replacing the coins with a plain gold platform.2014 – 1st KBS strike against pro-government bias of its president
In early May 2014, Gil Hwan-young removed the KBS news chief after alleged improper remarks over the sinking of the ferry Sewol. The chief then accused Gil of interference with news editing, with an alleged pro-government bias.After the board postponed a decision on whether or not to dismiss Gil, two of the broadcaster's largest unions went on strike.
As a result of the boycott, most of the broadcaster's news output was affected. The hour-long KBS News 9 ran for just 20 minutes, and during local elections on 4 June 2014, KBS was unable to send reporters to interview candidates.
The strike ended after the board of directors voted to dismiss Gil. The board passed a motion on 5 June 2014 demanding the discharge of President Gil. The majority vote decision was sent to be approved by the country's president Park Geun-hye, who has the power to appoint the broadcaster's head.