EP 82: Korea- Old White Whiskers and Mister Bunny

Published: June 30, 2021, 11 p.m.

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This is a trickster tale from Korea. The people of Korea are at the mercy of Old White Whiskers, the giant tiger that stalks the hills of Gangwon. He catches Mr Bunny slippin, and little bun bun has to use his wits to get home safely. Who is smarter, Mr Bunny or Old White Whiskers?

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Source: Korean Fairy Tales collected by W.E. Griffis (1922)

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Narrator: Dustin Steichmann

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Sound Effects: Arrowwood by Lisa Steichmann

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Music: [\\U0001f315_Live] \\uc1a1\\uc18c\\ud76c(Song so hee) - \\ub2ec\\ubb34\\ub9ac(Moon Halo) \\ub77c\\uc774\\ube0c(\\uac00\\uc57c\\uae08ver.)_\\uc791\\uace1: \\uc548\\uc608\\uc740 Creative Commons

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Podcast shout out: Composer Chronicals Stephen Trygar recounts the stories of composers past and present through the music they write. Historical episodes focus on a particular work by the featured composer and examines their life during the time the piece was written and performed. Additionally, living composers, musicians, industry professionals, and general enthusiasts are featured every other week to share their own stories and geek out over the music that we all love. Through these tales, you\'re invited to explore each composers\' legacy and their impact in keeping the world entertained.

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Listener shout out: Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Ulaanbaatar has been given numerous names in its history. Before 1911, official names included Nomi\\u012dn Kh\\xfcree (Mongolian: \\u1828\\u1823\\u182e \\u200d\\u1824\\u1828 \\u182c\\u1826\\u1837\\u1822\\u1836\\u1821\\u1828; \\u041d\\u043e\\u043c\\u044b\\u043d \\u0445\\u04af\\u0440\\u044d\\u044d) and Ikh Kh\\xfcree (\\u1836\\u1821\\u182c\\u1821 \\u182c\\u1826\\u1837\\u1822\\u1836\\u1821\\u1828; \\u0418\\u0445 \\u0425\\u04af\\u0440\\u044d\\u044d; lit. "Great Settlement"). It is called Bogdiin Khuree (\\u0411\\u043e\\u0433\\u0434\\u044b\\u043d \\u0425\\u04af\\u0440\\u044d\\u044d, Bogdi\\u012dn Kh\\xfcree, "Great Holy Khan\'s Monastery") in the folk song "Praise of Bogdiin Khuree". Other names were Da Kh\\xfcree (\\u0414\\u0430 \\u0425\\u04af\\u0440\\u044d\\u044d, d\\xe0, "great"), or simply Kh\\xfcree (\\u182c\\u1826\\u1837\\u1822\\u1836\\u1821\\u1828; \\u0425\\u04af\\u0440\\u044d\\u044d). The Chinese equivalent, D\\xe0 K\\xf9l\\xfan (\\u5927\\u5eab\\u502b), was rendered into Western languages as "Kulun" or "Kuren". In western languages, the city at that time was most often referred to as Urga (from Mongolian: \\u1825\\u1837\\u182d\\u1826\\u182d\\u1821; \\u04e8\\u0440\\u0433\\u04e9\\u04e9, \\xd6rg\\xf6\\xf6, "Palace"). From Wikipedia

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