I don't think I ever logged Pyongyang during my SWLing days. Being on the East Coast didn't help. On the other hand, 25 to 49 meters were chock full of European, Middle Eastern and African signals every evening. The only European that consistently eluded me was Poland, which supposedly had an English service to North America but somehow never made it into my speaker. I had QSLs, souvenirs and literature from just about everywhere else in Europe, including Communist East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, Albania, Ukraine, and of course, Russia -- both Radio Moscow and its sister station, Radio Station Peace & Progress, which billed itself as "the voice of Soviet public opinion," but, of course, broadcast the same opinions as Radio Moscow did!
It was fascinating for a teenager like me to hear the Cold War (and a few hot wars) play out on shortwave in the '60s and '70s. My most vivid memories are of Kol Yisrael during the Six Day War, Radio Prague during the Soviet invasion, and the Voice of Nigeria during that country's civil war with the breakaway province of Biafra. Each broadcast from Lagos would end with the slogan "To keep Nigeria one is a job that must be done!" Shortwave's last hurrah for me was in the early 1990s -- the first Gulf War and the end of apartheid in South Africa with the freeing of Nelson Mandela. It's a shame that so many nations have left shortwave in this millennium, but looking at it objectively, there is no way governmental shortwave broadcasting can be justified now. I still listen, but only for the occasionally interesting, occasionally infuriating and occasionally simply bizarre conversations on the ham bands.