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  2. Daniil Orain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniil_Orain

    Daniil Orain (born July 2000) is a Russian journalist known for his YouTube channel "1420 by Daniil Orain" in which he interviewed Russians in the street who agreed to comment on various political topics, including the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

  3. Pavel Kushnir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavel_Kushnir

    Pavel Kushnir was born in Tambov on 19 September 1984, [1] in a Jewish family. [2] His father, Mikhail Borisovich Kushnir (1945–2020), was a musician and a teacher at a children's music school, who developed his own method of teaching music to children, widely used in music schools in Russia. [1]

  4. Religion in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Russia

    Throughout the history of early and imperial Russia there were, however, religious movements which posed a challenge to the monopoly of the Russian Orthodox Church and put forward stances of freedom of conscience, namely the Old Believers—who separated from the Russian Orthodox Church after Patriarch Nikon's reform in 1653 (the Raskol ...

  5. Vitaly Zdorovetskiy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitaly_Zdorovetskiy

    Vitaly Zdorovetskiy (/ v ɪ ˈ t æ l i z ə ˌ d ɒr ə ˈ v j ɛ t s k i / vih-TAL-ee zə-DORR-ə-VYET-skee; Russian: Вита́лий Здорове́цкий, IPA: [vʲɪˈtalʲɪj zdərɐˈvʲetskʲɪj]; born March 8, 1992), better known by his YouTube username VitalyzdTv, is a Russian-American [2] YouTuber and internet content creator. [3]

  6. RT (TV network) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RT_(TV_network)

    In the NOW also has an active channel on YouTube and regularly posts videos from Soapbox, a Maffick-owned channel. [ 141 ] [ 142 ] [ 6 ] [ 143 ] In February 2021, Matt Field from the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists reported that RT had created an account on Gab , a social network known for its far-right userbase, right before the start of ...

  7. Vlad A4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlad_A4

    On 29 November 2014, Bumaga created the A4 YouTube channel, [2] playing on his surname Bumaga (Бумага), meaning Paper. [8] Fame came in 2016 after the release of the video '24 часа в батутном центре' (24 hours in a trampoline center), [6] when the number of subscribers he had increased from 200 thousand to 1 million.

  8. Graham Phillips (journalist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Phillips_(journalist)

    At this time, Phillips was working for Russian state channel Zvezda, as a freelancer, having parted company with RT following his second deportation from Ukraine, along with uploading videos to his YouTube channel. [42] In late 2014, Russian channel NTV released a film Военкор ('War Correspondent'), inspired by Phillips' early ...

  9. Russia-24 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia-24

    The editor-in-chief of the channel is Evgeny Bekasov (since 2012). The channel ostensibly aims to give a broad and impartial [2] outline of life in all of Russia’s regions from its European exclave of Kaliningrad to Vladivostok in the Far East. The channel was named Vesti until 1 January 2010, when the public-owned VGTRK rebranded its channels.