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Russia-1 (Russian: Россия-1) is a state-owned Russian television channel, [1] first aired on 14 February 1956 as Programme Two in the Soviet Union. It was relaunched as RTR on 13 May 1991, and is known today as Russia-1. It is the flagship channel of the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company (VGTRK). [3]
The Russian Television and Radio Broadcasting Company (RTR) [a] or Russian Television and Radio Broadcasting Company, [2] also known as Russia Television and Radio [b], is a national state-owned broadcaster which operates many television and radio channels in 53 of Russia's languages. [3] The company was founded in 1990 and is based in Moscow. [4]
From December 2020 to January 2021, all existing videos, news and program pages on the websites of the Russia-1, Russia-K and closed Rossiya-2 TV channels, as well as in the My Planet application, were transferred to this platform. From March to May 2022, the same was done for the RTR-Planeta TV channel and all VGTRK radio stations.
Pay-TV is growing in popularity amongst Russian TV viewers. The NTV Russia news company, owned by Gazprom, broadcasts the NTV Plus package to 560,000 households, reaching over 1.5 million viewers. [4] Six out of these seven satellites are new vehicles.
The Lithuanian authorities were outraged by the content of the May 31, 2017, broadcast of Solovyov's program, during which LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky proposed "putting forward an ultimatum to the Baltic states so that they would withdraw all NATO troops 300 kilometres from the borders of Russia," and if they don't, then - "take certain ...
All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company: 1997 RTR-Planeta (International version of Russia 1 and Russia K) All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company: 2002 Match TV (ex Russia-2) All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company: 2003 Russia-24 (ex Vesti) All-Russia State Television and Radio ...
From April 1995 to September 2002, the channel was known as Public Russian Television (Russian: Общественное Российское Телевидение, romanized: Obshchestvennoye Rossiyskoye Televideniye, ORT [oˈɛrˈtɛ]). [4] Channel One's main competitors are the Russia-1 and NTV channels. The channel has 2,443 employees as ...
With that, the RTV channel began its broadcast, now known as Russia-1. From May 14, Vesti began broadcasting 15 minutes-long editions at 20:00 and 23:00. Compared to Vremya, Vesti was innovative in terms of news presentation. For the first months of broadcast it was an opposition media, supportive of Boris Yeltsin and the democrats.