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TV Rain website provides live broadcasting and archived programs. [84] The channel is also broadcast on YouTube. [85] In January 2017, TV Rain was forced by the National Council of Television and Radio Broadcasting of Ukraine to stop broadcasting in the country. [86] It was shut down because channel content implied Crimea was Russian territory ...
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 Broadcasting Company: 2006 Carousel: Channel One Russia and All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company: 2010
The main news program, Vesti, is a leading information program in Russia. During the previous TV season, Vesti adopted a 24/7 production cycle with two-hour intervals, which allows for the news to be broadcast live across all Russian time zones.
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia's justice ministry on Friday declared media outlet TV Rain (Dozhd) a "foreign agent", part of what Kremlin opponents say is a crackdown on critical media before a ...
Mikhail Viktorovich Zygar (Russian: Михаи́л Ви́кторович Зы́гарь; born 31 January 1981) is a Russian born journalist, writer and filmmaker, and the founding editor-in-chief of Russian news channel TV Rain (2010–2015). Under Zygar's leadership, TV Rain provided an alternative to Kremlin-controlled federal TV channels by ...
The smotrim.ru domain appeared back in 2006. The name "Smotrim" was first used by VGTRK in the spring of 2020, during the self-isolation regime due to the Coronavirus pandemic in Russia: from March 27 to June 9, the "Smotrim at home" plate was used on the website of the Russia-1 TV channel instead of its logo, from which the second word was then removed.
Mikhail Zygar was the founding editor in chief of TV Rain, Russia’s lone independent news television station until it went into exile in 2022, and the author of “All the Kremlin’s Men” and ...
The Duma, Russia’s parliament, has passed a bill making it a crime, punishable by up to 15 years in jail, to spread what it called “fake news” about the Russian military.