Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Konstantin Vadimovich Kisin (/ ˈkɪsɪn /; Russian: Константин Вадимович Кисин; born 25 December 1982) is a Russian-British satirist, author, libertarian pundit, and co-host (with Francis Foster) of the Triggernometry podcast. Kisin has written for a number of publications including Quillette, The Spectator, The Daily ...
Konstantin Syomin was born in 1980 in Sverdlovsk (modern Yekaterinburg). After graduating from the special school with in-depth study of English in 1996, he entered the Ural State University. While still a student, he began working on TV. During one of his trips to Chechnya as a reporter for Sverdlovsk Oblast TV channel (OTV), an accident ...
Ukrainian officials described Russian claims that the perpetrators of the Crocus City Hall attack tried to escape to Ukraine as "very doubtful and primitive" disinformation, recalling that the border is heavily guarded by soldiers and drones, mined in many areas, and constantly shelled from both sides. [ 204 ]
Moscow's Basmanny court said in a statement that one of the journalists, Konstantin Gabov, had prepared video and photographic material for a YouTube channel, "Navalny Live", run by allies of ...
Publisher. Constable. Pages. 210. Awards. Sunday Times bestseller. ISBN. 9781408716045. An Immigrant's Love Letter to the West is a 2022 non-fiction book written by Russian-British comedian and political commentator Konstantin Kisin. [1][2] The book became a Sunday Times bestseller in the first week of its publication.
The indictment says that RT, a media entity formerly known as "Russia Today," and its employees laundered nearly $10 million "to covertly fund and direct" what it only calls "U.S. Company-1."
Kilimnik was born on 27 April 1970 [11] at Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine, Soviet Union. [12] Fluent in Russian and Ukrainian before his service in the Soviet Army, [12] he became fluent in Swedish and English as a linguist [12] at the Moscow Military Institute of the Ministry of Defense, which trained interpreters for the Soviet Union's Main Intelligence Directorate, known as the GRU of the Soviet Union ...
[145] Indeed, while Rossiya TV (Channel Russia) was state-owned since its foundation in 1991, major shareholders of ORT and NTV (Boris Berezovsky and Vladimir Gusinsky, respectively) sold their stocks to the government and Gazprom in 2000–2001. Moreover, TV6, a media outlet owned by Berezovsky, was closed in 2002 using a legal loophole.