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  2. All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-Russia_State...

    Eduard Sagalaev was appointed president of RTR's "Moscow Independent Broadcasting Corporation (MIBC)" TV6 Moscow. On 11 November 1996, the "Russian Universities" block stopped broadcasting, and its airtime passed to NTV. The first satellite TV networks "The RTR TV network", "Meteor Sports" and "Meteor Cinema" were launched.

  3. Russia-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia-1

    On November of that year, "RTR" changed to "RTR-1" has changed the logo. The reason for the name change - the creation of a new TV channel "RTR-2" (now "Russia-Culture"). On May 8, 1998 in the RTR includes regional television and radio. Since then, "RTR" broadcasts in 54 languages of the peoples of Russia, RTR became the largest media group in ...

  4. Russian Television and Radio Broadcasting Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Television_and...

    [21] [22] On December 3, 2009, the Russian Government approved the federal target programme "Development of TV and Radio Broadcasting in the Russian Federation in 2009-2018". [23] The main objective of the programme was to provide the population of the Russian Federation with free-to-air multichannel digital TV and radio broadcasting. [24]

  5. Match! Arena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Match!_Arena

    Match! Arena (Russian: Матч! Арена), formerly Sport-1 (Russian: Спорт-1) until January 25, 2016, is a Russian pay sport television channel that broadcasts in SD & HDTV 16:9 format. It was launched on August 10, 2010 by the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company under the name Sport-1 (Russian: Спорт-1).

  6. List of Russian-language television channels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Russian-language...

    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 ...

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  8. Vesti (VGTRK) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vesti_(VGTRK)

    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.

  9. Russia-K - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia-K

    The channel was rebranded as Russia-Culture (Rossiya-K) on 1 January 2010 along with three other main channels of the VGTRK group. [ 4 ] The channel re-transmitted Euronews European news channel from 2 October 2001 to 3 September 2017.