Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Radio Skonto Plus - Russian language music station (Riga 102.3 FM) Avtoradio - Music hits (Riga 103.2 and Kraslava 96.1 FM) Radio Baltkom - Adult contemporary (Riga 93.9 FM and Ventspils 88.5 FM) Radio Roks - Russian rock (Riga 88.6 FM) Mix FM - Dance music (Riga 102.7 FM) Radio 9 - Pop music (Jurmala 99.0 FM)
In Moscow Russkoye Radio began broadcasting on 2 August 1995. [1] In 1996, Russkoye Radio established the folk music award Golden Gramophone, which takes place at the end of each year in the Kremlin in Moscow and a similar ceremony takes place at the Ice Palace in St. Petersburg. In 2006 came the TV equivalent of the radio station - RU.TV.
VGTRK owns and operates five national television stations, an international network, six radio stations, and 89 regional TV and radio networks. It also runs the information agency Rossiya Segodnya. The All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company (VGTRK) is Russia's largest media corporation.
TeleRadio-Moldova (TRM) is the Moldovan state-owned national radio and television broadcaster. It owns two TV channels and three radio stations. TRM was admitted as a full active member of the European Broadcasting Union on 1 January 1993, under its former name Radioteleviziunea Nationala din Moldova (RTNM).
Initially it started with broadcasts to the Moscow region on 107.4 FM, it now covers around 600 of the big Russian cities, as well as online and satellite (via Eutelsat W7 and Tricolor TV). It also has stations in Moldova, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan. Hit FM broadcasts mainly contemporary hits (rock, RnB, electronic music).
Russkoe Radio – Russia, Belarus (Miensk, Babruisk and Mahilou), Cyprus (Nicosia, Paphos, Limassol and Larnaca), Armenia (Yerevan) and Kazakhstan; Hit FM – Russia and Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan) Radio Monte Carlo – Russia, Limassol (Cyprus) and Almaty (Kazakhstan) Radio Record – in Russia, Moldova (FM-network and DAB+ in Cishinau) and Kyrgyzstan
The programmes that the channel have is Vesti-Moldova which is on Mondays to Fridays in Romanian and Russian at 13:00, 16:00 and 20:45, Pyatnitsa S Anatolem Golya is at Fridays at 19:00, Azbuka Vkusa which is on Sundays at 12:00 in Russian and at Mondays to Fridays at 09:00 in Romanian and the ever popular morning show called Dobroe Utro, Strana which in Russian on Mondays to Fridays at 06:00 ...
[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]