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Sota.vision (SOTA) is a Russian independent news outlet. [1] [2] SOTA was started by a former reporter of Grani.ru, Alexandra Ageeva, who created her own YouTube channel to cover the most dramatic events involving Russian opposition activities in Moscow. [3]
History; Launched: 7 July 1938; 86 years ago () Former names: 1938–1952: Leningrad Radiocenter 1952–1960: Leningrad Television Studio 1960–1991: Leningrad Programme CTV (Leningrad Television) 1991–1998: Channel 5 1998–2004: Petersburg Broadcasting Center: Links; Website: www.5-tv.ru (Russia only) Availability; Terrestrial
Phillips previously worked as a stringer for the Russian state-owned television networks RT (2013–14) and Zvezda (2014–15). [4] [5] He then reported for his YouTube channel from Russian-controlled territory during the Donbas War in Ukraine, for which he received several medals, including one from Russia's Federal Security Service. [2]
[15] [16] Broadcasting was from 8:00 to 00:00 Moscow time, with the TV channel TCM Europe being broadcast at overnight hours. The distributor of the channel in the CIS and the Baltic States was Chello Zone. [17] [18] [19] On 1 April 2005, the pan-European Cartoon Network received a full-fledged Russian audio track. [20] [21]
TV3 Plus is the second most popular Russian channel in Latvia with a viewing share of 5.2% in May 2007, ahead of REN TV Baltic, but after the dominating First Baltic channel. [ 1 ] TV3 Plus, as with other channels of the All Media Baltics group in the Baltic states , switched to HD broadcasting on 26 July 2018.
Spas (Russian: Телеканал «Спас») is a federal channel in Russia which is associated with the Russian Orthodox Church. It started broadcasting in on July 28, 2005. The main owner of the channel is the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church. The founders of the TV channel are Alexander Batanov (died 2009) and Ivan ...
In April 1998, he suggested Larisa Sinelshchikova, vice-president of the TV-6 Russian commercial TV channel, to become the new CEO of VID. [5] The Russian financial crisis created a need for new management ideas, and Larisa Sinelshchikova in cooperation with Alexander Lyubimov took an unexpectedly bold decision to expand VID's own television ...
The editor-in-chief of the channel is Evgeny Bekasov (since 2012). The channel ostensibly aims to give a broad and impartial [2] outline of life in all of Russia’s regions from its European exclave of Kaliningrad to Vladivostok in the Far East. The channel was named Vesti until 1 January 2010, when the public-owned VGTRK rebranded its channels.