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4. Russian Media Group: Russkoye Radio — national network with music exclusively in Russian. Radio Maximum — Russian-American radio station. Hit FM — Russian and foreign hits. DFM — federal non-commercial dance radio station. Radio Monte-Carlo — radio for a premium audience. World classics of jazz, rock and pop music. 5. Krutoy Media:
VGTRK owns and operates five national television stations, two international networks, five radio stations, and 80 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.
Television in Russia. Television is the most popular medium in Russia, with 74% of the population watching national television channels routinely and 59% routinely watching regional channels. [1] There are 6,700 television channels in total. [2]
NMG (National Media Group) 1938 REN TV: NMG (National Media Group) 1997 CTC TV: CTC Media: 1996 Domashny: CTC Media: 2005 TV Rain: private investors: 2010 Muz-TV: UTV Russia Holding: 1995 MTV Russia: Prof-Media(under license Viacom: 1998 VH1 Russia: Prof-Media(under license Viacom: 2006 2×2 (TV channel) Prof-Media: 1989 TV3 Russia: Prof-Media ...
He is a major shareholder in Bank Rossiya which “is a key stakeholder in the National Media Group which supports Russian policy which is destabilising Ukraine”, the Government said.
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.
REN TV. REN TV ( Russian: РЕН ТВ) is a Russian free-to-air television network. It was founded on 1 January 1997 by Irena Lesnevskaya and her son, Dmitry Lesnevsky, who had been running REN TV as a production house for other national Russian television channels. Though it focuses mostly on audiences aged between 18 and 45 years old, the ...
PTR is funded by a mix of Russian government subsidies and public donations. As of 2013 PTR received a combined total of 1.2 bil RUB, the vast majority of which came from state funds. Broadcasting. The Presidential decree says the Russian Defence Ministry should draw up proposals for using its own TV station, Zvezda, to transmit its programmes.