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Vedomosti newspaper is published by Independent Media publishing house (which publishes the Russian Cosmopolitan and the only English-language daily The Moscow Times) together with Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal. Quality reviews and reprints from western newspapers make it popular among Russian executives, managers and middle class. The Independent Media was founded by a Dutch journalist Derk Sauer, who has recently sold his media empire to a Finnish publishing house. Still, Vedomosti is considered to be the newspaper that is least influenced by various internal political and business interests. Kommersant is the oldest Russian business newspaper (started in the 80s) and is more entertaining than Vedomosti. It is more like The Guardian in UK: features sections on economics, politics, arts, sports, and the articles often have more personal touch than Vedomosti. However, the newspaper belongs to the self-exiled tycoon Boris Berezovsky, so many people reckon he uses Kommersant to promote his political ideas. On the other side, the journalists in Kommersant were always famous for advocating journalists' freedom, so it is quite probable that Berezovsky's influence on the newspaper is limited. Izvestia seems to be closer to popular newspapers, while Kommersant has more circulation among business community. However, the both newspapers have somewhat similar style. There are a few English language newspapers printed in Russia, most of them in Moscow. The most popular is The Moscow Times (www.themoscowtimes.com), the first daily English-language newspaper in Russia, published by Independent Media. Most of its audience are expats, business-minded people, and English-speaking Russians. Another English-language newspaper is The Russian Journal (www.russianjournal.com) - a weekly newspaper - the journalist staff is mostly Russians. You can learn more about regional newspapers in relevant city guide sections on WayToRussia.Net. Russian TelevisionTelevision
is the most influental media
in Russia. The two main channels - ORT and RTR (mostly
government owned) cover almost all Russia. These channels
are quite
loyal to their owner, but allow themselves some critics and
sarcasm,
so it doesn't look like the old Soviet TV at all. Another channel
- NTV - used to be owned by the Russian company MOST Group
(owned
by a Russian oligarch (a rich guy) Mr. Gusinsky), but they were
not not nice to the Russian government, so there was tax police
coming to their office once and finding some horrible things that
made them bankrupt. The new owner (a big company loyal to
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![]() (c) Dinamit FM |
You can find all sorts of magazines in Russia:
from Cosmopolitan and Playboy to Harward Business Review and
Newsweek. There are also some local brands, such as Profil
and Dengi (business & economic review weekly). The lifestyle
niche is taken by popular western brands,
however the local
Afisha (published
in Moscow & St. Petersburg), which is a bit like Time Out (also
published in Moscow), is the champion among them.
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(c) Bolshoy Gorod
If you're looking for some "alternative" reading, try the New
Observer (which is a copy of The New Yorker, but in Russian)
and
Bolshoy
Gorod ("Big City" published by Afisha in Moscow). Both
provide intelligent and entertaining reading, but are quite
focused
on Moscow.
If you're looking for English-language magazines published
in Russia you will only find the publications, which look
more like mail-order catalogues. Foreign magazines are available
at some supermarkets and kiosks around Moscow and St. Petersburg
and are nearly impossible to find in other cities.
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