[lg policy] New Russian-Language Channel Seeks to Counter Kremlin Spin

Harold Schiffman hfsclpp at gmail.com
Thu Feb 9 22:00:27 UTC 2017


 [image: blog_thecable_full3] <http://foreignpolicy.com/channel/the-cable/>
New Russian-Language Channel Seeks to Counter Kremlin Spin
<http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/02/09/new-russian-language-channel-seeks-to-counter-kremlin-spin-current-time-putin/>

   - By Kavitha Surana <http://foreignpolicy.com/author/kavitha-surana>, Reid
   Standish <http://foreignpolicy.com/author/reid-standish>
   - February 9, 2017 - 11:56 am
   - @ksurana6 <http://www.twitter.com/ksurana6>
   -
   - [image: facebook] [image: twitter] [image: google-plus] [image:
reddit] [image:
   LinkedIn] [image: email]
   <?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20on%20Foreign%20Policy&body=New%20Russian-Language%20Channel%20Seeks%20to%20Counter%20Kremlin%20Spin%20-%20http%3A%2F%2Fforeignpolicy.com%2F2017%2F02%2F09%2Fnew-russian-language-channel-seeks-to-counter-kremlin-spin-current-time-putin%2F>

[image: New Russian-Language Channel Seeks to Counter Kremlin Spin]

Outlets that don’t toe the Kremlin line have long had trouble gaining a
foothold in the Russian media market. As a result, the expertly-produced
state media enjoys a virtual monopoly in the Russian-speaking world,
stifling independent voices and stories critical of official Russia.

Now, a new network for Russian speakers has entered the market and it hopes
to break through the drumbeat of Kremlin narratives by focusing on local
issues and people’s daily lives.
Trending Articles
Here’s How the U.S. Can Retain Leadership in Asia Secretary of State Rex
Tilerson appears to have clarified the puzzling statements on the South
China Sea that he made…

Powered By
<http://i.jsrdn.com/i/1.gif?r=0o2l&k=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&fwd=http%3A%2F%2Fdistroscale.com>

Current Time <http://www.currenttime.tv/>, backed by U.S.-funded Radio Free
Europe/Free Liberty and partnered with Voice of America, launched its 24/7
Russian language television channel on Tuesday. It had already started a
website last year. With about 100 staff members in Prague and
correspondents stationed throughout the region, the network will broadcast
in 11 countries across the former Soviet Union, including Russia, Ukraine,
Central Asia, and the Baltic countries.

“Our focus is on real human beings, bread and butter issues,” Daisy
Sindelar, the director of Current Time, told Foreign Policy during an
interview.  “The videos really tap into day-to-day but universal issues,
like corruption and poverty and health care.”

The move comes as European Union officials have stepped up criticism
<http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/11/23/the-eu-moves-to-counter-russian-disinformation-campaign-populism/>
of Kremlin-controlled media. Moscow-funded outlets like RT and Sputnik
often set the tone on stories like the Ukraine conflict, NATO, and domestic
issues inside some countries with large Russian-speaking populations,
sometimes sparking controversy with false information.

“Russia tries to challenge the stability and the minds of Western
societies,” said Anna Fotyga, a Polish member of the European Council who
sponsored an EU report on Russian disinformation last year. “I consider a
Russian-language satellite and digital network an excellent response to
this threat.”

Current Time may have trouble drawing eyeballs away from well-funded state
media pumped up with drama and glitz. The new outlet will have to make due
with a much smaller budget than established Russian networks enjoy.
Meanwhile, local affiliate stations that Current Time relies on to
distribute their content in Russia are often hesitant to pick up foreign
programming for fear that they could lose advertising revenue by going
against the official line.

“In the short term, we don’t anticipate that our TV penetration will be
significant in Russia,” said Sindelar.

Current Time’s founders think they’ll have better luck reaching the
millions-strong Russian language audience across the region on their
smartphones, using video to tell personal narratives and highlight local
issues. The digital division has already garnered more than 200 million
views on sites like YouTube, Facebook, and the Russian social media site
VKontakte since January 2016.

Glenn Kates, the managing editor of Current Time’s digital department, said
the team was inspired by the growing popularity of short subtitled videos
on Facebook from outlets like Al Jazeera +, Buzzfeed, and others news sites
that managed to excel in accessing audiences on social media platforms.

“I had seen how those videos were capable of engaging with people and I
realized that there is no reason that something that works there shouldn’t
work [for Current Time],” he said.

Current Time, which is affiliated with the Broadcasting Board of Governors
and funded by the U.S. government, will also need to shed criticism it has
its own state-funded editorial viewpoint.

Sindelar counters that the Russian government pours millions into their
glossy media industry, blocking independent channels from offering
different points of views. She said Current Time doesn’t push a political
viewpoint besides highlighting human rights and rule of law issues.

“We present one of the few alternatives that Russian speakers have to this
state-orchestrated media,” Sindelar said. “I think in the end we will have
an audience that knows they can come to us with zero spin and good factual
reporting about things that are important to them.”

Focusing on personal storytelling, instead of politics, will allow their
content to spread in Russia, Sindelar and Kates argued. Some shows, like
“Unknown Russia,” gives viewers a glimpse of life across Russia and tells
personal stories from the far-flung regions that many Russians themselves
have never visited. Others focus on how-to advice, such as “Business Plan,”
a show about creating start ups in Ukraine.

But it won’t be all lighter fare. For example, one recent
<http://www.rferl.org/a/27913045.html> story used smartphone video footage
and audio recordings to expose a harrowing episode of police brutality —
and its coverup — in Russia.

http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/02/09/new-russian-language-channel-seeks-to-counter-kremlin-spin-current-time-putin/

-- 
**************************************
N.b.: Listing on the lgpolicy-list is merely intended as a service to its
members
and implies neither approval, confirmation nor agreement by the owner or
sponsor of the list as to the veracity of a message's contents. Members who
disagree with a message are encouraged to post a rebuttal, and to write
directly to the original sender of any offensive message.  A copy of this
may be forwarded to this list as well.  (H. Schiffman, Moderator)

For more information about the lgpolicy-list, go to
https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/
listinfo/lgpolicy-list
*******************************************
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/lgpolicy-list/attachments/20170209/5a46976d/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
_______________________________________________
This message came to you by way of the lgpolicy-list mailing list
lgpolicy-list at groups.sas.upenn.edu
To manage your subscription unsubscribe, or arrange digest format: https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/listinfo/lgpolicy-list


More information about the Lgpolicy-list mailing list