Tuesday, February 14, 2012


Commentary

Putin TV

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin -- all hopes lie with Putin, and because Putin exists, a bright future awaits us.
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By Matviy Hanapolsky
The television screen shows an elderly woman of around 80, badly dressed. She is an Ossetian, lives in Tskhinvali, and witnessed the tragic events of last year's Russian-Georgian war.

She was recalling how Georgian troops forced their way into her home. "They were wearing American military uniforms and had American weapons," she says. "There was a chief instructor with them, he gave them orders in English."

The camera continues to focus on the woman as she speaks. The journalist doesn't interrupt. He doesn't ask how someone who has never in her life seen anything except her own cow knows what kind of weapons and uniforms the soldiers wore, or how she could be sure the commands were in English.

The journalist knows, which is why he doesn't interrupt. He and his group are the authors of this disinformation series that will be triumphantly screened by Russian state TV channels.

The woman was told what to say, and she is saying what she was told to. The journalist doesn't conceal his face: state TV and radio pay handsomely, and the Russian media operate on the principle "five minutes of ignominy and you can live comfortably for the rest of your life."

The days when Vladimir Gusinsky's NTV was a byword for independent and honest investigative reporting and Russia still had a free press are gone forever. These days NTV functions as the electronic equivalent of the yellow press, and its journalists "have scattered among the population like mice" -- some have left journalism altogether, some fastidiously avoid politics, and some have pledged themselves to lying.

After Russian President Dmitry Medvedev forced through amendments to the election law that mean that from now on the new Russian president will be elected/appointed for six years not four, everything has become cynically clear. Medvedev will remain in office until 2012, then Vladimir Putin for 12 more years, which means that from now until 2024 there will be the same government, the same criteria, and the same scale of values, without any real changes.

I would add that there are barely any opposition media, and if you happen to work for one of them you risk getting killed.

Nostalgia

Such is the reality of life in the Russian media. The journalists who broadcast yesterday's honest political reporting still work for the same TV channels, but those channels are now exclusively propagandistic, and the journalists simply collect their paychecks twice a month.

No, they have not visibly lost their journalistic ability, and you can watch investigative reporting every week. For example, about how a small businessman is treated badly in a small town.

The TV channel will show a detailed report of how and why he is victimized. Then the regional governor, who is invariably a member of United Russia, appears on the screen and assures us that those responsible have already been fired, that he personally will raise the issue of corruption with the government, and that the law needs to be changed.

Many channels, but just one program.
These investigative reports always follow the same scenario: the villains are at bottom, the mid-level boss is good, but all hopes lie with Putin, and because Putin exists, a bright future awaits us.

No generalizations, no questions "why do we still live like this?" In the context of problems, the top leadership does not exist. There is only "Vladimir Putin visited...," "Dmitry Medvedev affirmed sharply...."

Programs that contain discussion have vanished from the TV screen completely. Savik Shuster's program on the TRK Ukrayina channel is perceived in Russia as something romantic, improbable, a fairy tale, which elicits the comment, "Yes, things are different there in Kyiv."

Pessimism among journalists is total and irreversible.

The Word Is A Weapon

There is one sphere, however, which is the exclusive preserve of propagandists: political statements and political decisions by Putin and Medvedev. There not only discussions, but even simple questions are impossible.

There is a basic Kremlin decision: Russia has embarked on an information war. From now on, lies on television are no longer lies, but a weapon against the enemy.

In the case of Georgia, they lied day in, day out, at the slightest pretext. The more absurd the lie, the better.

When the first case of swine flu was diagnosed in Krasnodar Krai, an "expert" appeared on the screen and told an improbable story. He said there "are reports" that swine flu came from Georgia and that "there was a secret biological laboratory where experiments were conducted on pigs." Then some of the pigs escaped, mated with wild boar, crossed the frontier into the Russian Federation -- and there you are!

They lied from the very first minutes of the war in Georgia. They showed Russian Hurricane rockets and said they were Georgian Grad rockets. They lied constantly about the number of casualties: first they said 2,000, then 160, then 59, then 71.

They lied when they said Georgia planned to poison the Tskhinvali water supply, which was ridiculous because the small river that supplies drinking water to Tskhinvali flows into Georgia.

The film "8/8/8" was devoted to the anniversary of last year's war, which began on that date. It was in that film that the old Ossetian woman told how the "Georgian-Americans" forced their way into her home.

No Relations, No Questions

The most important media strategy is "no questions."

Medvedev visits German Chancellor Angela Merkel and tells her that Russia will have "no dealings" with Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko. And no one has the right to ask what that statement means.

Breaking off diplomatic relations? Annulling some agreement or other? Closing the borders and cancelling flights to Ukraine? There was a similar statement with regard to Georgia, and flights there were cancelled.

And the main thing: will there be a war?

That's not a joke, after all, the president did say "no relations."

And the most important question: if Yushchenko is reelected president, does that mean there will be "no relations" for five, or 10, or 15 years?

But there are no answers, just as there is not a single program where the top leadership would have to answer questions and provide explanations about the most vital issues of war and peace and about their own statements, which could give rise to a new war with Russia's closest neighbor.

Russian journalists joke that: "When I watch the first channel of Russian TV, I have the impression that Ernst is looking at me from the screen as though I were trash."

Konstantin Ernst is that channel's director-general.

Matviy Hanapolsky is a broadcaster for the Russian radio station Ekho Moskvy. The views expressed in this commentary, which was written for RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service, are his own, and do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL
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by: Ray from: Lawrence, KS
August 27, 2009 16:08
Good article. Two quick comments/questions. Don't you think that the Russian BS- detector is as developed as it was during the USSR? Are Russians blind/deaf to the huge gap between what Big Brother is saying and the grim reality? Where does modern technology fit into your equation? The 80-year old babushka might be intimidated into buying the Putin story, but your average 18 year old Russian?

by: Prince Igor
August 28, 2009 20:07
This article is written by someone who seems to essentially shill for the anti-Russian/Ukrainian nationalist line.

There's plenty of fault to be found with that view, which has found its way in the Ukrainian educational system and media.

The kid gloves treatment provided to such opinions is something overlooked by many a "Russia watcher."

Ukrainian ultra-nationalist approved if not supported agendas like the study of such topics as Russian media and Russian nationalism overlook some other matters. Some other folks exist with this mindset as well.

As the ongong distortions linger on.
Meantime, consider what the above author is leaving out in conjunction with what he's saying.

As someone else put it:

I usually do not have tome to read these pieces of garbage thoroughly, but the below practically made me fall of my chair - anything that preceded, or followed is made NIL by this blatant propaganda LIE.

"The days when Vladimir Gusinsky's NTV was a byword for independent and honest investigative reporting and Russia still had a free press are gone forever.

Those were the days when the entire media was OWNED by the oligarchs whose only purpose was to mold, spin and block opposing views to further their aims at the expense of the country and its people, whom they robbed blind.... I personally knew journalists and writers in Moscow that were squeezed and hounded out of their jobs by the oligarch-controlled media. The 1990s era was a free-for-all in terms of the "flowering" of porn and every other unsavory tabloid-type of press (if you had any cash to spare, you could churn out anything), TV that showed unbridled and uncensored violence and soft-porn sex (all foreign product) that I was shocked to see on daytime programming. As some point it seemed that Russian-made film and television fare was obsolete, and only the refuse of other countries was being dumped in the Russian mass media. This suited the oligarchs to demoralize and overwhelm the Russian public, many of whom complained that the entire media was "blackened" and was so depressing that it killed any constructive, positive impulse, as the economic system was in utter collapse... I was in Russia very often then, and it all passed in front of my eyes...

by: Maksim from: Tallinn, Estonia
August 29, 2009 17:16
"The camera continues to focus on the woman as she speaks. The journalist doesn't interrupt. He doesn't ask how someone who has never in her life seen anything except her own cow knows what kind of weapons and uniforms the soldiers wore, or how she could be sure the commands were in English."

Doesn't take a genius to tell an m16 from ak74 one and English language from Georgian.

This article is hopelessly biased and is nothing but anti-russian propaganda itself.

by: Ksenia Galouchko from: Moscow Times
August 29, 2009 18:25
Very poorly written article that simplifies the current situation in the Russian media. The author uses Cold War-stereotypes--something that everyone is sick and tired of already-- to argue his point about the lack of freedom of press in Russia. Statements like "The days when Vladimir Gusinsky's NTV was a byword for independent and honest investigative reporting and Russia still had a free press are gone forever."--I feel like the author of this should be writing horror stories instead of pretending to be a journalist. I am a journalist in Russia myself and realize the issues that the Russian media is facing but anybody who has spent some time here knows that free press exists, and everything depends on what you watch or/and read. Some newspapers/TV programs suggestions to get the writer thinking a bit outside of his box:newspapers-Kommersant, Vedomosti, Vlast, Moscow Times, Snob, Itogi (all of which have websites for online-reading); TV:Osokin's news on RenTv (which is a great, liberal channel in general), Vladimir Pozner's show, Shkola Zlosloviya, and even the comedy-show Bolshaya Raznitsa. It is good to criticize the flaws of Russian media but only when it is done intelligently and by someone who has done his research, which is not the case in this article.

by: LES from: USA
August 29, 2009 19:32
Dear Igor,

Your comment is absurd. To imply that kremlin controlled malicious disinformation is better, just shows that you are a kremlin propagandist, and your purpose here is to advocate the kremlin agenda.

Sincerely,
LES

http://russiangeorgianwar.blogspot.com/2009/02/julia-latynina-articles-on-august-war.html

http://art-of-arts.livejournal.com/214246.html


by: Konstantin from: Los Angeles
August 30, 2009 04:28
Russia invading, expanding territory, grabbing houses and other properties, guilty in aggression and genocide, and he is defending smearing Russian propaganda!

I do not care about Russian olligarhs and generals competitions for better smearing us and our nations of origin...

But, it is my villages they genocidized and repopulated!
It is my relatives they murdered!

From Hungary and Checks through Afghanistan, Abkhazia, Chechnia and Moldova...

...Russia smearing their past, present and future victims, including Ukraine!

What Igor "Prince" if for?
If it is from movie about Prince Dracula, "Igor" wasn't a prince, just a Dracula's propaganda bird that produced ugly screams...

Konstantin.

by: Prince Igor
August 30, 2009 18:48
Les

Raising valid points, some others at this thread differ with your propagandistic outburst.

Whereas you make broad swipes, Maksim, Ksenia and yours truly provide the specifics in opposition to the above propaganda piece that's archived at the JRL web site with (at least at last notice) no rebuttal.

This is typical of the kind of approach taken within English language Russia watching circles.

In turn, Russian government involved English langauge media and PR projects have fallen short in providing a valid counter-point to the views some others besides yourself favor.




by: Nobel Prize from: Riga
August 31, 2009 14:39
> by: Maksim from: Tallinn, Estonia
August 29, 2009 17:16

"Doesn't take a genius to tell an m16 from ak74 one and English language from Georgian."

The idea was that it never happened, Sherlock.

P.S.
As you are "Maksim from Tallin" - do you personally have something to do with those Russian riots there few years ago? Seen any "Fascists" around recently? Under your bed maybe?

So many biased "Russophobes" around. What a tough life you have... :D

by: Russophobe from: One who fears or dislikes Russia
September 01, 2009 15:55
In the U.S. we have a saying:
"Believe nothing that you hear, and only half of what you see". But, in times of war, believe NOTHING.

In russia, it would seem, it would be good advice to simply believe NOTHING!

by: Prince Igor
September 02, 2009 09:58
Among people who give themselves monikers like "Russophobe," - "it would seem, it would be good advice to simply believe NOTHING!"
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