25:
131:
813:. The format was then changed to that of a single-presenter one, but the dual-presenter one was kept for special editions of the program, and was even incorporated into the newscast's 1995-99 opening sequence. Special New Year's Day openers debuted in 1998, in celebration of the program's 30th anniversary.
577:(main) edition and the one at 11:00 pm as the third or late edition or the late night replay. The All-Union Programme's daytime schedule always began with the news at around 15:00. Midnight newscasts did not appear until the 1980s, when the First Programme screened a headline update preceding the
567:
News summaries were added as the transmissions increased during the day. There was a bulletin at the end of the morning and midday programmes (i.e. around 1:00 pm), an afternoon edition at 3:00 pm, and another at 6:30 pm on the first channel. From 1989, the latter bulletin began to use
542:
around 7:30 am (later 6:30 am) after the exercise programme, before airing children's programming and schools and colleges programmes, all produced together with the USSR Ministry of
Education and were also seen on Programme 4. Later, a live morning edition was shown at 6:30 am, before
728:
In 1987 the program logo appeared for the first time in its studio. 1988 saw a big change for the newscast as its studios featured picture backdrops for the first time, and debuted a new logo, with a styled letter В in a box (this was the year of its 20th anniversary). On 19 August 1991 it showed
576:
moniker, and its corresponding studio and graphics (including the title sequence and theme music), looking as it was the program's first edition (the 6:30 am program was the morning news edition while the one at 1 pm was the midday update), with the 9:00 pm telecast as the second
714:
There has been an accident at the
Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. One of the nuclear reactors was damaged. The effects of the accident are being remedied. Assistance has been provided for any affected people. An investigative commission has been set
670:
loosened its fidelity to the party line and began presenting fair reports about the events transforming
Eastern Europe at the time. On 15 March 1989 150 million Soviet citizens watched as the station aired an 85-page speech by Gorbachev to a
416:
65:, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Knowledge (XXG).
678:
1685:
37:
526:
Starting in the mid-1970s, another 30-minute late edition was presented on the All-Union
Programme (launched in 1956) around 11:00 pm. (This was in the form of a live simulcast of
1529:
737:
461:, the last of these having been the programme's main edition ever since its inception in 1968. Given the country's vast size (it stretches over eleven time zones) editions of
504:
499:
lasts 30 minutes, but in special circumstances (more especially during the Soviet era), the broadcast is extended beyond the 30 minutes allotted when necessary (such as the
613:), which ended in 1991. Today the news on Channel One Russia follows a similar schedule to this one, with Vremya, Novosti, and the all-Russian and regional news updates.
1761:
785:, changed broadcasters from Soviet Central Television to the new Ostankino Television 1 and 4. During the network's name change to ORT-1 (Public Russian Television-1,
1716:
391:). The programme has been on the air since 1 January 1968 (there were no broadcasts from August 1991 to December 1994) and has broadcast in color since 1974.
681:
criticizing the poor state of agriculture and setting out the case for reforms, the highlights of that address being featured on that day's telecast.
492:, Uzbekistan 1, etc. The program was also simulcast in autonomous republics as well. Since the premier in 1968, Vremya has been aired via satellite.
1756:
1751:
1746:
1261:
489:
68:
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
1741:
1736:
1731:
777:", but according to the news anchors themselves it was due to CT USSR being forced to lay off a large number of their staff which were said to be
76:
595:, "The News"). From 1989, the 15:00 news round-up on the All-Union Programme and the midnight news round-up on the First Programme were known as
1726:
481:
407:
bias and typically did not report on news that could potentially fuel anti-government sentiment. The programme presented reports that promoted
1558:
1428:
692:, for example, was often relegated to lesser news items during the ongoing coverage of the disaster; in contrast, western news media such as
534:
transmission zone, occasionally a repeat of the 9:00 pm programme, especially in the
European USSR.) Prior to that, both channels aired
1766:
1432:
424:
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774:
468:
During the Soviet era, the programme's main edition was also carried simultaneously on the primary channel of each republican station:
730:
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1630:
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443:
1123:
887:
432:
404:
926:† - chief presenter until the 1980s, reporting on major events such as the Red Square ceremonies and overseas visits of the
431:
in
Eastern Europe in 1989. This also made Vremya to be shown uncensored and critical, triggering the protests that hastened
89:
Content in this edit is translated from the existing
Russian Knowledge (XXG) article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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are also broadcast (either live or deferred) at Moscow time plus two, four, six, and eight hours, according to locality.
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simultaneously at 9:00 pm, then a replay broadcast would be aired the next morning when the First
Programme
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In the 1980s, 86% of Soviet adults relied on television coverage as their primary source of news. However,
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was seen as "a joke" by many Soviet citizens due to its poor coverage of news events. The coverage of the
485:
1211:
1460:
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890:, holding a poster, made visible to millions of viewers, which stated, in a mix of Russian and English:
247:
1175:
646:. The test was then extended for another two weeks, but was not carried by all of the same stations.
520:
295:
830:
On
Sundays since the late 1980s, the programme also has a separate Sunday edition, initially called
457:
is produced in three daily editions, scheduled for transmission in Moscow at 13:00, 17:00 and 21:00
1326:
1247:
1090:
Maxim
Sharafutdinov: 2007–? (Summer releases to the Far East and Siberia + CIS and other countries)
883:
767:
428:
1348:"A protester storms a live broadcast on Russia's most-watched news show, yelling, 'Stop the war!'"
698:
led with the story for six consecutive weekdays. Following the evacuation of the nuclear workers'
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and the sessions of the Congress in Moscow, making interviews with its leadership and deputies.
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80:
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564:) on weekdays (on weekends a morning edition of Vremya aired at 8:00 am after sign-on).
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featured the Kremlin's messaging, at the same time independent news outlets were shut down.
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newscast was broadcast on 27 August 1991 and replaced with another news programme known as
1701:
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176:
858:, Sunday Time). This programme also airs a roundup of the week's news. Until its launch,
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960:
952:
817:
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523:). Even highlights of the celebrations of the Union-wide holidays were also broadcast.
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in Moscow for the first time, albeit in the new styled studios which opened in 1990.
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1631:"Marina Ovsyannikova: Fears for Russian journalist who denounced lies live on TV"
816:
On 1 January 2018 the program celebrated its 50th anniversary. Russian President
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became a "flagship propaganda outlet" of the government. Reporting during the
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telecasts together with other CPSU-led activities, plenary sessions of the
781:
agents. When the USSR dissolved in December that year, the programme, now
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In a two-week test that lasted from 12 to 23 February 1990, more than 100
423:, when a director of news was introduced alongside the news being sourced
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debuted on the then Programme One of Soviet Central Television in 1989.
417:
Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's Central Committee
130:
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sequence, usually after midnight. All of these bulletins were known as
539:
334:
87:
to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
1696:
1183:
360:
236:
207:
1575:"1991/08/28 – ТВ ИНФОРМ. 1 канал. 28 августа 1991 г. [1/4]"
809:
resumed broadcasting on 16 December 1994, in time to report on the
795:) in April 1995, and Ostankino 4's earlier 1994 reformatting into
1606:
820:
visited the studio and congratulated the staff for the occasion.
1664:
1607:"Putin lauds Vremya newcasts for providing reliable information"
1304:
469:
144:
62:
480:, Georgian Public Broadcasting, Kazakhstan-1, Channel 1 of the
1138:
Andrei Ukharev: 2018–present (Information-analytic programme "
778:
736:
Vremya covered highlights of the March 1989 elections for the
635:
18:
1680:
The U.S. Naval Academy Collection of Soviet & Russian TV
803:
brand of newscasts with the 9pm edition being the flagship.
429:
collapse of the Soviet Union's satellite communist countries
1099:
Irada Zeinalova: 2012–2016 (Information-analytic programme
1550:
Catastrophe: A Guide to World's Worst Industrial Disasters
766:) the following day. The closure was due to pressure from
898:Остановите войну, не верьте пропаганде, здесь вам врут.
1406:"Opinion: Putin's Strange New Messaging on Russian TV"
1380:"Letting state TV dominate, Russia chokes free media"
1299:
Noticiero Nacional de la Televisión Cubana (1961) –
58:
1429:
Soviet television: a new asset for Kremlin watchers
638:member stations across the United States broadcast
415:in a negative manner. The newsroom was tied to the
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773:claiming that the programme was "too tied to the
738:Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union
1461:"PBS Will Extend U.S. Airing of Soviet Newscast"
1148:: 2020–present (Information-analytic programme "
550:(which continues today on Channel One Russia as
892:
712:
359:, lit. "Time") is the main evening newscast in
1530:"GORBACHEV SETS SWEEPING AGRICULTURAL REFORMS"
1157:Similar newscasts in other socialist countries
83:accompanying your translation by providing an
49:Click for important translation instructions.
36:expand this article with text translated from
1684:Much of this article was translated from the
1056:†: 1999–2001 (Information-analytic programme
1034:†: 1996–1999 (Information-analytic programme
896:
849:
835:
799:, the newscast was integrated as part of the
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427:. This made CT USSR report accurately on the
386:
368:
8:
1109:: 2016–2018 (Information-analytic programme
631:as its signature tune and opening sequence.
1445:"Soviet news program comes to public TV".
1083:2005–2012 (Information-analytic programme
129:
118:
1478:
1476:
1474:
1404:Sheets, Lawrence Scott (March 17, 2022).
710:issued the following brief announcement:
650:Coverage during the last days of the USSR
490:Lithuanian National Radio and Television
1762:Channel One Russia original programming
1553:. Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. p. 47.
1338:
623:Between 1980 and 1984, and since 1986,
95:{{Translated|ru|Время (телепрограмма)}}
1510:
1500:
1386:. Agence France-Presse. March 10, 2022
388:Центральное телевидение СССР, ЦТ СССР
7:
1717:1964 Soviet television series debuts
1665:Первый канал. Официальный сайт. Лица
1483:New York Media, LLC (3 April 1989).
1489:. New York Media, LLC. p. 19.
792:Общественное Российское Телевидение
611:TSN:Televizionnaya sluzhba novostey
1435:Interview with Ekatherina Andreeva
862:was shown as per Monday-Saturday.
14:
1528:Dobbs, Michael (March 16, 1989).
1346:Troianovski, Anton (2022-03-14).
886:appeared behind the news anchor,
616:The majority of Russians rely on
373:, Pervy kanal) and previously on
880:2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
444:2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
314:- 27 August 1991 (Soviet Union)
23:
1757:2010s Russian television series
1752:2000s Russian television series
1747:1990s Russian television series
1587:from the original on 2021-12-14
1449:. 20 February 1990. p. 6A.
1309:Thời sự (Current Events, 1971)
1279:(Broadcast News, 新闻联播, 1978) –
1019:Alexandra Buratayeva: 1995–1999
511:, and deaths of Soviet leaders
438:In the Russian Federation era,
419:. This situation changed after
160:
1742:1980s Soviet television series
1737:1970s Soviet television series
1732:1960s Soviet television series
999:Russian Federation-era edition
654:After the introduction of the
642:. The test was coordinated by
503:state ceremonies and parades,
379:Central Television of the USSR
93:You may also add the template
1:
1727:Russian television news shows
1547:Terra Pitta (5 August 2015).
1135:Vitaly Eliseyev: 2007–present
882:, on 14 March 2022, employee
811:looming conflict in Chechenya
627:has used the theme song from
606:Телевизионная служба новостей
1700:), the famous theme tune by
1609:. TASS. TASS. 1 January 2018
1220:Panorama (Панорама, 1968) –
1063:Andrey Baturin: 2003–2005: (
1036:"VREMYA with Sergey Dorenko"
597:TSN: Television News Service
568:the two presenter format of
263:1 hour to 1 hour 30 minutes
1767:Flagship evening news shows
1233:(По света и у нас, 1960) –
1010:Tatiana Komarova: 1994–1995
433:the end of the Soviet Union
106:Knowledge (XXG):Translation
1783:
1628:Rose, David (2022-03-15).
1285:People's Republic of China
1256:Dnevnik (Дневник, 1959) –
1188:Televizní Noviny (1958) –
1077:Olga Kokorekina: 2007–2008
1074:Pyotr Marchenko: 2003–2005
1004:Igor Vykhuholev: 1994–2003
690:Chernobyl nuclear disaster
620:as a trusted news source.
509:Supreme Soviet of the USSR
403:, the programme had a pro-
316:16 December 1994
232:Ostankino Technical Center
57:Machine translation, like
1291:Korean Central Television
1022:Alexandr Panov: 1995-1996
897:
878:broadcast related to the
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38:the corresponding article
1722:Soviet television series
1007:Nelly Petkova: 1994–1996
306:1 January 1968
1686:Russian Knowledge (XXG)
844:), since 2003 known as
450:Schedule and popularity
182:Patrioticheskaya Pesnya
104:For more guidance, see
1146:Ekaterina Berezovskaya
1044:: 1998–2005, 2018–2020
905:
726:
723:, 28 April 1986, 21:00
679:CPSU Central Committee
399:In the Soviet days of
1486:Lenin Meets Letterman
1266:Revista Televizive -
1167:Deutscher Fernsehfunk
870:2022 anti-war protest
731:impending coup d'etat
425:from official outlets
77:copyright attribution
1289:Podo (Report, 보도) –
1196:(continues today on
1176:Dziennik Telewizyjny
1067:at night, literally
903:Russians against war
748:The last Soviet-era
521:Konstantin Chernenko
459:local time (= UTC+3)
291:Soviet Programme One
257:30 minutes to 1 hour
228:Production locations
1534:The Washington Post
1327:Marina Ovsyannikova
884:Marina Ovsyannikova
545:breakfast programme
505:CPSU Party Congress
1352:The New York Times
1311:Vietnam Television
1124:Ekaterina Andreeva
1118:Current presenters
913:Soviet-era edition
888:Ekaterina Andreeva
411:and portrayed the
365:Channel One Russia
324:- present (Russia)
276:Channel One Russia
272:Production company
190:Unnamed Melody by
85:interlanguage link
1688:article about it.
1560:978-93-85505-17-1
1465:Los Angeles Times
1042:Kirill Kleimyonov
856:Voskresnoe Vremya
783:Novosti Ostankino
572:, as well as the
478:Eesti Televisioon
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199:Country of origin
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1212:Magyar Televízió
1130:Mikhail Leontyev
1048:Zhanna Agalakova
974:Galina Zimenkova
942:Evgeny Kochergin
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851:Воскресное Время
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1697:Vremya, vpered!
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1163:Aktuelle Kamera
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1111:"Sunday VREMYA"
1101:"Sunday VREMYA"
1085:"Sunday VREMYA"
1026:Arina Sharapova
1001:
984:Sergey Medvedev
971:Aza Lihitchenko
966:Victor Balashov
949:Elena Kovalenko
938:Gennady Chetrov
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1132:: 1999–present
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1126:: 1997–present
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1107:Valery Fadeyev
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1094:Dmitry Borisov
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629:Time, Forward!
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34:You can help
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1649:. Retrieved
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1611:. Retrieved
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1589:. Retrieved
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1413:. Retrieved
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1363:. Retrieved
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1204:only, 1994-)
1171:East Germany
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1069:"Night time"
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530:in the next
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370:Первый канал
363:, airing on
347:
346:
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254:Running time
248:Multi-camera
244:Camera setup
203:Soviet Union
188:(1984–1986),
158:
155:Presented by
122:
81:edit summary
72:
45:(April 2023)
43:
35:
1591:30 December
1511:|work=
1295:North Korea
1200:within the
1096:: 2011–2017
1060:, Saturday)
1050:: 1998–2007
1028:: 1996–1998
1016:: 1995–1999
988:Leonid Elin
801:Novosti ITA
700:closed city
663:perestroika
561:Доброе утро
296:Channel One
293:(1968-1991)
205:(1968–1991)
194:(1970–1979)
1711:Categories
1651:2022-03-15
1415:2022-04-07
1390:2022-04-07
1365:2022-04-01
1333:References
1301:Cubavision
1262:Yugoslavia
1244:Telejurnal
1014:Igor Gmyza
908:Presenters
842:Sem' d'nei
832:Seven Days
744:Transition
501:Red Square
405:government
381:(CT USSR,
367:(Russian:
320:1994-12-16
310:1968-01-01
223:Production
161:Presenters
40:in Russian
1646:0140-0460
1637:The Times
1513:ignored (
1503:cite book
1495:0028-7369
1384:France 24
1360:0362-4331
1246:(1966) –
1210:(1957) –
1178:(1958) –
1165:(1952) –
837:Семь дней
763:ТВ-Информ
754:TV-Inform
579:closedown
548:120 minut
540:signed on
497:broadcast
474:Belarus 1
409:socialism
260:(general)
99:talk page
1585:Archived
1433:7days.ru
1410:Politico
1321:See also
1239:Bulgaria
1226:Bulgaria
1065:"VREMYA"
1058:"VREMYA"
718:—
657:glasnost
421:Glasnost
239:, Russia
75:provide
1613:14 July
1580:YouTube
1431:p. 48;
1315:Vietnam
1272:Albania
1252:Romania
1216:Hungary
1198:TV Nova
787:Russian
704:Pripyat
677:of the
644:WGBH-TV
603:: TCH:
601:Russian
592:Новости
587:Russian
583:Novosti
556:Russian
383:Russian
377:of the
353:Russian
335:RT News
329:Related
318: (
308: (
303:Release
287:Network
218:Russian
97:to the
79:in the
42:.
1644:
1557:
1493:
1358:
1208:Híradó
1184:Poland
894:No War
876:Vremya
860:Vremya
807:Vremya
750:Vremya
721:Vremya
708:Vremya
686:Vremya
674:plenum
668:Vremya
640:Vremya
625:Vremya
618:Vremya
574:Vremya
570:Vremya
536:Vremya
532:Orbita
528:Vremya
463:Vremya
455:Vremya
440:Vremya
401:Vremya
361:Russia
357:Вре́мя
348:Vremya
237:Moscow
208:Russia
123:Vremya
339:Vesti
163:below
141:Genre
59:DeepL
1642:ISSN
1615:2018
1593:2014
1555:ISBN
1515:help
1491:ISSN
1356:ISSN
1305:Cuba
1281:CCTV
1268:RTSH
775:CPSU
660:and
543:the
519:and
495:The
486:LTV1
470:AzTV
413:West
159:See
145:News
73:must
71:You
1258:JRT
1248:TVR
1235:BNT
1222:BNT
1190:ČST
1180:TVP
797:NTV
779:KGB
715:up.
702:of
636:PBS
184:by
175:by
61:or
1713::
1640:.
1634:.
1583:.
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1532:.
1507::
1505:}}
1501:{{
1473:^
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1224:–
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1192:–
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789::
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758:ru
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980:†
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