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  1. Upon the total dissolution of the country on 26 December 1991, Soviet Central Television (by now part of the All-Union State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company due to a 8 February 1991 reform) ceased to be the state broadcaster of the former USSR.

  2. Television in the Soviet Union was owned, controlled and censored by the state. The body governing television in the era of the Soviet Union was the Gosteleradio committee, which was responsible for both the Soviet Central Television and the All-Union Radio.

  3. Aug 23, 2016 · This book—the first full-length study of Soviet Central Television to draw extensively on archival sources, interviews, and television recordings—challenges the idea that mass culture in the Soviet Union during the Brezhnev era was dull and formulaic.

  4. The Central Television of the USSR ( Russian: Центральное телевидение СССР, romanized: Tsentral'noye televideniye SSSR; abbr. CT USSR [ Russian: ЦТ СССР, romanized: TsT SSSR]) was the state television broadcaster of the Soviet Union.

  5. In order to respond to foreign radio broadcasting and offer an appealing Soviet alternative to the Western popular culture that was penetrating Soviet borders, the Communist Party leadership encouraged Central Television's staff to seek new styles and genres of television broadcasting.

  6. Feb 26, 2018 · The associate professor of history explains how TV programming progressed from the relative freedom of post-Stalinism, through the repressive Brezhnev era and into the dawn of Gorbachev’s perestroika. Along the way, Soviet TV sought new ways to legitimize authority even in the absence of a coherent ideology or political role for ...

  7. Dec 27, 2018 · Christine Evans's book, Between Truth and Time: A History of Soviet Central Television, is a formidable contribution to the emerging scholarship on the history of television under Soviet socialism....