Echo of Moscow
Broadcast area |
Russia Chicago Bishkek |
---|---|
First air date | 22 August 1990 |
Owner | Gazprom Media |
Website | http://echo.msk.ru |
Echo of Moscow (Russian: Э́хо Москвы́, Ekho Moskvy) is a Russian radio station based in Moscow, broadcasting in many Russian cities, in some of the former-Soviet republics (through partnerships with local radio stations), and via the Internet, which some observers describe as "the last bastion of free media in Russia".[1] Most of the content consists of news and talk shows focusing on social and political issues and the station tries to represent different points of view. The current senior editor is Alexey Venediktov. Among radio hosts of the station are Victor Shenderovich, Yulia Latynina, Yevgenia Albats, Vladimir Kara-Murza, Vladimir Ryzhkov, Maria Gaidar, Yevgeny Yasin and Sophie Shevardnadze.
In addition to broadcasting Echo of Moscow is running a website that publishes analytical and factual materials in a variety of fields including international and domestic political affairs, social developments and cultural trends. The articles are written by members of the so-called Echo of Moscow Club, an honorary group of political analysts, academic researchers, columnists and public figures. Among the site's authors are Boris Akunin, Dmitrii Bykov, Matvey Ganapolsky, Eduard Limonov, Alexey Navalny, Valeriya Novodvorskaya, Victor Shenderovich, and a number of other experts, who have sustained national and international acclaim in their areas of expertise. The Echo of Moscow site is an authoritative source of information, and its publications are regularly cited, relied on and reproduced by major Russian internet publications and other media sources. The internet streaming appears to have ceased 23/07/13. Online broadcasting in Russian heard on 29/12/13.
Shareholders structure
- Gazprom Media 66%
- Journalist staff 34%
(Information correct as of 2005.)
Frequencies
- Abakan - 71.06, 104.2 FM
- Barnaul - 69.11 FM
- Chelyabinsk - 70.70, 99.5 FM
- Chicago - 1330 AM
- Ekaterinburg - 67.46, 91.4 FM
- Zelenogorsk - 71.06 FM
- Izhevsk - 105.3 FM
- Irkutsk - 69.5 FM
- Kazan - 105.8 FM
- Krasnoyarsk - 106.6 FM
- Makhachkala - 105.2 FM
- Mirny - 102,4
- Moscow - 91.2 FM
- Nizhnevartovsk - 107.0 FM
- Nizhny Novgorod - 107.4 FM
- Orenburg - 101.3 FM
- Omsk - 70.55, 105.0 FM
- Perm - 91.2 FM
- Rostov-na-Donu - 69.44 FM
- Samara - 99.1 FM
- Saint Petersburg - 91.5 FM
- Saratov, Engels - 105.8 FM
- Tolyatti - 107.9 FM
- Tomsk - 105.0 FM
- Tyumen - 72.44 FM
- Tver - 107,2 FM
- Ufa - 91.1 FM
- Ukhta - 105.0 FM
- Yaroslavl - 106.5 FM
- Vladikavkaz, Beslan - 102.8 FM
- Vologda - 105.7 FM
Critics and controversy
Numerous chief editor replies point out that Gazprom and/or other stock-holders did not interfere with informational policy and were not allowed to.[2][3]
Gallery
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Old studio
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Old studio
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New television studio of Echo of Moscow and RTVi
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New television studio of Echo of Moscow and RTVi
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John Beyrle on Echo of Moscow
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Alexey Venediktov interviews Mikhail Gorbachev in station’s television studio
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Echo of Moscow. |
References
- ↑ "Magazine Roundup". signandsight.com. 2008-09-16. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
- ↑ Juferova, Yadviga (2008-02-20). "Свобода эха. Останется ли после 2 марта Алексей Венедиктов главным редактором "Эха Москвы"?" (in Russian). Rossiyskaya Gazeta. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
- ↑ Alexey Venediktov (2008-03-03). "Без посредников" (Podcast). Echo of Moscow. http://echo.msk.ru/att/element-498778-snd1-22_1.mp3. Retrieved 2009-06-13.
External links
- Shoutcast Live Stream
- Frequencies List (Russian)
- David Remnick. Echo in the Dark: A radio station strives to keep the airwaves free. - The New Yorker. September 22, 2008
Coordinates: 55°45′8.19″N 37°35′46.72″E / 55.7522750°N 37.5963111°E