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Television in the Soviet Union

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.[1]

Soviet television production was classified into central (Soviet Central Television), republican, and regional broadcasting.

History edit

In 1938, television broadcasting began in Moscow and Leningrad under the auspices of the All-Union Committee for Radiofication and Radio Broadcasting at the USSR Sovnarkom (Всесоюзный комитет по радиофикации и радиовещанию при СНК СССР).[2]

On 1 October 1934, Russia's first television receivers were produced. The B-2 had a 3×4-centimetre (1¼×1½-inch) screen[3] and a mechanical raster scan in 30 lines at 12.5 frames per second. On 15 November 1934, Moscow had its first television broadcast, of a concert. On 15 October 1935, the first broadcast of a film was made.

On 9 March 1938, a first experimental studio television program was broadcast, from Shabolovka tower, in Moscow. Three weeks later, the first full film, The Great Citizen (Великий гражданин), was broadcast. On 7 June 1938, a television broadcast was tried in Leningrad.[citation needed]

World War II disrupted regular television broadcasting; it was re-instated in Moscow on 15 December 1945. On 4 November 1948, the Moscow television centre began broadcasting in a 625-line standard. On 29 June 1949, the first out-of-studio broadcast, of a football match, was made, from the Dynamo sports stadium. On 24 August 1950, a long-range broadcast was made from Moscow to Ryazan.[citation needed]

In time for the golden jubilee year of the October Revolution, 1967, SECAM color broadcasts debuted in both Moscow and Leningrad on their local TV channels. By 1973, the Soviet television service had grown into six full national channels, plus republican and regional stations serving all republics and minority communities.[citation needed]

Distance and geography edit

The size and geography of the Soviet Union made television broadcasting difficult. These factors included mountains, such as the Urals, the Taiga, and the Steppes, and the spanning of eleven time zones. For instance, a program broadcast at 18:00 in Moscow came at 21:00 in Frunze, Kirghizia. The population density was irregular, with many more residents in the west. The Soviet Union also relayed broadcasts to other Warsaw Pact states.[4]

Soviet television standard edit

The Soviet broadcast television standard used CCIR System D (OIRT VHF band with the "R" channels ranging from R1 to R12) and System K (pan-European/African UHF band), with SECAM as the color system standard. The resulting system is commonly referred to as "SECAM D/K".[citation needed]

Soviet television channels edit

There were six television channels (called "programmes") in the Soviet Union. "Programme One" was the main channel, with time-slots for regional programming (see "Regional television services", below). The other channels were Programme Two (also known as the All Union Programme), the Moscow Programme (the third channel), the Fourth Programme (the fourth channel), the Fifth programme (broadcast from Leningrad), and the Sixth Programme (sports, science, and technology).[citation needed]

Not all channels were available across all the Soviet Union. Until perestroika and the establishment of the Gorizont satellite network, many regions received just the First Programme and the All Union Programme. The satellite network brought all six channels to the entire Soviet Union. The new channels offered urban news and entertainment (Channel 3); culture, documentaries, and programmes for the Intelligentsia (Channel 4); information and entertainment from the point of view of another city (Channel 5); and scientific and technological content (Channel 6).[citation needed]

Regional television services edit

In addition to the national television channels, each of the Republics of the Soviet Union (RSS) and Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics of the Soviet Union (ARSS) had its own state radio and television company or state broadcasting committees. The regional company or committee was able to broadcast regional programming in Russian or the local language alongside the official First Programme schedule and was also able to broadcast additional channels for their coverage area only. Alongside them were a number of city television stations that served as retransmitters of national programming with local opt-outs for news and current affairs.[citation needed]

Soviet satellite services edit

The Soviet Union's domestic satellite television system, Orbita, was as large as Canada's Anik and the United States' satellite system.[citation needed]

In 1990, there were 90 Orbita satellites, supplying programming to 900 main transmitters and over 4,000 relay stations. The best-known Soviet satellites were the Molniya (or "Lightning") satellites. Other satellite groups were the Gorizont ("Horizon"), Ekran ("Screen"), and Statsionar ("Stationary") satellites. People outside the Soviet Union who used a TVRO satellite television could receive Soviet broadcasts.[citation needed]

Broadcasts were time-shifted for the Soviet Union's many time zones. The national television channels were only on the air for part of the day, giving room in the schedule to time-shift. There were two types of Soviet time-shifting, one based on a similar radio programme, and "Double" programs, which was composite time-shifting for the different time zones.[citation needed]

Only the First Programme was time-shifted on the pattern of a similar radio programme, the All-Union First Programme from Soviet radio. TV Orbita-1 was broadcast in the UTC +11, +12, and +13 time zones. TV Orbita-2 was broadcast in the UTC +9 and +10 time zones; TV Orbita-3 in the UTC +7 and +8 time zones; TV Orbita-4 in UTC +5 and +6; and the First Programme in time zones UTC +2, +3, and +4.[citation needed]

All other national television channels (the All-Union, Moscow, Fourth, and Leningrad programmes) used the "double" programme composite time-shifting.[citation needed]

Programming edit

Soviet TV programming was diverse and similar to that of American PBS. It included news programmes, educational programmes, documentaries, occasional movies, and children's programmes. Major sports events such as football and ice hockey matches were often broadcast live. Programming was domestic or made in Warsaw Pact countries.[citation needed]

The broadcasts had relatively high levels of self-censorship. Prohibited topics included criticism against the status and implementation of Soviet ideology, all aspects of erotica and nudity, graphic portrayal of violence, coarse language, and illicit drug use.[citation needed]

The leading news programmes used presenters with exemplary diction and excellent knowledge of the Russian language. Sergey Georgyevich Lapin, chairman of the USSR State Committee for Television and Radio (1970 to 1985) made a number of rules. Male presenters could not have beards and had to wear a tie and jacket. Women were not allowed to wear pants. Lapin banned a broadcast of a close up of Alla Pugacheva singing into the microphone, as he considered it reminiscent of oral sex. Lapin and his committee were accused of antisemitism in the television programming.[citation needed]

Despite these limitations, television grew in popularity. The average daily volume of broadcasting grew from 1673 hours in 1971 to 3,700 hours in 1985. A new television and radio complex, the "PTRC" was built for the 1980 Moscow Olympics. The Ostankino Technical Center in Moscow was one of the largest in the world at that time.[citation needed]

In the late 1980s, the nature of programming began to change. Some Western programs, mostly from the United Kingdom and Latin America, were imported. Talk shows and game shows were introduced, often copied from their western counterparts. For example, the game show, Pole Chudes (The Field of Miracles) based on Wheel of Fortune. Free speech regulations were gradually eased.[citation needed]

Until the late 1980s, Soviet television had no advertisements. Even then, they were rare, because few companies could produce advertisements about themselves.[citation needed]

The Soviet Union's television news was provided by the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union (TASS).[citation needed]

Made-for-TV movies edit

At the beginning of the 1960s, television in the USSR expanded rapidly. The increase in the number of channels and the duration of daily broadcasts created a shortage of suitable content. This led to production of television films, in particular of multiple-episode television films (Russian: многосерийный телевизионный фильм)—the official Soviet moniker for miniseries.[5] Despite that the Soviet Union started broadcasting in color in 1967, color TV sets did not become widespread until the end of the 1980s. This justified shooting made-for-TV movies on black-and-white film.

The 1965 four-episode Calling for fire, danger close[6] is considered the first Soviet miniseries. It is a period drama set in the Second World War that depicts Soviet guerrilla fighters infiltrating German compound and directing the fire of the regular Soviet Army to destroy the German airfield. During the 1970s, the straightforward fervor gave way to a more nuanced interplay of patriotism, family and everyday life wrapped into traditional genres of crime drama, spy show or thriller. One of the most popular Soviet miniseries—Seventeen Moments of Spring[7] about a Soviet spy operating in Nazi Germany—was shot in 1972. This 12-episode miniseries incorporated features of political thriller and docudrama and included excerpts from period newsreels. Originally produced in black-and-white in 4:3 aspect ratio, it was colorized and re-formatted for wide-screen TVs in 2009.

Other popular miniseries of the Soviet era include The Shadows Disappear at Noon[8] (1971, 7 episodes) about the fate of several generations of locals from a Siberian village, The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed (1979, 5 episodes) about the fight against criminals in the immediate post-war period, and TASS Is Authorized to Declare... (1984, 10 episodes) about the tug-of-war of Soviet and American intelligence agencies.

Numerous miniseries were produced for children in the 1970s-1980s. Among them are: The Adventures of Buratino (1976, 2 episodes)—an adaptation of The Golden Key, or the Adventures of Buratino by Alexey Tolstoy, which in turn is a retelling of The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi; The Two Captains[9] (1976, 6 episodes)—an adaptation of The Two Captains by Veniamin Kaverin about a search for a lost Arctic expedition and the discovery of Severnaya Zemlya; The Adventures of Elektronic (1979, 3 episodes) about a humanoid robot meeting and befriending his prototype—a 6th grade schoolboy; Guest from the Future (1985, 5 episodes) about a boy and a girl travelling in time and fighting intergalactic criminals. In each of these, CTV-USSR co-produced them with the Gorky Film Studio.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ О РЕСПУБЛИКАНСКИХ МИНИСТЕРСТВАХ И ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫХ КОМИТЕТАХ РСФСР. Закон. Верховный Совет РСФСР. 14.07.90 101-1 :: Инновации и предпринимательство: гранты, технологии, патенты In Russian.
  2. ^ Указ Президента РСФСР от 28.11.1991 № 242 «О реорганизации центральных органов государственного управления РСФСР» In Russian.
  3. ^ "Why was it so dangerous to watch Soviet TV sets?". www.rbth.com.
  4. ^ ОБ УТВЕРЖДЕНИИ ПОЛОЖЕНИЯ О МИНИСТЕРСТВЕ ПЕЧАТИ И ИНФОРМАЦИИ РОССИЙСКОЙ ФЕДЕРАЦИИ. Постановление Правительства РФ от 18.05.93 № 473 in Russian.
  5. ^ "Television film in the USSR (in Russian)". russiancinema.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  6. ^ "Vyzyvaem ogon na sebya (Calling for fire, danger close)". imdb.com. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  7. ^ "Seventeen Moments of Spring". imdb.com. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  8. ^ "Teni ischezayut v polden (The Shadows Disappear at Noon)". imdb.com. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  9. ^ "Dva kapitana (The Two Captains)". imdb.com. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  • 1990 edition of the WRTH (World Radio and Television Handbook)

External links edit

  • CCCP TV: the Soviet TV portal
  • (in English) Library of Congress—The U.S. Naval Academy Collection of Soviet & Russian TV
  • (in Russian) Russian Museum of Radio and TV website
  • The U.S. Naval Academy Collection of Soviet & Russian TV
  • Nu Pogodi, the Soviet equivalent of Road Runner/Coyote, or Tom and Jerry.
  • (in English) Television of Perestroika

television, soviet, union, owned, controlled, censored, state, body, governing, television, soviet, union, gosteleradio, committee, which, responsible, both, soviet, central, television, union, radio, soviet, television, production, classified, into, central, . 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 1 Soviet television production was classified into central Soviet Central Television republican and regional broadcasting Contents 1 History 2 Distance and geography 3 Soviet television standard 4 Soviet television channels 5 Regional television services 6 Soviet satellite services 7 Programming 7 1 Made for TV movies 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editIn 1938 television broadcasting began in Moscow and Leningrad under the auspices of the All Union Committee for Radiofication and Radio Broadcasting at the USSR Sovnarkom Vsesoyuznyj komitet po radiofikacii i radioveshaniyu pri SNK SSSR 2 On 1 October 1934 Russia s first television receivers were produced The B 2 had a 3 4 centimetre 1 1 inch screen 3 and a mechanical raster scan in 30 lines at 12 5 frames per second On 15 November 1934 Moscow had its first television broadcast of a concert On 15 October 1935 the first broadcast of a film was made On 9 March 1938 a first experimental studio television program was broadcast from Shabolovka tower in Moscow Three weeks later the first full film The Great Citizen Velikij grazhdanin was broadcast On 7 June 1938 a television broadcast was tried in Leningrad citation needed World War II disrupted regular television broadcasting it was re instated in Moscow on 15 December 1945 On 4 November 1948 the Moscow television centre began broadcasting in a 625 line standard On 29 June 1949 the first out of studio broadcast of a football match was made from the Dynamo sports stadium On 24 August 1950 a long range broadcast was made from Moscow to Ryazan citation needed In time for the golden jubilee year of the October Revolution 1967 SECAM color broadcasts debuted in both Moscow and Leningrad on their local TV channels By 1973 the Soviet television service had grown into six full national channels plus republican and regional stations serving all republics and minority communities citation needed Distance and geography editThe size and geography of the Soviet Union made television broadcasting difficult These factors included mountains such as the Urals the Taiga and the Steppes and the spanning of eleven time zones For instance a program broadcast at 18 00 in Moscow came at 21 00 in Frunze Kirghizia The population density was irregular with many more residents in the west The Soviet Union also relayed broadcasts to other Warsaw Pact states 4 Soviet television standard editThe Soviet broadcast television standard used CCIR System D OIRT VHF band with the R channels ranging from R1 to R12 and System K pan European African UHF band with SECAM as the color system standard The resulting system is commonly referred to as SECAM D K citation needed Soviet television channels editThere were six television channels called programmes in the Soviet Union Programme One was the main channel with time slots for regional programming see Regional television services below The other channels were Programme Two also known as the All Union Programme the Moscow Programme the third channel the Fourth Programme the fourth channel the Fifth programme broadcast from Leningrad and the Sixth Programme sports science and technology citation needed Not all channels were available across all the Soviet Union Until perestroika and the establishment of the Gorizont satellite network many regions received just the First Programme and the All Union Programme The satellite network brought all six channels to the entire Soviet Union The new channels offered urban news and entertainment Channel 3 culture documentaries and programmes for the Intelligentsia Channel 4 information and entertainment from the point of view of another city Channel 5 and scientific and technological content Channel 6 citation needed Regional television services editIn addition to the national television channels each of the Republics of the Soviet Union RSS and Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics of the Soviet Union ARSS had its own state radio and television company or state broadcasting committees The regional company or committee was able to broadcast regional programming in Russian or the local language alongside the official First Programme schedule and was also able to broadcast additional channels for their coverage area only Alongside them were a number of city television stations that served as retransmitters of national programming with local opt outs for news and current affairs citation needed Soviet satellite services editThe Soviet Union s domestic satellite television system Orbita was as large as Canada s Anik and the United States satellite system citation needed In 1990 there were 90 Orbita satellites supplying programming to 900 main transmitters and over 4 000 relay stations The best known Soviet satellites were the Molniya or Lightning satellites Other satellite groups were the Gorizont Horizon Ekran Screen and Statsionar Stationary satellites People outside the Soviet Union who used a TVRO satellite television could receive Soviet broadcasts citation needed Broadcasts were time shifted for the Soviet Union s many time zones The national television channels were only on the air for part of the day giving room in the schedule to time shift There were two types of Soviet time shifting one based on a similar radio programme and Double programs which was composite time shifting for the different time zones citation needed Only the First Programme was time shifted on the pattern of a similar radio programme the All Union First Programme from Soviet radio TV Orbita 1 was broadcast in the UTC 11 12 and 13 time zones TV Orbita 2 was broadcast in the UTC 9 and 10 time zones TV Orbita 3 in the UTC 7 and 8 time zones TV Orbita 4 in UTC 5 and 6 and the First Programme in time zones UTC 2 3 and 4 citation needed All other national television channels the All Union Moscow Fourth and Leningrad programmes used the double programme composite time shifting citation needed Programming editSoviet TV programming was diverse and similar to that of American PBS It included news programmes educational programmes documentaries occasional movies and children s programmes Major sports events such as football and ice hockey matches were often broadcast live Programming was domestic or made in Warsaw Pact countries citation needed The broadcasts had relatively high levels of self censorship Prohibited topics included criticism against the status and implementation of Soviet ideology all aspects of erotica and nudity graphic portrayal of violence coarse language and illicit drug use citation needed The leading news programmes used presenters with exemplary diction and excellent knowledge of the Russian language Sergey Georgyevich Lapin chairman of the USSR State Committee for Television and Radio 1970 to 1985 made a number of rules Male presenters could not have beards and had to wear a tie and jacket Women were not allowed to wear pants Lapin banned a broadcast of a close up of Alla Pugacheva singing into the microphone as he considered it reminiscent of oral sex Lapin and his committee were accused of antisemitism in the television programming citation needed Despite these limitations television grew in popularity The average daily volume of broadcasting grew from 1673 hours in 1971 to 3 700 hours in 1985 A new television and radio complex the PTRC was built for the 1980 Moscow Olympics The Ostankino Technical Center in Moscow was one of the largest in the world at that time citation needed In the late 1980s the nature of programming began to change Some Western programs mostly from the United Kingdom and Latin America were imported Talk shows and game shows were introduced often copied from their western counterparts For example the game show Pole Chudes The Field of Miracles based on Wheel of Fortune Free speech regulations were gradually eased citation needed Until the late 1980s Soviet television had no advertisements Even then they were rare because few companies could produce advertisements about themselves citation needed The Soviet Union s television news was provided by the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union TASS citation needed Made for TV movies edit At the beginning of the 1960s television in the USSR expanded rapidly The increase in the number of channels and the duration of daily broadcasts created a shortage of suitable content This led to production of television films in particular of multiple episode television films Russian mnogoserijnyj televizionnyj film the official Soviet moniker for miniseries 5 Despite that the Soviet Union started broadcasting in color in 1967 color TV sets did not become widespread until the end of the 1980s This justified shooting made for TV movies on black and white film The 1965 four episode Calling for fire danger close 6 is considered the first Soviet miniseries It is a period drama set in the Second World War that depicts Soviet guerrilla fighters infiltrating German compound and directing the fire of the regular Soviet Army to destroy the German airfield During the 1970s the straightforward fervor gave way to a more nuanced interplay of patriotism family and everyday life wrapped into traditional genres of crime drama spy show or thriller One of the most popular Soviet miniseries Seventeen Moments of Spring 7 about a Soviet spy operating in Nazi Germany was shot in 1972 This 12 episode miniseries incorporated features of political thriller and docudrama and included excerpts from period newsreels Originally produced in black and white in 4 3 aspect ratio it was colorized and re formatted for wide screen TVs in 2009 Other popular miniseries of the Soviet era include The Shadows Disappear at Noon 8 1971 7 episodes about the fate of several generations of locals from a Siberian village The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed 1979 5 episodes about the fight against criminals in the immediate post war period and TASS Is Authorized to Declare 1984 10 episodes about the tug of war of Soviet and American intelligence agencies Numerous miniseries were produced for children in the 1970s 1980s Among them are The Adventures of Buratino 1976 2 episodes an adaptation of The Golden Key or the Adventures of Buratino by Alexey Tolstoy which in turn is a retelling of The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi The Two Captains 9 1976 6 episodes an adaptation of The Two Captains by Veniamin Kaverin about a search for a lost Arctic expedition and the discovery of Severnaya Zemlya The Adventures of Elektronic 1979 3 episodes about a humanoid robot meeting and befriending his prototype a 6th grade schoolboy Guest from the Future 1985 5 episodes about a boy and a girl travelling in time and fighting intergalactic criminals In each of these CTV USSR co produced them with the Gorky Film Studio citation needed See also editCensorship in the Soviet Union Propaganda in the Soviet Union Soviet Central Television Media of the Soviet UnionReferences edit O RESPUBLIKANSKIH MINISTERSTVAH I GOSUDARSTVENNYH KOMITETAH RSFSR Zakon Verhovnyj Sovet RSFSR 14 07 90 101 1 Innovacii i predprinimatelstvo granty tehnologii patenty In Russian Ukaz Prezidenta RSFSR ot 28 11 1991 242 O reorganizacii centralnyh organov gosudarstvennogo upravleniya RSFSR In Russian Why was it so dangerous to watch Soviet TV sets www rbth com OB UTVERZhDENII POLOZhENIYa O MINISTERSTVE PEChATI I INFORMACII ROSSIJSKOJ FEDERACII Postanovlenie Pravitelstva RF ot 18 05 93 473 in Russian Television film in the USSR in Russian russiancinema ru in Russian Retrieved 2017 09 22 Vyzyvaem ogon na sebya Calling for fire danger close imdb com Retrieved 2017 09 22 Seventeen Moments of Spring imdb com Retrieved 2017 09 22 Teni ischezayut v polden The Shadows Disappear at Noon imdb com Retrieved 2017 09 22 Dva kapitana The Two Captains imdb com Retrieved 2017 09 22 1990 edition of the WRTH World Radio and Television Handbook External links editCCCP TV the Soviet TV portal in English Library of Congress The U S Naval Academy Collection of Soviet amp Russian TV in Russian Russian Museum of Radio and TV website The U S Naval Academy Collection of Soviet amp Russian TV Nu Pogodi the Soviet equivalent of Road Runner Coyote or Tom and Jerry in English Television of Perestroika Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Television in the Soviet Union amp oldid 1182232058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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