Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 19 – For years it
has been a commonplace that the Kremlin uses television to promote its vision
of Russia with a mass audience even as the more educated strata of the
population turn to the Internet to get alternative and often more accurate
accounts of what is going on.
That is still true, Mikhail Asketov
observes in an article on the “Osobaya bukhva” portal yesterday, but the large television
audience is changing as well, costing the government’s First Channel its long-time
lead in viewers and leading to the rise of NTV which gives a simulacrum of
accurate information (www.specletter.com/obcshestvo/2012-12-18/chrevo-vecshanie.html
According to Asketov, Russia’s
television viewers increasingly at least some of the time want more “serious”
and less obviously massaged information. As a result, NTV now has passed First
Channel and the two are barely ahead of Russia-1, with 13.9 percent, 13.7
percent and 13.6 percent respectively.
Of course, the commentator
continues, no one would confuse programming on NTV with the even more serious
journalism offered on some websites, “but in our country live millions of
people who are not able to use the Internet as a media source and who do not
listen to opposition FM radio stations.”
The First Channel maintained its
lead for a long time relying on “the sympathies of the most archaic strata of
the population” and providing programming which “corresponds to their taste and
intellectual requirements.” That is what it is still doing, but it is losing
audience shar because the Russian television audience is increasingly
variegated.
One can say, Asketov says, that “if
the First Channel along with Russia-1 is the lower paleolithic, then the middle
and the upper [paleolithic stratas] are served by NTV and programs of its
spirit found on certain other channels.”
And those middle and upper stratas are increasing in number just as the
Internet audience in Russia is expanding.
And that “upper” stratum, “the more
intellectual one,” Asketov continues, “is becoming somewhat higher in
comparison with the lower paleolithic audience which does not even pretend to
any intellectual interest.” Such people want “to hear wise words and answers to
serious questions” and to be able to say that they only watch “serious
broadcasts.”
In fact, NTV does not provide the
highest level of programming and is much degraded even from what its broadcasts
were doing in the 1990s. But because it like the other stations is interested
in attracting an audience, it is at least providing something that the
government’s First Channel does not.
Asketov says that no one should make
too much of these distinctions within the television audience at least for the
time being, but they are an indication that all Russian television viewers are
not all the same, that they are changing just as the country is, and that the
regime cannot rely on its TV station to generate support for itself by offering
its propaganda.
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