Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 16 – While Muscovites
still overwhelmingly rely on television for their daily news, residents of the
Russian capital now turn to social networks and the Internet more generally
more often than they do to radio, a change that is likely to change political
and social views there and prompt the Kremlin to intervene more actively in
such channels.
Even more intriguing than this shift
in Moscow, the Levada Center reported, has been an analogous one outside the ring
road. There, the pollsters reported last
week, most people still rely on television but rely on social networks and the
internet almost as much as they do on radio and associates (tatar-centr.blogspot.com/2013/07/blog-post_1959.html).
The figures for Moscow are
especially striking. Eighty-five percent of the 1000-person sample said that
they relied on television for news, 29 percent said they used newspapers and
magazines, 27 percent Internet publications, 24 percent friends and associates,
22 percent on social networks, and 20 percent on radio broadcasts (levada.ru/15-07-2013/istochniki-informatsii-moskvichei).
Respondents were allowed to give
more than one answer. Among Muscovites
over 50, a slightly higher percentage listed television as their source for
news. Among students and youth as a whole, far higher percentages listed social
networks, 55 percent for students and 42 percent among those under 24.
Those slightly older also turned to
the Internet and social networks, with 37 percent of those aged 25 to 39 saying
they used the Internet for news and 35 percent saying they relied on social
networks. More than half of all Muscovites
and 44 percent of all Russians said they used the Internet daily or “almost
daily.”
Ninety-three percent of the students
and 60 percent of those with higher education used the Internet every day,
while 63 percent of pensioners in the country as a whole never used it. But, the Levada Center reported, “18 percent
of Muscovite pensioners use the Internet on a daily basis.”
Asked which social network they use,
39 percent of Muscovites said they use “Vkontakte,” compared to 27 percent of
all Russians. Thirty-one percent of residents of the capital use “Odnoklassniki,”
but 35 percent of all Russians do.
Especially important, nearly one Muscovite in five – 19 percent – use
Facebook.
Russian
officials and especially the heads of federal subjects are making use of social
networks. This week, Medialogia rated the governors on the basis of citations
to their blogs. Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov and Daghestan’s Ramazan Abdulatipov
led the list, far outdistancing all others (www.mlg.ru/company/pr/2538/).
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