Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 21 – Despite increasing
use of the Internet, Moscow television has “a practically unlimited monopoly on
the formation of the social-political agenda” for Russians, according to a “Novaya
gazeta” commentary on the findings of the latest investigation of media use by
the independent Levada Center.
Many commentators have suggested or
perhaps more accurately expressed the hope that rising rates of Internet use
among Russians would break television’s dominance, but that is not the case
generally and, what is more important, is not the case during times of crises
in which their country is involved, Diana Khachatryan says (novayagazeta.ru/politics/64088.html).
The
“Novaya gazeta” journalist summarizes the report on “The Russian Media
Landscape” prepared by sociologists Denis Volkov and Stepan Goncharov that was
released earlier in the week on the basis of surveys conducted between 2009 and
2014 (levada.ru/17-06-2014/rossiiskii-media-landshaft-televidenie-pressa-internet).
The
Levada report demonstrated, Khachatryan says, that “the Internet as a source of
information cannot replace traditional media,” even in the Russian capital
where Internet use is the highest.
Instead, 90 percent of Russians rely on television for news, with only
24 percent using the Internet, and 19 percent relying on newspapers.
Volkov
and Goncharov say that their surveys show that “in Russia almost everyone
regardless of social status, level of education or place of residence watches
television.” In fact, they reported, a higher percentage of Muscovites watch TV
than do people in other regions, and a higher share of them – 65 percent
against 50 percent – trust what is said on television.
And
Russian views turn overwhelmingly to the First Channel (8 percent), Russia-1
(71 percent), and NTV (48 percent) rather than to the independent Dozhd, which
only two percent of all citizens and only three percent of Muscovites watch
regularly.
Another
important finding from the Levada study, Khachatryan says, is that despite
having access via the Internet to multiple sources of news, few Russians make
comparisons. Half rely exclusively on
one source, a fifth on two, 17 percent on three, and only 12 percent use three or
more at any one time.
Among
those who use only one source, television predominates with 85 percent of such people
saying they rely on it. Only five
percent – or one in 20 – say they use the Internet exclusively. But those using multiple sources, the
sociologists found, were no more critical than those who used only one.
Still
worse for those who have put their faith in the Internet, the Levada Center
scholars say, are the following two realities. On the one hand, a large share
of those using the Internet does not turn to it for news. And on the other, their numbers are boosted
only by aggregator sites which are themselves highly selective and not
necessarily objective either.
During the current crisis in
Ukraine, 70 percent of Russians say that federal media, that is, television,
are treating the events there objectively.
One reason for that, the Levada experts suggest, is that television
works like propaganda: the longer people are exposed, the more likely they are
to accept it as true.
Appended to Khachatryan’s article
are two comments by experts. Andry
Vyrkovsky, a specialist on journalist at Moscow State University, says that the
Internet will only become predominant as a result of generational change and a
shift away from the current pattern of declining Internet use as people get
older.
And sociologist Boris Dubin suggests
that when one talks about Russians’ trust of the media, one must keep in mind
that this “does not mean that people are prepared to fully take everything on
faith.” Rather it reflects in many cases
simply a desire not to “subject to criticism” what television says.
As far as Moscow is concerned, Dubin
says, there are many misconceptions. “We
think that the larger the city, the higher level of education and critical thinking
and so on there will be.” But “this is not entirely so.” The Russian capital has a large fraction of
people who have recently arrived there and who are not “included in civic life”
and a large number of disappointed people as well.
Muscovites as such are not “critical,”
he adds. It is only “young Muscovites with a good education and adequate
incomes. And that is a much smaller group”
than many think despite the attention its members routinely get.
Dubin does not say so but he could
have: Many of these people young Muscovites are English speakers, and all too
often visitors from the West draw conclusions about Russia as a whole from that
small subset of the population, forgetting just how tiny it is and assuming
that it reflects the media consumption patterns and attitudes of the country as
a whole.
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