Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 14 -- Two weeks ago, the Levada Center issued a
report suggesting that the influence of Moscow television on younger Russians
is declining at a precipitous rate, thus depriving the Kremlin of one of its
most reliable means of influencing Russian public opinion (levada.ru/2019/08/01/21088/).
But
now a Russian commentator, Valery Panov, argues that the situation is even
worse: Not only are young Russians paying less attention to Moscow television
than they did, but when they do watch it, they often take more from the
advertisements which fill 20 percent of broadcast time than from the programs (stoletie.ru/obschestvo/televidenije_bjet_po_svoim_255.htm).
And those advertisements in subtle
ways introduce Englishisms and Americanisms in ways that undermine the message
of the intervening programs, win over the hearts and minds of young Russians,
and give an ideological victory to the West that it does not deserve and an
ideological defeat to the Kremlin that it does not appear to recognize.
Panov offers the case of one young
Russian with whom he spooke whose vision of Russia today and of its future
sound more like those of Kremlin critics than Kremlin supporters even though he
regularly watches First Channel and Russia-1 and “trusts them more than the
Internet.”
“In such cases,” he says, “one
usually says that with friends like these, one doesn’t’ need enemies, since
precisely ‘such friends’ who know well the situation from the inside will hit
at the most sensitive places.” But their comments should not be dismissed: They
highlight an unexpected reality:
“TV is destroying the mass consciousness
of Russians no less seriously than the anti-Russian propaganda of the West.” (stress supplied)
Advertising on Moscow TV takes up 20
percent of the time, and it has become part of the social milieu” of Russians
even though most of it is produced by trans-national corporations with only the
most necessary parts being translated into Russian. The rest is typically in
English – and the values are certainly those of the West, not of Russia.
Perhaps still worse, Panov continues, in
these commercials, “Russian speech is presented with distortions of all norms
and rules. (This point has also been made by two Russian television
personalities during a recent program with commercials -- politikus.ru/video/121776-cherez-angliyskiy-yazyk-idet-podchinenie-soznaniya.html.)
“Americanization” has taken over Russian
television to the point, the commentator continues, that “I think this has
become one of the threats to the national security of Russia. Perhaps, we need
to fine channels for using foreign words” as is done in Spain or in Ukraine “for
the use of Russian.”
It is understandable that “television is a
business, the main goal of which is to gain a profit by any means just as in
any other sphere of free enterprise,” Panov says. But television plays an outsized role in
Russian life and therefore something has to be done to redress the balance
which now exists.
“In fact,” he continues, “the television
of Russia has been reduced to two simple formulas: the advertisement of good and
propaganda,” political and otherwise. Consequently, it promotes what sells and
reinforces it, such as the cult of force that has spread from the box to
society at large.
Panov suggests that things have gotten to
the point that “the Americans and Europeans should long ago have stopped
spending money on the creation of various structures directed at opposing ‘the
influence of Russia.’ For them, Russian television is doing this very well” and
using Russian means to do so.
“It seems to me,” the Moscow commentator
says, “that the role and significance of television in such an important task
as the consolidation of society is being underrated in Russia.” It remains the
chief source of information even for those who turn to the Internet – and they are
still a minority.
But – and this is what matters most of all
– “Russian television as is the case throughout the rest of the world long ago
already ceased to be only a means of mass information but a powerful system of
programming the consciousness of millions of people, an instrument for the control
of their behavior, a world of psychological compensations, a source for
amusement, and the main factor of the formation of any ideas about life.”
There is the famous poem of World War II writer
Aleksandr Mezhirov who muses when Soviet artillery shells by mistake Russian
lines as to who might have given them the wrong map coordinates, Panov
says. What’s happening with Russian TV
forces one to ask who is giving it coordinates which are causing this channel
to hit the wrong people in the wrong way.
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