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Soviet Television and Radio - COLD WAR DOCUMENTARY

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  • Опубликовано: 14 авг 2024
  • ​🍘 Use my code COLDWAR10 and link: bit.ly/3mBmIjR to get 10% off (save up to $47!) your own authentic Japanese subscription box from Bokksu! Don't miss out on this amazing snack-journey through Japan!
    Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the description of the Soviet Television and radio, as we see which technologies were used by the USSR, which TVs were made and sold and so on.
    What Happened to the German and Japanese POWs?: • What Happened to the G...
    Operation Paperclip: • Operation Paperclip - ...
    German Expulsions: • German Expulsions Afte...
    Soviet Education System: • Soviet Education Syste...
    How Khrushchev Fed the Soviet People: • How Khrushchev Fed the...
    Novocherkassk Massacre 1962: • Novocherkassk Massacre...
    Soviet Tourism: • Soviet Tourism: How di...
    Soviet Passport System: New Serfdom or Reform?: • Soviet Passport System...
    Kaliningrad: How Russia Got a Stronghold in Europe: • Kaliningrad: How Russi...
    How the Soviets Won the Early Space Race: • How the Soviets Won th...
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    #ColdWar #Soviet #Television
    This video was sponsored by Bokksu

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @TheColdWarTV
    @TheColdWarTV  2 года назад +57

    ​🍘 Use my code COLDWAR10 and link: bit.ly/3mBmIjR to get 10% off (save up to $47!) your own authentic Japanese subscription box from Bokksu! Don't miss out on this amazing snack-journey through Japan!

    • @Generalul68977
      @Generalul68977 2 года назад +1

      I hate you.

    • @stupidminotaur9735
      @stupidminotaur9735 2 года назад +2

      Do how/what the Soviets allow what western/America tv/movies/documentary's they let in. Whats censored what's cut from which famous movies jaws Rambo godfather so forth

    • @Generalul68977
      @Generalul68977 2 года назад

      @@stupidminotaur9735 The films were censored because the Communist Party did not want people to see those ugly scenes from the movies.

    • @stupidminotaur9735
      @stupidminotaur9735 2 года назад +1

      @@Generalul68977 no they didn't want people to see the wealth of the west. And nudity so forth.

    • @Generalul68977
      @Generalul68977 2 года назад

      @@stupidminotaur9735 Capitalism is a bad system, because there is poverty in capitalism.

  • @DMS-pq8
    @DMS-pq8 2 года назад +541

    Laughing at how small early TV screens were.... While watching on a phone

  • @Unix2816
    @Unix2816 2 года назад +727

    You know this guy is dedicated when he uses. A real Soviet tv outro

    • @alecjones4135
      @alecjones4135 2 года назад +61

      ending was beautiful

    • @Unix2816
      @Unix2816 2 года назад +51

      @@alecjones4135 *Blyatiful

    • @Unix2816
      @Unix2816 2 года назад +4

      @@ShinSheel ok . . .

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 2 года назад +51

      Don't forget to turn off your television!

    • @Unix2816
      @Unix2816 2 года назад +29

      @@TheCimbrianBull *our television

  • @torgeirbrandsnes1916
    @torgeirbrandsnes1916 2 года назад +192

    Fun fact: I live in Norway. I think we was 2nd to last to have tv broadcast in all of Europe. The last was Albania. TV started in 1960. (NRK) Radio started around 1930. You had to pay a radio and tv tax two times a year. Norway did not get a national privat tv station until 1992! Now you know!

    • @lonerider5933
      @lonerider5933 2 года назад +47

      I wish the USSR kinda went socialdemocratic at some point like Norway. Being from a multinational Soviet family, it pains me to see how things ended with such a catastrophic collapse of the country and massive hardships for people in the 90s all over the independent states. The USSR had a lot of potential, resources, people, ideals. Many people were naive though, so when privatization started many oligarchs took all the wealth that the people created for decades overnight. I hope that someday we can reach your level of development and democracy.

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 2 года назад +17

      Wise Norwegians. You should have kept private TV stations out completely. Once you yield on that, a Berlusconi is behind the corner.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 2 года назад +5

      Yeah, I can understand why you would be wary. Still, NRK still seems dominant over there.

    • @G-Mastah-Fash
      @G-Mastah-Fash 2 года назад +5

      @@stefanodadamo6809 Yeah just have the state control all the information, that's totally not retarded.

    • @someonejustsomeone1469
      @someonejustsomeone1469 2 года назад +1

      @@lonerider5933 Gorbachev tried, didn't succeed.

  • @boblowes
    @boblowes 2 года назад +69

    I grew up on a Scottish island halfway between mainland Scotland & Norway. Every summer, we would have Russian deep sea fish-factory ships turn up. They'd fish in the deep Atlantic for weeks, then harbour the ships and process the fish onboard, to sail back to the USSR with full holds of frozen herring and mackerel. When the crew had days off, they'd come ashore on their lifeboats, and buy cheap Wrangler jeans and Nescafe coffee by the score. But they'd also buy cheap electronics - radios, clocks, clock-radios, kettles, coffee machines, even cheap colour or black & white portable TVs and home computers like the ZX Spectrum (which as a computer architecture, had been widely copied in the Soviet Union). Toys were another big hit - cheap action figures, yo-yos, hula hoops, dolls, slinkies - whatever they could put on a pallet and crane onto the lifeboat to take back to the ship. All to sell on the black market.
    My parents actually drove a Lada (Russian-built version of a Fiat) at the time. Mechanically, they were pretty reliable (if simple, but with horrible electrics). Anyway, we had several Soviet fishermen offer to buy it from us, because it was cheaper to do that, and ship it home on the deck of their ship, than it was for them to buy a Lada in their own country. Crazy.

    • @zsg87
      @zsg87 2 года назад +12

      Imported Lada were considered especially valuable and cost more in the secondary market, there was an opinion that they were of higher quality

    • @jrus690
      @jrus690 Год назад +9

      If I got my understanding right, for the Lada the Soviet planners had choice; either buy a Ford Mustang factory from America or grab the Fiat factory from Italy. They did the latter, and to think they could have had a bizarre state car in their hands, a Russian version of an American muscle car. Maybe it was not the Mustang but it was still an interesting choice they could have made.

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Год назад +1

      It was not CHEAPER. To buy lada in ussr u had to be a privileged veteran or a political leader, the rest were waiting in queues for decades

    • @boblowes
      @boblowes Год назад +7

      @@bambinaforever1402 Yes, it was cheaper. Specifically, for the Klondykers (as they were known), who I was talking about. For them, it was cheaper and easier to buy a 2nd hand Lada in the UK, stick it on the deck if their ship and take it home to Russia, then it was to try and buy one through Soviet Beauracracy. They probably didn't even keep the cars for themselves, but sold them on again for a profit.
      I suggest you go back and re-read my original comment.

    • @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge
      @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge 2 месяца назад

      Sounds like they had a big boat, I'm surprised they were able to carry all that without being caught

  • @igorkarlic2297
    @igorkarlic2297 2 года назад +69

    Radio Yerevan was asked: "Is it true that in the Soviet Union no one lacks a stereo system?"
    Radio Yerevan answered: "In principle, yes, you hear the same from all sides."

  • @ivarkich1543
    @ivarkich1543 2 года назад +370

    I'm taking a newspaper in my hands. Brezhnev's speech is there.
    I'm turning the radio on. Brezhnev's speech is there.
    Then I'm turning the TV on. Brezhnev's speech is there, too.
    Now, I'm afraid of plugging my iron in.

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 2 года назад +35

      A Radio Yerevan joke!

    • @LaDeXi
      @LaDeXi 2 года назад +2

      Gold! 😂

    • @TheGuyNobodyReallyLikes
      @TheGuyNobodyReallyLikes 2 года назад +5

      What is a Brezhnev?

    • @LaDeXi
      @LaDeXi 2 года назад +16

      @@TheGuyNobodyReallyLikes Leonid Brezhnev was the former leader of Soviet Union.

    • @surendramumgai631
      @surendramumgai631 2 года назад +9

      Most ex soviet citizens regard Leonid Brezhnev as the best soviet leader after stalin , life was really good for them during the period he reigned as president.

  • @hotel283
    @hotel283 2 года назад +138

    My old boss grew up in the Soviet Union. I remember telling her our view of Soviet TV was brief flickering clips of their news broadcasts with the aforementioned men in ill fitting suits.
    Funny thing - those Soviet newscasters were fucking ROCKSTARS over there. As close to megacelebrities as you could get in the Soviet Union. She said the big weekly newscast was on Sunday evening and the whole country basically shut down to watch.

    • @pyatig
      @pyatig 2 года назад +11

      Not sure what she’s referring to, news was on channel one daily at 9pm. There was one popular news/entertainment show on Saturday night but that aired in mid to late 80s during perestroika

    • @HalfgildWynac
      @HalfgildWynac 2 года назад +8

      By the way, that particular guy in a suit, Igor Kirillov, died less than a month ago.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_Kirillov

    • @Neville60001
      @Neville60001 2 года назад +1

      Have you ever seen the satirical _SCTV_ skits satirizing Soviet television? You _might_ get a laugh out of them ( ruclips.net/user/results?search_query=CCCP1 )

  • @mikets42
    @mikets42 2 года назад +114

    May I suggest: "school & teachers - USA vs USSR", same for doctors, engineers, retail workers (which are the areas where life was VERY different)? It also may be interesting "picturing USSR in the USA cold war era movies vs reality" - because watching these movies was so hilarious from the inside of USSR in the 80s.

    • @harrytpk
      @harrytpk 2 года назад +7

      I was born in 1949 so I grew up during the Cold War I and I was always interested in Russian History and the USSR but our knowledge in America about life in Communist Russia was slight to non existent I remember I was lucky enough to see the movie Moscow Doesn’t Believe in Tears in the late 1980’s on Cable and it blew me away, I had no idea till then that Russians at least in Moscow lived lives not very different my own here in the states. It was a revelation.

    • @gavinstirling7088
      @gavinstirling7088 Год назад +7

      That would make an interesting documentary, comparing Western movies produced during the cold day with actual reality.

  • @gulliverdeboer5836
    @gulliverdeboer5836 2 года назад +221

    Those last 4 minutes certainly were an unexpected but welcome surprise!

    • @ukrainiipyat
      @ukrainiipyat 2 года назад +17

      Ah the "good" old days. When Ukraine became independent country they did similar thing at end of TV day where they had Hymn Ukraina with very similar scenes of USSR produced video. It was sort of like same shitty old horse cart but new driver.

    • @intel386DX
      @intel386DX 2 года назад +7

      The greatest athem ever :)

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 2 года назад

      Magnificent! It makes me want to learn Russian. I only know a few words like "narod"

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator 2 года назад +4

      @@alexcarter8807 Well you're a third of the way into pro-Soviet propaganda already ;) You just need to know " ours" and " best" and then quote production volumes :P

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 2 года назад +7

      @@ukrainiipyat that soviet (russian?) anthem is something else though, I always loved it as somebody from the West. Too bad everything under the surface was so rotten

  • @badluck5647
    @badluck5647 2 года назад +339

    My uncle spoke of his time in Soviet Russia back in the day. He said there were only 2 channels on TV. He said Channel 1 was propaganda, and channel 2 was a KGB pointing a Kalashnikov at the screen saying "Turn back to channel 1!"

    • @AllPileup
      @AllPileup 2 года назад +64

      Classic Soviet joke.

    • @bitterballs356
      @bitterballs356 2 года назад +31

      Classic anti Soviet propaganda told as a dumb joke

    • @surendramumgai631
      @surendramumgai631 2 года назад +11

      @fa q This isn't a good joke bcoz a good joke cannot be based on a lie. No guns were ever pointed at the heads of people in the USSR to force them into doing something they wouldn't otherwise do

    • @Marinealver
      @Marinealver 2 года назад +32

      @@surendramumgai631 Correct, if a gun was pointed at the head of the "traitor", no threats would be given, just a shot.

    • @surendramumgai631
      @surendramumgai631 2 года назад +7

      @@Marinealver The soviet union executed fewer people than the USA

  • @Leipaa
    @Leipaa 2 года назад +172

    The anthem and montage outro is very moving. It shows what the Soviet Union was supposed to be and sometimes was, at its best.

    • @Fiedman
      @Fiedman 2 года назад +41

      Call me crazy but I've always liked the Soviet/Russian National Anthem.

    • @lam7499
      @lam7499 2 года назад +56

      @@Fiedman the Soviet anthem is beautiful. Politics aside, it's hard to not appreciate a good piece of music!

    • @lam7499
      @lam7499 2 года назад +7

      @@dengxiaopinggaming5500 unironically I listen to some of that while running.
      It's surprisingly encouraging

    • @metropolisatlantas
      @metropolisatlantas 2 года назад +8

      Yeah, though 99.999999999999% of the time it was a shitty hellhole. Actually, scratch that, it was shit 100% of the time.

    • @troller8680
      @troller8680 2 года назад +13

      @@metropolisatlantas you lived in USSR to know this, or just heard stories?

  • @raymondcoventry1221
    @raymondcoventry1221 2 года назад +34

    I never get tired of that awe-inspiring anthem. No matter your politics that is objectively the best anthem ever written and performed.

    • @judithshapiro1557
      @judithshapiro1557 8 месяцев назад +1

      The GDR anthem is far better

    • @raymondcoventry1221
      @raymondcoventry1221 8 месяцев назад

      @@judithshapiro1557GDR had a good one too, but I'm gonna stick with my pick

  • @domspider1
    @domspider1 Год назад +4

    Very good handling of numbers at minute 14:50. TV in US 97% in all houses in 1977, in USSR 55 million in a population of 257 million in 1975. The reality of TV's in US in 1977 is: population 216 million, 97% of that is 209.5 million and if in each house there are 4 people, gives 52.3 million TV's in the US just like the USSR approximately two years before (1975).

  • @padawanmage71
    @padawanmage71 2 года назад +35

    I couldn’t help thinking of that scene in ‘The Hunt for Red October’ where all the crew start singing the Soviet National Anthem, and couldn’t help contrasting which how we used to have the US National Anthem play just before the start of programming every day in the morning.

    • @crankychris2
      @crankychris2 2 года назад +2

      Ah yes, before all night 'infomercials' existed.

  • @kiselyovs
    @kiselyovs 2 года назад +7

    Correction, Soviet Union never used PAL as a broadcast TV signal system, it always was SECAM like in France.

  • @marijusp
    @marijusp 2 года назад +37

    I grew up in south Lithuania, near the Polish border. In significant southwestern part of Lithuania (including Kaunas city) people were able to watch Polish TV. It was good thing, because Polish TV was still more free and better. I guess that in Estonia the same was with Finnish TV. Also I remember, that my gradpa listened to "Radio Liberty". Soviets tried to block signals of this radio, but attempts wasn't extremely successful - people were still able to listen.

  • @thethirdjegs
    @thethirdjegs 2 года назад +115

    Hey The Cold War channel,
    The montage with the Soviet anthem as audio background made this video the best so far.

    • @tomalexander4327
      @tomalexander4327 2 года назад +6

      I immediately thought of The Hunt for Red October when I saw it.

    • @alecjones4135
      @alecjones4135 2 года назад +6

      it's the real thing

    • @justinbrown691
      @justinbrown691 2 года назад +3

      Such a great anthem

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 2 года назад +7

      Don't forget to turn off your television!

    • @matpk
      @matpk 2 года назад

      @@alecjones4135 Compare 1930s Nazi Germany Vs 2020s Communist Chinazi IN YOUR NEXT VIDEO Project before it's too late

  • @parasatc8183
    @parasatc8183 2 года назад +178

    Would be nice to see an episode about how people from the Eastern Bloc viewed non-Eastern Bloc TV but I think it would be too short and the impact of foreign TV was just about the same as shortwave broadcasts from the West so I assume it wouldn't be too different from the shortwave radio episode. Anyway, aside from how the East Germans preferred West German TV, especially for news and current affairs, there is a story of how Estonians from the south of the country travelled north to watch Emmanuelle premiere on Finnish television on June 24, 1987 :)

    • @N_0968
      @N_0968 2 года назад +27

      Yes, I have fond memories of watching Finnish tv in Estonia. We were especially interested in movies and some tv series.

    • @thethirdjegs
      @thethirdjegs 2 года назад

      Mao Ang Plano,
      Abay ka o langyaw? Unsa bahin ang plano?
      Anyways, i expect the channel to probe deeper about cold war including eastern bloc mass media outside ussr.

    • @JayeshLimaye
      @JayeshLimaye 2 года назад +9

      @daniel halachevYes, like Sandmännchen.

    • @Lanoumik
      @Lanoumik 2 года назад +29

      As a kid in Czechoslovakia I could watch Austrian TV. Most popular were advertisments for toys/videogames. It was like a window into another world. Also remember watching Knight Rider, Star Trek and Tron :). Didnt understand a thing, but it all looked so cool.
      Paradoxically, first time I saw a Mickey Mouse cartoon was on Soviet Tv, which was broadcasted locally for soldiers occupying our country after 1968.

    • @ukrainiipyat
      @ukrainiipyat 2 года назад +8

      Well, near end of USSR there was lot of foreign programmes coming in on TV - like MTV from America and also some drama shows like Beverly Hills etc. It was dubbed over in Russian, or subtitled. But dialogue didn't really matter much - images said so much more.

  • @rreinehr1
    @rreinehr1 2 года назад +74

    Disappointed to learn they didn’t have OurTube.

    • @westrim
      @westrim 2 года назад +5

      @fa q I believe France has Breadtube.

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 2 года назад +5

      @@westrim Hon! Hon! Hon! Hon! Baguette, baguette!

    • @imthatninja7669
      @imthatninja7669 2 года назад +3

      @@TheCimbrianBull excellent French

    • @user-yx8tn8ls5u
      @user-yx8tn8ls5u 2 года назад +1

      @fa q I guess they would have called it something like "ВСВС" likе "Всесоюзная Видеосеть", and the people would shorten it to "Vasya"...

    • @RAKITHA9
      @RAKITHA9 2 года назад +4

      Nor OnlyComrades

  • @HistoryOfRevolutions
    @HistoryOfRevolutions 2 года назад +317

    "It is always a much easier task to educate uneducated people than to re-educate the mis-educated"
    - Herbert M. Shelton

    • @pauld9561
      @pauld9561 2 года назад +1

      Mis-educated, means Democrat

    • @stupidumbasshithead5715
      @stupidumbasshithead5715 2 года назад +1

      @@pauld9561 and liberal

    • @ryhanzfx1641
      @ryhanzfx1641 2 года назад

      @@pauld9561 what does that have to do with anything though? don't be so reactionary

    • @adameckard4591
      @adameckard4591 Год назад +3

      Re-education is happening right now in America, right before our very eyes.

    • @josemoreno3334
      @josemoreno3334 Год назад

      That's what the left wing MSM hear in the U.S. is doing today.

  • @AtotheZ7
    @AtotheZ7 2 года назад +56

    Love the humor of this show, "Two things that go together like peanut butter and jelly and decaf coffee and the trash.".

    • @bigsarge2085
      @bigsarge2085 2 года назад +5

      Brilliant

    • @emjackson2289
      @emjackson2289 2 года назад +2

      If Viktor Belenko doesn't deliver that snack-box from Hokkaido, Japan, flying a MiG25, I ain't buying . . . . that's the perfect Japan-USSR-Cold War-tie-in.

    • @mrpersianality6363
      @mrpersianality6363 2 года назад

      Capitalism and oppression

    • @LukeVilent
      @LukeVilent 2 года назад

      I expected to hear "Like Lenin and the Party".

    • @LukeVilent
      @LukeVilent 2 года назад

      @@mrpersianality6363 Yeah, GULAG and human rights.

  • @ukrainiipyat
    @ukrainiipyat 2 года назад +24

    In USSR when anthem play on the TV, it was time to turn TV off so didn't start fire and burn whole Khruschevka down.

    • @lonerider5933
      @lonerider5933 2 года назад

      What do you mean?

    • @TheColdWarTV
      @TheColdWarTV  2 года назад +14

      The comment is regarding the quality of Soviet-built TVs. They had a habit overheating and catching fire.

    • @parasatc8183
      @parasatc8183 2 года назад +7

      I think TVs in general back in the 80s at least were at risk of overheating. I don't think the anthem was used for that purpose but the "Не забудьте включить телевизор" prompt was used for that instead :) Polish TV channels also did the same thing paired with a loud sound. Even TV channels in the UK at that time would also advise their viewers to shut off their sets - it's just that they said it calmly.

    • @Mortablunt
      @Mortablunt 2 года назад +6

      UK: "Please, turn off your television."
      SU: "DON'T FORGET! TURN OFF THE TV!"

    • @silverhorse2010
      @silverhorse2010 2 года назад

      This.

  • @alexandrvasilev2865
    @alexandrvasilev2865 2 года назад +9

    17:11 "that guy in the poorly-tailored suit" is a legend of Soviet and Russian television Igor Kirillov, unfortunately he passed away 2 days ago.

  • @Year2047
    @Year2047 2 года назад +64

    I love that you used Time, Forward! by Svirdov. The movie may be dumb propaganda but its a great score from a composer so good that the composer's of the original metal gear solid theme "sampled" one of his songs to make it.

    • @namesurname624
      @namesurname624 2 года назад

      Which MGS track uses samples from there?

    • @Year2047
      @Year2047 2 года назад +4

      @@namesurname624 it wasn't this one. It was this track. ruclips.net/video/8JL4JXEv-RY/видео.html

    • @LevelCASDUO
      @LevelCASDUO 9 месяцев назад

      Its even used as a news intro in channel 1's "Vremia" , though they aint reliable.

  • @bewritehere1
    @bewritehere1 2 года назад +21

    A few people have already mentioned Radio Moscow, but I would like to see an episode on the external propaganda efforts of the USSR (aka R. Moscow). I listened to Radio Moscow from 1978 or so, when I got my first shortwave radio. I was barely in high school at the time, but I found it very interesting. Their signal was very strong and it could be heard almost continuously day and night, at least on the west coast. One of their broadcast antenna was in Cuba and I believe they had a regular AM signal beamed to South Florida. At any rate, the programming was interesting. I continued to listen, although not as regularly, when the Soviet Union collapsed and the name of their shortwave station was changed to the Voice of Russia, which survived until about 2014. I was somewhat amused at some point in the late 1990's when I saw that Joe Adamov, who spoke perfect English and was a constant presence on R. Moscow, was on U.S. TV with Phil Donahue!

  • @midge_gender_solek3314
    @midge_gender_solek3314 2 года назад +14

    In 1967 SECAM color TV standard was adopted in cooperation with France

  • @notsorandumusername
    @notsorandumusername Год назад +3

    I've read the annoying beep at the end was done deliberately to wake people up who had fallen asleep in front of their tv to have them turn their sets off. Soviet television sets that still used valves instead of transistors were known as fire hazards, so they needed to be shut off in order for them to cool down.

  • @yesterdaysrose5446
    @yesterdaysrose5446 2 года назад +23

    Fun thing: In the 1990s, my neck of woods in eastern Finland only got the YLE 1 and 2 TV channels over the air. (Which are cool. And remain cool.) I was green with envy with the folks who had cable TV, because they also got the Mainos-TV 3, which had all of the cool series at the time. HOWEVER. We could pick up the Karelian TV broadcasts. In black and white (some SECAM/PAL format incompatibility I think). With, obviously, Russian voiceover. So I had some cool bloody time watching completely incomprefuckinghensible episodes of Chip & Dale Rescue Rangers.
    I saw SOME of those episodes when MTV3 actually became available in the region.
    [...oh shit it's available in Disney+, WHAT.]
    Oh! Oh! Here's a good one.
    Estonian folks figured out how to rejigger their SECAM TVs for Finnish PAL colour broadcasts.
    They received some Mainos-TV 3 broadcasts. Featuring ads with Väinö Purje, "Väiski from the Kesko store chain".
    Soviet government had to send some government propaganda out. According to them the guy was OBVIOUSLY a CIA plant. NOBODY can have that much food on display at any given moment. RIDICULOUS.
    This led to some govermental meeting of minds where the president of Finland, Urho Kaleva Kekkonen, went "ok maybe we tone down those transmitters soonish I guess".

  • @pavelvoynov5408
    @pavelvoynov5408 2 года назад +24

    Satire and humor were actually quite widespread in Soviet media, at least by 70-ies and later. Communist ideology and top officials were untouchable, of course. But ineffective local bureaucracy and low quality of consumer goods and services were a fair game for comedians.

  • @ShadyAli17
    @ShadyAli17 2 года назад +36

    I liked the earlier videos' background where you placed 2 photos of each of the leaders of US and USSR at the time of the beginning of the event your talking about on the wall (Truman-Stalin or Eisenhower-Kruschcev etc)

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 2 года назад +12

      Can you imagine doing it for a post cold war series:
      Putin - Clinton
      Putin - Bush
      Putin - Obama
      Putin - Trump
      Putin - Biden
      Putin - ?

    • @patsfreak
      @patsfreak 2 года назад

      Ditto but they’ve been bouncing around a lot. Pretty sure they batch record this and stopping to swap photos might be a pain in the ass

    • @ShadyAli17
      @ShadyAli17 2 года назад +10

      @@badluck5647 or Elizabeth-Stalin to Elizabeth-Putin 🤣

    • @igorsmihailovs52
      @igorsmihailovs52 2 года назад +1

      But this time there was a Soviet TV logo in one of these frames. Seems more relevant to me.

    • @whitetrash1864
      @whitetrash1864 2 года назад

      @@badluck5647 Putin-Putin

  • @noodled6145
    @noodled6145 2 года назад +21

    Ushanka show's take on this is great too.

  • @totalwartimelapses6359
    @totalwartimelapses6359 2 года назад +59

    Second comment: one very bad thing about state media is how it deifies the leader and acts like he can literally do no wrong
    As a Syrian I experienced this first hand with our media, I also saw it in pro-Gaddafi and pro-Saddam media, it's utterly ridiculous they blatantly say stuff like "our glorious leader" and talk about him like he's the greatest to ever live
    And no other inner outlet dares to say otherwise or go against the state narrative, nor are any outlets allowed to criticize the foreign policy of the nation

    • @daveallentown6868
      @daveallentown6868 2 года назад +10

      It is sad that American mainstream media has taken to deifying certain leftist persons and movements.

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero 2 года назад +5

      @@daveallentown6868 *certain persons
      Have some self-awareness and self-criticism please instead of just pointing fingers elsewhere

    • @surendramumgai631
      @surendramumgai631 2 года назад +2

      The deification of the leader by state tv is to balance the flak the leader is getting from the enemy's media which invariably describes him as an evil murderous dictator. Saddam Hussein , Gadafi , Assad etc all fall into this category.

    • @daveallentown6868
      @daveallentown6868 2 года назад +6

      @@Game_Hero I am unable to point my finger at myself because no one wants to deify me, no matter how hard I plead and cajole. And in the spirit of self-criticism, I will admit I hold a minority view: the rest are busy being brainwashed. But on a final note, which is serious, I consider it disrespectful to the masses who lived behind the Iron Curtain to compare their experiences to those of contemporary Americans. Nonetheless, I do believe concerted, cross-institutional forces are at work in our western societies that are calculated to lead to socialist/ communist outcomes. If you believe this is an inappropriate forum to express such points of view, do let me know.

    • @joseaca1010
      @joseaca1010 2 года назад +6

      venezuelan here, same, specially regarding that dead SOB chavez, jesus christ i kid you not, they prayed to him once on national TV

  • @CruelDwarf
    @CruelDwarf 2 года назад +32

    I seriously disagree with the premise of 'no criticism of the system or the government was allowed on the TV'. I think it was impossible to miss programs like 'Fitil' (Matchlight) when researching the material for this episode. And Fitil was nothing but criticism of the system.

    • @domashnie_lubimtsy
      @domashnie_lubimtsy 2 года назад +15

      This channel is very much biased, what else did you expect? 🤷

    • @Felix-gl9dt
      @Felix-gl9dt 2 года назад +11

      yeah lol, more like U.S.A and propaganda = peanut butter and jelly

    • @YuryMar
      @YuryMar 2 года назад +9

      Fitil (and many other actually - people like Raikin, Zhvanetsky, programs like "Vokrug Smecha" ("Around the Laughter") etc) critizised not the system, but just some people and events, which are officially called as "isolated shortcomings" ("отдельные недостатки"). But such programs never critisized entire soviet system and it's general problems. Not until start of Perestroika (when programs like "Vzgliad" ("The Sight") and "600 secons" appears), but this is another story.

    • @CruelDwarf
      @CruelDwarf 2 года назад +10

      @@YuryMar so critique of 'parts of the system' is not critique 'of the system'? Critique of individual people in the government is not critique of the government? It is not how logic works.

    • @necrosteel5013
      @necrosteel5013 2 года назад +1

      @@CruelDwarf it's like saying the system is not at fault at all, it's the leaders that are ( this is literally true for any and all systems of governance ). It's not really about how a totalitarian system specifically prevents any form of escape or alternatives for people dissatisfied with the status quo. Any system works when the values of the people reflect the mode of government action, what the people can handle should be handled by them alone, what cannot but is still a necessity is taken up by either the government or by organizations. I afraid this current bourgeoisie capitalist system is while not as bad, is definitely likely to only grow to be even more totalitarian thanks to big tech, big government and mega corporations taking stronger hold of people's lives.

  • @Game_Hero
    @Game_Hero 2 года назад +20

    That soviet outro should be at the end of every episode talking about the soviet union. Also, too bad you didn't talk about the anecdote about why there is a beeping noise at the end of it.

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 2 года назад +5

      Don't forget to turn off your television!

    • @liveforever141
      @liveforever141 2 года назад +9

      I am from Eastern Europe and my mother told me, that this was a warning to wake up people who fell asleep watching TV, old Soviet TV's were prone to overheating and were a fire hazard if left through the night. Text says "Don't forget to turn off your television!"

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 2 года назад +4

      @@liveforever141 I used to live in Belfast. I remember in the 60s and 70s having to turn off the TV for the same reason and if I remember right, we also had messages about doing it for a long time.

    • @liveforever141
      @liveforever141 2 года назад +1

      @@paulohagan3309 maybe that was just a thing with old TV sets then, both in the West as in the East. I do not really know as I grew up with TV made in late 1990's. We had no real problem with it.

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 2 года назад +3

      @@liveforever141 Yes, I think you're right about old technology. The old sets in the early 60s had lots of problems.
      At the time we were behind a small mountain in Belfast and with the technology at the time we couldn't receive the second channel because the mountain was blocking the signal.
      We used to go to my Grandparents in the countryside 70km away and see a few programs we couldn't get because we were only a few km from the antenna and the mountain was in the way ...

  • @Telewaifus
    @Telewaifus 2 года назад +10

    Nice video! Only one tech note:
    The 625 line standard is called "CCIR" (Comité consultatif international pour la radio) and it was created in 1948. It had a better quality compared the 405 line system used in UK or the 525 line system used in USA. "PAL" is a color decoding system, invented by Telefunken years later
    I collect vintage TVs and I own a Rubin 714. I think that soviet technological products were very reliable, because the internal parts are basically military grade. Every time I fix a soviet radio or a TV i have to replace only a couple of parts.

    • @VisibilityFoggy
      @VisibilityFoggy 2 года назад +1

      Isn't there another standard called SECAM? In addition to NTSC/PAL?

    • @Telewaifus
      @Telewaifus 2 года назад

      @@VisibilityFoggy yeah, it was invented in France

    • @notsorandumusername
      @notsorandumusername Год назад +1

      The Soviet Union and the rest of the Eastern Bloc (including the GDR) actually used the French-originated SECAM instead of PAL from West-Germany. The two systems are very similar, but SECAM is a little more robust against interference on long distance reception. It can, however, pick up false colour information since the colour carrier is always on whereas PAL simply uses bog standard black-and-white mode when the broadcast is actually black-and-white. So that did lead to problems when colour broadcasting was not yet the full-time standard. Later the PAL/SECAM issue became obsolete when tv sets with multi-tuners came available. It was the reason why after communism fell the Eastern countries could quickly switch over to PAL instead of SECAM. PAL was easier to use in the studio. In fact, the eastern countries did use PAL internally, only converting to SECAM at the transmitter site.

  • @theshadowman1398
    @theshadowman1398 2 года назад +39

    My whole family grew up with Sovjet television and even I in the 90s grew up with them.
    There was no evil in them whatsoever. There was never focus to badmouth other countries. Children’s shows are the most memorable and I still have fond memories of them.

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Год назад

      Wdf are u talking about? News had nothing else but badmouth everything

    • @theshadowman1398
      @theshadowman1398 Год назад

      @@bambinaforever1402
      Western news yes,

  • @ubercomrade
    @ubercomrade 2 года назад +20

    Soviet cinema was incredible. The Grammer of cinema was invented by a soviet citizen.

    • @user-cx1ki8li4t
      @user-cx1ki8li4t 2 года назад +2

      War and peace is a great film. In addition, the soundtrack of two Soviet films is great: grassland, dear grassland,and Singing turbulent youth。

    • @user-cx1ki8li4t
      @user-cx1ki8li4t 2 года назад +2

      ПОЛЮШКО- ПОЛЕ,Песня о тревожной молодости,This is their Russian name

    • @ianhomerpura8937
      @ianhomerpura8937 Год назад

      Come and See is still one of the greatest anti-war films out there.

  • @ivarkich1543
    @ivarkich1543 2 года назад +5

    In 70'ies many families in the USSR still did not have a TV set at home since they were very expensive, and people needed to put by money for several months. The cheapest TV set "Record" costed 200 roubles. Most of people earned less than 200 roubles a month. My mom bought her first TV set just in 1983 when I was 8. In 1982, when Brezhnev died, the school obliged children to watch his funeral. Those, who didn't have a TV set, had to go to their classmates to wathc the funeral. About third of my classmates didn't have a TV set at home that year.

  • @sefarkas0
    @sefarkas0 2 года назад +5

    While watching your documentary I noticed a little error. The soviets used SECAM not PAL.
    An interesting technical attribute of SECAM is it uses an FM modulation scheme.
    SECAM is far superior for long distance transmission and a good choice for a country as large as the Soviet Union was. But is also impossible (at the time) to modify or mix in different program material along the way. I don’t know of this was done on purpose to keep the central government in control or it was just a technical tradeoff at the time.
    You can read a simple explanation on Wikipedia -- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SECAM under the Disadvantages section.
    On a lighter note the three major transmission systems around the world are PAL, NTSC and SECAM.
    Each have their sarcastic alternate acronyms
    NTSC (American) - Never Twice Same Color
    PAL (German) -- Picture Always Lousy
    SECAM (French) -- Something Essentially Contrary to the American Method
    Rumor has it that the French didn’t want to use the German invention PAL

    • @hegedusuk
      @hegedusuk 2 года назад

      I noticed that too. The whole eastern bloc as far as I know, used secam. And France.

  • @valentinstoyanov304
    @valentinstoyanov304 2 года назад +5

    There was just one TV channel in Bulgaria until the 80's when a second channel was introduced on the national television. And there were just 2 radio "programs" - "Horizont" and "Hristo Botev". The state owned radio is still the most popular radio in Bulgaria.

  • @emfuentes27
    @emfuentes27 2 года назад +15

    Funny thing. Growing up in Cuba I used many of those Russian TV models. They used to get really hot, and some of them caught fire.

    • @LordWhatever
      @LordWhatever 2 года назад +4

      My guess is that they weren't built for "Cuba Caliente, coño".

  • @shinichikudo7577
    @shinichikudo7577 2 года назад +2

    XDDD The end got me!
    Didn't thought you guys would include it, but you did

  • @Itapirkanmaa2
    @Itapirkanmaa2 2 года назад +2

    PAL is a colour TV denomination, invented and patented by the Germans in 1962, therefore the Soviet early B&W transmissions were not in PAL.

  • @pyatig
    @pyatig 2 года назад +81

    As someone who was born in Odessa in 75 and been living in NY since 90 I can tell you that everything Soviet tv said about the west turned out to be true

    • @BichaelStevens
      @BichaelStevens 2 года назад +2

      Such as?

    • @liveforever141
      @liveforever141 2 года назад +21

      And TV in the West itself became propaganda. Such is the cycle.

    • @plunderpunk2
      @plunderpunk2 2 года назад +8

      "Everything". Including how the Communist system (which was never fully adopted by the Soviets themselves) would triumph in the West, gotcha. Cool.

    • @tihspidtherekciltilc5469
      @tihspidtherekciltilc5469 2 года назад +4

      Cough Yuri Bezmenov cough.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 2 года назад +4

      They were just hypocrites, then
      And don't generalise the West like that, you've seen the least developed developed country and now take it to be as the standard

  • @blanchjoe1481
    @blanchjoe1481 2 года назад +13

    Watching the Olympics I enjoyed when the CCCP won a sport, because they would play the Soviet Anthem. As national anthems go, the "Gosudarstvenny gimn SSSR" or The State Anthem of the Soviet Union, was one of the most enjoyable to listen to. Of course the lyrics were a tad to martial, or dare I say, "Soviet" for my ears, but the instrumental was rousing.
    Information in Totalitarian Regimes, or in Democracies, and in the world at large are "products". In the Totalitarian Regimes it was a product designed by and for the Ruling Party. In a Democracy it is a product designed by viewer appeal, and is used primary to sell soap or automobiles. In the Totalitarian Regimes any information that is not conducive to the benefit of the Ruling Party is deleted. In the Democracies any information that will not sell newspapers, or garner viewer audience, is shoved onto a back pages, slotted for a less valuable viewing time, or is ignored completely.
    The Truth can not be "fed" to us, the Truth can only recognized from a position of ignorance, and then earned only though effort, and this is why so few are Wise.

  • @Tuppoo94
    @Tuppoo94 2 года назад +2

    6:01 Soviet Central Television was actually broadcast using the French SECAM color encoding. This was also done in Eastern Bloc countries to prevent the people from watching Western European TV, which was broadcast in PAL. However, viewers in the East were able to buy PAL decoders, and thus could watch Western programs. This was commonly done in Estonia, where Finnish TV signals reached Tallinn.
    1:50 Props for using the theme music from the program Время, which itself is from the movie "Time, Forward!", and was composed by Georgy Sviridov.

    • @rayh6118
      @rayh6118 2 года назад

      I love that tune in the end

  • @KD2HJP
    @KD2HJP 2 года назад +14

    I went to the Soviet Union (and several other European countries):as an exchange student in 1989. Was an amazing experience

    • @amirm3621
      @amirm3621 2 года назад

      You can go to north Korea if you really liked it

    • @necrosteel5013
      @necrosteel5013 2 года назад

      What was particularly good about the union back in the day to you?
      The lack of racism?
      Style of education?
      Or hospitality of the Russian people?

    • @KD2HJP
      @KD2HJP 2 года назад +7

      @@necrosteel5013 Hospitality of the people, the teenager/20 something's of 1989.
      The monuments for the WW2 fallen were, too, very memorable

    • @chepushila1
      @chepushila1 2 года назад +1

      @@amirm3621 Nothing in common.

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator 2 года назад

      @@chepushila1 Actually, seeing DPRK brought back a lot of memories of early 90s Poland - dull, drab, monochrome even, sooty, but the people seemed optimistic but unsettled. I could have done without it.

  • @stefanodadamo6809
    @stefanodadamo6809 2 года назад +9

    Adriano Celentano and Ornella Muti on Soviet tv, that I didn't know... But Italian movies and music were widely appreciated. Our music stars from the Festival of Sanremo of the 80s are still legendarily successful in Russia and Ukraine to this day!

    • @pyatig
      @pyatig 2 года назад +1

      I will remember that one girl who sang “boys boys boys” for as long as I live. What was her name,Sabrina I think?

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 2 года назад

      @@pyatig Sabrina Salerno. Believe me, she's far hotter today at 50-plus than she was then. Check her bikini shots.

    • @user-jm3xl7rg5k
      @user-jm3xl7rg5k 2 года назад +2

      Why not? They were in soviet cinemas as well.

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 2 года назад +6

    That ending was a delightful little surprise lol. Thank you for another very interesting video!
    Stay well out there everybody, and God be with you, friends. ✝️ :)

  • @scavarli6068
    @scavarli6068 2 года назад +2

    Great episode. The best. I like the way you ended the broadcast in what I assume is Soviet sty;e. LOL Keep up the good work!

  • @user-cx1ki8li4t
    @user-cx1ki8li4t 2 года назад +12

    The film in the Soviet Union, Moscow does not believe in tears, is very famous in China.war and peace are also great.
    😍😍😍

  • @StalinTheMan0fSteel
    @StalinTheMan0fSteel 2 года назад +4

    As a little kid in the waning years of the Soviet Union (detente) I used to listen to my dad's shortwave radio at night, by far the loudest signal on the bands was Radio Moscow, followed by The Voice of America. Of course there was the ever present "Russian Woodpecker" hammering away across the spectrum during the night. When I got my first Ham license, it could usually wipe out the 40 meter band! LOL! It was gone by the 90's, replaced apparently by something more high tech..... And quiet!

    • @xminusone1
      @xminusone1 2 года назад +1

      Yes i also rember that. I don't know where you lived but radio Moscow was the easiest to listen, deustch welle, we also had the Russian woodpecker all over the place.. but in the 80' we don't know what it was. Also the buzzer, another sovjet broadcast. Some romanian broadcast. And early data transmission. I still have the old hammarlund hq-180a that i used in thoses days.

    • @StalinTheMan0fSteel
      @StalinTheMan0fSteel 2 года назад

      @@xminusone1 I used to have a mint condition Hammarlund hq-170a! 😁 I currently have several shortwave radios and still listen to the international broadcast bands, still a few stations out there, the ever present "Radio Havana" and both "Radio China) Taiwan and mainland China. Last week I caught "Radio Slovakia" also occasionally Romania. Also still a few pirate stations just below the 40 meter Ham band! Lately I listen to an AM station on 1700 out of Tijuana "Heraldo Radio", they play 80's top 40, pop/rock etc. 😁 All the best to you! 😉

  • @jasondouglas6755
    @jasondouglas6755 2 года назад +9

    My favorite show was shoe shoelace. Shoe and shoelace one is meaningless with out the other

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator 2 года назад

      Wilk i zajec was decent too. I used to have a VHS tape at my grandmother's house with that show because they stopped airing it in Poland (they just broadcast it in Russian, straight up) later on into the 90s and I liked watching it when I came for summer vacation.

  • @ViraL_FootprinT.ex.e
    @ViraL_FootprinT.ex.e 2 года назад +20

    I've always been intrigued by propaganda, and it's effectiveness. I'd also love to see one of these on American, hyper-patriotic cold war era propaganda. Something I feel has done a considerable amount of damage to us in the long run because anything meaningful for the common good of the citizens of the US gets lambasted by our elites as sOcIaLiSm/CoMmUnIsM. However, I do find it fascinating that we have a large portion of the population that seems to look at _Red Dawn_ as if it was a documentary or something. Also, just the way Hollywood and the military intersect and coordinate is something that still goes on. Military incorporation into sports events (expensive, wildly unnecessary, flyovers and all). Copaganda. Etc.
    It really is impressive how we've been able to manufacture consent for a lot of the stuff our nation does domestically and OCONUS, and how that's changed over time. But for the sake of the channel, I'd assume that we'd just stick within the confines of the actual cold war.

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 2 года назад +6

      The stigma to socialism seemed to work out pretty favorable to the US economy.
      Wolverines!

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 2 года назад +1

      @fa q Real wages were on the rise until covid hit, the price of rent is going up in every developed country, and healthcare cost are high because people are living longer.
      Meanwhile, every country that embraced a socialist economic system collapsed with the exception of Cuba where everyone is equally poor.

    • @MichaelDavis-mk4me
      @MichaelDavis-mk4me 2 года назад +2

      Just watch modern American TV, it's still pure propaganda. As a Canadian, I just can't watch their TV, it's so horribly biased.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 2 года назад +1

      @@MichaelDavis-mk4me Most TV here seems to be sensationalized at best, and partisan propaganda at worst.

  • @rewoppop
    @rewoppop 2 года назад +33

    That Soviet anthem was beautiful.

    • @letecmig
      @letecmig 2 года назад +1

      Russia has the same anthem till this day. Just the lyrics has been changed. Being no fan of the Soviet Union, I must admit that the tune is spot on for this type of the anthem/patriotic song, on par with Marseillaise

    • @MichaelDavis-mk4me
      @MichaelDavis-mk4me 2 года назад +1

      @@letecmig I don't like the French anthem and I speak French as my main language, though it's not my country. Soviet anthem was and still is the best ever produced. In fact, it's the only one I like, it's just so damn good. All the rest are boring.

    • @johnyanga8532
      @johnyanga8532 2 года назад

      @@MichaelDavis-mk4me absolutely best Anthem ever.

    • @MichaelDavis-mk4me
      @MichaelDavis-mk4me 2 года назад +1

      @@johnyanga8532 Not that the competition is fierce, I'm gonna be honest.

    • @fg7726
      @fg7726 2 года назад

      @@MichaelDavis-mk4me i'm french but yes, the soviet anthem is THE best one ! La Marseillaise is so... creepy

  • @TakeMeOffYourMailingList
    @TakeMeOffYourMailingList 2 года назад +5

    A couple of ponts:
    Most importantly, you seem to imply that "The West™" is just the USA. In many other Western countries (in fact most in Europe), there are public TV stations without advertising, entirely funded by either the government or some form of licence fee. It wasn't until the late 1950s in the UK for example that commercial TV was even allowed, and even then to this day product placement is pretty much forbidden, and sponsors have practically zero say in how most commercial TV is made.
    Also, you mentioned "PAL" -- firstly, PAL refers to the method of transmitting colour images. When it's just black and white, it's simply the "625-line system". Secondly, the Soviet Union used SÉCAM for colour transmissions, rather than PAL. A SÉCAM set could receive PAL transmissions and vice versa, but would not be able to render the colour. For this reason, East Germany also opted to use SÉCAM whilst FRD used PAL, but by the 1970s the DDR government recognised "Republikflucht bei Fernseher" (escape by television) and began to manufacture sets compatible with both PAL and SÉCAM.

  • @kianfarazmand8733
    @kianfarazmand8733 2 года назад +4

    Using soviet broadcast at the end was brilliant👍😂
    I hope you do this kind of creativity more often

  • @mtdarus
    @mtdarus 2 года назад +1

    The end video show Everyone is happy. Miner happy,industrial worker happy,farmer happy. A lot of smile. Love it

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475 Год назад +1

    Loved the outro. Makes me miss those fun days back in the gulag.😪

  • @goupilmauperthuis8413
    @goupilmauperthuis8413 2 года назад +5

    Great video! As a child of the seventies I remember quite well the Prerestroika years and I recall french newspapers writing about a 5 minutes daily soviet TV program called something like "chaos in the union", where a very popular journalist would focus on the country's problem. I remember it because that kind of program could only be made during Perestroika but the journalist himself was actually very critical of Perestroika... Did you notice that during your research?

  • @queenofdramatech
    @queenofdramatech 2 года назад +9

    I love that you use the time forward rumba by Sviridov as your background music because it introduced the news for Soviet people.

    • @danielgstohl9993
      @danielgstohl9993 2 года назад +2

      I was thinking it sounded an awful lot like tthe Soviet news intro. Guess it really was that

  • @Keefan1978
    @Keefan1978 2 года назад +13

    Love the music video in the end! Ingenious! :D One example of absurdities of Soviet era television making was the decision of the Estonian Soviet TV to start making and showing weird advertisements in the 80s. They advertised all kind of services and products (which, sometimes, where nowhere to be had). One might ask, why did they do it, as there was no real need for the state-owned companies to advertise, there as no market incentive to be won. Well, the reason is quite simply put: Finland. As people in Tallinn and northern Estonia in general had access to the Finnish TV and where very actively watching it (despite the states efforts of banning it and disturbing the signal), the TV makers where trying to do stuff that was similar to the things they saw on Finnish TV, thus also trying to ad TV-ads. I'm pretty sure these ads are now also viewable on RUclips...

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 2 года назад +3

      The Ushanka show channel has one or two videos about that.

    • @hydrogenbond7303
      @hydrogenbond7303 Год назад +1

      In Czechoslovakia, there also weird commercials being produced. I know about ones for milk, cabbage, sausages, state owned lottery and many other stuff. Another weird thing about the food commercials was that, since there wasn't any competition, there wasn't any brand mentioned in the commercial, therefore the message was essentially just "Drink more milk." or "Eat cabbage" etc.

  • @charles1964
    @charles1964 2 года назад +3

    I found it Interesting, starting @19:14 that the U.S. the programing day in that period started with the Test Pattern and "The National Anthem" too, but mostly that there were no images of Stalin in the montage (even though "The Great Patriotic War" was shown) although Lenin was shown frequently, Comrade Stalin was conspicuous by his absence....

  • @WinstonSmith6
    @WinstonSmith6 2 года назад +3

    You can always just turn on CNN. To get a feel what it was like.

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 2 года назад +8

    Your documentaries are fascinating! And the Bell Button bits are some of the finest around (million dollar idea: annual "The Cold War" Bell Button bit montage video?!). The Soviet End-of-Broadcast snippet is a brilliant inclusion.

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 2 года назад +3

      Don't forget to turn off your television!

  • @Falke615
    @Falke615 2 года назад +2

    Me: Wow, he is wrapping it up with four minutes to go?
    30 Seconds later: Ha! Brilliant!

  • @buckrogers5331
    @buckrogers5331 2 года назад +1

    This is super interesting for me, a former TV engineer who worked for Thomson CE R&D. Merci beaucoup, sir.

  • @MushroomTherapy28
    @MushroomTherapy28 2 года назад +6

    Hey The Cold War channel, i think if you can post the sources have been used for the episodes, that would have been great for reading/learning more about the topics. Thank you so much! :)

  • @Austins_Corner
    @Austins_Corner 2 года назад +11

    That sign off at the end is just a masterwork of propaganda

  • @bertilliozephyrsgate6196
    @bertilliozephyrsgate6196 2 года назад +1

    The most exciting thing about watching Soviet TV was wondering if your set was going to explode.

  • @poetasintierra
    @poetasintierra 3 месяца назад

    Excellent video. Very iformative. It showed me how little I knew about this period of Hustkry, even though I was born in the dead of the Cold War. Thx!

  • @gate7clamp
    @gate7clamp 2 года назад +10

    They should make a DVD box set of the best of Soviet TV I’m sure that would make a killer in sales

  • @deanbuss1678
    @deanbuss1678 2 года назад +5

    This was one of the best produced episodes yet.
    Thanks CWC !

  • @akeffo
    @akeffo 2 года назад +1

    The biggest hit show was “The Glorious Production of Tractor Carburetors Show of Shows!”

  • @sdhubbard
    @sdhubbard 2 года назад +2

    I've seen the outro before. That slightly misshapen star gets me every time.

  • @The-Commentator
    @The-Commentator 2 года назад +55

    At the end of the video, I became a patriotic comrade aiming to restore the Soviet Union.

    • @lothar3610
      @lothar3610 2 года назад +9

      You even look like a young Stalin XD

    • @TheQuotes21
      @TheQuotes21 2 года назад +2

      Red Salute Comrade 💕

    • @blueberrypirate3601
      @blueberrypirate3601 2 года назад +1

      Reading the anti capitalist scum news with pistol held to head😂

    • @charlestaylor253
      @charlestaylor253 2 года назад +3

      Khorosho, Tovarich! Now all you have to do is vote for the Amerikanskii Democratic party...😏

    • @wizard3z868
      @wizard3z868 2 года назад

      @@charlestaylor253 wow that's taking a joke to far lol

  • @pgancedo9299
    @pgancedo9299 2 года назад +4

    I had no idea CNN was around so long…

  • @sebastianfritzsche
    @sebastianfritzsche Год назад +1

    The 625 line standard isn’t known as “PAL”. The Soviet Union used the D/K black and white standard. Later SECAM was used to transmit color.

  • @steved7961
    @steved7961 2 года назад +1

    On June 21 1964 the TV screens throughout the USSR went blank. Spain scored the winning goal against the USSR in the UEFA cup and the USSR authorities decided that the population should not be able to watch more of the match and especially Franco leading the victory celebrations.

  • @naoisekenneally9634
    @naoisekenneally9634 2 года назад +4

    I would love to see an episode on dissident movements within the Soviet Union during the cold war

  • @valerija.legasov548
    @valerija.legasov548 2 года назад +3

    I was born in The Czechoslovakia in 1985, exactly 4 years before the Velvet revolution, so I could not remember the real life both in The Czechoslovakia as well as in The USSR. I was 6, when The USSR colapsed. I am highly interested in the real life behind the Iron curtain (mainly in The Czechoslovakia and The Soviet union), I learn Russian and I am collector of the stuff made in The CS and The USSR. And now back to business. I would like to point out, I am not comunist. The Soviet TV served as the propaganda tool, in deed. If I say "A", I should say "B", so here we go! I have a lot of Soviet movies, cartoons, interviews, documents, even New Year show etc., and honestly sayd: There were also TV - broadcast programs without propaganda, really! Yes, of course, You are right - at least in general. Greetings from Prague to all, stay safe and be healthy, take care!

    • @ondrejsedlak4935
      @ondrejsedlak4935 Год назад

      I actually do remember TV in Czechoslovakia up until 1986 when my family escaped to Australia.
      It wasn't all that amazing to as there were only two TV channels, 1 and 2. Channel 2 was just a delayed broadcast of channel 1 for the most part.
      TV shows were actually pretty good and I remember them very fondly, such as the fantasy Arabela and the sci-fi Návštěvníci.
      Propaganda wasn't actually all that prevalent by 1986 as the communists knew the while mess was coming to an end and probably just gave up.
      There wasn't much western stuff but you would still get the occasional US film or TV show, provided it wasn't anything anti-communism.

  • @emjackson2289
    @emjackson2289 2 года назад +2

    My Mum and Dad used to love Koronation Prospekt, the story of everyday working class citizens in Marxchester.
    Nothing like the workers ration of Comrade Bettyskya's borsch hotpot and the weekly ale delivery to wash it down with whilst saluting the Stakhanovite efforts of Regional Director Barlowski's Number 17 Textile Factory.

  • @davidkennerly
    @davidkennerly 7 месяцев назад +2

    SECAM, not PAL, became the standard for television in the Soviet Union.

  • @masterimbecile
    @masterimbecile 2 года назад +8

    In soviet Russia, TV watches you!

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 2 года назад +4

      In Soviet Russia, radio listens to you.

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 2 года назад

      @@badluck5647 In the West today, lots of CCTV cameras watch a lot of people 24/7.

  • @SturmerSS
    @SturmerSS 2 года назад +3

    Now western censure is much stronger and systematic then USSR could ever achieve.

  • @everythingsucks2825
    @everythingsucks2825 2 года назад +1

    This hour has 22 minutes is 100 percent still on the air

  • @SteadicamCologne
    @SteadicamCologne Год назад +1

    I work as an audio engineer in the TV business and have had many run ins with russian and soviet made microphones. the oktava mk 12 was and is still a widely used microphone. the unit is typically "russian" built. it does what it is supposed to do and is as durable as a tank . other high quality systems are the "Soyuz" line of professional microphones. extremly well crafted and rival the top tiers in production audio from the west. i remeber working with a russian, ex soviet ENG cameraman and he had at KT 190 in his living room. For those who dont know - it is basically a sony betacam copy and looks ecxactly like its japanese counterpart. even the most hardcore communist must be true to his heart, that you just cant beat the asians in electronics - but instead of just buying a sony , they redesigned the unit , and because of " why not" reasons put a betacam recorder on the back.

  • @operator9858
    @operator9858 2 года назад +5

    ya always been curious about all this. its always fascinated me that russians have seen some of the same things we have, but others not at all while we seem to share a lot of classical stories and mythology. guess this is true to some degree with many others, but seems kind of distinct in its own way.

  • @punjabigundaa
    @punjabigundaa 2 года назад +3

    Met an older soviet man in the UK. He said they were not allowed to watch western movies but they saw a lot of Indian movies. Bollywood was very popular in the USSR as India was not a western ally and often sided with the soviets.

    • @alexandersedov9896
      @alexandersedov9896 7 месяцев назад

      Soviet people watched ten times more American films (in Soviet cinemas and on Soviet TV) than Americans watched Soviet films. On the issue of “censorship” and how it actually works.

  • @mtc2300
    @mtc2300 Год назад +1

    I grew up in Denmark in a part of the country, where we could pick up both East and West German tv along with Swedish. The East Germans broadcasted in SECAM, so we weren't able to pickup DFF in colour but with sound. Most of the GDR could pickup West German tv, but not Rügen in the north east and Dresden in the south east. These areas was known as Tal der Ahnungslosen (Valley of the Clueless) and the West German public service station ARD (Das Erste) was jokingly referred to as Ausser (except) Rügen & Dresden.

  • @retrorama3355
    @retrorama3355 2 года назад +1

    I thought this video was about soviet television and radio... literally. I was like, " the soviet era had a bunch of cool TV and radio designs!" 😆

  • @julianhermanubis6800
    @julianhermanubis6800 2 года назад +3

    Serious question: what was the percentage of television ownership in the USSR versus that in the United States or Western Europe in the early years (i.e., late 1940s and 1950s)? Does anyone have reliable figures on this?

  • @brianmartindale2221
    @brianmartindale2221 2 года назад +5

    LOL that last bit, the Soviet song. Reminded me of the days when broadcast closed with the national anthem - sans that third verse - and all those glorious American scenes. I was cracking up! I miss the days of straight-up propaganda.

  • @Tbot2020
    @Tbot2020 2 года назад +1

    I used to watch old Soviet-Era News intro Channels on You Tube all the time. Something about them (And the Soviet Union) I found absolutely fascinating. I appreciate this channel and this episode so much !!!

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Год назад

      U can go to north korea if u re fascinated with dump like ussr. I was born in that toilet country - nothing fun. Robbed of childhood

  • @MalunoMcSketch
    @MalunoMcSketch 2 года назад +5

    Wait....you do kings and genrals?
    Edit: I can't believe I didn't see this before. I love both channels.

  • @nickwilliams3688
    @nickwilliams3688 2 года назад +7

    Coming right out with the dunk on decaf lmao

  • @Thoralmir
    @Thoralmir 2 года назад +1

    You forgot the Soviet Union's favorite cartoon cat & mouse duo: "Worker & Parasite".

  • @damianmcdonagh7908
    @damianmcdonagh7908 Год назад

    Many thanks for posting, I love this RUclips channel.

  • @swaghettiyolonese6914
    @swaghettiyolonese6914 2 года назад +12

    In Soviet Russia, television watches you.

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 2 года назад +2

      In Soviet Russia, radio listens to you.