Fire Safety Encyclopedia

Articles of the Komsomolskaya Pravda today. Radio kp web camera. Radio KP webcam live

Radio Komsomolskaya Pravda is an information and conversation radio station. The station broadcasts news about the main events in Russia and the world. Frequent guests in the studio are politicians, leading economists, political scientists and businessmen, famous musicians and directors. On the air, the presenters receive calls and read out SMS from those wishing to speak.

Radio KP webcam live

  • The broadcasting frequency of the radio station in Moscow: 97.2 FM

Past broadcasts, radio station archive, broadcasts, guests in the studio, live concerts

Radio KP is a network information and conversation radio station that went on the air in 2009.

    More than 800 journalists (including international affairs) of the famous "Komsomolskaya Pravda" are working on the air of the radio station. News releases tell about the main events in Russia and the world.
    Political scientists and businessmen, leading economists, famous musicians and directors often come to the studio, discuss the most pressing and topical topics with journalists of the Publishing House KP and experts.

Particular attention is paid to the opinion of radio listeners: on the air, the presenters receive calls and read out SMS from those wishing to speak. More than 50 copyright programs and special projects are regularly broadcast.

Synergy Publishing House "KP" and all its projects ("Komsomolskaya Pravda", "Soviet Sport", weekly "Football", "Express Gazeta", website kp.ru, press center) are the basic platform for creating a unique radio station.

    Cities and broadcasting frequencies of Komsomolskaya Pravda

    - Moscow - 97.2 FM

    - Abakan - 105.3 FM

    - Almetyevsk - 97.2 FM

    - Barnaul - 106.8 FM

    - Belgorod - 90.7 FM

    - Biysk - 100.9 FM

    - Bratsk - 99.5 FM

    - Vladivostok - 90.4 FM

    - Vladimir - 104.3 FM

    - Volgograd - 96.5 FM

    - Vologda - 99.2 FM

    - Voronezh - 97.7 FM

    - Gubkin - 88.6 FM

    - Donetsk - 106.0 FM

    - Yekaterinburg - 92.3 FM

    - Zlatoust - 89.3 FM

    - Izhevsk - 107.6 FM

    - Irkutsk - 91.5 FM

    - Kazan - 98.0 FM

    - Kaliningrad - 107.2 FM

    - Kamyshin - 90.7 FM

    - Kemerovo - 89.8 FM

    - Kerch - 103.6 FM

    - Kirov - 88.3 FM

    - Krasnodar - 91.0 FM

    - Krasnoyarsk - 107.1 FM

    - Lipetsk - 103.7 FM

    - Miass - 89.8 FM

    - Find - 107.2 FM

    - Nizhny Novgorod - 92.8 FM

    - Novosibirsk - 98.3 FM

    - Noyabrsk - 104.0 FM

    - Orichi - 87.9 FM

    - Perm - 96.6 FM

    - Cockerels - 105.5 FM

    - Pyatigorsk - 88.8 FM

    - Rostov-on-Don, Bataysk - 89.8 FM

    - Salavat - 100.4 FM

    - Samara - 98.2 FM

    - Sarapul - 96.4 FM

    - Saratov, Engels - 90.6 FM

    - Sayanogorsk - 102.3 FM

    - Sevastopol - 107.7 FM

    - Serov - 89.5 FM

    - Simferopol - 107.8 FM

    - Stavropol, Armavir - 105.7 FM

    - Sterlitamak - 100.4 FM

    - Tver - 99.3 FM

    - Tyumen - 99.6 FM

    - Ulan-Ude - 90.4 FM

    - Ussuriysk - 99.4 FM

    - Khabarovsk - 88.3 FM

    - Chelyabinsk - 95.3 FM

"TVNZ" is a daily tabloid newspaper founded on March 13, 1925. It takes the first place in terms of the number of readers in Russia (35 million circulation in 2008).

Created in accordance with the decision of the XIII Congress of the RCP (b). The first issue of the newspaper was published on May 24, 1925 with a circulation of 31 thousand copies. In the Soviet period - the organ of the Central Committee of the Komsomol.

The newspaper was initially aimed at a youth audience, so it contained a lot of popular science and adventure articles. In the 1960-1970s, such journalists as Yaroslav Golovanov and Vasily Peskov worked in it. With the beginning of perestroika, socially critical articles began to appear in the newspaper, which further increased the popularity of the newspaper. In the late 1980s, its circulation reached 20 million copies.

Komsomolskaya Pravda was the first in the country to publish a color newspaper: on February 23, 1984, the first issue of the supplement to the newspaper, the Sobesednik weekly, was published. It became a cult publication for those who were then 20. The circulation of the newspaper in record time reached 1 million 350 thousand copies.

On December 1, 1990, "Komsomolskaya Pravda" ceased to be the organ of the Central Committee of the Komsomol, turning into the "All-Union daily newspaper".

At the beginning of 1991, the editorial office organized and held a large-scale contest "Miss Press of the USSR", about which the film "Miss Press" was shot by the VID television company for Channel One.

On August 19, 1991, during the August putsch, the newspaper was banned by the State Emergency Committee and for the first time in its history, the issues on August 19 and 20 were not published according to the schedule. But on August 21, the newspaper published the entire chronicle of the events of the putsch as a historical document.

In 1992, there was a peaceful "divorce" between "Interlocutor" and "Komsomolskaya Pravda" and the weekly was registered as an independent publication.

In the 1990s-2000s, the newspaper noticeably shifted its focus from social and political topics to the gossip, the lives of celebrities and the entertainment of the reader, becoming one of the largest "tabloids". The political review remained in the newspaper, but took up less space.

Since 1993, the weekly "Komsomolskaya Pravda" (sometimes called "fatty") has been published with an increased volume. Its circulation significantly exceeds the circulation of the daily issue and reaches 3.1 million copies. Until 2005 the weekly was published on Fridays, then on Thursdays.

On Monday, February 13, 2006, the entire sixth floor of the building, where the Moscow edition of Komsomolskaya Pravda was located, burned down. Despite the fire, Komsomolskaya Pravda remained to work on Pravda Street. The editorial office was moved to the building of the former clinic on the street. Pravda, 15.

In early August 2007, Komsomolskaya Pravda changed its address and moved to Stary Petrovsko-Razumovskiy proezd (Dynamo metro station), where it is still located. The publishing house occupies the upper 4 floors in the 6-storey building of the Moscow sewing association Vympel (founded in 1914), which rents out a significant part of its premises for commercial and other organizations.

In 2002, the newspaper, using the method of an exaggerated sensation on an acute topic, published an article "The Moscow Monastery turned out to be a brothel", with slander against the Franciscan Catholics.

In N125, dated August 26, 2008, on page 5, she published a photo of Paul McCartney, to whom Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko allegedly presented a shirt with the inscription “Thank you, God, I'm not a Muscovite!”, With accusatory comments from the newspaper's deputy editor-in-chief Leonid Zakharov. Subsequently, it turned out that the donated shirt was white, and the inscription was added to the photo using an image editor. The editors later admitted the mistake, deleted the article and published a refutation. According to the editor-in-chief of the newspaper Novy Dnestrovskiy Kuryer Sergei Ilchenko, “The site“ KP ”is generally oversaturated with crude provocations of this kind - it openly works for the confrontation between Ukraine and Russia”.

The publications of Komsomolskaya Pravda journalists cause scandals and legal proceedings against the newspaper.

Despite the fight against alcoholism proclaimed by the President of the Russian Federation in August 2009, the newspaper is reproached that it is often directly engaged in the promotion of domestic drunkenness. "Komsmolskaya Pravda" publishes illustrated reports, which describe how its journalists and the heroes they interview are engaged in copious drinking.

Earlier (in 2002) an incident in Tyumen was reported when a Komsomolskaya Pravda journalist, who was intoxicated, got into a fight with the musicians of the Chaif ​​group. A year earlier, two journalists of the newspaper prepared a report from the sobering-up center, where they had ended up, being, according to their confession, drunk.

Newspaper headline: Son of Elena Yakovleva: "Nobody beat me!"

Children of famous artists often become heroes of secular news. 27-year-old Denis Shalnyh, the heir of talented actors Elena Yakovleva and Valery Shalnykh, again forced to talk about himself. The young man decided to remove the tattoo from his face, after which there were publications that the guy was allegedly pursued by the fans of the tattoos and was almost beaten to a pulp because of his decision to abandon the painting on his body.

  • Newspaper headline: What kind of blindness

    Moscow in the summer was sausage "like lads on acid", in the Arkhangelsk region and now it is hot from "garbage" protests, in Ingushetia they cut off the Internet to suppress rallies, "optimized" doctors throw statements on the table, but "everything is calm in Baghdad." The Kremlin sees no growth in protest activity in Russia this year. This is precisely why people take to the streets. Because those above do not want to see what is happening below.

  • Newspaper Headline: Bribe to a Greyhound Puppy

    Accused of a large bribe, the ex-head of the capital's TFR, Alexander Drymanov, fell into the hands of investigators because of his ... bad memory. Fearing to forget the pin code from the credit card, which his deputy Denis Nikandrov handed over to the dignitary of the Investigative Committee as a bribe, San Sanych carried the pin code on a piece of paper in his bag.

  • Newspaper headline: Income from spending will be calculated

    It was proposed to establish the financial solvency of potential borrowers based on their expenses. Thus, banks want to improve the mechanism for calculating the maximum debt burden (MPI). Financial organizations are obliged to calculate this limit from October 1 for all borrowers. If it turns out that the borrower will have to give more than half of the annual income for a new loan, they will not give a loan.

  • Newspaper headline: The stench from my house!

    Stench, mountains of garbage, cockroaches, flies and even bedbugs - neighbors with "Plyushkin's syndrome" can turn the life of the entire entrance into hell. Someone silently endures for years, someone beats at all doors, starting with the precinct and ending with the Ministry of Emergencies, someone knocks the thresholds of ships. But to evict the owner of a bad apartment is an intractable task. The only thing that can be achieved is a general cleaning. Alas, the sweep does not help for long, especially if the tenants are suffering from mental illness.

  • Newspaper Headline: Better Never Than Late

    And we didn't even notice the elephant! - something like this can be described my emotions after a detailed acquaintance with the unexpected political revelations of the former head of the presidential administration and Yeltsin's son-in-law Valentin Yumashev. Having watched the interview of Valentin Borisovich with Vladimir Pozner that thundered this weekend, I read in addition his recent less popular interview with publicist Andrei Malgin. The time was well spent.

  • Band 2

      Four days ago, after the launch of the MCD, residents of the Moscow region were able to quickly and with maximum convenience get from one end of the region to the other. Therefore, the residents of Pavshinskaya Poyma were enthusiastic about the commissioning of the new Penyagino station.

      A bill has been submitted to the State Duma that will oblige Rosgvardia employees to sometimes introduce themselves and present their ID. The new requirements do not apply to those involved in the maintenance of order during mass street actions. And the National Guards will still be able to detain the protesters without explaining the reasons - for the sake of preventing "grave consequences."

    • Newspaper Headline: Headlong Race

      Michael Bloomberg submitted documents for registration as a candidate from the Democratic Party in the upcoming US presidential elections in 2020. Rumors have been around for a long time that the billionaire who rose to prominence when he was mayor of New York might break into the race. However, it was doubtful that a serious politician would enter into a competition with opponents with a 9-month handicap. However, Bloomberg is an extraordinary person and can achieve a lot where it would be impossible for anyone else.

    Band 3

    • Newspaper headline: Progressive. Income. Not yours

      Recently, the discussion of the progressive approach tax has intensified again. So far, its first part is the release of people with small earnings from personal income tax. VTB CEO Andrei Kostin spoke in the spirit that he sees growing support for the initiative in the government and the presidential administration. In turn, First Deputy Prime Minister Anton Siluanov replied that it is necessary to look at both the pros and cons.

    • The headline in the newspaper: "Akademkniga" slammed shut forever?

      In the windows of the Akademkniga store (Vavilova street, 55/7), announcements have recently appeared that the store will be closed from the new year. The reason is the rise in rent: the owner of the premises has introduced commercial rates for the store, which Akademkniga will not stand. The uniqueness of this situation is that the store of the publishing house of the Academy of Sciences has been located in this house since the moment of its construction, that is, for more than 60 years.

    • Newspaper headline: Does the country need "these assholes of yours"?

      The birth rate in Russia is falling rapidly. The latest poll conducted by the Levada Center among women under 45 and men under 55 confirms the sad truth: 27% of our fellow citizens plan to have only one child, and 9% are going to give up childbearing altogether. The change in the attitude of the people to this issue is especially clearly visible if we compare the current statistics with the one that existed 70 years ago: in 1960, one woman had 2.5 children, and today - only 1.6.

    • Newspaper headline: The circulation of pharmacies among the people

      Muscovites, accustomed to the fact that medicines can be bought at every step, have no idea that there are regions in Russia whose residents have to travel tens of kilometers to the pharmacy. And there are many such territories. Pharmacies are distributed across the country extremely unevenly: somewhere dense, and somewhere empty. For example, there are only 17 pharmacies in the entire Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. These are the data of a large-scale study conducted by DSM Group analysts.

    Band 4

    • Newspaper headline: Saved on health

      Rosstat has issued another scattering of valuable information - on GDP growth in the third quarter, on the development of industry, on the dynamics of exports and imports. If Rosstat is presented as a kaleidoscope, then the folding pictures, as expected, were constantly changing. This time, the vector of mood changes, inspired by the pictures, ranged from uncertain, timid joy to the usual melancholy and even indignation.

    • Newspaper Headline: Customers Go Digital

      In the outgoing year, mobile banking continued its triumphant march. The positive trend was formed due to several factors: the popularity of smartphones and the financial literacy of the population increased. In addition, Russians have become more rational in spending.

    • Newspaper Headline: "Waiting for the Coming Crisis"

      Russians are increasingly taking cash to banks. According to RIA Novosti, over the past year, the volume of household deposits has grown by 9% - up to 29 trillion rubles. The deposit of 1 person on average accounts for 200 thousand rubles. But experts don't trust the calculations. In their opinion, the growth of deposits arose because of the moneybags, and half of Russians have no time for savings: they spend more than 50% of their salaries to pay off loans.

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