Gazprom-Media
Subsidiary | |
Industry | Mass media |
Founded | 2000 |
Headquarters | Moscow, Russia |
Key people |
Nikolay Senkevich, CEO Dmitry Chernyshenko, Board Chairman |
Owner | Gazprombank |
Parent | Gazprom OJSC |
Subsidiaries | NTV, NTV Plus, Echo of Moscow, Izvestia, Tribuna |
Website | www.gazprom-media.com |
Gazprom-Media (Russian: ОАО Газпром-Медиа) is the largest Russian media holding founded in 2000 as a subsidiary of Gazprom. In 2000 it acquired NTV, the only nationwide state-independent television in Russia of the time, as well as other media assets of Vladimir Gusinsky's Media Most group, which raised a major controversy and resulted in considerable changes in their editorial policy. In 2005 Gazprom-Media purchased Izvestia, a leading nationwide newspaper. In August 2005 Gazprom sold the group to Gazprombank.
Media assets
Television
Radio
- Autoradio
- CITY-FM
- Comedy radio
- Ekho Moskvy
- Humor FM
- Kids Radio
- NRJ Russia
- Relax FM
- Romantica
Paper publications
- Seven Days Publishing House:
- Itogi (weekly news magazine)
- Seven Days (TV guide)[1]
- Story Caravan (monthly magazine)
- Story Caravan Collection (monthly magazine)
- Tribuna
- Peterburgskiy Chas Pik
- Seven Days Publishing House:
Internet
Movie & Cinema
- Central Partnership
- Comedy Club Production
- NTV-Kino
- October Cinema & Crystal Palace Cinema
Directors General
- Viktor Ilyushin (December 1997 – June 1998)
- Sergey Zverev (June 1998 – May 1999)
- Alexander Astafyev (1999–2000)
- Alfred Kokh (June 2000 - October 2001)
- Boris Jordan (October 2001 - January 2003)
- Alexander Dybal (January 2003 – June 2004)
- Nikolay Senkevich (since July 2004)
Board of directors
- Dmitry Chernyshenko (chair)
- Ilya Yeliseyev
- Nikolay Senkevich
- Sergei Ushakov
- Konstantin Chuychenko
Management Committee
- Nikolay Senkevich (CEO, Director General)
- Igor Goykhberg (Deputy Director General)
- Sergey Petrov (Director for Finance)
- Yan Piskunov (Chief of Legal Department)
- Dmitry Samokhin (Director General of NTV Plus)
References
- ↑ 7 Days: The Russian Oracle, 7 April 2010.Accessed: 5 December 2010.
External links
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