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Влад и мир про Тарханов: Мы, Мигель Мартинес (Альтернативная история)

Оценку не ставлю, но начало туповатое. ГГ пробило на чаёк и думать ГГ пока не в может. Потом запой. Идет тупой набор звуков и действий. То что у нормального человека на анализ обстановки тратится секунды или на минуты, тут полный ноль. ГГ только понял, что он обрезанный еврей. Дальше идет пустой трёп. ГГ всего боится и это основная тема. ГГ признал в себе опального и застреленного писателя, позже оправданного. В основном идёт

  подробнее ...

Рейтинг: 0 ( 0 за, 0 против).
iv4f3dorov про Тюрин: Цепной пес самодержавия (Альтернативная история)

Афтырь упоротый мудак, жертва перестройки.

Рейтинг: +1 ( 1 за, 0 против).
iv4f3dorov про Дорнбург: Змеелов в СССР (Альтернативная история)

Очередное антисоветское гавно размазанное тонким слоем по всем страницам. Афтырь ты мудак.

Рейтинг: +2 ( 3 за, 1 против).
A.Stern про Штерн: Анархопокалипсис (СИ) (Боевик)

Господи)))
Вы когда воруете чужие книги с АТ: https://author.today/work/234524, вы хотя бы жанр указывайте правильный и прологи не удаляйте.
(Заходите к автору оригинала в профиль, раз понравилось!)

Какое же это фентези, или это эпоха возрождения в постапокалиптическом мире? -)
(Спасибо неизвестному за пиар, советую ознакомиться с автором оригинала по ссылке)

Ещё раз спасибо за бесплатный пиар! Жаль вы не всё произведение публикуете х)

Рейтинг: 0 ( 1 за, 1 против).
чтун про серию Вселенная Вечности

Все четыре книги за пару дней "ушли". Но, строго любителям ЛитАниме (кароч, любителям фанфиков В0) ). Не подкачал, Антон Романович, с "чувством, толком, расстановкой" сделал. Осталось только проду ждать, да...

Рейтинг: +2 ( 2 за, 0 против).

How Russian Journalists in Exile Are Covering the War in Ukraine [Masha Gessen] (fb2) читать постранично, страница - 5


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for Russian journalists in exile. She talked about how she’d helped Russian journalists open bank accounts and get cell-phone contracts. She said that some had arrived with one hastily packed bag, that many of them needed to find schools for their kids and psychotherapists for themselves. “And we expect these people, while they are experiencing all of this, while they are also unable to stop work, to be heroes, to continue fighting against the war, and to make no mistakes,” she said. “I propose we see each other as humans. We have common values, and they are the only things that will make it possible for us to survive this war.”

As Sile spoke, the color seemed slowly to return to Dzyadko’s face. Sile had grown so frustrated with Latvian authorities that she was beginning to think TV Rain’s journalists might need to find another country to host them. “Maybe we just don’t have what it takes to keep them safe here,” she said. But, she went on, many of them don’t have enough money to pay bills, let alone buy plane tickets, and moving again would be re-traumatizing for them and their children. “If we have a problem, we cannot push it on someone else,” she said. “We have to solve it in Latvia ourselves.”

TV Rain had settled into a familiar state of uncertainty. The team continued to work, as it had through a multitude of crises back in Russia, broadcasting on YouTube and on its Web site. Korostelev was banned from Latvia. Some of his colleagues feared that they would soon be deported. At the time, people close to the government told me that there was no political will to enable TV Rain staff members to secure more permanent legal status in Latvia. Some of their visas were set to expire in the spring. Dzyadko brushed off these concerns: “That’s still months away! We just need to keep working.”

Three days later, TV Rain learned that it was losing its office and studio space in Riga. By then, Dzyadko was in the Netherlands, meeting with Sauer. Sauer made the case for moving the entire operation to Amsterdam. It was more expensive than Riga, and harder for Russian speakers to navigate, but its residents were also less afraid of Russia, less suspicious of Russians, and proud of its nickname, City of Freedom. The mayor, the Dutch foreign minister, and the state secretary for culture and media had all visited Sauer’s space and listened to him outline his vision for a Russian independent-media community.

On December 22nd, TV Rain was granted a Dutch broadcasting license. Dzyadko received a work visa to the Netherlands. He and Kotrikadze would soon be moving to Amsterdam, along with a number of other TV Rain staffers. It would be their third city since TV Rain left Russia, last March. Kids would change schools again. Family photographs would be propped up on new windowsills. But TV Rain’s journalists would have jobs and electricity and heat. They would keep reminding themselves that they are the lucky ones. ♦

TV Rain’s reporters and producers often improvise studio spaces.

The biggest worry in the newsroom was that Ukrainians would stop speaking to them.

The New Yorker  · by Masha Gessen · March 6, 2023