About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 70. Chapters: Pravda, Eastern Bloc information dissemination, Deutscher Fernsehfunk, Channel One, Printed media in the Soviet Union, Radio Televizioni Shqiptar, Soviet Central Television, Broadcasting in the Soviet Union, Kurier Wile ski, Voice of Russia, Television in the Soviet Union, Magyar Televizio, Romanian Television, Rundfunk der DDR, RIA Novosti, Pershyi Natsionalnyi, Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company, Telewizja Polska, Valdai International Discussion Club, Neues Deutschland, TVP2, Kossuth Radio, Komsomolskaya Pravda, Magyar Radio, Eesti Televisioon, Horizont, TVP1, Latvijas Telev zija, Mass media in Communist Czechoslovakia, Sovetskaya Latviya, Deutschlandsender, Bulgarian National Television, Polskie Radio, Scinteia, TVR1, M1, Bulgarian National Radio, Radio Belgrade, Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union, National Television Company of Ukraine, Lithuanian National Radio and Television, Radio in the Soviet Union, Radio Bulgaria, List of newspapers in Ukrainian SSR, National State Television and Radio Company of the Republic of Belarus, TVR2, Berliner Rundfunk, Rude pravo, Radio Berlin International, Latvijas Radio, T2, Trud, Radio3Net, Radio DDR 1, Zeri i Popullit, Efir 2, List of television channels in Belarus, Kauno diena, Programme One, ELTA, Soviet Information Bureau, M2, Trybuna Ludu, Radio Romania Actualit i, Central newspapers of the Soviet Union, Zvyazda, Belarusian Telegraph Agency, Borba, Radio Romania Cultural, Moscow Programme, Czechoslovak Television, Pionerskaya Pravda, All Union First Programme, Karjalan Sanomat, Rahva Haal, Esti Budapest. Excerpt: Eastern Bloc information dissemination was controlled directly by each country's Communist party, which controlled the state media, censorship and propaganda organs. State and party ownership of print, television and radio media served as an important manne...