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Gazprom-Media

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Gazprom-Media
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryMass media
Founded2000
HeadquartersMoscow, Russia
Key people
Nikolay Senkevich, CEO
Dmitry Chernyshenko, Board Chairman
Revenue7,342,407,000 Russian ruble (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
532,525,000 Russian ruble (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
640,058,000 Russian ruble (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
Total assets4,400,965,000 Russian ruble (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
OwnerGazprombank
ParentGazprom OJSC
SubsidiariesNTV, NTV Plus, Echo of Moscow, Izvestia, Tribuna
Websitewww.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

Paper publications

Internet

Movie & 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

  1. ^ 7 Days: The Russian Oracle, 7 April 2010.Accessed: 5 December 2010.