Komsomolskaya Pravda journalists. “Marginality has become the general line. Andreev Nikolai Alekseevich

At the beginning of the week, Uliana Skoybeda's column was published on the website of Komsomolskaya Pravda with the subtitle “Sometimes you regret that the Nazis did not make lampshades from the ancestors of today's liberals. There would be fewer problems." The text was about the words of the oppositionist Leonid Gozman, who in his blog equated the Soviet counterintelligence SMERSH with the Nazi SS troops. Gozman was outraged by the series about the valiant SMERSH employees, and Skoybeda, in turn, was outraged by the fact that "liberals are revising history in order to knock the ground out from under our country's feet."

Words about lampshades from the ancestors of the liberals caused a scandal on the Internet, which resulted in calls to boycott KP. Later, the provocative statement was removed from the site. Editor-in-chief of the newspaper Vladimir Sungorkin named the phrase “ugly”, however, he referred to the fact that Ulyana Skoybeda blurted it out in an emotional heat. Sungorkin added that he would reprimand the journalist, but at the same time noted that the words of Gozman, whom he called "an ideological madman", still seem offensive to him. The State Duma has already dealt with the statements of the oppositionist, Komsomolskaya Pravda has so far gotten off with a warning from Roskomnadzor for violating laws on the media and on countering extremism.

Lenta.ru asked several well-known journalists who once worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda to talk about how a column with anti-Semitic statements could have appeared in the newspaper, what has changed in the newspaper in recent years and how it stands out from the rest of the Russian press .

Olga Bakushinskaya, columnist, worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1995 to 2006

When I started working at Komsomolskaya Pravda, such things could not even come close. But the newspaper gradually changed - it became especially noticeable when Yeltsin resigned. The press began to change in principle, but Komsomolskaya Pravda, in my opinion, especially. It was in the early 2000s that people of extreme right-wing nationalist views came to it. I cannot say that this has never been felt in Sungorkin. Another question is that he would never give out his views with the words of Skoybeda - simply because he is a good journalist and a rather smart and cautious person.

The readership has also changed a lot in recent years, because what kind of food to spread - such consumers will come. I think that the person who is now reading Komsomolskaya Pravda likes everything, and he fully supports Skoybeda's position. In this sense, the newspaper satisfies its reader. Sungorkin is also a very good businessman, and partly he does it now because it is profitable.

Komsomolskaya Pravda always had a lot of journalists' emotions, and this was its big plus. Your opinion, if you knew how to express it well, was very much appreciated. But before, at least, it was necessary to confirm your emotions with actual events. I'm afraid the balance has shifted now.

I cannot say that Komsomolskaya Pravda was or is now in any special position. The point, rather, is that now you can print something like this in any publication and there will be no big scandal - marginality is not just allowed, it has become a kind of general line. Look what statements deputies allow themselves. In any normal coordinate system, this is a criminal case and rejection by society. And here you can say whatever you want, you will also be given an order. So Sungorkin is not the only one here - he is like everyone else.

Many journalists who once worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda do not really like to talk about the modern edition. Frankly, we are quite hurt that this happened. Previously, when you said that you worked at KP, everyone understood that you had a strong school and that you were a real journalist. And now it's getting more and more embarrassing to mention it. But I'm still proud that I worked at KP - it was a good newspaper.

Aleksey Sinelnikov, editor-in-chief of the newspaper My District, worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1995 to 2007, at the time of his departure he headed the editorial office of the site

I don’t really follow what Komsomolskaya Pravda writes now, but I can’t say that I’m very surprised. Uliana Skoybeda by nature is such a woman who waves her saber on every occasion. In addition, a biting manner is, in principle, cultivated in Komsomolskaya Pravda - it is important that the articles are sincere and reach the audience. Sungorkin is generally careful about the possibility of journalists to splash out what is on their minds. "Komsomolskaya Pravda" is valuable for the mass reader because it is so unkempt.

But, in my opinion, there was a bust with this column, as well as with some of the previous columns of Ulyana. Unfortunately, this story reflects the state of the whole society. We do not know how to stop in time, we do not know how to negotiate - the nature of the discussion has acquired sick features on both sides. For me, both points of view are unacceptable: Ulyana committed indecency, but Gozman with his position is just as disgusting to me. My grandfather ended up in a penal battalion, probably behind him were the same machine guns of people from the NKVD. I have no complaints about them, it was a war, there were completely different conditions.

There is an opinion that a lot is forgiven for Komsomolskaya Pravda. But in the case of this column, I would not speak about power, but about society. Most people won't rebel against a newspaper, won't boycott it, no advertiser will refuse to cooperate. If such a story happened in Europe, there the state would not even have to intervene in the situation - there ordinary readers would say to the newspaper: "That's it, goodbye." We ourselves are quite inert, so we - the Internet community as part of the inhabitants of Russia - can be ignored. We will now shout about it on the Internet and switch to the fact that the Americans beat us 8:3.

At the same time, I do not think that Sungorkin is completely indifferent to the reaction of the public. It is not bestial people who work at Komsomolskaya Pravda, they can apologize, they can explain how it happened. But it seems to me that a newspaper with such a huge audience still needs to be more careful.

Valery Simonov, worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1988 to 1997, went from the first deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper to the chairman of the board of AOZT Komsomolskaya Pravda, and then the editor-in-chief of the publication

I do not want to comment on this scandal, because I do not consider it particularly outstanding. In my opinion, this situation has often been happening in various media lately, so I don’t want to stand up and judge an individual journalist or publication. There is already such a genre in journalism - the excitation of a scandal. In Komsomolskaya Pravda, this story just sounded so loudly, because it suddenly touched on such a sensitive topic.

When I headed the newspaper, there were other laws of journalism. Then the responsibility of the publication for publications and the personal responsibility of the journalist for his words were incomparably higher. Of course, there were scandals and high-profile materials in KP - without this, the newspaper could not exist at any time, and Komsomolskaya Pravda, frankly, was always allowed a little more than the rest of the monsters of the newspaper market. But those scandals were more significant, interesting, or something. The current "Komsomolskaya Pravda" has retained many generic features, including a penchant for outrageousness, a desire to be a pioneer in those topics that are usually not discussed aloud in society.

During my creative biography, my attitude towards the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper has changed a lot. I have probably experienced the whole range of feelings that exist between people and newspapers - from great love to hatred. Now I treat my colleagues from KP with quite benevolent interest. I will not say that Komsomolskaya Pravda is the publication with which I start all day, but I follow it. There are a lot of names from the old guard that I'm interested in.

Azer Mursaliev, editor-in-chief of the Kommersant publishing house, was a correspondent for Komsomolskaya Pravda in the 1980s

I have not read the article by Ulyana Skoybeda, so it is difficult for me to judge this scandal. Now I hardly read Komsomolskaya Pravda, because our publications and KP occupy completely different niches. The newspaper I worked for was completely different - it was designed for what is now called the elite, for the smart reader. She was, of course, a mass newspaper, even got into the Guinness Book of Records as the most circulated edition. But now mass publications have become different, they suggest a different level of audience development. Now its readers are people who watch NTV and TNT channels. Perhaps the fact is that society has changed a lot over the years, stratified.

I worked for the newspaper in the last years of the Soviet Union and the first years of the new Russia, when it did not strive for such scandalousness. But in general, Komsomolskaya Pravda has always published polar opinions, sharp, high-profile articles. In Soviet times, Komsomolskaya Pravda really was in a special position: it was allowed a little more than other major publications, or it allowed itself what others could not afford. But what happens to the newspaper now, I don't know.

I have a good relationship with Vladimir Sungorkin, I think that he is a talented and successful media manager. I worked with him for many years and I think that he is an intelligent person with a balanced position. He never adhered to radical or extremist views. I do not think that Sungorkin gave the task to write such a column, but the fact that he later removed the phrase that caused outrage from there speaks rather in his favor.

Vladimir Mamontov, President of Izvestiya Publishing House, worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1990 to 2005, at various times he held the positions of first deputy editor-in-chief, editor-in-chief, and then editor-in-chief of the publication

I don't think Sungorkin saw this [Skoibeda's article]. In any case, this is unacceptable and needs a clear explanation for the public. There can be no two or three opinions. I remember that I myself wrote that many critics of Russia would not exist in the world if the Russian and Soviet "muzhik", "cattle" had not saved Europe. Some he just pulled out of the oven. Managed. But here is something else: here is mockery. As well as Gozman's comparison of Smersh with the SS. Ulyana succumbed to a provocation, but this is impossible. Yes, and without provocation it is impossible to write like that.

The seventh - the last - week of vision restoration according to the method of Professor Zhdanov. He did not relax, on the contrary, he increased the load! Exercise for the eyes - 7 times a day. I repeat the first FIVE exercises 10 times. Exercises 6 - 12 - ONE time. Palming (eye massage with palms) - as you get tired.

Finish

I already calmly read newspapers with the naked eye, texts on the monitor. I even print. And the hand is still reaching for the glasses. Looks like he's been around for 20 years. I see, I understand that these “crutches” are no longer needed, but I can’t part at all. I am looking for excuses to vilify for another day or two: I urgently need to submit an article, all of a sudden I won’t have time without them, I’ll slowly print. Another treacherous thought also spun in my head: maybe slightly extend the scheduled period, smoothly move from +1 to +0.75, and only then ... Professor Zhdanov explained the "strangeness" of my behavior. People who decide to restore their vision develop a psychological inferiority complex towards the end of classes. Especially the nearsighted. It seems that without glasses you will not see something very important in life. “Experience shows that at the finish line you must decisively take off your points. You suffer psychologically for a week or two, and then you forget about them. Vision will be restored.

I decided to "torment myself" away from my spectacled temptress - Claudia. Computer keyboards. I took a vacation for two weeks. And on Sunday, September 22, on the day of his 60th birthday, he waved to his small homeland 400 km from the capital. Left the laptop at home. And in order not to be tempted, I decisively broke the +1 points I bought quite recently. Although back in July it was problematic to read +2.5 prescribed by the doctor and I wore +3.

Why do I need them now? The experiment is over!

In recent years, a hundred kilometers from my father's house, from the constant fixation of the situation on a difficult track, strong tension appeared in my eyes. I had to slow down, sharply break my eyes, rotate to reset the glazing. Now all 400 km eyes looked at the track tirelessly. No glazing. (Over the past three months, I have wound 400 km back and forth three times - the effect has been preserved.)

The second discovery was made the next morning in the village, going to the forest. I used to collect mushrooms without glasses. But now he noted with surprise that the grass, foliage, needles look brighter, more alive than before. I thought it was the night rain washed the forest. However, in the following campaigns, nature looked much more colorful. Not to mention the fact that he brought home more mushrooms than in previous seasons. (Although this fact, if desired, can be attributed to a rich harvest of boletus.)

It turns out that in just seven weeks I not only got rid of my senile presbyopia, began to read, work on a computer without glasses, as planned, but also improved my vision qualitatively. A pleasant surprise.

As Zhdanov predicted, in these two weeks I completely lost my spectacle inferiority complex. Returning to Moscow, he didn’t even remember about the eye “crutches”. As if he had not worn for two decades.

If I immediately took a vacation for a month, then in the countryside, deprived of the opportunity and DUTIES to print on a computer, I would have reached the goal of a week in 4, maximum 5. Law: the less you wear glasses, the faster your vision is restored! But I conducted the experiment in the real conditions of a big city. In working mode. Without changing anything in the schedule, lifestyle, habits, nutrition.

Don't waste your time!

Perhaps the main question for beginners and those who are just planning to practice according to the Zhdanov method is where to get time for training? So much, they say, written in the newspaper! Don't worry, friends. The professor and I specifically gave a detailed description of the training, so that everyone could understand what and how to do. It takes a little time to complete. If there is a passionate desire to get rid of glasses, is it really difficult to set aside several times a day for 5 - 7 minutes for palming, exercising?

Think about how much time you spend aimlessly every day at planning meetings, meetings, meetings, smoke breaks, in lines, commuting, etc. Use these lost hours and minutes wisely. Draw with your eyes on the walls, windows in meeting rooms, offices, savings banks, hospitals, shops, hairdressers, bus salons, subway cars ... One colleague reported the other day that in the gym he manages to train his eyes at the same time as his muscles.

Watch your favorite movie in the evening, transfer - bam! - at the most interesting place, an advertisement popped up. Calm down, citizens! Do not click the remote - it's useless. TV bosses agreed to run commercials simultaneously on different channels. Rub your palms until warm, close your eyes and surrender to palming. Let your eyes rest from the flickering screen. In advertising telepauses, you can also do eye exercises.

Again, remember - eye training must be strictly performed in increments until you lose points. Don't stop halfway. After a seven-week experiment, to consolidate my success, I continued to purposefully do gymnastics for the eyes and other exercises for another month. Gradually reduce the time and number of classes. Now I don't really do it anymore. Tired eyes at the computer - a three-minute palming! I go to the subway, minibus - purely on the machine, I do Zhdanov’s exercises in order to keep my form, not to waste time. Not every day. The weather will be clear - I am performing solarization in the sun. I really like this main exercise for relaxing the eyes (alas, Moscow rarely indulges on sunny days now). That's all my current activities.


Karmen Alexander Romanovich (1941-2013)

Born in 1941 in Moscow. Graduated from the Faculty of International Relations of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR (1967).

After graduating from the institute, he worked in the foreign department of the Izvestia newspaper (1968-73), art. correspondent of the foreign department of the newspaper "Komsomolskaya Pravda", the newspaper's own correspondent for Latin America - with places of residence in Havana (Cuba) (1974-77) and in Lima (Peru) (1977-85). Since 1986, he has been an editor-consultant of the Main Editorial Office of Latin America of the Novosti Press Agency (now RIA Novosti).

From 1988 to 1995 - own correspondent of APN for South America, based in Montevideo (Uruguay).

Since 1995 - correspondent and columnist for the international department of the magazine "New Time", head. department "Abroad" of the newspaper "Vek", correspondent of the international department of the newspaper "Vremya MN".

From 2004 to 2009 - Deputy editor-in-chief of the Latin America journal of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Since 2002 - Lecturer in the Department of International Journalism, Faculty of Journalism, MGIMO (U) of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation.

The main topics of publications are foreign policy, history, culture and social problems of Latin American countries, Russian-Latin American relations.

Author of four essay-journalistic books, illustrated with his own photographic works, about the countries of Latin America. Author of a book of memoirs about his father - an outstanding documentary filmmaker of the 20th century - "Unknown Wars of Roman Karmen", awarded with a diploma of the 20th II Moscow International Book Fair (2009).

Laureate of the Artyom Borovik Prize (2010) “Honor. Courage. Mastery”, prize of the Union of Journalists of Moscow and the Yulian Semyonov Cultural Foundation (2012) “For a great creative contribution to the development of extreme geopolitical journalism”, a special award of the Union of Journalists of Russia “Golden Shelf of Russian Journalism” (2012). He has diplomas of "Recognition of Merit" from the National Union of Journalists of Peru and the Prensa Latina Agency (Cuba) for his contribution to the development of relations with these countries.

The book of essays "The One and Only", published as a textbook for student journalists, was awarded the prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia (2011).

Kirinitsyanov Yury Ivanovich

Born on March 5, 1949 in Semipalatinsk, in a family of employees. Graduated with honors in 1971 from the Faculty of Journalism of the Kazakh State University. S.M. Kirov. According to the distribution, he began in the regional newspaper "Avangard" (Dzhetygaru, Kustanai region). Since 1972, he worked in the republican newspaper "Leninskaya Smena" - as his own correspondent in the Kustanai and Turgai regions, head of the department of rural youth. From March 1974 to September 1975, he was the editor-in-chief of the Leninskaya Smena newspaper at a student construction site (supplement to the Leninskaya Smena). Then - in "Komsomolskaya Pravda", as his own correspondent for the Kazakh SSR (1975-78). Then there was Pravda, Stroitelnaya Gazeta, and Rabochaya Tribuna. In "Rossiyskaya Gazeta" - own correspondent in Kazakhstan (1995-2009). In October 2002, he founded the monthly international newspaper Ves Mir, which is published in Russian and printed in Kazakhstan (Almaty). Circulation up to 5000 copies, distributed in 22 countries. The main topics are the commonwealth of Kazakhstan and Russia, Eurasianism, politics, economics, education, science and culture. Among the authors - including journalists of all generations of the KP.

He was awarded the Soviet medal "For Labor Valour". Laureate of the prizes of the Union of Journalists of Kazakhstan and Russia., the highest award of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation - the Badge of Honor "For services to the professional community." He was noted with gratitude from Grigory Rapota, Secretary General of the Eurasian Economic Community, for his great creative contribution to the development of partnership and mutual understanding between the EurAsEC states. (Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan). He was noted with gratitude from the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan N. Nazarbayev - for "active coverage of the processes of integration and development of the Eurasian Economic Community".

Honored Worker of the Republic of Kazakhstan.

Knyazeva Marina Leonidovna

She published her first poem in Komsomolskaya Pravda, in Scarlet Sail, later she worked in the newspaper as an intern in the information department. After graduating from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University (1976) and postgraduate studies, having defended the title of candidate of philological sciences, she worked as a correspondent for the magazines "Youth", "Student Meridian", while simultaneously teaching, and still conducts a special course at the department of periodicals of her native faculty.

Participated in political movements "For a Healthy Russia" (1996; director of the "Culture" program), "For Civil Dignity" (1998; member of the presidium).

Member of the Union of Journalists of the USSR , the Union of Russian vers libre, the Union of theatrical figures. Member of the editorial board of the newspaper "Literary Fair".

Kovalevsky Vladimir Alexandrovich

Born on June 5, 1948 in Kazakhstan, in virgin lands (Dzhetygara, Kustanai region). He published his first notes and stories in the regional newspaper Avangard.

He studied journalism at the Kazakh State University in Alma-Ata and at the same time worked in the republican youth newspaper Leninskaya Smena.

At the age of 23 he received a government award - for organizing the virgin expedition "The Bread of the Decisive".

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" (1975-84) - staff correspondent for the Turkmen SSR, head of the department of morality and law (since 1981). For participation in the actions of "Komsomolskaya Pravda" in the virgin lands and on the BAM, he was awarded the badge of the Central Committee of the Komsomol "Labor Valor".

Then work in the newspaper "Izvestia" (1984-99) - as a special correspondent, executive secretary of the weekly "Soyuz", columnist for "Financial News". After 2000 - vice-president of the audit and consulting company "Ekfi", then adviser to the president and editor-in-chief of the corporate newspaper in the company "TransTeleCom".

Kozhevnikova Kapitolina Vasilievna

She was born on September 26, 1925 in the village of Ivanovka, Sterlibashevsky district of Bashkiria. She graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of the Ural State University (1948). For ten years she worked in the newspaper "Soviet Moldavia" (1948-58). Since 1958 - own correspondent of "Komsomolskaya Pravda" in Moldova, since 1960 - correspondent of the newspaper in Voronezh. Since 1965 in Moscow. As a special correspondent for the newspaper, she traveled to many regions and republics of the country. The range of journalistic interests is the protection of a person from arbitrariness, injustice, violence; national features, life, life, history, economic, social problems of different peoples of the USSR. Favorite genre - essay. The well-known essay "Bashkir Honey" tells about the history of beekeeping in Bashkiria, its problems of that time, about his father, a collective farm beekeeper, about his childhood spent in the apiary. In 1975, she moved to the editorial office of Literaturnaya Gazeta, where she worked as a columnist on agrarian problems for 19 years. Laureate of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of the USSR for 1984. Author of publicistic books "Signals of the Soul" (1972), "The Warmth of Your Hearth" (1975), etc.

Kozhukhov Mikhail Yurievich

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1982 to 1989. Correspondent of the foreign department, own correspondent in Afghanistan. Then - Izvestia correspondent in South America, editor of the international department of Izvestia. Further biography is connected with television: the author and host of the programs "International Panorama", "Take a Step", "Old Apartment", "True Friends", "In Search of Adventure", "Far and Even Farther" and many others.

Currently, he manages his own television company "Contrast". Co-author and producer of dozens of documentaries and television programs.

He was awarded the Order of the Red Star for his work in Afghanistan. Laureate of the national television award TEFI in the nomination "The best host of entertainment programs", the National Tourism Award named after Yu. Senkevich, the award of the Union of Journalists "Golden Pen of Russia".

Kozlova Svetlana Mikhailovna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" since 1975, she worked in the department of literature and art.

Since 1978 - head of the department of a literary magazine, member of the editorial board of a trade publication, press secretary of the first deputy mayor in the Moscow government.

Kolesnikova Natalya Vasilievna

She graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University in 1976. She worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1973-76 as a courier and secretary. Author of memoirs about the people of Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Further work in the magazine "Student Meridian" (1976-78), the newspaper "Soviet Russia" (1978-86), the magazine "Young Artist (1986-2002), currently - in the magazine" Hour for You ".

Member of the Union of Journalists and the Union of Artists of Russia.

Korneshov Lev Konstantinovich (1934-2005)

The first publication in "Komsomolskaya Pravda" - when he was the secretary of the Kirovograd regional committee of the LKSMU. He worked in the apparatus of the Central Committee of the All-Union Leninist Young Communist League, was the editor-in-chief of the magazine "Young Naturalist", deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine "Young Communist".

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1970 to 1978 - Deputy, First Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Editor-in-Chief. Then - deputy editor-in-chief of the Izvestia newspaper, columnist for Rossiyskaya Gazeta, employee of the Voskresenye GZhO.

Author of seventeen books, four feature films and about thirty documentaries.
Member of the Union of Writers and Cinematographers, Secretary of the Union of Journalists of the USSR. Laureate of the Union of Journalists of the USSR, the Moscow Journalistic Organization, the KGB of the USSR, the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR, and a number of foreign creative awards.
Awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor.


Korsakova Tatyana Alexandrovna

Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. From December 1974 to December 1999, in Komsomolskaya Pravda, she worked as her own correspondent, head of the student department, and special correspondent.

Then - the editor of the department of letters and special correspondent of the newspaper "Tribuna". (2000-02), deputy chief editor of the monthly "Practical Journal for Teachers and School Administration" (2002-2014)..
Laureate of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Moscow, the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor "For Merit" (2011).

Kostenko Kim Prokopevich (1923 - 1990)

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1950 to 1969 - staff correspondent for the Stalin region, head, editor of the working youth department, member of the editorial board, executive secretary, deputy editor-in-chief.
Later - deputy secretary of the Pravda newspaper, executive secretary of the Sovetskaya Kultura newspaper, head of the correspondent office in Czechoslovakia of the Novoe Vremya magazine.
Front-line soldier, participant of the Great Patriotic War. He was awarded two Orders of the "Patriotic War", the Order of Alexander Nevsky, the Order of the Red Star, the medals "For the Defense of Stalingrad", "For the Liberation of Prague", and other government awards.

Kotenko Irina Ilyinichna (1941 - 2009)

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1964 to 1997 - secretary, assistant of the department of student youth, correspondent of the department of letters, correspondent of the department of the verification bureau. Awarded with the Diploma of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation.
Active organizer and participant of such corporate editorial and club events as "Front Countryman", "Hour of Writing", "Book Salon", "Anniversaries", "Thursdays".

Krasnyansky Eduard Vladimirovich

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1968 to 1974 - an intern, correspondent of the news department. Then - correspondent, first deputy chief editor of the newspaper "Soviet Trade" (1975-95).
Member of the Board of Directors, PR Director of SBS-AGRO Bank, Press Secretary of First OVK Bank (1995-2003), General Director of Alexander House (2003-04). Currently, he is a member of the Board of Directors of the Capital Credit Partnership Bank, the Alexander House company and other organizations. Cavalier of government awards. Author of documentary and fiction books.
Krivomazov Nikolai Pavlovich (1947-2012)
Born on the Don. After graduating from the Kamensk Pedagogical College, he worked as a teacher in Yakutia.
Graduated from the Irkutsk State University and the screenwriting department of VGIK.
Since 1968 - a professional newspaperman: he started in the regional Yakut newspaper "Lena Mayaktary". Then the Irkutsk regional newspaper "Soviet Youth" (1969 - 77) - literary worker, staff correspondent for the North: Bratsk, Ust-Ilim, Boguchany, BAM.
In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" (1977 - 82) - correspondent for Eastern Siberia. Then the correspondent of the newspaper "Socialist Industry" (1982-87), the newspaper "Pravda" (1987-88), later - deputy. department editor, executive secretary of the Pravda newspaper (1988 - 95), columnist for Rossiyskaya Gazeta (1995 - 98).
Founder and founder of the Grazhdanin Publishing House (1998), publisher and editor-in-chief of the Grazhdanin and Russian Vodka magazines. The author of the two-part film "Raging Bus" (1990).
Laureate of the V. Gilyarovsky Prize.

Krylova Zoya Petrovna (1944-2017)

She worked as a kindergarten teacher, accountant, secretary of the people's court. She graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. The first publications appeared in 1961. Since 1965 - a correspondent for the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper.
From 1966 to 1981, in Komsomolskaya Pravda, he was an intern, literary worker, head. department of student youth, editor of the departments of students, students and scientific youth, member of the editorial board. She completed her postgraduate studies at the Academy of Social Sciences. PhD in Philosophy.
Author of a book on folk pedagogy.From 1983 to 2009 she headed the Rabotnitsa magazine. She was a board member of the Soviet Women's Committee. Editor of an Orthodox newspaper for prisoners (2012-16). Compiler of the encyclopedia (volume 2) of the Union of Journalists of Ioskva "Journalism at the Turn of the Ages". Creative activity was marked by the Order of Friendship of Peoples, medals, prizes of the Union of Journalists.

Kulikov Yury Petrovich

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1975 to 1982. Since 1982 - in the "Literary Gazette": first deputy. Executive Secretary, Own Correspondent in India, South and Southeast Asia, Executive Secretary, Deputy Editor-in-Chief. Then the editor-in-chief of a city newspaper, a magazine, a special correspondent for the newspaper Gazeta, a columnist for Izvestia. Author of several books-dialogues - with E. Primakov, A. Volsky, A. Shokhin and others. Twice winner of the prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia, including in 2012 in the nomination "Golden Shelf of Russian Journalism" for the book "One Can't Be Counted . The temptation of conversations.


Kulikova Albina Ivanovna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1961 to 1987 (with a break for study) - referent In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1961 to 1987 (with a break for study) - referent of the department, deputy executive secretary.
Later, Deputy executive secretary, executive secretary, art editor, art editor, head of the design department, chief artist (together with artist Viktor Skrylev) of many publications - Medical Newspaper, Culture newspapers, Litera Gazette Internaithle, Federation, "Superman", magazines "Peasant Woman", "Foreigner", "Autograph", "Tobacco Shop", "Medical Bulletin", etc. She was awarded the Sign "Excellent Printer".

Kupriyanov Alexander Ivanovich

In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1978-92) he was his own correspondent for the Khabarovsk Territory and the Magadan Region, head of the Komsomol life department, deputy editor-in-chief of the Sobesednik weekly, executive secretary and own correspondent in England. For his work in the newspaper he was awarded medals and the Order of the Badge of Honor.
After Komsomolskaya Pravda, he worked as First Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Rossiyskaya Gazeta, Editor-in-Chief of Express-Gazeta, Stolichnaya Evening Newspaper, Editor-in-Chief of Izvestia, Editor-in-Chief of Rodnaya Gazeta, General Director of the National News Agency, is a book publisher.
Returning to Komsomolskaya Pravda, he became the organizer of radio and television KP (2009-2011). In n / a - editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Vechernyaya Moskva".
Author of short stories and novels, poetry collections.

Kushnerev Sergey Anatolievich

Since 1982 - in the newspaper "Komsomolskaya Pravda": trainee, correspondent, head of the student youth department, executive secretary, member of the editorial board (1988-93).

One of the founders of Novaya Gazeta. Worked in the newspaper "Moscow news" (1994-1996).

Since 1994, he has been the editor-in-chief of the Vzglyad program. From 1996 to the present, he has been the editor-in-chief of the TV company VID.

Television projects of Sergey Kushnerev:

Scandals of the week (1995-2001, TV-6); Make a move (1996-1999, TV-6); How it was (1997-2002, ORT); Wait for me (1998 - our time, RTR, then Channel One); Another life (2000, Channel One); Testament of the XX century (2000, Channel One); The Last Hero (2001-2008, Channel One); 12 Little Indians (2004, TNT); Incredible stories about life (2008 - our time, Channel One).

Producing documentaries about Chechnya:

"Dreams of War" (1996); "Demobilization Album" (1997); "New Year in Chechnya" (1997); "Soldiers of Love" (1999).

Member of the jury at the Festival of Television Programs in Monte Carlo (1997).

Member of the Academy of Russian Television (1001). Winner of the TEFI-2002 award in the Best Producer nomination.

He was awarded the medal "For Labor Valor" (1990), the Order of Friendship (2006).

Kuchkina Olga Andreevna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" since 1957 - an intern, literary worker, traveling correspondent, deputy editor of the department of literature and art. Currently, he is a columnist at the main editorial office.
Member of the Writers' Union of Moscow, member of the Russian PEN Center, Academician of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.
Playwright, poet, prose writer. He is the author of the book of plays "White Summer", collections of poems "Communicating Vessel", "Italian Butterfly", "Leap Age", novels, other books of prose, including the memoirs "Slanting Rain".
Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR.

Lavrova Kira Nikolaevna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1964 to 1992. Own correspondent in Kuzbass, then in Samara. Since 1972 - Deputy Executive Secretary of the Editorial Board. She led a personal column "Street. Company. Teenager." Author of many publications in magazines and collections. Honored Worker of Culture. Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia. Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation - the Badge of Honor “Honour. Dignity. Professionalism".

Lapin Alexander Alekseevich

He came to Komsomolskaya Pravda as a correspondent for Kazakhstan. For 15 years (1986-2000) he went from a journalist to the deputy general director of the newspaper in the newspaper. Under his leadership, a regional network of Komsomolskaya Pravda was created.

In 2000 he created his own newspaper business and moved to Voronezh. The publishing house of Alexander Lapin "EURASIA-PRESS - XXI CENTURY" operates in 8 large cities of Central Russia.

Member of the Union of Writers and the Union of Journalists of Russia.

Larin Vladimir Alekseevich (1957-2008)

He worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda for fifteen years - from 1986 to 2001. He started as a staff correspondent for Orenburg, Bashkiria and Northern Kazakhstan, wrote excellent essays. A year and a half later, he was taken to the floor - he was a special correspondent, deputy. editor of the propaganda department, in the most difficult, critical times - in the late 80s and early 90s - he headed the department of the republics responsible for "hot spots", many of which he visited personally. Then - the first deputy. secretary, executive secretary, deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper.

After "KP" for several years he worked as the chief editor of "Soviet Sport". For the last two years, he has been executive secretary of the Rossiyskaya Gazeta-Nedelya weekly.

Levina Alevtina Yakovlevna (1935-1987)

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1965 until the end of his life - an intern, a literary employee of the information department, a special correspondent.
Member of mountaineering ascents, including Everest, parachutist. Author of the journalistic book "A Thousand and One Doors", compiled posthumously by colleagues from Komsomolskaya Pravda. Laureate of the Lenin Komsomol Prize.

Lipatov Viktor Sergeevich (1935 - 2007)

Historian by education. Journalist and editor by occupation. Essayist and poet by vocation.
He started in the newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets. In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1966 to 1986 - head, editor of the department of Komsomol life, columnist, editor of the department of literature and art, member of the editorial board.
Since 1986 - editor-in-chief of the magazine "Youth". Author of books on art: "Colors of time", "Color, light, life"; series "World of Masterpieces". Poetry collections were published: "The Secret of a Restrained Heart", "The Step of a Legionnaire", "On the Peaks", "The Midnight Cross", "The Eight Candlesticks", "The Light in the Palms".
Laureate of literary prizes, as well as prizes named after Nikolai Ostrovsky and Lenin Komsomol.


Lubitsky Vladimir Nikolaevich

In Komsomolskaya Pravda from the beginning of 1977 to the end of 1978 color: # (color); laquo; Old apartmentraquo; (1977 yes - staff correspondent for the Belgorod, Kursk, Oryol, Voronezh, Lipetsk, Tambov and Ryazan regions, deputy editor for the department of Komsomol life of the editorial office.
The next twelve years in the newspaper "Pravda" - special correspondent, deputy editor of the department, editor, member of the editorial board. Chief editor of the magazine "Illustrated Russia" (1991-96), head of the press service of the Provisional Administration in the zone of the Ossetian-Ingush armed conflict, head of the press service of the Accounts Chamber of the Russian Federation (1996-2000), deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Vek" (2000- 04), executive editor of the Moskovskaya Sreda newspaper. Poet, writer, playwright.

Makarov Sergey Sergeevich

He started in the newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets. In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1971 to 1975 - a correspondent for the department of rural youth. Then - a traveling correspondent for the magazine "Rural Youth". Author of essay books.

Diploma winner of the Moscow International Book Fair (2008) for the book "Crane Cries".

Makartsev Yury Dmitrievich

After graduating from the journalism faculty of Moscow State University, he worked in the Sakhalin press, from where he was transferred in 1969 to the department of working youth of Komsomolskaya Pravda. He went from a literary worker to a member of the editorial board, editor of the working youth department. Until 1981 he was his own correspondent in Germany. Upon his return, he worked in the Smena magazine, and from 1985 to 1988 he was a special correspondent for Interlocutor.
Then - the first deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Working Tribune" and to the present day "Rossiyskaya Gazeta".
Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor "For Merit" (2011). Diploma winner of the Moscow International Book Fair (2009) for the novel "Non-Diplomat".

Marina Lyudmila Vasilievna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1959 to 1999 - secretary of the military sports department, correspondent of the letters department, head of the economic department of the editorial office. Awarded with the medal "Veteran of Labour".

Marinicheva Olga Vladislavovna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1973 to 1993 - she began as a referent for the school department, and ended as a newspaper columnist. After and to the present time - a special correspondent for the Teacher's Newspaper. Laureate of the Union of Journalists of Russia. Author of prose books.


Marshkova Tatyana Ivanovna

Born and raised in Moscow. Graduated from the faculty
journalism at Moscow State University. The first publications in Komsomolskaya Pravda appeared in 1970
year before entering university. In 1971-1981. - trainee, apprentice
Correspondent of the department of literature and art. Worked in a publishing house
"Sovremennik" (editor of criticism and literary criticism), in the magazines "Fatherland" and "Hearth", in the "Parliamentary newspaper",
"Literary newspaper". Since 2006 - the leading editor of the Algorithm publishing house.
She constantly presented materials on the problems of Russian culture, the main creative predilection was and remains the musical theater. Author of many conversations with artists, published in national publications.

Culturologist, biographer, critic. Author and compiler of the books “Alexander Vedernikov. So that the soul does not become impoverished”, “Yesenin and Isadora Duncan”, “Yesenin in Konstantinov”, “Mikhail Evdokimov. No time to live”, “Tchaikovsky. Last years". In collaboration with L. Rybakova, she wrote the book Bolshoi Theatre. Golden Voices” about the masters of the national opera stage (Moscow, 2011). Editor of more than two hundred books on culture, literary criticism and social and political topics.

Member of the Union of Journalists. Member of the Writers' Union of Russia.

Mikhalev Pavel Filippovich

Graduated from Leningrad State University. In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1958 to 1987 (with interruptions) - literary worker, deputy editor of the department of physical culture and sports, member of the editorial board, editor of the foreign department, own correspondent in the UK, columnist.
Since 1987 - Deputy, since 2011 - Advisor to the General Director of TASS. Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR.

Murtazaev Akram Kayumovich

Laureate of the sign of the Union of Journalists of Russia "Golden Pen".

Mussalitin Vladimir Ivanovich

From 1969 to 1974 - own correspondent of "Komsomolskaya Pravda" in the Orenburg region, Western Kazakhstan, Bashkiria. Then - a special correspondent and columnist for the Izvestia newspaper (1974-80). After graduating from the graduate school of the Academy of Social Sciences - Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the magazine "Nash Sovremennik" (1984-88), Editor-in-Chief of the publishing house "Soviet Writer" (1988-90).
Now - Secretary of the Board of the Union of Writers of Russia, editor-in-chief of the international magazine "Forum". Ph.D.
Winner of a number of international and Russian literary awards, including the Bunin Prize and the International Prize of Saints Equal-to-the-Apostles Cyril and Methodius.

Nedoshivin Vyacheslav Mikhailovich

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1977 to 1986. Last position - member of the editorial board, editor of the department of morality and law, letters and mass work. Then - postgraduate studies at the Department of Theory and History of Culture of the Academy of Social Sciences under the Central Committee of the CPSU, defense of a dissertation on literary anti-utopias (he published several editions of J. Orwell's novel and fairy tale in his own translations), teaching at the department (course on the history of literary criticism).
Candidate of Philosophy, Associate Professor.
In 1991 he left the CPSU. He worked as a press secretary of the State Secretary of Russia (1991-93). Organizer and head of one of the first PR agencies in Russia (1993-97).
In recent years - a historian of literature, in particular, Russian poetry of the Silver Age. Author and presenter of 60 episodes of the television cycle “Nameless Houses. Unknown Pages of the Silver Age” (2001-02) for St. Petersburg TV, a 40-episode documentary-fiction television cycle dedicated to the 860th anniversary of Moscow “Nameless Houses. Moscow of the Silver Age”, television films about M. Tsvetaeva, F. Tyutchev, D. Davydov, A. Kuprin (2003-04), A. Green and others for TVC and the channel “Culture”.
Author of several editions of the book “Walks through the Silver Age. Very personal stories from the lives of great poets.
Laureate of the St. Petersburg Union of Journalists "Golden Pen" award, the All-Russian competition of television films of the Media Union (2003). The highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor "For Merit" (2010).

Oberemok (Lipatova) Elena Eliseevna

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from the student's bench (from 1970 to 1999) - from an intern to a manager. department. She led the author's bands "Literary cabaret" and "Heal for health."
In 1999 she moved to Literaturnaya Gazeta. She was the editor-in-chief of the socio-political supplement "Characters" and at the same time the first deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine "Youth". In n / in deputy. editor-in-chief of a socio-political publication, the daily newspaper Stoletie.ru, expert of the Historical Perspective Foundation Natalia Narochnitskaya.
Prose writer. Published in the magazines: "Sowing", "Continent", "Friendship of Peoples", "Literary Study", "Youth", etc. Laureate of awards. Boris Polevoy and Vl. Maksimov.
Author and presenter of a series of lectures on émigré Russian literature of the early 20th century at European universities.
Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia and the International Literary Fund.

Ovchinnikova Ludmila Pavlovna

Born in the Stalingrad region. Graduated from Moscow State University. In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1959 to 199laquo; Evening Moscow alt = 7 years (with a break in the early 60s) - a member of the department of student youth, the department of letters, staff correspondent for the Volgograd region, a member of the department of working youth, military-patriotic education, special correspondent department of the republics.
Since 1997 - in the newspaper "Tribuna".
Member of the Writers' Union of Russia. Author of the books “The Bell in the Long Meadow”, “Women in Soldier's Greatcoats”, “Stalingrad. 164 days at war" and others.
Awarded with the medal "Veteran of Labour". Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - Badge of Honor “Honour. Dignity. Professionalism ”(2007), awards of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation for the collection“ Children of Stalingrad ”(2010).

Oleinikov Nikolai Fedorovich (1943 - 2011)

Born on the Don. From the age of fifteen he worked as a carpenter, fitter, instructor of the district committee of the Komsomol. Served in the army. He went through the school of district and regional youth newspapers.
In 1974-77, he was a staff correspondent of Komsomolskaya Pravda in the Rostov Region, organizer and editor of the visiting editorial office of Komsomolskaya Pravda at a shock Komsomol construction site - the construction of the Atommash plant. In 1977-79, he was the head of the Komsomol Searchlight department of the editorial office.
Later he worked in the magazines "Dialogue", "Political Education", "Peasant Woman", the newspaper "Chimes". In recent years, he has been an associate professor at the Russian State University of Trade and Economics.
Candidate of Economic Sciences. Author of a number of publicistic books and scientific papers.
Laureate of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia (1992).

Ostroukhov Anatoly Alexandrovich

In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1973 to 1988 (courier, employee of the department of letters, intern of the secretariat, issuer, deputy head of the illustration department, head of the artistic design department).
Then: Deputy Executive Secretary of the newspaper "Soviet Culture", Executive Secretary of the magazine "Capital"; build editor, executive secretary, editor of the photo department of the Ogonyok magazine; deputy executive secretary of the newspaper "Izvestia"; executive secretary of the newspaper "Vremya MN"; executive secretary of the journal "World Energy"; executive secretary of the National Banking Journal.
Developed and implemented print design for several publications.Member of the Union of Journalists.One of the founders of this website of the Club of Journalists of All Generations of "Komsomolskaya Pravda", its first designer and publishing director.

Today, on Victory Day, we remember our veterans. And, of course, Leonid Korobov, the legendary war correspondent who worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda. Many of today's journalists would do well to learn from people like him - not to be afraid of anything, to be at the forefront and do their job, no matter what.

At first, they did not want to take him as a correspondent - he was the secretary of the military department and had to “grow up”. But Korobov did not wait, and went to work. They searched the editorial office of the young officer. And a few days later, Marshal Voroshilov himself called the editorial office: - “Here your correspondent is interviewing me, don’t scold him.” Of course, the editors appreciated the act - it was almost impossible to get close to Kliment Efremovich. But our colleague did. After that, of course, he was hired.

Leonid Korobov was a unique journalist. It was he who, when the Soviet Union and Germany were still friends, interviewed Hitler in Munich. He first met with the writer Alexander Kuprin - immediately after his return from exile. He made reports about the rescue of the Chelyuskinites. When the first metro line was opened in Moscow, he jumped into the car where Stalin and Kaganovich were traveling. And, taking out a voice recorder, he began to ask the leader how he liked our metro. "Good work, comrade! How have you not been shot yet?" Stalin joked. And he forwarded the young journalist to Kaganovich.


He was indeed a brave journalist - it was not in vain that he was the first of the Soviet correspondents to receive the Order of Lenin. He accomplished a real feat - he took command of the battalion, replacing the killed commander at a combat post. About people like him, these lines are written - "with a watering can and with a notebook, or even with a machine gun." Once he rented a secret camp. And then he told - if he was caught, then he had a way out. He put the photo cassette in his mouth. And, if anything, I would just gnaw it and eat it. 12 times he crossed the front line, putting himself in incredible danger in order to do his job well for the good of the Motherland. But, perhaps, his most important journalistic victory was the presence at the signing of the act of surrender of Germany. A few years ago, they wanted to give his name to a school in his native Yuryev-Polsky. And in 2013, an exposition of his memory was opened there.


Despite the fact that Leonid Alekseevich left us in 1971, he is remembered and honored by many in our country. His family is certainly proud of such a grandfather. We remember, we are proud of the exploits, we honor the memory of Leonid Alekseevich Korobov! A heroic warrior, a talented journalist and writer and a wonderful person, a kind father and a legendary grandfather! Congratulations to all on the Victory Day!” - said the son of a military correspondent, Maxim Korobov, to the Komsomolskaya Pravda.

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