The Standard (St. Catharines)

Russia’s Vladimir Putin is now a reality TV star

- AMIE FERRIS-ROTMAN

MOSCOW — Vladimir Putin can add a new skill to his resumé: reality TV star.

A new series launched Sunday evening on state television, focusing on the Russian leader’s weekly activities. The one-hour show, called “Moscow. Kremlin. Putin,” comes as Putin suffers one of his largest dips in popularity for years.

While Putin appears almost daily on state television, a show of this type is uncharted territory for the leader.

Putin is shown speaking to gifted teenagers about the inner workings of diplomacy in the program and also attending the funeral of beloved crooner Iosif Kobzon, the Russian “Frank Sinatra” who died last week at age 80.

Viewers are also treated to never-seen-before footage of Putin’s vacation last month to Siberia. The 65-year-old leader is shown puffing up a mountain with a hiking staff, collecting wild berries in his chest pocket and watching wildlife as he mutters under his breath, “They’re not afraid of us.”

The show, on the Rossiya 1 channel, comes days before tens of thousands of Russians are expected to protest across the country at the Kremlin’s deeply unpopular pension restructur­ing.

Putin succumbed to rare public pressure last week when he partially revised the pension overhaul in an unusual televised address to the nation.

The concession exposed potential cracks in the foundation­s of Putin’s popularity, at a time when Western sanctions, imposed over election interferen­ce and Ukraine crisis, have hit the Russian economy hard.

Putin’s approval ratings dropped to 67 per cent in July from 79 per cent in May, according to the independen­t Levada Center. Almost 90 per cent of Russians opposed the pension overhaul, the pollster found, and opposition politician­s seized on the plan to galvanize their supporters.

On Monday, Putin’s spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov emphasized that the new show was entirely the creation of the channel, which is controlled by the Kremlin, and that it represente­d a “balanced” view.

 ?? ALEXEI NIKOLSKY, SPUTNIK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Russian state-owned television channel has a new weekly current affairs program devoted to President Vladimir Putin.
ALEXEI NIKOLSKY, SPUTNIK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Russian state-owned television channel has a new weekly current affairs program devoted to President Vladimir Putin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada