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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Radio broadcasting in the Soviet Union, like all other media, was owned by the state and was under its tight control and censorship. The governing body in the late Soviet Union was "USSR State Committee for Television and Radio Broadcasting", or USSR Gosteleradio ( , ), which was in charge both of Soviet TV and Soviet radio. There were many cultural and scientific programs broadcast daily. Besides other aims and tasks, like other party-controlled media in the late 1980s, radio broadcasts attempted to instill in the population a sense of duty and…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Radio broadcasting in the Soviet Union, like all other media, was owned by the state and was under its tight control and censorship. The governing body in the late Soviet Union was "USSR State Committee for Television and Radio Broadcasting", or USSR Gosteleradio ( , ), which was in charge both of Soviet TV and Soviet radio. There were many cultural and scientific programs broadcast daily. Besides other aims and tasks, like other party-controlled media in the late 1980s, radio broadcasts attempted to instill in the population a sense of duty and loyalty to the Communist Party and Soviet state. Every day the government broadcast an estimated 1,400 hours of radio programming to all parts of the country, often in as many as 70 languages. The main programming emanated from Moscow, where eight radio channels broadcast 180 hours daily to audiences throughout the country.