Vlad(islav) Nikolayevich
Listyev ( ) (May 10, 1956 – March 1, 1995) was a Russian
journalist and head of the ORT TV Channel (now
government-owned Channel
One).
Career
Vlad Listyev was arguably the most popular journalist and TV
anchor in Russia (and remains
well-remembered years after his death), and was a key force in
bringing the voice of democracy to the Russian television. Listyev
first appeared on television as one of the hosts of a highly
progressive and successful TV show
Vzglyad ("The View") in
late 1980s.
He was also the first host of the Russian version of "
Wheel of Fortune" which became very popular.
Following
the success of Vzglyad, Listyev and his colleagues founded
a TV company VID (Vzglyad i
Drugiye—The View and the Others) that would produce
programming for the First Channel of Central Television, the main
TV channel in the Soviet
Union
(later called Ostankino and
ORT). In VID, Listyev started a number of new TV
projects—
Pole Chudes ("A Field
of Wonders", the Russian version of the
Wheel of
Fortune),
Ugadai melodiu ("Guess a melody", the
Russan version of
Name That
Tune),
Tema ("The Theme"), and
Chas Pik
("The Rush Hour"). In 1995, Listyev moved from VID to ORT, where he
was appointed the director of the channel. One of Listyev's very
first moves as the director was to order a temporary stop to all
advertising, in effect leaving all unauthorized middlemen out of
the lucrative advertising business, and consolidating future ad
sales in the hands of the channel.
Death
Shortly after his appointment, on the evening of March 1, 1995,
when returning from the live broadcast of his evening show
Chas
Pik, Listyev was shot dead on the stairs of his apartment
building. Valuables and a large sum in cash that Listyev had on him
were left untouched, leading the investigators to conclude that the
murder was either a political or business-related
assassination. However, despite numerous
claims made by investigators that the case was close to resolution,
neither the gunmen, nor those who ordered the killing, were
found.
The killing caused an enormous public outcry—in an unprecedented
move, ORT and several other Russian TV Channels shut down for the
whole day on
March 2, displaying only the
picture of Listyev and the words "Vlad Listyev Has Been Killed."
Days later, the channel was reorganized and after a number of
different incarnations, came back as the government-controlled
Channel One that Russian
viewers are now familiar with. Listyev's wake was visited by
thousands of people, and even the ailing
Boris Yeltsin was forced to make a
statement.
There has been much speculation as to the reasons behind Listyev's
murder, and two possible causes have been isolated as the most
likely: financial and political. When Listyev put the middlemen
advertising agencies out of business, he deprived many corrupt
businessmen of a source for enormous profits. From the political
standpoint, Listyev enjoyed an enormous popularity rating among
Russian citizens and could potentially influence the political mood
of the whole country.
A 1996 article in
Forbes "Godfather
of the Kremlin" by
Paul Klebnikov
accused
Boris Berezovsky of
ordering the murder. Berezovsky said the article was a "series of
lies" and sued the magazine in Britain. Berezovsky withdrew the
libel suit in 2003 following Forbes's statement that there was no
evidence that Berezovsky had ordered anyone's murder. Klebnikov,
who published a book with the same title in September 2000, was
murdered in April 9, 2004.
References
External links