“We’re not on TV right now — we can tell the truth,” says one of top Russian TV propagandists thinking she was off air at a propaganda show about Ukrainian elections. Note the Ukrainian flag used as a tablecloth. Screendump via Julia Davis.

In the middle of a live-streamed marathon coverage of Sunday’s elections in Ukraine, Russian state TV host Olga Skabeyeva told her co-host, Yevgeniy Popov:

“We’re not on TV right now — we can tell the truth.”

Was this a Freudian slip? A sincere confession? Or did the host by mistake think the camera was off?

Deny – and hide behind a joke

The comment was quickly noted by Julia Davis, an American expert in Russian disinformation who translates and analyses Russian state TV in real time on her Twitter.

My fave part of this livestream was when Skabeeva told Popov:

"We're not on TV right now — we don't have to lie."https://t.co/wwntpsH8Wg — Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) March 31, 2019

The Rossiya 1 host reacted to Julia Davis’ comment with a tweet simply saying “little liar” – and a blinking smiley.

https://twitter.com/OSkabeeva/status/1112444842699878401

Skabeyeva’s short tweet suggested two classical disinformation approaches at the same time: Flat denial and hiding behind a joke.

“Your turn to lie”

Nevertheless, Davis had heard right.

Ms. Skabeyeva’s comment echoed the whistleblower testimony of her former colleague on the state TV channel Rossiya 1, Leonid Krivenkov, who earlier this year told RFE/RL about how the network’s employees would joke by saying “your turn to lie” on the internal communication channels before switching over to a colleague.

In another classical case, an employee of the state-controlled NTV confessed on camera to having spread disinformation: The NTV journalist did not realize he was being recorded when he told a BBC correspondent that his network had reported the killing of a little girl in Ukraine, knowing that the killing had in fact never happened.

The Kremlin’s propaganda and its obsessions

It was already a well-known fact that the Russian state-controlled media prefers to ignore domestic affairs and compensates with almost obsessive coverage of what goes on outside Russia – especially in Ukraine.


What was less known – but is now clear thanks to the exchange on Julia Davis’ Twitter – is that the Kremlin’s propagandists pay so much attention to how their work is monitored and exposed abroad.

Follow this link to the EUvsDisinfo database for examples of disinformation appearing in Olga Skabeyeva’s and Yevgeniy Popov’s talk show “60 Minut” on the state TV channel Rossiya 1.

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Tags: disinformation, hybrid warfare, Kremlin propaganda, propaganda, Russia's hybrid war, Russian disinformation, Russian media, Russian propaganda, Russian TV