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Igor Piddubny (also spelled Poddubny; Ukrainian: Ігор Миколайович Піддубний; born June 18, 1965) is a Ukrainian journalist, media manager, politician, and film director known for a number of documentaries that covered controversial topics in Ukrainian history and were aimed at Russophone audiences in both Ukraine and Russia. One of these documentaries, which delves into the life of Stepan Bandera, one of the leaders of Ukrainian nationalists, topped the ratings of UA:First, the national television channel in Ukraine, for the year 2015. Piddubny was also one of the founders of Robinzon TV, the first streaming television website in Ukraine. He received Merited Journalist of Ukraine award in 2015.

Igor Piddubny
Ігор Миколайович Піддубний
Born (1965-06-18) June 18, 1965 (age 57)[1]
Kharkiv, Ukraine
NationalityUkraine
CitizenshipUkraine
Alma materKharkiv National University of Radioelectronics
Occupation
  • Journalist
  • Film director
  • Politician
Political partyAll-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" 2005[2]–2015[3]

Media and political career



Early career: 1991–1999


Piddubny was born in Kharkiv on June 18, 1965.[1] He graduated from Kharkiv National University of Radioelectronics in 1991, and later took courses in journalism from the University of Vienna.[2][4]

Piddubny's career in journalism started amid the economic chaos, hyperinflation, and uncertainty that followed the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. In 1992, he worked for the newly formed Kharkiv newspaper ATV and became the deputy head of the Kharkiv office of Nika TV,[4] a newly formed cable television company headquartered in Moscow. As both media projects failed and were restructured, Piddubny moved to the FM radio business. In March 1995, he became CEO of Radio 50, a local radio station, but after a period of media asset consolidation, the station changed its ownership, and in 1997, Piddubny had to leave.[4] He briefly attempted his own advertising business, but returned to radio in 1998.[4]


Politics and media: 2000–2010


From the early 2000s, Piddubny partnered with Arsen Avakov, a Ukrainian businessman and politician, identified with the "Orange" political block. The block was then at the core of the opposition Ukrainian politics, mainly formed by Viktor Yushchenko's "Our Ukraine" and Yulia Tymoshenko's All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland". Piddubny simultaneously headed several media projects sponsored and controlled by Avakov, including TV station TRK Kharkiv News [uk], radio station Novaya Volna, TV and radio company Radio-Artel, etc.[4][5] Piddubny's longest involvement was with the currently defunct Kharkiv weekly newspaper, Pyatnica, where he served as an editor-in-chief from 2003[6] to 2011 (in paper format)[7][8] and then until 2015 when it continued (as an online publication).[2]

After the success of the Orange Revolution in 2005, Avakov was appointed the Governor of Kharkiv Oblast by newly elected president Viktor Yushchenko. However, due to regional political differences, the Orange political block was in the minority in Kharkiv Oblast. Considerable tension grew between centrally-appointed Avakov the two leaders of local government Hennadiy Kernes and Mykhailo Dobkin.[5][9] Amidst this tension, Avakov-controlled media and Kernes-controlled media continuously attacked their respective opponents.[5][9] In early 2007, Piddubny's new Opel Signum vehicle parked next to his home was burned in a night-time arson attack.[10] Both Piddubny and Avakov denounced the attack and alluded that only two people could have behind it;[11][12] however, seven years after the arson, the perpetrators had still not been found.[13]

Meanwhile, in late 2005, Piddubny began his own political career in Kharkiv local government, joining All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" in December.[2] In 2006 he was elected to the Kharkiv Oblast Council; later he became the caucus leader for the "Fatherland" minority in the council.[1][6] In 2009, one of Piddubny's projects in the council was the electronic condolence book of Kharkiv Oblast which aimed to preserve information about local victims of World War II.[14]

In the summer of 2010, Piddubny helped defending Kharkiv's urban forest from the road laying and the associated tree-cutting initiated by Hennadiy Kernes. The attempt to defend the forest failed, however, as the protesters were beaten and their camp destroyed by pro-Kernes titushky, and the road was eventually built.[15][16] In 2010, Piddubny also served as an assistant to People's Deputy of Ukraine Volodymir Filenko [uk][6]

In the fall of 2010, Ukraine experienced a political shift when Viktor Yanukovych was elected president, reversing the Orange Revolution. In simultaneously held local elections, Piddubny was elected to Kharkiv City Council [uk],[17] but his patron, Arsen Avakov, lost his head-to-head controversial and contested electoral battle with Hennadiy Kernes for the position of Kharkiv mayor.[18][19][20][21] As freedom of the press in Ukraine deteriorated,[22] by 2011, most Avakov-controlled media were forced off the air or out of circulation.[7][8]


Media and politics: 2011–present


After the demise of most of Avakov's media, Piddubny remained the editor-in-chief of (online only) Pyatnycya at least until 2015.[2]

By 2012, Piddubny's main project has become Robinzon.TV, the first Ukrainian streaming television website.[23] It utilized YouTube as its underlying platform, and offered a mix of studio programs and live news, often from unpaid stringers armed only with mobile phones.[24] In an interview, Piddubny said that the idea came from a Russian TV channel, Dozhd. He said that rather than create Robinzon.TV as a "political mouthpiece," his aim was something akin to a public broadcasting service.[4] After the Ukrainian revolution of 2014, Robizon.TV was purchased by businessman and politician Yevheniy Murayev.[25]

Piddubny remained in opposition in the Kharkiv City Council [uk]; occasionally, his verbal altercations with Hennadiy Kernes attracted national attention.[26] In 2015, Piddubny was re-elected to the Kharkiv City Council; his current term ends in 2020.[3] However, he no longer represents the All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland", and is listed as an independent member of the Council.[3]

In 2015, Piddubny received the Merited Journalist of Ukraine award from the Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko.[27] As of 2016, Piddubny considered film-making his primary work.[28][29]


Film making


Piddubny's career as a film director began in 2010 with an hour-long documentary, Undesirables (Russian: Неугодные), inspired by his work on the electronic condolence book of Kharkiv Oblast.[28][30] Undesirables spotlights how many contemporary Ukrainians have ancestors who were persecuted by communists or Nazis, resulting in significant omissions in ancestry knowledge.[28] The film was positively received.[30]

Although Piddubny's documentaries deal with Ukrainian history, they are filmed in Russian and specifically aimed at Russophone audiences in both Ukraine and Russia. Piddubny gave two reasons for this decision. First, Ukrainian-speaking audiences know Ukrainian history much better and do not have as many questions (or hold as controversial opinions) as the Russian-speaking Ukrainians.[28] Second, because the Russian audience is considerably larger, Piddubny could make more money.[31]


Stepan Bandera: Ukraine between red and black


External video
Stepan Bandara: Ukraine Between Red and Black, YouTube video

The documentary Stepan Bandera: Ukraine between red and black delves into the life of Stepan Bandera, a militant ideologist of Ukrainian nationalism. The documentary was filmed in 2014 in multiple locations, including Bandera's birthplace, Staryi Uhryniv; other Ukrainian towns associated with Bandera and his followers;[32][33] Jezkazgan in Kazakhstan (the location of the largest Soviet labor camps for Ukrainian political prisoners); and inside Moscow archives.[34] Like other Piddubny films, it was primarily aimed at the Russophone audiences of Eastern Ukraine and Russia.[33][35][36]

The film received overall positive reviews from critics, who thought Piddubny managed to maintain an independent viewpoint free of propaganda for either side, and that such an account of Stepan Bandera was long overdue.[37][38] Boris Bahteev, a Detector Media [uk] critic, believes, however, that Piddubny hadn't completely freed his worldview from the Soviet propaganda and mythology created around Bandera.[37]

The documentary topped the ratings of UA:First, the national television channel in Ukraine, for the year 2015.[39] It gained additional audience on YouTube[35] and on 1+1 TV channel,[36] and is being used in Ukraine in secondary schools as an educational aid.[40] As of 2016, it remained the most-watched Piddubny film.[28]


Crimea: Maximum Security Resort


External video
Crimea: Maximum Security Resort, YouTube video

Premiering in October 2015, the documentary Crimea: Maximum Security Resort is a four-part miniseries that explores 250 years of the Crimean history.[41][42] It investigates the question who had a more righteous claim to the Crimean peninsula, which was annexed by Russia in 2014.[41][43] The miniseries received positive reviews from Ukrainian critics.[41][43]

The miniseries utilizes many previously unpublished NKVD archive documents,[42] prompting Inna Dolzhenkova, a Ukrainian Association of Cinematographers critic, to call the documentary "a painful slap in the face" to Ukrainians who became interested in the history of Crimea only after its annexation.[43]


Ivan Mazepa: I appoint you a traitor


External video
Ivan Mazepa: I appoint you a traitor, YouTube video

Filmed for 18 months between 2017 and 2019,[44] the documentary Ivan Mazepa: I appoint you a traitor explores the life of Ivan Mazepa, a controversial Hetman of Zaporizhian Host who is asymmetrically portrayed in Russian and Ukrainian histories. Piddubny's film crew worked in Ukraine, Austria, Romania, Russia, and Sweden to present a comprehensive image of Mazepa.[31][44] Two Russian historians, Evgeniy Anisimov [ru] and Tatyana Tairova-Yakovleva [uk] appeared in the film as consultants.[45]

The documentary premiered in a Kharkiv theater in March 2019.[46] Aside from Ukrainian television, the film was shown internationally within the Ukrainian diaspora in United States and in Europe, including Vienna, Budapest, and Stockholm.[31][47] In 2019, it received Gran Prix at the historical film festival Poza Chasom[31] and was the subject of masterclasses at the Kharkiv State Academy of Culture.[48]

The documentary received positive reviews from Ukrainian historians Oleksandr Halenko [uk; fi][45][49] and Sergiy Pavlenko [uk][50] and Russian historian Boris Sokolov[51] The documentary was criticized, however, because it was filmed in Russian rather than Ukrainian.[50]


Full Filmography


Original title (in Russian) Ukrainian title English title Year Ref
Неугодные Неугодні Undesirables 2010 [28]
Неоднозначные Неоднозначні Controversials 2011 [28]
Живая душа Жива душа Living Soul 2012
Несчастливая звезда Нещаслива зірка Unlucky Star 2012
В августе 43-го У серпні 43-го In August 1943... 2013 [28]
Увековечить нельзя забыть Увічнити не можна забути Memorialize or Forget? 2013
Харьков 1941–43. Жизнь как она есть. Харків 1941–43. Життя як воно є. Kharkiv 1941–43: Life in the Raw 2014 [28]
Степан Бандера: Украина между красным и чёрным Степан Бандера: Україна між червоним і чорним Stepan Bandera: Ukraine between red and black 2015 [37]
Крым. Курорт строгого режима Крим. Курорт суворого режиму Crimea: Maximum Security Resort 2015 [42]
Вечный огонь Вічний вогонь Eternal Flame 2016
Иван Іван Ivan 2016 [28]
УКРАЯ УКРАЯ Borderland 2016 [52]
Возвращение Повернення Restitution 2017 [53]
Иван Мазепа. Назначаю тебя предателем. Іван Мазепа. Призначаю тебе зрадником. Ivan Mazepa: I appoint you a traitor 2019 [31]

See also



References


  1. Gorovaja 2010.
  2. City Watch 2019.
  3. Fedorkova 2015.
  4. Zelenskaja 2012.
  5. Alasanija 2007.
  6. Glavnoe, June 25, 2010.
  7. Mirer 2011.
  8. Status Quo, September 14, 2011.
  9. L'vova 2010.
  10. Censor.net, January 31, 2007.
  11. Kljuchko 2007.
  12. Avakov 2007.
  13. Zinenko 2014.
  14. Mavrichev 2009.
  15. Zaharov 2010.
  16. Podrobnosti, June 2, 2010.
  17. Ermolenko 2010.
  18. Migacheva 2010.
  19. Ukrayinska Pravda, November 2, 2010.
  20. Korrespondent, November 2, 2010.
  21. Focus, November 2, 2010.
  22. Dorovskykh 2010.
  23. UNIAN, April 6, 2012.
  24. UNIAN, April 5, 2012.
  25. Kozachenko 2014.
  26. Makarenko 2013.
  27. Decree 367 2015.
  28. Magrilov 2016.
  29. Kharkiv-TV 2018.
  30. Status Quo, November 11, 2010.
  31. Vashulenko 2019.
  32. Serdjuk 2014.
  33. Vesti, July 25, 2014.
  34. Robinson.TV, July 30, 2014.
  35. Butusov 2015.
  36. Gazeta.ua, December 17, 2014.
  37. Bahteev 2015.
  38. Losev 2015.
  39. Dan'kova 2016.
  40. OsvitPortal, December 26, 2018.
  41. Sventah 2015.
  42. Noskov 2015.
  43. Dolzhenkova 2015.
  44. Pilipenko 2019.
  45. qwerty.gdn, June 30, 2019.
  46. Gokova 2019.
  47. Blini Bioscoop, March 12, 2016.
  48. Kosachova & Kolyakina 2019.
  49. Ukrayinska Pravda, June 30, 2019.
  50. Pavlenko 2019.
  51. Sokolov 2019.
  52. Dolzhenkova 2016.
  53. Glavnoe, September 5, 2017.

Literature cited




This article is based on the text donated by the Wenard Institute under CC-BY-4.0 license.




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