VIDgital

VIDgital
Native name
АО «Телекомпания ВИД»
Private company
Industry Television
Founded 1987 (1987)
Founders

Vladislav Listyev
Andrey Rasbash
Alexander Lyubimov
Alexander Politkovsky
Ivan Demidov

Alexander Gorozhankin
Headquarters Akademika Koroleva Str, 12, Ostankino Technical Center, Moscow, Russia
Key people

Vladislav Listyev
Alexander Lyubimov
Larisa Sinelshchikova
Andrey Rasbash

Sergey Kushnerev
Products TV programs, entertainment shows, talk shows, documentaries
Number of employees
171
Subsidiaries

AO MuzOboz
AO Disk-kanal
Krylya-media

Pervoye Polye (VID-Design)
Website www.vid.ru Edit this on Wikidata

VIDgital (Russian: ВИDgital), formerly and still commonly known as VID (Russian: ВИД, stylized as ВИD, lit. "View"; acronym of Vzglyad i Drugiye, "Glance and Others") is a Soviet and Russian TV production company. VIDgital produces shows for Channel One Russia (Russian: Первый канал), NTV (Russia) and OTR. It is best known for producing the television programmes Wait for Me (Russian: Жди меня), designed to help people find loved ones and Pole Chudes (Russian: Поле Чудес) which is a popular Russian version of Wheel of Fortune[1].

VIDgital’s TV shows are also aired by Inter (TV channel), ONT, Evraziya and Prime TV channels.


History

1987-2000

Vladislav Listyev, one of VID founders

The VID Television Company was founded in 1987 by Vladislav Listyev, Andrey Rasbash, Alexander Lyubimov, Alexander Politkovsky, Ivan Demidov and Alexander Gorozhankin, based on Vzglyad, a Russian creative association affiliated with the Youth Editorial Board of the Central Television of the USSR[2].

The company was renamed VID, an acronym of Vzglyad i Drugiye, on 2 October 1990.

In the 1990, VID opened new subdivisions in Saint Petersburg and Nizhny Novgorod, which aired their own TV programs.

In Autumn 1991, the Soviet Ministry of Press registered Vzglyad as the official newspaper of the VID Television Company. The newspaper was later renamed Novy Vzglyad, lit. ‘New Outlook’, in May 1992.

VID Predstavlyaet (Russian: ВИD представляет, translated: VID Presents), a TV programme hosted by television speaker Igor Kirillov, was aired on Friday evenings on Channel One Russia (1991-1994) and on Wednesdays on Ostankino’s Channel Four (February-March 1992).

Between 1991 and 1995 VID was in partnership with Experiment, a creative association at Ostankino, the Russian State Television and Radio Company.

Between 1992 and 1994 VID sponsored Ostankino’s editorial office for children and co-produced children’s programs, Spokoynoy nochi, malyshi! (Russian: Спокойной ночи, малыши!, translated: "Good Night, Little Ones!") and The Call of the Jungle.

In 1992 VID became a shareholder of several companies, such as Muzoboz, Disk-kanal, Pole Chudes, Vzglyad, InterVID, holding 60% of the shares or more in each of them.

From 1993 to 1995 VID, along with ATV and REN TV, was part of the Association of Independent Television Producers, which co-founded the ORT TV channel in 1995.

VID has been a co-founder of TEFI (Russian: ТЭФИ), Russian National TV awar by the Russian Academy of Television, since 1994.

From September to November 1998 RTR TV channel aired Dobroye utro, Rossiya! (Russian: Доброе утро, Россия!, translated: "Good morning, Russia!"), a morning TV program produced by VID in cooperation with Igor Shestakov’s creative workshop.

2000-2017

In 2001-2002 VID co-sponsored a group of VID-owned groups.

As part of the reorganization of VID, the following programs suspended their participation in it: VID-design, later renamed Pervoye Polye (Russian: Первое поле), Obshchestvo otkrytykh okon (Russian: Общество открытых окон), Putyovye sovety (Russian: Путёвые советы), Krylya-Media (Russian: Крылья-Медиа) and others.

In 2000, VID, which had considerably increased the amount of produced content by that time, decided to compete for the Channel 3 broadcasting rights in a contest held by the Russian Ministry of Press and Mass Media.

On 19 April 2000 Larisa Sinelshchikova, CEO of VID, explained this decision as follows: "Any producer dreams of moving to his own home one day. The life of the independent producer on any channel is more like living in a dormitory, so he always longs to move to his own home, all the more so if he ‘produced’ enough relatives to fill up the whole dormitory". At the same time, she believes that "the Government of Moscow wants, so it seems, to have a strong and worthy channel. We are pursuing the same goal"[3].

The broadcasting concept of the channel and the feasibility study were based on the assumption that the new channel’s annual budget would be approximately $30,000,000.

On 17 November 2001 VID aired the first season of Posledniy geroy (Russian: Последний герой, translated: Last Hero), the Russian version of the American Survivor reality show, based on the idea that spectators can not only observe the ups and downs of competitions, but also spy on the life of people they don’t know.

VID changed its name to VIDgital (VID + digital)[4] on 6 October 2017, explained by Alexander Lyubimov as follows: "We start to seriously consider moving onto the Internet. There you can experiment and try out new turns, new intonations and new ideas".

In September 2017 it was reported that the Zhdi Menya TV show would no longer be broadcast on Channel One Russia. According to federal media resources, Channel One Russia and VIDgital failed to sign the contract for the production of the above-mentioned programme owing to the "new team’s personnel policy" and, consequently, the parties’ failure to agree on the candidacy of the new host.

Starting 27 October 2017, the VIDgital-produced Zhdi Menya is aired on NTV.

Management and Shareholders

Larisa Sinelshchikova, CEO of VID (1998-2007)
Alexander Lyubimov, CEO of VID (1995-1998)

Vladislav Listyev became the CEO of VID in 1993.[2]

After his death on 1 March 1995, it was Alexander Lyubimov who managed the company from March 1995 to April 1998.

In April 1998, he suggested Larisa Sinelshchikova, vice-president of the TV-6 Russian commercial TV channel, to become the new CEO of VID[5].

The Russian financial crisis created a need for new management ideas, and Larisa Sinelshchikova in cooperation with Alexander Lyubimov took an unexpectedly bold decision to expand VID’s own television production, an initiative supported by Igor Shabdurasulov and Alexander Akopov, CEOs of ORT and Rossiya television channels respectively.

This measure enables VID to become a major content producer for ORT and, as a result, the leader of Russia’s television market in terms of both its standing and finances.

A change in the company’s shareholders took place in 1999, with Larisa Sinelshchikova and Sergey Kushnerev becoming VID’s new shareholders. The participants did not disclose any information about the sum of the deal, which resulted in all of the previous shareholders giving up their shares, with the exception of Alexander Lyubimov.

In early 2007, VID’s main shareholders Alexander Lyubimov and Larisa Sinelshchikova had a major disagreement over the company’s further development strategy.

Sinelshchikova promoted her long-lived idea of the umbrella brand, whose implementation would help diversify the management of the company through redistribution of human and financial resources and result in the shareholders’ increased profits.

Lyubimov’s rejection of this idea led to Sinelshchikova’s withdrawal from VID and her subsequent successful implementation of the umbrella brand concept in her new full-cycle television company, Krasny Kvadrat (Russian: Красный квадрат, translated: Red Square).

Headquarters

The headquarters of the VIDgital Television Company is located in the Ostankino Technical Center at 12, Akademika Koroleva Street, Moscow.

Original logo of VID was created by Andrey Rasbash. It became a logo of the Chinese Taoist philosopher Guo Xiang with a three-pawed toad on his head, which was found at the Museum of Eastern Art in Moscow.[5] VID is known both for its logo, which has attracted controversy and popularity in equal measure for being visually shocking and austere and its wordmark, which uses the latin D instead of the Cyrillic Д, so the logo appears as ВИD as opposed to ВИД. Logo The logo for VID has attracted a large amount of interest from the internet due to its visually shocking nature. It is a stone mask (allegedly of Guo Xiang, a Taoist philosopher) that was copied directly from the Museum of Eastern Art in Moscow. Apparently, the museum attempted to sue VID, leading them to digitally alter the mask in order to avoid legal difficulty.

The most notable use of the logo is in their 1990 intro, which is publicly available for viewing on the video sharing website YouTube. In it we see a line slowly moving into the screen while a loud, inappropriate sound of a jackhammer is played. A ball then drops off the line and as we see it 'splash' into the white background a 5-note fanfare plays, which is not only loud and unexpected but aurally intimidating.

When the ident was introduced there were many complaints from parents with young children, who found it scary to watch, especially when it preceded children's television. To add to the grievances the logo incorporated flashes of bright white light against black backgrounds; this feature was later removed due to epilepsy concerns. When people started to circulate petitions to remove the old ident, VID released a version in 1999 which featured a match being struck, the smoke of which formed the VID logo, although there are no videos of this online. In 2002 a new version of the ident was produced, featuring a smaller version of the logo on a yellow background with the text "VID Television Company presents" (albeit in Russian).

After VID was renamed to VIDgital, the old logo was heavily redesigned.

References

  1. "Александр Любимов: пока не пришли мыши"". TASS. 2017-10-02.
  2. 1 2 "Листьев Владислав Николаевич. Биографическая справка"". RIA Novosti. 2011-11-21.
  3. "Larisa Sinelshchikova in media news"". Vedomosti. 2000-04-24.
  4. "«Телекомпания ВИD» сменит название на следующей неделе"". Govorit Moskva. 2017-10-02.
  5. 1 2 "Любимов: мы готовили "Взгляд" к подполью"". RIA Novosti. 2013-11-19.
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