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Too good too late

Too good too late

By Daria Gorshenina

My name is Daria Gorshenina. I am a journalist from Russia. I am 24 years old, which means that 22 of them I spent having Putin as the head of my country.

In this podcast, I and folks of the Putin generation try to understand why the conflict in Ukraine happened and what we are going to do about it.

Stay tuned.
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Lena Zubareva: Civil society in Russia is not dead

Too good too lateFeb 25, 2023

00:00
45:06
Lena Zubareva: Civil society in Russia is not dead

Lena Zubareva: Civil society in Russia is not dead

This episode was recorded right after the anniversary of the poisoning of Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny. I spoke with Lena, a political activist from Novosibirsk who still lives in Russia and dares to give an interview under her real name. Novosibirsk is the so-called capital of Siberia and has a population of one and a half million. The city is also ranked one of the most protested cities in Russia. But this year the city lost its right to elect the mayor. Now the Kremlin will appoint the mayor, or rather the puppet mayor.

I talked with Lena about academic freedom in Russia, political activism, and historical memory. 




Feb 25, 202345:06
Lira Akhmetova: "I'm a Muslim Tatar woman, but I'm viewed as a white woman"
Feb 11, 202335:37
Robert De Shade: The lives of my Russian friends are in jeopardy
Jan 28, 202340:36
Kira Naumova: Each package of sanctions is getting tougher against Kaliningrad
Jan 18, 202345:56
Young school teacher: "Russian politics has never been close to Europe"

Young school teacher: "Russian politics has never been close to Europe"

I talked with a young school teacher. She is nearly my age and well-educated. She completed her Bachelor’s in political science and master's in sociology. She lives in one of the biggest cities in Russia. She grew up in a middle-class religious family, and she identifies herself as a religious person. And her position towards the war is not really negative. 

Although we have completely different positions here, I think it is necessary to have a discussion and have this episode recorded rather than just cancel each other and not talk.

I won't reveal her name in the podcast according to her desire.

We talked about Russian schools and new patriotic classes, the role of the Orthodox religion in Russia and the attitude towards the EU.

Music by Moryaksostagem from Zvukipro.com


Nov 05, 202226:26
Anna Ivanova: "I didn't get the logic of European sanctions"
Oct 08, 202237:32
Young journalist: "My older colleagues understood the game rules faster than me"
Sep 29, 202225:31
Ivan Makridin: "I'm not feeling guilty, but I'm feeling responsible"

Ivan Makridin: "I'm not feeling guilty, but I'm feeling responsible"

For this episode, I interviewed young Russian journalist Ivan Makridin. In Russia, he was working freelance and making his podcast. Due to the war, he decided to relocate to Europe. I talked to him about possible penalties for his journalistic work, the feeling of guilt, and fake patriotism.

Vanya's Instagram: www.instagram.com/i.makridin/

Vanya's podcast: podcast.ru/1372729695 (in Russian only)

Where to read Vanya: www.codastory.com (Russian and English) & https://thenewtab.io (Russian only)

Music by my Casio synth.

Aug 05, 202222:18
What the podcast is about?

What the podcast is about?

Hey! My name is Dasha. I am from Russia.

Every other week I will talk with Russians of my generation about how the conflict in Ukraine impacted them, how they are feeling and how their Ukrainian relatives and friends are. And what is more important, how did we, as a nation, fail ourselves and what we are gonna do about it.

text and idea by Daria Gorshenina
music by Kleber KGF

contact: 6501735@gmail.com

Mar 29, 202202:07