
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Starting in late 2011, tens of thousands of protestors took to the streets to try to stop what they saw as a power grab by Russian leader Vladimir Putin. The movement was not successful, but analysts say it worried the Russian leader so much that he launched a crackdown on dissent that has lasted to this day. We hear from Russian rock journalist, Artemy Troitsky, who composed a song that became an anthem of what was sometimes called the "Snow Revolution".
Also, the launch of the first women's newspaper in Afghanistan, how black stuntmen demanded work from the big studios in Hollywood, and the dramatic story of the women who escaped a violent cult based in South London.
Photo: An anti-Putin rally in Moscow in December 2011. Credit: Getty Images
4.3
554554 ratings
Starting in late 2011, tens of thousands of protestors took to the streets to try to stop what they saw as a power grab by Russian leader Vladimir Putin. The movement was not successful, but analysts say it worried the Russian leader so much that he launched a crackdown on dissent that has lasted to this day. We hear from Russian rock journalist, Artemy Troitsky, who composed a song that became an anthem of what was sometimes called the "Snow Revolution".
Also, the launch of the first women's newspaper in Afghanistan, how black stuntmen demanded work from the big studios in Hollywood, and the dramatic story of the women who escaped a violent cult based in South London.
Photo: An anti-Putin rally in Moscow in December 2011. Credit: Getty Images
5,457 Listeners
368 Listeners
1,795 Listeners
7,676 Listeners
3,205 Listeners
510 Listeners
1,805 Listeners
1,094 Listeners
962 Listeners
603 Listeners
953 Listeners
1,925 Listeners
1,049 Listeners
1,884 Listeners
838 Listeners
355 Listeners
422 Listeners
744 Listeners
4,796 Listeners
4,181 Listeners
732 Listeners
3,194 Listeners
501 Listeners