“Given the current situation, we have no plans to add these channels to our service,” a Netflix spokesperson told IndieWire. As of February 28, the Russian media law has not gone into effect yet. Published at 1:50 p.m. ET: Netflix will be subject to new broadcast regulations in Russia starting March 1, following the streaming platform being added to the “audiovisual services” overseen by Russia’s communications regulator Roskomnadzor in 2021. The register applies to streaming services available in Russia with at least 100,000 daily users. Such a categorization will require Netflix to broadcast streams of 20 Russian federal television stations including Channel One, NTV, and a channel run by the Russian Orthodox Church, Spas, according to the Moscow Times via Politico. This requirement will only be applicable to Netflix’s services in Russia; it is estimated that the platform has approximately 1 million national subscribers.
Channel One is closely linked to the Kremlin, with President Putin’s allies like top spy Chief Sergey Naryshkin and Putin’s first deputy chief of staff Alexey Gromov on the board of the station. Per Politico, Gromov’s responsibilities include overseeing the production of state propaganda and Moscow’s broad program of censorship. He previously served as Putin’s press secretary. Netflix has yet to publicly address the new mandates in the wake of Russia invading Ukraine. The streaming giant previously announced a partnership with Russia’s National Media Group (NMG) in 2020; NMG owns nearly a 20-percent stake of Channel One. Netflix currently does not offer services in China, Crimea, North Korea, or Syria, though it launched in Ukraine last fall. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here. Netflix was previously called into question by the Putin administration, with former Culture Minister Vladimir Medinsky claiming that the U.S. government knew “how to enter every home” through Netflix in 2016. By November 2021, the Russian interior ministry “confirmed that it would examine a complaint leveled by Olga Baranets, the public commissioner for protecting families, regarding the dissemination of ‘gay propaganda’ on Netflix,” per Politico. If Netflix is found to be in breach of Russia’s laws against the portrayal of “non-traditional sexual relations,” the company may face fines or a possible suspension. The international community has been imposing embargoes on Russian entertainment. The 2022 Eurovision Song Contest officially banned Russian artists from competing, while the Ukrainian Film Academy called for a boycott of Russian films. “Several films made by Russia are regularly admitted to the programs of most world film festivals, and significant resources are spent on their promotion,” the Academy wrote. “The result of this activity is not only the spread of propaganda messages and distorted facts. It also boosts the loyalty of Russian culture — the culture of the aggressor state, which unleashed unjustified and unprovoked war in central Europe.”