Brigid McCarthy

Jazz saxophone great Igor Butman

Growing up without religion in the Soviet Union, believing in jazz

Arts, Culture & Media

Igor Butman grew up in the Soviet Union, where he learned jazz from listening to nightly broadcasts of the Voice of America on shortwave radio, and from bootleg records.

Looking Back at the Cuban Missile Crisis

Arts, Culture & Media
The World

40 Years Ago, Soviet Gymnast Olga Korbut Dazzled the World

Arts, Culture & Media

Documentary Film ‘The Other Chelsea’ Depicts a Different Ukraine

Sports

Tymoshenko Case: International Pressure on Ukraine Intensifies

Global Politics
Orwell and the Refugees (Book Cover)

Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’ and Ukrainian Refugees

Arts, Culture & Media

A year after George Orwell published his classic novel, “Animal Farm”, it became a hit with an unexpected group — Ukrainian refugees from the Soviet Union. They understood Orwell’s allegorical novel about the Soviet Union in a way that others did not.

Soviet Era Dark Humor Makes a Comeback

Global Politics

The Soviet jokes disappeared when the Soviet Union collapsed, but that brand of dark humor has made a comeback in Russia today.

The World

Grappling With a Post-Soviet Identity

Global Politics

Host of a Russian history program says his series, titled Kto my? (Who Are We?), is about Russians understanding themselves.

The World

Dealing With Money in Post-Soviet Life

Arts, Culture & Media

After the collapse of the USSR, Russians and other ex-Soviets had to learn to face a new culture – a money culture. For many, that was a huge shock.

Nostalgia for the Soviet Union

Global Politics

The Soviet Union dissolved 20 years ago this Sunday. More than half of all Russians now regret that demise, according to a recent poll. Brigid McCarthy visited a restaurant in Moscow that lets nostalgic customers pretend they’re back in the USSR.