
A historian by training, he worked as an editor at “Own Game” and “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire”, as a journalist at the BBC Russian Service and at RIA Novosti. Author of the university course “Search and Verification of Information in the Modern Media Environment.”


Is it true that on the anniversary of the annexation of Crimea, the video “Crimea is Russia” was shown in Times Square?

Did Trump say that the US would face a “bloodbath” if he lost the presidential election?

Is it true that the director of the Oscar-winning film “20 Days in Mariupol” passed off someone else’s archival footage from Donetsk as filming the city?

Is it true that during the social experiment in Kazakhstan no one raised the Ukrainian flag lying on the floor?

Is it true that an advertisement was shown at a bowling tournament in the United States calling for an end to funding for Ukraine?

Is the video of BBC presenters having fun in front of a photo from Navalny's grave true?

Is it true that at an exhibition in New York, Ukrainian Armed Forces soldiers were presented as a pile of feces with hands?

Is it true that Putin’s message to the Federal Assembly was watched live on YouTube by 27 million people, a third of whom were in Ukraine?

Did the US Congresswoman say that pedophilia is not a crime, but a type of personal identification?

Is it true that Hollywood is making a biopic about Zelensky with a budget of $115 million?






