Thawing out
How TV smash hit Heated Rivalry has not only melted hearts, but cultural stereotypes about Russia as well

Since its November premiere, Canadian TV series Heated Rivalry, which follows a years-long gay love affair between Canadian ice hockey star Shane Hollander and his Russian archrival, Ilya Rozanov, has catapulted its two young leads, Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie, to global superstardom.
“Russianness is entirely synonymous with reticence, severity, and a refusal to follow the rules.”
“Ilya’s speech in episode five, in which he confesses his love for Shane, made me cry, not just because of the scene’s beauty, but precisely as it was in Russian.”
In a time of political tension and uncertainty, rebranding Russia from a political reality to an aesthetic is not without its dangers.

Toppling Goliath
Members of Russia’s Finno-Ugric ethnic minorities discuss their reasons for joining the Armed Forces of Ukraine

One man’s terrorist
Multiple Russian teenagers are facing long prison sentences for acts of sabotage carried out to make money

Breaking the waves
The Kremlin’s latest attempt to quash Telegram echoes the Soviet Union’s war on foreign radio broadcasts

Deserting the paper army
How one woman refused to be a cog in Russia’s military machine

Censory overload
As the Kremlin declares war on queer literature, Russians are still finding ways to read and publish transgressive fiction

Violent entrapment
Queer people in Russia are increasingly being catfished by criminal gangs and even the police

A deserter’s desert
Escape routes from the Russian military are narrowing as European attitudes to ex-servicemen harden

My enemy’s enemy
How Ukrainians and Russia’s ethnic minority groups are making common cause in opposing Russian imperialism

Cold case
The Ukrainian Holocaust survivor who froze to death at home in Kyiv amid power cuts in the depths of winter


