Abstract

The Russian state-funded international broadcaster RT (formerly Russia Today) has attracted much attention as a purveyor of Russian propaganda. To date, most studies of RT have focused on its broadcast, website, and social media content, with little research on its audiences. Through a data-driven application of network science and other computational methods, we address this gap to provide insight into the demographics and interests of RT’s Twitter followers, as well as how they engage with RT. Building upon recent studies of Russian state-sponsored media, we report three main results. First, we find that most of RT’s Twitter followers only very rarely engage with its content and tend to be exposed to RT’s content alongside other mainstream news channels. This indicates that RT is not a central part of their online news media environment. Second, using probabilistic computational methods, we show that followers of RT are slightly more likely to be older and male than average Twitter users, and they are far more likely to be bots. Third, we identify thirty-five distinct audience segments, which vary in terms of their nationality, languages, and interests. This audience segmentation reveals the considerable heterogeneity of RT’s Twitter followers. Accordingly, we conclude that generalizations about RT’s audience based on analyses of RT’s media content, or on vocal minorities among its wider audiences, are unhelpful and limit our understanding of RT and its appeal to international audiences.

Highlights

  • The Russian state-funded international broadcaster RT purportedly aims to provide a Russian perspective on events and issues to international audiences

  • First, RT Twitter followers rarely engage with RT content, and claims that RT has a large audience that supports its “antiWestern” worldview are misguided (Cohen 2014)

  • We study Twitter, due to its major significance as a news sharing platform

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Summary

Introduction

The Russian state-funded international broadcaster RT (formerly Russia Today) purportedly aims to provide a Russian perspective on events and issues to international audiences. RT blurs the lines between news reporting, propaganda, and soft power (Wright et al 2020: 2), and has, since its creation in 2005, become the subject of much controversy—especially in the “Western” states in which it operates and seeks to exert influence. RT has had to register there as a foreign agent and has been banned from using paid advertisements on some social media platforms. In France, RT has been accused of promoting protests by the “Yellow Vests,” leading President Macron to draft legislation to ban media that are considered to “de-stabilise the country” (Newman et al 2019: 84). In the United Kingdom, RT was fined £200,000 by the communication regulator Ofcom for impartiality breaches in their reporting on the Skripal poisoning and Syrian conflict (Elliot 2019)

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