The Fall of the Soviet Union: Why the Superpower Collapsed — Fexingo History

The Last Soviet Comedian: How Jokes Undermined the Kremlin

6 min · 1 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Comedian: How Jokes Undermined the Kremlin

Descripción

In this episode of The Fall of the Soviet Union, Lucas and Luna explore how political jokes (anekdoty) became a quiet weapon of resistance and a barometer of public disillusionment. From the Stalin-era terror to the Brezhnev stagnation, Soviet citizens traded jokes that punctured propaganda, mocked shortages, and exposed the gap between official rhetoric and daily life. Lucas traces the evolution of the anekdot — from whispered jokes about Lenin and the NKVD to the explosion of glasnost-era satire on TV programs like Vzglyad and the stand-up of Mikhail Zadornov. He explains how the KGB's Fifth Directorate collected and catalogued jokes, treating them as 'anti-Soviet agitation,' yet never managed to stamp them out. The conversation covers key joke cycles: Brezhnev's senility, the eternal queue for sausage, the absurdities of central planning, and the dark humor of Chernobyl. Luna reflects on how humor helped ordinary people reclaim a sliver of agency. The episode concludes with a donation appeal tied to preserving independent history, then returns to the sobering thought that when the jokes stopped being funny, the end was near. #SovietUnion #PoliticalJokes #Anekdoty #SovietHumor #Glasnost #Perestroika #Brezhnev #Gorbachev #Chernobyl #Vzglyad #MikhailZadornov #KGB #Samizdat #Resistance #Satire #USSR #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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138 episodios

Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Newspaper: Pravda and the Collapse

The Last Soviet Newspaper: Pravda and the Collapse

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the final years of the Soviet Union through the lens of its most iconic newspaper, Pravda. Once the unquestioned voice of the Communist Party, Pravda saw its authority crumble as glasnost allowed open criticism, competition from new publications like Argumenty i Fakty and Moskovskie Novosti surged, and the newspaper itself became a battleground between hardliners and reformers. The story tracks Pravda's circulation collapse from 10 million to under 200,000, the editors' struggle over whether to publish the NKVD's 1939 secret protocol with Nazi Germany, and the bizarre moment when the newspaper endorsed Boris Yeltsin in 1991. The episode also touches on Pravda's role in the August 1991 coup, when its editors supported the GKChP, and its final transformation into a tabloid after the Soviet collapse. Through Pravda's rise and fall, the episode reveals how the monopoly on truth was broken long before the empire fell. #Pravda #SovietMedia #Glasnost #ArgumentyiFakty #MoskovskieNovosti #Gosteleradio #MikhailGorbachev #BorisYeltsin #GKChP #MolotovRibbentropPact #NKVD #SecretProtocol #AugustCoup #SovietHistory #ColdWar #Journalism #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 de jul de 20265 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Car: How Lada Outlived the Empire

The Last Soviet Car: How Lada Outlived the Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the strange afterlife of the Soviet automobile industry through the story of the Lada — specifically the VAZ-2101, a Fiat 124 clone that began production in 1970 and kept rolling off assembly lines until 2012, long after the USSR itself dissolved. They trace how AvtoVAZ, the Tolyatti-based giant built by Fiat under Brezhnev, became a symbol of Soviet planned economy's contradictions: a car that was famously unreliable yet beloved, with a five-year waiting list that outlasted the Politburo. They discuss the Zhiguli nameplate (never actually called Lada domestically), the bizarre barter economy that surrounded spare parts, and how the car's survival into the Putin era mirrored Russia's incomplete break with its Soviet past. Along the way, they touch on the 1973 oil crisis impact, the role of the Komsomol in distribution, and why a battered Lada was the first car many post-Soviet citizens ever owned. A story of industrial inertia, national pride, and the object that refused to die with the system that built it. #Lada #AvtoVAZ #VAZ2101 #SovietAutomobiles #Zhiguli #Fiat124 #Tolyatti #SovietEconomy #PlannedEconomy #Brezhnev #Perestroika #Gosplan #PostSoviet #RussianCars #IndustrialHistory #ColdWar #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 de jul de 20267 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Library: Books That Outlived the Empire

The Last Soviet Library: Books That Outlived the Empire

In episode 136 of The Fall of the Soviet Union, Lucas and Luna explore a quiet corner of the collapse: the fate of the country's libraries and the books that survived—or didn't—when the USSR dissolved. They focus on the Russian State Library in Moscow, the former Lenin Library, and the story of its deputy director, Galina Kislovskaya, who in 1991 faced a horrifying discovery: millions of books from the Soviet period, including rare editions from the 1920s avant-garde and banned samizdat, were being systematically destroyed by a secret order from the KGB. The hosts trace the roots of this destruction back to Lenin's 1918 decree on library confiscation and Stalin's even more brutal purges of 'ideologically harmful' literature. They also discuss the underground network of librarians who hid forbidden texts, and how the collapse of the state led to a frantic race to save what remained. The episode touches on the fate of the Library of the Academy of Sciences in Leningrad, the fire of 1988 that destroyed a third of its collection, and the strange afterlife of Soviet books as they flooded Western markets, often sold for scrap. It's a story about memory, ideology, and the physical objects that carry history. #USSR #SovietUnion #Libraries #RussianStateLibrary #GalinaKislovskaya #Samizdat #KGB #BookBurning #Censorship #LeninLibrary #Glasnost #Perestroika #History #FexingoHistory #ColdWar #EasternEurope #Moscow #Leningrad Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Cosmonaut: How the Space Program Mirrored the Collapse

The Last Soviet Cosmonaut: How the Space Program Mirrored the Collapse

In the final years of the USSR, the once-glorious space program became a desperate, decaying symbol of a superpower in freefall. This episode follows the story of Sergei Krikalev, the 'last Soviet cosmonaut,' who launched from Baikonur in May 1991 and returned to Earth in March 1992—to a country that no longer existed. We trace the Mir space station's struggle for survival, the grounding of the Buran shuttle after a single unmanned flight, and the absurd, tragicomic negotiations between Russia and Kazakhstan over Baikonur's future. Along the way, we meet the engineers who watched their life's work rot in the Kazakh steppe, the cosmonauts who sold their autographs to buy spare parts, and the political decay that turned a national triumph into a salvage operation. This episode offers a unique, human-scale window into the collapse: through the eyes of the men and women who reached for the stars while their world fell apart beneath them. #SovietSpaceProgram #SergeiKrikalev #MirSpaceStation #BaikonurCosmodrome #BuranShuttle #LastSovietCosmonaut #Glasnost #Perestroika #SovietCollapse #SpaceHistory #Kazakhstan #RussianSpaceAgency #Salyut #Soyuz #Energia #ColdWar #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Newsreel: How TV News Exposed the Empire's Lies

The Last Soviet Newsreel: How TV News Exposed the Empire's Lies

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore how Soviet television news—once the Kremlin's most trusted propaganda tool—became a force for exposing the regime's failures. From the nightly 'Vremya' program that censored disasters like Chernobyl, to the rise of glasnost-era investigative journalism on 'Vzglyad' (View), they trace how state-controlled broadcasts inadvertently revealed the truth. The episode focuses on the pivotal moment in 1986 when Vremya first acknowledged the Chernobyl nuclear accident, breaking decades of silence. It also covers the 1989 broadcast of the Supreme Soviet sessions, where deputies like Andrei Sakharov openly criticized the Communist Party, and the 1991 resignation speech of Mikhail Gorbachev, which aired live across the country. Along the way, Lucas and Luna discuss key figures like Leonid Kravchenko (the head of Gosteleradio who tried to suppress Vzglyad), and the 1990 media law that ended censorship. The conversation reveals how the medium that once sustained the Soviet system ultimately helped dismantle it. If this episode was worth a coffee to you, support the show at buy me a coffee dot com slash fexingo. #SovietTV #Vremya #Vzglyad #Chernobyl #Glasnost #Perestroika #LeonidKravchenko #AndreiSakharov #MikhailGorbachev #Gosteleradio #SovietMedia #Propaganda #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #ColdWar #MediaHistory #1991 Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

2 de jul de 20266 min