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

The Last Soviet Index: How the Price of Bread Brought Down an Empire

7 min · 25 jun 2026
aflevering The Last Soviet Index: How the Price of Bread Brought Down an Empire artwork

Beschrijving

In 1990, the Soviet state raised the price of bread for the first time in decades. It was a desperate move by a government running out of cash and credibility. But the decision backfired catastrophically, fueling panic buying, empty shelves, and political outrage. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the story of that price hike — from the Goskomtsen planners who calculated it to the long queues that became a symbol of collapse. They explore the deeper crisis of the Soviet economic model: a system that had kept prices artificially low for so long that any adjustment felt like betrayal. Along the way, they encounter the shadow of the 1962 Novocherkassk massacre, the rise of the cooperative movement, and the strange paradox of a superpower that couldn't afford its own bread. #History #FexingoHistory #SovietUnion #Goskomtsen #PriceReform #Bread #Perestroika #Gorbachev #Pavlov #Novocherkassk #Queues #Shortages #EconomicCollapse #1990 #LastSoviet #EasternEurope #ColdWar #FallenEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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

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 jul 20266 min
aflevering The Last Soviet General: Pavel Grachev and the Army's Final Loyalty artwork

The Last Soviet General: Pavel Grachev and the Army's Final Loyalty

In August 1991, as the Soviet Union teetered on the brink, a single general held the fate of the nation in his hands. Pavel Grachev, the 42-year-old commander of the elite Tula Airborne Division, was ordered by the hardline coup plotters to storm the Russian White House and arrest Boris Yeltsin. Instead, he defected, sending tanks to defend the parliament and crushing the GKChP's last hopes. This episode traces Grachev's rise from a paratrooper in Afghanistan to Yeltsin's Minister of Defense, exploring the fractured loyalties within the Soviet military, the role of the 106th Guards Airborne Division, and the chaotic aftermath when Grachev's own troops turned against him during the 1993 constitutional crisis. Drawing on memoirs, declassified Soviet military telegrams, and interviews with veterans of the Tula division, we reveal how one man's choice shaped the empire's final hours — and the violent birth of Russia's new army. #PavelGrachev #AugustCoup #SovietUnion #RussianWhiteHouse #TulaAirborneDivision #BorisYeltsin #GKChP #1991 #SovietMilitary #Perestroika #Glasnost #AfghanistanWar #1993ConstitutionalCrisis #RussianHistory #ColdWar #EasternEurope #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

2 jul 20268 min
aflevering The Last Soviet Soccer Match: How Football Foreshadowed the Fall artwork

The Last Soviet Soccer Match: How Football Foreshadowed the Fall

In 1988, as the Soviet Union teetered on the brink, its national soccer team stunned the world by reaching the European Championship final. This episode explores how football reflected the empire's contradictions: state-sponsored athletic glory masking economic decay, the rise of nationalist fervor in the republics, and the quiet rebellion of players like Dynamo Kyiv's stars. We follow the Soviet side's Cinderella run at Euro 88, the role of coach Valeri Lobanovskyi's scientific methods, and the match against the Netherlands where Marco van Basten's impossible volley became a metaphor for the USSR's fading prowess. We also look at the 1991 dissolution through the lens of the Soviet Top League, where teams from seceding republics began to withdraw, and the last USSR national team match in November 1991. This isn't a sports episode—it's a story of how a superpower's collapse played out on the pitch, with hints of what was to come in the failed 1991 August coup and the independence declarations that followed. #SovietUnion #Euro88 #SoccerHistory #ValeriLobanovskyi #DynamoKyiv #MarcoVanBasten #SovietTopLeague #Perestroika #Glasnost #Nationalism #Ukraine #Russia #Football #ColdWar #History #FexingoHistory #SovietCollapse #1988Euros Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren5 min
aflevering The Last Soviet Comedian: How Jokes Undermined the Kremlin artwork

The Last Soviet Comedian: How Jokes Undermined the Kremlin

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]

Gisteren6 min
aflevering The Last Soviet Signal: How Radio Waves Crashed the Empire artwork

The Last Soviet Signal: How Radio Waves Crashed the Empire

In this episode of The Fall of the Soviet Union, Lucas and Luna explore a hidden front of the Cold War that hastened the USSR's collapse: the electromagnetic spectrum. Before the Berlin Wall fell, Western radio stations like Radio Liberty, Voice of America, and Deutsche Welle were beaming uncensored news into Soviet living rooms. The Kremlin spent billions jamming those signals with massive transmitters and 'gorilla' antennas, but by the late 1980s, the jammers fell silent. Lucas unpacks the technical cat-and-mouse game between Soviet jamming stations and Western broadcasters, the role of glasnost in opening the airwaves, and how the final unjamming of Radio Liberty in 1988 marked a psychological surrender. Along the way, he reveals the little-known story of the Radio Moscow engineer who risked his career to relay a forbidden interview with Andrei Sakharov. The episode also reflects on how the battle for information—fought not on battlefields but in the static between frequencies—became a decisive factor in the Soviet Union's final years. #RadioLiberty #VoiceOfAmerica #DeutscheWelle #Glasnost #SovietJamming #ColdWarRadio #AndreiSakharov #RadioMoscow #Perestroika #InformationWar #EasternEurope #USSR #FallOfTheSovietUnion #History #FexingoHistory #Broadcasting #Censorship #SignalIntelligence Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30 jun 20269 min