Melitopol

RAW TRAVEL'S "STEADFAST IN UKRAINE" WINS AWARDS

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, May 31, 2023

NEW YORK, May 31, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- AIM Tell-A-Vision® Group (AIM TV), producers of the nation's most-watched travel show, Raw Travel®, announced their episode "Steadfast in Ukraine," featuring a visit to wartime Ukraine garnered two Telly Awards. The episode won a Silver Telly in the Television, Travel and Tourism category and a Bronze Telly in the category of Television, Video Journalism. 

Key Points: 
  • The special episode featured Executive Producer, Writer, and Host Robert G. Rose as he and Ukrainian refugee videographer Anastasia Zui traveled from Poland to film in Western Ukraine.
  • Anastasia, a talented cinematographer and regular member of the Raw Travel crew, is a twice-displaced refugee from the Donbas region.
  • "Winning awards is never our objective, especially in this case," says Robert G. Rose, Producer and Host.
  • Raw Travel is currently in its Tenth Season of broadcast syndication and can be viewed in 180 U.S. cities in over 96% of US TV homes.

LANDMINE CHARITY CALLS FOR A 'MARSHALL PLAN FOR MINES' FOR UKRAINE

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 16, 2023

Open-source satellite imagery indicates there are minefields that stretch for hundreds of kilometres in the east and the south of the country.

Key Points: 
  • Open-source satellite imagery indicates there are minefields that stretch for hundreds of kilometres in the east and the south of the country.
  • One single fortified mine line runs 90km from the Russian border to north of the town of Lysychansk in the east.
  • A definitive and coordinated 'Marshall plan for mines' would be a clear call to action for the international community."
  • Brady Afrik, an open-source satellite analyst, has identified hundreds of km of Russian defensive fortifications in southern and eastern Ukraine.

LANDMINE CHARITY CALLS FOR A 'MARSHALL PLAN FOR MINES' FOR UKRAINE

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 16, 2023

Open-source satellite imagery indicates there are minefields that stretch for hundreds of kilometres in the east and the south of the country.

Key Points: 
  • Open-source satellite imagery indicates there are minefields that stretch for hundreds of kilometres in the east and the south of the country.
  • One single fortified mine line runs 90km from the Russian border to north of the town of Lysychansk in the east.
  • A definitive and coordinated 'Marshall plan for mines' would be a clear call to action for the international community."
  • Brady Afrik, an open-source satellite analyst, has identified hundreds of km of Russian defensive fortifications in southern and eastern Ukraine.