Multiple Russian influencers are issuing groveling apologies and losing work as outrage at the “almost naked” party on December 20 continues unabated.
Now, amid growing outrage, Ivleeva faces a class-action lawsuit filed December 26, in which plaintiffs are demanding she pay $11 million to a veterans’ charity, per the independent Russian outlet Meduza.
Other attendees lost well-paid work, finding themselves dropped by brands they promote and having TV specials and concerts canceled, Meduza reported.
Pro-censorship activist Ekaterina Mizulina said the party was “a shot in the foot to the entire policy of our state,” and called for a government-level boycott of the celebrities involved, The Washington Post reported.
One of Russia’s top TV propagandists, commentator Vladimir Solovyov, called the partygoers “beasts” and “scum,” The Washington Post reported.
It also suggests that the economic privations and grind of military service involved in the invasion of Ukraine are much closer to mind for the Russian public than Putin had first hoped.
The original article contains 469 words, the summary contains 159 words. Saved 66%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Multiple Russian influencers are issuing groveling apologies and losing work as outrage at the “almost naked” party on December 20 continues unabated.
Now, amid growing outrage, Ivleeva faces a class-action lawsuit filed December 26, in which plaintiffs are demanding she pay $11 million to a veterans’ charity, per the independent Russian outlet Meduza.
Other attendees lost well-paid work, finding themselves dropped by brands they promote and having TV specials and concerts canceled, Meduza reported.
Pro-censorship activist Ekaterina Mizulina said the party was “a shot in the foot to the entire policy of our state,” and called for a government-level boycott of the celebrities involved, The Washington Post reported.
One of Russia’s top TV propagandists, commentator Vladimir Solovyov, called the partygoers “beasts” and “scum,” The Washington Post reported.
It also suggests that the economic privations and grind of military service involved in the invasion of Ukraine are much closer to mind for the Russian public than Putin had first hoped.
The original article contains 469 words, the summary contains 159 words. Saved 66%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!