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Golos

Golos may refer to:

  • GOLOS, a coalition of non-governmental groups monitoring for election violations and government responsiveness to citizen requests in Russia
  • Golos (newspaper), a Russian newspaper, published in Saint Petersburg in 1863-1885
  • Golos (film), a Russian 1982 psychological drama
  • Golos (TV series), Russian music talent television show, part of the international Voice franchise
  • Golos Prikazchika, a former weekly newspaper published in St. Petersburg
  • Golos Respubliki, a Kazakhstani newspaper
  • Golos Sotsial-Demokrata, a former Russian-language publication, issued by a section of exiled Mensheviks
  • Golos Truda, an anarcho-syndicalist periodical published in New York, St. Petersburg and Moscow in the 1910s and 1920s
  • Jacob Golos (1889–1943), Ukrainian-born Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet secret police operative in the USSR, founder of Golos spy ring with Gaik Ovakimian as head in U.S.
Golos (film)

For the Russian NGO, see GOLOS Association

Golos (, also known in English as "Voice"), is a 1982 psychological drama set in Soviet Union. Based on the screenplay of the same name by Natalya Ryazantseva and directed by Ilya Averbakh. This is the last film by director Ilya Averbakh.

Golos (TV series)

Golos(; English: The Voice) is a Russian reality talent show that premiered on 5 October 2012 on the Channel One Russian television network. The Golos is part of the international syndication The Voice based on the reality singing competition launched in the Netherlands as The Voice of Holland. Dina Garipova was declared the first winner on 29 December 2012. Sergei Volchkov won season two, while Alexandra Vorobyova won season three; Hieromonk Fotiy won season four.

Golos (newspaper)

Golos (, Voice) was a Russian political and literary newspaper, edited and published in Saint Petersburg in 1863-1885 by Andrey Krayevsky. One of the most successful Russian newspapers of the 19th century (its circulation in 1877 reached 22,630 and was rising), Golos supported the liberal capitalist reforms in Russia. In its first five years the newspaper received 11 official warnings and 3 bans, one of which resulted in a six-month gap. The newspaper's major contributors were Vasily Bilbasov (since 1871 an actual editor-in-chief), Alexey Pleshcheyev, Nikolai Albertini, Vladimir Bezobrazov, Vasily Modestov, Evgeny Markov, Pyotr Yefremov, Lev Panyutin, Grigory Gradovsky, Alexander Gradovsky, Vladimir Zotov, Pyotr Nechayev, Arseny Vvedensky, Leonid Polonsky and Feofil Tolstoy among others.