A conflict situation arose, but a solution was found in it: in the morning, Fresh Wind programs were broadcast to Moscow and the Moscow Region with the Teleexpo logo, while the Teleexpo TV company itself was actively broadcasting in the first months only at night (in the morning hours, only advertising and infomercial).
[12][13] If a public holiday or weekend falls on a weekday before and after it (1 January and 2, 8 March, 1 May or 9, 12 June, 7 November and 12 December), the channel still adhered to the standard broadcasting schedule and ended the show in the morning day block at 12:30.
[14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34] Also, by analogy, if Saturday or Sunday on the occasion of the postponement of holidays were working days, then the TV channel adhered to the volume of broadcasting weekends and ended the show of the morning block at 10:00.
[35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47] Initially, the morning broadcasting block began daily at 8:00, then on weekdays its beginning shifted gradually: first to 7:30, then to 7:00, and later to 6:30.
[73] In May 1995, the channel began to appear in some print media (for example, the newspaper Pravda (until 1998, within the broadcasting network of the Kultura TV channel),[74][75] Antenna-Telesem, Argumenty i Fakty,[76] Segodnya (until 1997),[77] Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Novye Izvestia (until 1998),[78] All TV Channels,[79] Komsomolskaya Pravda ( until 1997),[80] Izvestia (until 1997),[81][82] Moskovskij Komsomolets,[83] Vechernyaya Moskva,[84] Russian Telegraph[85] and the magazines 7 days ”,[86][49][87] “ TV Park”,[88][89] “MK-Bulvar”,[90][91][92] “TV-Parade”, as well as the press in the cities of Moscow area).
[108][109] From 27 August to 5 September 2000, due to a fire at the Ostankino TV tower, MTV Russia did not broadcast on the Teleexpo frequency.
[110] Also, from 5 to 24 September 2000, MTV Russia broadcast at Teleexpo around the clock from 0:30 to 12:30 on weekdays and from 0:30 to 10:00 on weekends without a four- and five-hour break from 2:00 until 7:00 and from 3:00 to 7:00, which was practiced earlier.
[131][132][133] Initially, Euronews aired under the Teleexpo license from 0:30 to 3:00 and from 6:30 to 12:30 on weekdays[134][135] and until 10:00 on weekends and holidays,[136][137][138][139][140][141][142] covering part of the morning programs of the Kultura TV channel.
[143][144] From 15 October 2001 to July 2003, in a number of print media (“7 days”,[145][146] “TV PARK”,[147][148] “Arguments and Facts”), the column previously assigned to “Teleexpo”, continued to publish: in it, due to the lack of a rigid broadcasting grid, Euronews always wrote the same text: “News releases of the Euronews agency in Russian”[149] or more often - “Program of the international information channel“ Euronews ”in Russian ", Registered in the publication" 7 Days "from 31 December 2001,[150] and in" TV Park "- from 29 October of the same year;[151] From 15 to 28 October 2001, the column with the Euronews program guide was missing in the magazine.
[158] Teleexpo's license expired on 8 June 2003, as evidenced by the TV channel's registration card as a media,[159] the disappearance of a separate column from a number of print media allocated for Euronews and the beginning of publication of its morning block from July 2003 as a separate program in the broadcasting network TV channel "Culture" (there were only indirect references to the night block).