"Utisak nedelje" uživo ispred B92!
Muftija sandžački Muamer ef. Zukorlić u Kažiprstu B92
Insajder specijal - Svetlana Ražnatovic B92
Aleksandar Vučić - Intervju za TV B92
DV - Bulevar B92
Sever Kosova "Patriotske pljačke" b92
"Ljudi" - gost Đorđe Balašević - B92
B92: Bosna Srebrena - Istina o Srebrenici
FOX - INTERVJU (RADIO B92-01.10.2014.)
Lepomir Bakic-B92 Sladak zivot II
Kristijan Golubović u Bulevaru na TV B92
Lepomir Bakic, B92 Sladak zivot
B92 Ciklotron - Pipaci Hleba
Lepa Lukic - Show Sladak zivot - (Epizoda 1) - (B92 30.9.2014.)
"Utisak nedelje" uživo ispred B92!
Muftija sandžački Muamer ef. Zukorlić u Kažiprstu B92
Insajder specijal - Svetlana Ražnatovic B92
Aleksandar Vučić - Intervju za TV B92
DV - Bulevar B92
Sever Kosova "Patriotske pljačke" b92
"Ljudi" - gost Đorđe Balašević - B92
B92: Bosna Srebrena - Istina o Srebrenici
FOX - INTERVJU (RADIO B92-01.10.2014.)
Lepomir Bakic-B92 Sladak zivot II
Kristijan Golubović u Bulevaru na TV B92
Lepomir Bakic, B92 Sladak zivot
B92 Ciklotron - Pipaci Hleba
Lepa Lukic - Show Sladak zivot - (Epizoda 1) - (B92 30.9.2014.)
Mikri Maus @ Zini da ti kazem (Radio B92)
B92 - MARKOVDAN DAN RAVNOJ GORI
Sav taj folk 8 - Gore od ljubavi - B92
Bulevar B92 - Milan Tarot: Žene se Boris Tadić i Nataša Bekvalac
Milorad Dodik Između dve vatre b92
Uzbudilnik 10.02.2014 B92 prvo javljanje
B92 napad
TV B92, "Hoću da znam" - Vedrana Rudan
Lepomir Bakic, B92 Sladak zivot, deo 3
B92 (Serbian Cyrillic: Б92) is a radio and television broadcaster with national coverage headquartered in Belgrade, Serbia. The network's key demographic is chiefly urban and young audience. Veran Matić is the CEO and one of the founders of B92. Dragan Đilas was also one of the founders of B92, he was a news editor at the station. In 19 March 2012,[clarification needed] B92's logo was "The Cube in Surprised Girl", when the letter b is now lower-case.
The station was a rare outlet for independent news and information in Serbia under Slobodan Milošević, and was a force behind many demonstrations that took place in Belgrade during the turbulent 1990s. Due to this, B92 won the MTV Free Your Mind award in 1998, and many other awards for journalism and fighting for human rights. B92 is the subject of the best-selling book This is Serbia Calling.
In April 2008, B92 launched their second TV channel with 24 hour news coverage named B92 Info. This channel is cable only.
The radio station originally went on the air in 1989 with help from the Soros Foundation and USAID, though it was shut down by authorities a few times in its early years. It was forced off the air for a time in 1999 when NATO bombed Serbia, and government agents cracked down on independent reporting. The government took over the station in 1999 but the team continued broadcasting in borrowed studios as B2-92. In a dawn raid in May 2000 government troops seized everything but Internet broadcasting from secret studios continued until after the ousting of Milošević in October 2000, when the two stations were unified. It has continued as a combined music and news radio station since.
Aleksandar Vučić (Serbian: Александар Вучић, born 5 March 1970, in Belgrade, SR Serbia, Yugoslavia) is a Serbian politician, former Deputy President and currently the acting President of the Serbian Progressive Party. He is a former secretary-general of the Serbian Radical Party and was President of the Serbian Radical Party's city parliamentary club before joining the Serbian Progressive Party. Besides Serbian, Aleksandar Vučić is fluent in English and has a working knowledge of French and Russian. Vučić is a graduate of the Belgrade Law School. He is married and has two children.
In 1993, Vučić became a member of the Serbian Radical Party and was selected as a representative for the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia. Two years later, when 24, Vučić was selected as the party's secretary-general.
On 24 March 1998 Vučić became Serbian minister of information in the government of Mirko Marjanović. His term as a minister will be remembered by his controversial Information Law, which brought high fines for independent journalists, who were against Milošević's regime. During implementation of Vučić's law, Serbian journalists were fined with 24.000.000 Serbian Dinars in total, all foreign TV channels were removed from cable television networks, and re-broadcasting of any foreign Serbian-language service via terrestrial radio and TV channels was forbidden.
Đorđe Balašević (Serbian Cyrillic: Ђорђе Балашевић, born May 11, 1953 in Novi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia, then Yugoslavia) is a prominent Serbian singer-songwriter.
Balašević started his career in the 1977 as a member of the pop rock band Žetva, before leaving to form the pop rock band Rani Mraz. After releasing two albums, Rani Mraz disbanded, and Balašević started a successful solo career, spanning up to the present. While his initial works were mostly pop rock-oriented, in his later career he often used elements of rock, chanson and folk music, while his lyrics often dealt with romantic, humorous or political- and social-related themes.
Balašević was born to a Serbian father, Jovan Balašević, and to Veronika Dolenec, half Hungarian, half Croatian from Rasinja near Koprivnica, Croatia. He has a sister, Jasna. His grandfather's surname was Balašev, but in 1941 the grandfather changed it to Balašević.
The younger Balašević grew up in Jovana Cvijića street in Novi Sad, in the same house where he currently lives. He started writing poetry in primary school. He left high school in the third year (because, in his words, he hated subjects like mathematics, physics and chemistry) but managed to get a high school diploma as part-time student and passed the preliminary exam for the university study of geography. He never graduated from the university. Instead, he joined the band Žetva (Harvest) in 1977.
Aleksandar "Kristijan" Golubović (Serbian Cyrillic: Александар-Кристијан Голубовић; born 30 November 1969) is a Serbian organized criminal and Mixed martial artist. He was featured among several other Belgrade gangsters in the 1996 documentary about Serbia's underworld called Vidimo se u čitulji. Kristijan is one of only a few individuals, out of dozens featured in the film, still alive today.
After spending four and a half years in prison in Požarevac, he was released on January 9, 2009. As of January 2010, he is in police custody again after getting arrested on a charge that he was involved in narcotics trade.
Born to Srboljub "Kića" and Milanka "Mima" Golubović in a family of gastarbeiters living in Munich, Kristijan did not meet his father until grade school since he was serving a long-term prison sentence for taking part in a robbery with deadly outcome. His mother was a JAT stewardess. His father was imprisoned in Goli Otok prison. His godfather (kum) was Ljuba Zemunac, a notable mafia boss.
Boris Tadić (Serbo-Croatian pronunciation: [bǒris tǎdiːtɕ], Serbian Cyrillic: Борис Тадић; born 15 January 1958) is a Serbian politician and the leader of the Democratic Party. He was the President of Serbia, from 11 July 2004 until his resignation on 5 April 2012. He was elected to the first five-year term on 27 June 2004, and was sworn into office on 11 July. He was re-elected for a de facto second five-year term on 3 February 2008 and was sworn in on 15 February. He resigned on 5 April 2012. Prior to his Presidency, Tadić served as the last Minister of Telecommunications of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and as the first Minister of Defence of Serbia and Montenegro. He is a psychologist by profession.
Boris Tadić advocates the integration of Serbia into the European Union but he also believes Serbia should join the EU only with his country's sovereignty over Kosovo. He is seen as a pro-Western leader but who favours balanced relations with Russia, the United States, and the EU.
Boris Tadić was born in Sarajevo, the capital of the People's Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a republic within the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. His father, Ljubomir, is a philosopher and a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. His mother, Nevenka, is a psychologist. His maternal grandfather and six other relatives were killed by the Croatian Ustaše during World War II at the Jasenovac concentration camp.