Banned Uncensored Uncut Music Videos Russia «Fast»
If you are accessing these videos from outside Russia, you are legally safe (usually). However, if you are a Russian citizen or a visitor inside the Russian Federation, seeking is now a criminal act under Article 207.3 (public dissemination of knowingly false information about the Russian military) and Article 6.21 (LGBT propaganda among minors).
: Blocked by YouTube in Russia at the government's request for allegedly containing "information about drugs," specifically images of people smoking. IC3PEAK – "Death No More" banned uncensored uncut music videos russia
Banned for "extremism" and "discrediting authorities." The Video: Russian rapper Face (Ivan Dryomin) released a stark, black-and-white uncut video featuring a lookalike of Vladimir Putin sitting in a prison cell, injecting drugs, and acting deranged. The uncensored version includes explicit scenes of the double urinating on the Russian constitution. Why it’s banned: Direct insult to the President (which became a criminal offense in 2019). The uncut difference: The censorship board demanded blurring of the double’s face and removal of the constitution scene. The uncut version runs 30 seconds longer with a specific frame of a FSB officer being humiliated. Face now lives in exile; the video survives via IPFS and VPN-restricted Telegram channels. If you are accessing these videos from outside
Have you found a banned uncut video missing from this list? Archives are actively maintained at the Internet Freedom Collective. IC3PEAK – "Death No More" Banned for "extremism"
Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the rapper Oxxxymiron canceled all Russian tours. His video for “Oyda” (uncut) includes a final title card listing the names of Ukrainian cities under bombardment. Within hours, all copies on Russian-hosted platforms were deleted, and the video was classified as “fake news about the Russian army.”
This international viral hit featured absurdist, chaotic imagery, including a policeman twerking and scantily clad individuals in surreal situations. While initially passed, state broadcaster Channel One later refused to air the video during daytime hours, citing its "provocative sexual nature." The band’s subsequent move to condemn the war in 2022 led to their complete erasure from state playlists, with all their videos effectively banned.