Russian News Site Fined $6,600 Over ‘Heated Rivalry’ Review Amid Tightening Anti-LGBTQ+ Crackdown
Photo Credit: Crave/HBO
A district court in the city of Saratov has fined the regional news agency SaratovBusinessConsulting 500,000 rubles, approximately $6,600, for allegedly spreading “LGBT propaganda” in an online article about the Canadian TV series “Heated Rivalry.” The ruling, handed down by the Oktyabrsky District Court, treats a standard entertainment review as a violation of Russia’s expanded ban on public expressions of LGBTQ+ relationships.
In addition to the penalty imposed on the outlet, a separate administrative case targeted the agency’s IT director, Andrei Bashkaikin, over a similar article. On 7 April 2026, magistrate judge Vadim Krikunov of Judicial District No. 4 in the Oktyabrsky District fined Bashkaikin 50,000 rubles, underscoring how both organizations and individual staff can face punishment under the same law.
Chilling effect and self‑censorship in Russian media
An employee of SarBC, speaking anonymously for safety reasons, described the article that triggered the case as a “harmless review” of a popular TV series discussing why it had attracted so much attention. Even in that interview, the staff member refused to name the show explicitly, reflecting the climate of fear surrounding any public mention of LGBTQ+ themes.
The employee said the piece came through a link‑exchange arrangement and was taken down quickly, but the brief publication window still resulted in a large fine for the outlet and a separate charge for its IT director. The episode illustrates an expanding pattern in which Russian authorities treat even neutral or culturally focused coverage of queer stories as unlawful “promotion,” prompting newsrooms to remove content and avoid naming LGBTQ+ works outright.
Media advocacy groups and human rights organizations have previously documented how Russia’s anti‑LGBTQ+ laws, including restrictions on so‑called “propaganda,” contribute to widespread self‑censorship and a shrinking space for independent journalism. The SarBC case shows that even local business news agencies can be drawn into this enforcement web simply by covering internationally popular queer media.
‘Heated Rivalry’: a queer hockey drama with a Russian lead
“Heated Rivalry” is a Canadian television series that premiered in November 2025 on streaming platforms Crave and HBO Max, adapted from Rachel Reid’s novel of the same name about a secret romance between two professional hockey players. The story follows Russian player Ilya Rozanov, portrayed by actor Connor Storrie, and Canadian player Shane Hollander, played by Hudson Williams, whose on‑ice rivalry gradually becomes a long‑term, clandestine relationship.
Despite not being officially available on domestic streaming platforms, the series has become a surprise hit among Russian viewers and now ranks among the top three most popular shows on Kinopoisk, the country’s largest film and TV portal. With a rating of 8.6, it even outperforms globally recognized titles like “Stranger Things” and high‑profile Russian dramas linked to the war in Ukraine.
Fans and commentators say the series resonates because it portrays queer athletes navigating both elite sports culture and the pressures of Russian society. One Russian fan, using a pseudonym for safety reasons, described it as “a serious social drama” rather than just a romance, highlighting the emotional weight of a closeted athlete’s story under restrictive laws.
Fans circumvent bans as laws tighten
Because licensed Russian streaming services do not carry “Heated Rivalry,” viewers in Russia access the show through VKontakte, torrent sites, pirated streaming pages, and Telegram channels, where episodes can generate over a million views apiece. On VKontakte alone, the sixth episode reportedly surpassed one million views, indicating substantial domestic interest despite official disapproval.
Telegram has become a central hub for the show’s Russian‑speaking fandom, hosting large channels where subscribers share fan art, memes, discussion threads, and merchandise related to the main couple. The largest Telegram fan channel reportedly has more than 45,000 subscribers, with membership surging around the broadcast of a pivotal episode in which Rozanov discusses how Russia and his family would not accept the pair as an openly gay couple.
On Russian‑language TikTok, thousands of videos under the #HeatedRivalry hashtag blend reaction clips, storytelling, and conversations about LGBTQ+ representation, Russia, and family expectations. Some fans write about the “visceral fear” of disappointing parents or revealing a queer identity, linking their own experiences to Ilya Rozanov’s fictional struggle.
Beyond streaming and social media, Russian‑language fanfic platform Ficbook hosts dozens of stories inspired by the series, ranging from general‑audience material to adult‑rated works, which are harder for authorities to monitor comprehensively. Rachel Reid’s original novel remains available through major Russian online retailer Ozon, where it holds a high user rating and reviews that thank the publisher for making a print edition accessible in the current climate.
Russia’s evolving anti-LGBTQ+ legal framework
Russia first introduced a nationwide ban on “propaganda of non‑traditional sexual relations” in 2013, framing it as a measure to protect minors from exposure to LGBTQ+ content. In 2022, lawmakers expanded the law to cover all age groups and a broad range of public information, allowing authorities to penalize any positive or neutral depiction of queer relationships in media, advertising, literature, and online spaces.
Penalties for alleged propaganda violations can reach hundreds of thousands of rubles for individuals and up to millions of rubles for organizations, especially when authorities deem the content to target minors or to be distributed via mass media or the internet. In late 2023, Russia’s Supreme Court went further by designating what it termed the “international LGBT movement” an extremist organization, a move that effectively criminalized most forms of public LGBTQ+ advocacy under the banner of national security.
Human rights groups have argued that these policies violate fundamental rights to freedom of expression, association, and non‑discrimination, and they have documented raids, fines, and closures involving LGBTQ+ venues, online communities, and publishers. Researchers who study the enforcement of Russia’s “propaganda” laws note that cases often rely on broad and ambiguous definitions of what constitutes “promotion,” leaving media outlets and cultural institutions at heightened risk.
Cultural popularity versus legal repression
The popularity of “Heated Rivalry” among Russian viewers highlights a gap between official policy and audience interests, particularly among younger people who turn to global platforms for queer representation. LGBTQ+ activists and observers say that as more content is formally banned or stigmatized, the demand for stories centering queer characters has not disappeared, but instead has shifted into semi‑private online spaces and fan communities.
Yaroslav Rasputin, a Russian LGBTQ+ activist now living in Georgia, told The Moscow Times that there is a “huge unmet demand for queer content” among Russian‑speaking audiences, including many heterosexual women and girls who follow queer books, films, and series. Rasputin added that the stricter the government’s restrictions, the more intensely the few pieces of LGBTQ+ media that do slip through tend to resonate and circulate.
At the same time, conservative activists have mobilized against the series, with Andrei Soldatov of the Orthodox movement Sorok Sorokov condemning “Heated Rivalry” in January as containing “sodomite scenes” and what he described as propaganda of “unnatural depravity.” Soldatov said his group planned to file complaints with the Prosecutor General’s Office and Roskomnadzor to seek further restrictions on the show’s availability.
For many LGBTQ+ people and allies in Russia, the story of a closeted hockey star in “Heated Rivalry” mirrors real‑world experiences of secrecy and fear under the current political environment. A gay man identified as Alexei told The Moscow Times that the divide between “a world of restrictions” and an informal “open world of the internet and Western culture” makes such series especially meaningful to younger audiences who have grown up with tighter state controls.
In this context, the fine against SarBC for a now‑deleted review underscores how Russian authorities are extending the reach of anti‑LGBTQ+ laws from streaming platforms and activist groups to mainstream media outlets, even when they engage with queer stories as part of routine cultural coverage. The case signals that, under current regulations, simply explaining why a queer series has become popular can be enough to trigger a costly legal penalty.
Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
