Putin on Georgia’s mind

Georgia just can’t get Vladimir Putin out of its mind. A new cartoon of extremely poorly-drawn yellow characters on Georgian TV called The Samsonadzes — an obvious knock-off of The Simpsons — is rising high in the ratings chart. Creator Shalva Ramishvili disavows his show is a copy: The Samsonadzes is a native Georgian serial ...

Georgia just can't get Vladimir Putin out of its mind.

Georgia just can’t get Vladimir Putin out of its mind.

A new cartoon of extremely poorly-drawn yellow characters on Georgian TV called The Samsonadzes — an obvious knock-off of The Simpsons — is rising high in the ratings chart. Creator Shalva Ramishvili disavows his show is a copy:

The Samsonadzes is a native Georgian serial about a Georgian family… I want to say to Simpsons fans, please do not think that our show is an imitation or a rip off of The Simpsons. Yes of course it was an inspiration for us, but the Samsonadzes is not a copy.

A recent episode featuring Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin makes it hard to disagree on the "native Georgian" part, at least. Ramishvili described the importance of including Putin and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in a recent episode:

Having the Russian leaders on the show was like fulfilling a civic duty. The whole world is interested in the relationship between Russia and Georgia and we all know what Russia did in Georgia during the war [of August 2008].

Apparently, there’s a trend of Eastern European knock-offs of The Simpsons: check out this "cult hit" on YouTube of The Simpsons set in rural Estonia.

Andrew Swift is an editorial researcher at Foreign Policy.

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