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  • Pay no heed Mobbme, we all benefit from His toned rippled pecs.

    Originally posted by Luke Gu View Post
    He must be happy when he know one Canada boy so adore him。
    This sums up your entire posting history on WAB.

    HD Ready?

    Comment


    • Originally posted by HistoricalDavid View Post
      Pay no heed Mobbme, we all benefit from His toned rippled pecs.



      This sums up your entire posting history on WAB.

      lmfao hahahahaha, you bad boy you!!

      Comment


      • Back to Google News
        Russian punk rockers rage against the Putin machine

        By Alexander Osipovich (AFP) – 1 day ago

        SAINT PETERSBURG — Brashly shouting out his lyrics in crowded, smoky clubs, Alexei Nikonov zeroes in on provocative themes that most musicians here ignore -- authoritarianism and injustice in today's Russia.

        Nikonov, the outspoken singer of Saint Petersburg-based punk rock band PTVP, saves much of his venom for Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, referring to him as a "pig" in one of his most strident songs.

        "We live in a feudal society," Nikonov fumed in a backstage interview before a recent concert. "Everything is decided by one person, the dictator. The dictator decides everything."

        This is not the sort of opinion one can find anymore on Russian television channels or most radio stations, where criticism of the government faded away after Putin became president in 2000.

        Though Putin stepped down last year to become prime minister, he is still widely seen as Russia's true ruler.

        Meanwhile Russian rock music lost much of its rebellious spirit after being at the forefront of perestroika, the liberal reforms introduced by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s, musicians and critics say.

        Ironically, some of the leading figures in 1980s rock now perform at patriotic concerts organised by the Kremlin.

        But in Saint Petersburg, a city long seen as Russia's "window to the West", a handful of bands have defied the trend and continue to speak out.

        They include PTVP, whose full name translates as "The Last Tanks in Paris," and some veteran bands who complain of being marginalized on television and radio because of their politics.

        "Most bands, for some reason, have become conformist and most music is just fun," said Sergey Chernov, a music columnist for the St. Petersburg Times newspaper who has followed Russian rock since the 1980s.

        "PTVP are unique in touching on political and social subjects. There are probably two or three well-known bands who do this."

        -- The 'degradation' of Russian rock --

        In 1981, when Saint Petersburg was called Leningrad, Communist authorities allowed the opening of the Soviet Union's first legal rock-music club.

        Though closely overseen by the KGB, the Leningrad Rock Club became the heart of a vibrant scene in which many bands inserted veiled protest messages into their songs, which won enormous popularity as perestroika anthems.

        But with the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, the old censorship vanished and capitalism became the new master of Russia's music industry.

        The result was the "degradation" of Russian rock, said Mikhail Borzykin, the frontman of Televizor, a band which got its start in the Leningrad Rock Club and which is now one of Russia's few politically outspoken rock groups.

        "When it comes one's position as a citizen, it has become unfashionable to express it openly. There is an attitude that politics should be separate from art," Borzykin said.

        The crushing of media freedom under Putin also had a devastating effect, as television and radio stations were taken over by Kremlin-friendly owners who feared the slightest hint of dissent, Borzykin said.

        "All show-business managers are connected, through rent or other financial obligations, to officials," he said.

        "So they are very afraid of losing their small business by getting into any conflicts, even petty ones, with the authorities."

        Last year, Televizor -- which means "Television" -- got into a conflict with a Saint Petersburg television channel that asked them to do a live performance, then canceled it after reviewing the songs Borzykin planned to sing.

        The channel said it was because the songs contained inappropriate words, but Borzykin called it political censorship.

        -- 'Provincial towns are afraid' --

        For radically outspoken PTVP, which was founded in 1996 in the small town of Vyborg near Russia's border with Finland, the problems are even worse.

        Several times over the years, police rushed the stage and stopped concerts after Nikonov sang about Putin, and once in Vyborg he was hauled off to jail before being freed without charges, band members recalled.

        "It is mostly provincial towns that are afraid," Nikonov said.

        The band is undoubtedly disrespectful to Putin, especially in its 2002 song "FSB Whore," whose title refers to the KGB's post-Soviet successor agency, which Putin once led.

        The song's lyrics are: "Don't listen to anything! / He always lies to you! / Putin, Putin, Putin! / A pig will find filth everywhere!"

        Whether due to censorship or simply the limited appeal of its raw punk rock, PTVP's songs virtually never appear on television or radio. The band plays at clubs where it has a small but loyal following.

        "They have a clear point of view on what's happening in Russia today on the political front," said Pavel Isakov, a young fan at the recent PTVP concert in Saint Petersburg.

        "They have the right approach to this, the position that young people share, and not what the media like to promote."
        “the misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not being exploited at all” -- Joan Robinson

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Luke Gu View Post
          He must be happy when he know one Canada boy so adore him。
          Not just the Canadian mate, not just him.
          When our perils are past, shall our gratitude sleep? - George Canning sigpic

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Knaur Amarsh View Post
            Not just the Canadian mate, not just him.
            Add one more to it comrade Long live Putin.. long live.
            It is so. It cant be otherwise

            Comment


            • Vlad is calling...;)
              Attached Files
              It is so. It cant be otherwise

              Comment


              • Neo visits Shaolin Temple, he knows Kungfu.
                Attached Files
                “the misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not being exploited at all” -- Joan Robinson

                Comment


                • Brokeback Putin

                  Comment


                  • And who is the second?

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by andrew View Post
                      And who is the second?
                      ;)

                      Comment


                      • MIB or is it Neo? I cant tell. He is just so awesome.

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                        • Originally posted by tinymarae View Post
                          MIB or is it Neo? I cant tell. He is just so awesome.

                          Look how humble Mr. Putin is, he can be showing off with expensive Cufflinks, but he refuses, he says the button that comes with the shirt is good enough ;)

                          Unlike this guy at the bottom who is showing off his cufflinks so much, that you can't even see his face
                          -

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Mobbme View Post
                            Look how humble Mr. Putin is, he can be showing off with expensive Cufflinks, but he refuses, he says the button that comes with the shirt is good enough ;)
                            A man of the people, fellow traveller, much at ease in his skin and not too proud to hobnob with the proletriat.

                            I wish I was his personal, very personal secretary ....
                            When our perils are past, shall our gratitude sleep? - George Canning sigpic

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Knaur Amarsh View Post
                              A man of the people, fellow traveller, much at ease in his skin and not too proud to hobnob with the proletriat.

                              I wish I was his personal, very personal secretary ....
                              Me first. I'd be his right hand man, and I'd have my right hand chopped off to become that!

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Mobbme View Post
                                Me first. I'd be his right hand man, and I'd have my right hand chopped off to become that!
                                Sorry, secxretary is possible but not right hand man, the sheer intensity of Overlord Putin's masculinity ensures that no one else can be a man around him, not even tiny countries, forget individuals.
                                When our perils are past, shall our gratitude sleep? - George Canning sigpic

                                Comment

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