Saturday, April 17, 2010

Pokemon Deluge Legendary Pokemon Location

Chiguire Island raging

Truly these Chamos
Chiguire of Bipolar They are eating with their animated series "The Presidential Island." Aztecs land already being felt, as we will show the article published by El Universal of Mexico. Satirize


AL leaders in internet
Presidential Island The Animated Series has been a success in Latin America, the program includes Chávez, Lula and others


A Venezuelan web site for two years has been devoted to make fun of President Hugo Chavez has become a shining success in the network, where the authors released their satirical blog to circumvent censorship. Juan Andrés Ravell

and Oswaldo Graziani said that his first goal is to make people laugh and ease the polarized political environment in the South American country. His latest creation is a satirical animated series, this time including other Latin American leaders, who are shipwrecked together with Chavez on a desert island after participating in a summit and are forced to survive as they can, imitating the hit series Lost.

Presidential Island The Animated Series has been a success in Latin America and has earned the blog The capybara Bipolar Graziani Ravell and a wide following in social networks. The first episode, which tells how is that the leaders end up on the island in the middle of a storm and a dispute over where to take ship between Chavez, who yesterday recalled his return to power after the 2002 coup - and Colombia's Alvaro Uribe, has had over a million spectators since it was released in February and doubled traffic blog.

Chavez, who happened to Fidel Castro as the leader most talkative of the region, bored with their peers with a long monologue while fishing sitting on a tree branch during episode two. Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and falls asleep in the sea. The series also mocked U.S. President, Barack Obama, who appears at the end of the second episode Chavez shooting a tranquilizer dart from the top of a coconut to achieve to shut up. "It's something we did for fun: the international facet of President Chávez is often more fun than local," Ravell said. I can think about what Chavez, Graziani said that "he is funny, but I do not know if you have such a good sense of humor when you make fun of him." Ravell and Graziani, 28, 30, made his first attempt at cable television in 2007, but the program was so edited that missed the joke. So, they decided to take her brand of political satire to the network.



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