At the beginning, I thought that it would be fine if he spoke Russian in his hometown of Kazakhstan. He had already performed half of his performances, and he was still speaking.
Well, does someone in St. Petersburg get a headache talking about this every day?
"Borat" is about a TV reporter who ranks sixth in Kazakhstan. He was sent to the United States to learn advanced things, and made a documentary and returned to China to show the backward Chinese. With the differences in systems, technology, culture, customs, etc., Porat raised many questions that made Americans angry or embarrassed-
in the parking lot, he asked the salesperson, how many miles does your car have to drive, and can it crash? Kill a bunch of gypsies?
In the hotel, he told the waiter to get a magnet, this room is really good, and while talking, he took out the things in the luggage belt - including a live chicken, the waiter said: I haven't reached the room yet, this is the elevator.
On the live broadcast of the TV show, he told the host to remind me before the show that I was going to pee. The host was shocked: The live broadcast has already started!
...
If you were unfortunate enough to meet such a weirdo on the street, wouldn't it be maddening too?
If you are more unfortunate to suddenly see his maddening questions in a movie and your own really mad face, or see him on the Walk of Fame at a film festival suddenly transformed into an English gentleman, Are you going to faint?
Well, he is a British comedian who pretended to be making a documentary and made a movie, which made many unwitting Americans cast him as an extra. Now, a number of angry characters have filed lawsuits against him. Kazakhstan also made a four-page advertisement in the New York Times, saying that our country is not what he said.
But Cohen, the lead actor, said that he neither meant to ridicule Kazakhstan, nor did he intend to discriminate against Jews - in fact, he was Jewish himself, and he only ridiculed the United States.
Ugh... a bit unconvincing for someone like me who is super insensitive to political nerves.
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