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Ran out of anti-Russian stories?: The Times grilled for calling Masha and the Bear propaganda

A bizarre year-old report calling cartoon Masha and the Bear Kremlin propaganda for kids has sprung up to live on the page of The Times, prompting commentators to wonder if the publication runs out of Russophobia ideas.

The adventures of a pesky little girl who befriends a bear and other animals in the style of Tiny Toons Elmyra has been enjoyed by children and parents worldwide. The Russian-made cartoon landed on Netflix and its Russian and English-language YouTube channels jointly have over 21 million subscribers.

What can be sinister there? “Childrens show is propaganda for Putin, say critics” – reads the headline on the Saturday edition of The Times.

The UK journalists have dug up the last years report from Finlands paper, Helsingin Sanomat, which was based on an interview with an Estonian professor, claiming that Masha and the Bear were intended to create a positive image of Russia in childrens minds and was a danger to Estonian national security.

The Times said that similar concerns were expressed in neighboring Baltic country of Lithuania and cited the University of Buckingham Professor, Anthony Glees, who believes that: “Masha is feisty, even rather nasty, but also plucky. She punches above her slight weight. Its not far-fetched to see her as Putinesque.”

But internet users, including some with anti-Kremlin views, saw the story as a new low in anti-Russian sentiments.

In my career as a journalist, Ive got used to Russian Duma wackos claiming that Harry Potter or Teletubbies are part of a grand conspiracy to corrupt Russian children. Now that the Times is pushing same stuff, things must have gone really bad. https://t.co/9KOjU9AFLt

— Leonid Ragozin (@leonidragozin) November 17, 2018

Russia expert, Mark Galeotti, said on his website that The Times have reached the “peak” with its article, which he blasted as “cliché Russophobia.”

Masha and the Bear are not coming to invade your homeland
Today's dumbest 'everything is Russian hybrid war' article got me venting my spleen…https://t.co/JAstzg0HPf

— Mark Galeotti (@MarkGaleotti) November 17, 2018

Mark Galeotti also argued that it was “pretty damn far-fetched” to suggest that the Kremlin, would want President Putin to be perceived as “a little girl who cries when she doesnt get what she wants and gets her pig to dress up like a baby.”

And this isn't even a political wacko, but – supposedly – a serious newspaper. This is both hateful and beyond stupid…

— Litvine Nicolas (@NicoLtvin) November 17, 2018

The bear is Russian and bored shitless of the perpetual idiocy of Masha.

Masha? She's got to be Western or specifically American to display that level of idiocy! ???

— Rob Proud (@RobProud) November 17, 2018

The Russian Embassy in London also joined the conversation and suggested that all Russian cartoons should be added to the UK sanctions, introduced against Moscow after the Skripal poisoning.

An important issue raised by @thetimes today: How UK can find salvation from “Masha and the Bear”? Launch an Ant-Cartoon Excellence Centre somewhere in the Baltic? Place all cartoonists on EU sanction list? Clearly a decisive – and a very expensive – approach is needed! pic.twitter.com/a05fKE24Be

— Russian Embassy, UK (@RussianEmbassy) November 17, 2018

Nonsense, I grew up watching the Hollywood cartoons and I'm not even close to be pro-Western.

— Serge Coushen (@SCoushen) November 17, 2018

Other Twitter users hurried to share the made-up consequences of the cartoons harmful influence on their kids and themselves.

TBH I thought it was a bit strange that my daughter would stand in attention when hearing “Farewell of Slavianka” and answered in class that she wanted to be a T-34 tank driver when she grew up.

— Frederico Muñoz (@fredericomunoz) November 17, 2018

Good advert to watch Masha and the Bear, watched at least 1yr, greatgrandchildren watch all the time, lovely beautiful presentaion absolute delight to watch.71yr old ex miner.

— Keithbritton (@Keithbritton11) November 17, 2018

This is insane! I usually show the kids Cheburashka, so they are properly manipulated – I saw Masha i Medved always as a decadent distraction from building a true lenininst spirit. And now this…it's nationalist Russian propaganda! I am confused.

— David Berger (@BergerWthur) November 17, 2018

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