Venezuelan cartoon has bizarrely-named superhero who looks exactly like President Maduro… and smashes US enemies with his iron fist
- Venezuela launches propaganda campaign to beef up Nicolás Maduro’s credentials by using the caped crusader SuperBigote – or SuperMoustache
- The cartoon superhero resembles Venezuela’s president and has been met with praise or derision, depending on which side of the country viewers stand
- Pro-Maduro politicians have hailed the ‘indestructible’ superhero, who appears on state television using his superpower – an iron left fist
- ‘Nobody messes with SuperBigote,’ state television channel VTV boasted on Twitter
Venezuelan caped superhero Super Bigote -or Super Moustache in English- has been launched in a propaganda campaign aimed at beefing up the reputation of the countrys moustachioed President Nicolás Maduro.
The cartoon character – who bears a striking resemblance to Venezuelas authoritarian leader – has divided the country into two camps and is either met with praise or critique, according to political affiliations.
The first episode of the cartoon, which aired in December, shows the hero SuperBigote tackling a US-launched electromagnetic drone sent to destroy Venezuela’s domestic electricity grid.
‘We’ll destroy them at last! They’ll suffer! They’ll weep! They’ll be the global epicentre of the pandemic!’ the dastardly imperialist says in accented Spanish
SuperMoustache tried to send Cuban, Russian and Chinese Covid vaccines to Venezuelan citizens in one episode of the cartoon
Supporters of Maduros regime hails the hero, who is wearing colourful blue underpants over his red tights, as he saves the South American socialist nation only using his iron left first against a supposedly Trump-inspred villain.
‘It’s fantastic! Don’t miss it!’ Luis Villegas Ramírez, Venezuelas deputy commerce minister, tweeted after the latest episode of the one minute cartoon aired, in which SuperBigote tried to send various Chinese, Russian and Cuban Covid vaccines to the Venezuelan population.
‘Nobody messes with SuperBigote,’ the state television channel VTV stated in an official Tweet shortly thereafter.
Meanwhile, those sceptic of the authoritarian leader´s ability to effectively run Venezuela in the face of humanitarian and economic disaster, such as opposition leader Julio Borges, quipped that ‘Super Destroyer of Venezuela’ would be a more fitting name for the character.
SuperBigote resembles Venezuela´s President Nicolás Maduro (pictured) with his real life moustache on display
The prominent opposition leader added that Maduro ‘means misery and corruption.’
Some viewers of the new TV-series see it as a means to build a cult of personality around the dictator – or possibly an attempt at mind control by the 59-year old Venezuelan leader and former bus driver.
Others, like Venezuela specialist at the Americas Society/Council of the Americas, Guillermo Zubillaga, commented that there is a deeper meaning behind the design of the national cartoon phenomenon.
Zubillaga put it down to a PR tactic where SuperBigote highlights the strength of a leader who has managed to overcome a US-backed campaign against him ‘against all odds’.
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