peacetraveler22: (Default)
peacetraveler22 ([personal profile] peacetraveler22) wrote2015-09-25 11:46 am
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Какой мультфильм был лучшим в СССР?

169281-foxixol

It was a Saturday morning tradition in my youth. My sister and I would awake early, run to the couch, and sit there for hours in our pajamas watching cartoons. What a relief for our parents! We were quiet, and they could sleep in. :) My favorite was "The Smurfs." These blue creatures were always on some spooky adventure, and I loved it. There was mystery, humor, intrigue, and even a female vixen who constantly distracted the male Smurfs. Feminists hate this imaginary blue seductress, and they created a popular theory called "The Smurfette Principle," which criticizes the way females are typically portrayed in cartoons. You can read about it here. To some extent I agree. I strongly dislike the classic Disney princess stories, where the helpless female is sitting around waiting for an imaginary prince to rescue her. Modern day Disney cartoons are much better, and the idea of a "princess" has evolved to include not only a beautiful woman, but a smart one also, with strong, charismatic personality traits.

Today, a reader sent me a Ukrainian folk cartoon, and I remember watching clips of Soviet cartoons on YouTube with [livejournal.com profile] macos during his first visit to the U.S. He introduced me to "Hedgehog in the Fog" and others. I fell in love with this adorable, fluffy character "Чебура́шка." :)

What's your favorite Soviet cartoon?


[identity profile] notfop.livejournal.com 2015-09-26 09:44 am (UTC)(link)
And I add one question: "What sites are most popular in US ?" :) I surf sometimes at US sites and they seems to me are quite boring .. what do you think?

[identity profile] a-nimaida.livejournal.com 2015-09-26 11:03 am (UTC)(link)
к сожалению я не могу вам ответить

у нас совсем мало информации о США ..все проблемы от этого

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-09-27 03:19 pm (UTC)(link)
We don't have anything like LiveJournal in the USA, where a bunch of blogs are on the same site. Most travel, pop culture and social commentary writers have stand alone sites, but they don't receive a lot of comments or reader interaction. That's why I like LJ, it's easy to communicate with a lot of different people on the same platform. For news, I think most Americans visit two main sites - CNN.com or Foxnews.com. Then, there are stand alone sites that publish more provocative stories like http://www.drudgereport.com/ (very right wing/conservative). And there's a popular site called "Gawker," which is more yellow like LJ. They publish political stories, entertainment stories, etc. But English speaking Internet is entirely different than RuNet. It's more calm and less aggressive, esp. the dialogue in comments. :) Pop culture sites include TMZ.com, the stories there get a lot of comments!!