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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 27 February 2025. Russian animated series "Nu, pagadi" redirects here. For the German band, see Nu Pagadi. This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources ...
Russian mob stole costumes from iconic ’90s kids’ show in botched $100K ransom plot: star. Chris Nesi. November 29, 2024 at 8:56 PM. ... The missive was allegedly from the Russian mob, leaving ...
Fantasy Patrol (Russian: Сказочный патруль, romanized: Skazochnyy patrul) is a Russian animated fantasy television series created by Vadim Volya and Evgeniy Golovin. The series follows the adventures of four young sorceress girls who live in the city of Myshkin. The series is produced by Studio Parovoz.
Mentac (Mutant from the Russian Exiles, possessed a fifth-level brain capable of computer-like analysis, deceased) Mikhail Nikolaievitch Rasputin (A mutant who was the older brother of Colossus of the X-Men and Magik of the New Mutants. He was a former Russian cosmonaut, a superhero, a supervillain, and a presumed messiah. Deceased.)
Boris Badenov is an antagonist character in the 1959–1964 animated series Rocky and His Friends and The Bullwinkle Show, so often appearing with his devious accomplice, Natasha Fatale, that the two are usually grouped together, as Boris and Natasha, a reference to Boris Drubetskoy and Natasha Rostova in Tolstoy’s War and Peace.
Qumi-Qumi is a comedy animated series for children ages 8–12. The prototypes of Qumi-Qumi were created in 2005 for a comic strip festival. In 2007, a short cartoon music video with dancing Qumi-Qumi characters in it gained high popularity online with 5 million viewings.
Ukranian Mila Kunis, pictured here with her husband Ashton Kutcher at the 2022 Governors Awards on March 25, 2022, shared how she changed "overnight" how she talks to her kids about their cultural ...
In the Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language of Vladimir Dahl, the name Kashchei is derived from the verb "kastit" – to harm, to dirty: "probably from the word "kastit", but remade into koshchei, from 'bone', meaning a man exhausted by excessive thinness".