SuperEpicFailpedia Wiki
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Vladimir Putin (b. 7 October 1952) is a Russian politician, a former KGB officer, and the incumbent President of Russia. He served in that position from 1999 to 2008, and again from 2012 to the present, while serving as Prime Minister of Russia in 1999 and from 2008 to 2012.[1]

Popular Culture[]

Appearances[]

Variants[]

Year Name Appearance Notes
1999 Vladimir Putin
  • Royal Canadian Air Farce, episode "?"
  • Portrayed by Don Ferguson.
  • After coming to power, the teetolaing Putin receives a phone call from Prime Minister Jean Chrétien. The resulting conversation led Putin to drink heavily.
  • Boris Yeltsin was portrayed in other sketches by John Morgan.
2009 Vladimir Putin
  • Family Guy, episode "Spies Reminiscent of Us"
  • Brian and Stewie Griffin track a Cold War-era Russian sleeper agent to Russia. Putin agrees to help them to avoid international embarrassment.
  • Putin was voiced by John Viener.[2][3]
2015 Vladimir Putin
  • ISBIT Games, First Person Lover
  • The twist villain. Unnamed, though visibly patterned after Putin. Has a bear as a minion.[4]
2016 Vladimir Putin
  • Vladimir Putin makes plans to invade Canada, alongside President Quentin Carroway.[5] Naheed Nenshi is depicted as the Prime Minister of Canada.
2018 Vladimir Putin
  • Chapterhouse Comics, Captain Canuck: Invasion, Jay Baruchel, Van Jensen, Leonard Kirk

Mentions[]

The following list is of various mentions of Vladimir Putin in fiction and popular culture.

Year Name Appearance Notes
2010 Vladimir Putin
  • Red Snow, author Michael Slade
  • Criminal mastermind Mephisto had purchased a modified airborne strain of Ebola Zaire from from the vengeful former-Biopreparat scientist Vladimir Grof between the fall of Soviet Russia and the rise to power of Putin.[6]

Links[]

References[]

  1. Vladimir Putin - Encyclopædia Britannica - Retrieved 7 September 2020
  2. Spies Reminiscent of Us - Full Cast & Crew - IMDB
  3. John Viener - IMDB
  4. OK, So What The Hell Is This - Luke Plunkett - 30 January 2015 - Kotaku Australia - Retrieved 6 June 2021
  5. Quantum Night by Robert Sawyer - Alex Binkley - 11 June 2016 - The Ottawa Review of Books - Retrieved 7 September 2020
  6. Red Snow - Michael Slade - Penguin Canada - Published 2010 - Page 209 - Retrieved 6 June 2021
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