Saturday, May 26, 2012


Transmission

A Necktie A Day Keeps Autocracy Away

Oleg Panfilov and his product
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Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has long since digested any fibers he may have consumed while nervously chewing on his necktie during the 2008 war with Russia.

The incident was famously caught on film in a BBC report (see it below at the 1-minute mark) and couldn’t have tasted sweeter to the Kremlin, which repeatedly used the incident to suggest that the Georgian leader was less than mentally sound.

WATCH: Saakashvili eats his tie:



More than three years later, many Russians still associate Saakashvili with his famous chew -- and so it’s not too late, says Oleg Panfilov, to have a bit of fun.

The prominent Russian journalist, free-press advocate, and Kremlin critic took to a gallery in his adopted hometown of Tbilisi on September 13 to unveil his “edible reformist ties.”

"We decided to poke a bit of fun at [the Kremlin’s use of the tie incident]. We decided to do this project and began making ties from traditional Georgian products," he told RFE/RL by telephone. 

"On the packaging of the product is the most important part -- a few words on how to use the tie. It's written that consuming the tie three times a day in a moderate amount generates an appetite for freedom and democracy.”

That means, Panfilov says, the sartorial snacks would be well-suited for the Kremlin’s ruling tandem.

"When we had our presentation, we made two large ties and we wrote that they were for [Prime Minister Vladimir] Putin and [President Dmitry] Medvedev," he said. "We were poking fun at the idea that if Putin and Medvedev believe that Saakashvili can eat a tie -- and Georgia became a more democratic country than Russia -- then we invite Putin and Medvedev to also try a bit of tie and maybe Russia will become a bit better, too."

WATCH: The edible necktie launch ceremony on Georgian TV:



The ties come in flavors including prune and apple and, according to Eurasianet.org, sell for 5 lari (or about $3) each.

Eurasianet also reports that, according to the organizers, sweet-flavored ties are intended for "good people," while sour varieties are more appropriate for the Russian president and prime minister.

Beyond the political joke, Panfilov admits he’s in the edible tie business to make a profit. Georgia is, of course, part of the capitalist West.

He tells RFE/RL that while production is in its infancy, he has already purchased a bar code and plans to sell the ties in Georgian supermarkets. He’s wagering that the ties will also be a hit come the tourist high season.

Levan Cholokashvili, from the Coalition for a European Georgia and Panfilov’s business partner, was quoted by Russian news agency RIA Novosti (which somewhat surprisingly picked up the story) as saying that the first batch of ties had already sold out.

-- Richard Solash
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Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Waffen SS
September 15, 2011 01:12
Georgians are fun people. Gotta love them.

by: Lewis from: USA
September 16, 2011 07:41
It was especially funny to watch their well-equiped army retreat everywhere in 2008 from the Russian counterattack.

by: Jeffrey Hunter from: Rosaroto Baja California
September 17, 2011 15:01
This is a wonderful article. Later today I will draft up an introduction to this piece and post it on our blog href="http://www.nicetiestore.blogspot.com">About Neckties - Buy Ties</a> with links to this article. I am always looking for unique stuff about ties and this is about as good as it gets.


On a side note - I was in Tbilisi in 1989 as a pro photographer and also as a guide for for a company that I owned - Photo Adventure Tours. That tour consisted of 18 University of San Juan Puerto Rico photography students, their professor who was a babe, and 4 other people. It was the one year anniversary for the killing by the Soviet Army of many young people who were protesting.ands or red rose petals were everywhere on the street, and the sidewalks. The grand parents sat on the sidewalk holding the pictures of the Innocent slain, their grand children. It was a very emotional time and we were all very humble about our presence there.


It seems that there is so much hate and stupidity in our world - everywhere, in the USA as well. I have exiled myself from my country after realizing that 9-11 was a "false flag" self inflicted attack so that Bush and the Neo Cons could invade Iraq and Afghanistan for oil - not to bring freedom and democracy. It is about capitalism and greed. I had long ago become ashamed to be an American due to what the USA really was. The lies and the propaganda were just too great.


I saw the same sentiments in the eyes of the Georgians. Once the Soviet Union lost control and had to give up its stronghold on the people of Georgia I was glad. I guess they still have a difficult way with having compassion for other peoples and other religious and ethic ways. It is greed - just like USA and their British counterparts - the desire to control the oil and to squeeze profit out of everyone and everything and to make sure that everything is in favor of their plan, with no regard sovereignrign rights or the lives of innocent people. A million or two - dead, can be justified in their evil minds as the end result will justify their means.


So Tbilisi was a somber place that time but we did however have some great experiences there. On the way up to the overlook on the mountain where there was a church and a fantastic view of the city, I convinced the bus driver and the guide to stop for an hour so we could photograph the house that Tchaikovsky lived in when he wrote the Nutcracker Suite. That was a really special thing for all of us as the tree in front had surely cast a shadow on Tchaikovsky on bright days as it was an old Oak I think at least a few hundreds years old. The people who lived in that yellow house were amazed and waived to us from the same windows that Tchaikovsky had to have looked out of. The bus driver and the guide thought that we were crazy, could have been. But honestly how many times can you checkout a house that a very famous composer lived in?


I wish the makers of the the fabulous flavored neckties great success. It is not such a bad idea. God Bless

About This Blog

Written by RFE/RL editors and correspondents, Transmission serves up news, comment, and the odd silly dictator story. While our primary concern is with foreign policy, Transmission is also a place for the ideas -- some serious, some irreverent -- that bubble up from our bureaus. The name recognizes RFE/RL's role as a surrogate broadcaster to places without free media. You can write us at transmission+rferl.org

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