Celebrating Freedom of Expression in Mother Russia
The Bloodhound Gang, an American band whose name will probably sound kind of familiar thanks to their 1999 song “The Bad Touch” (best known for its chorus of “So let’s do it like they do on the Discovery Channel”), is, against all odds, managing to generate international headlines this morning. Unfortunately, like their songs, the news isn’t good.
The band’s trouble began late last month during a performance in the Ukrainian city of Odessa during which one of the band’s members—bassist Jared Hasselhoff, aka Evil—decided to stuff a Russian flag down the front of his pants and pull it out from the other side. “Don’t tell Putin,” Hasselhoff told the crowd. It appears as though someone did. The New York Times explains what happened next:
By Sunday, the authorities had canceled the band’s concert in southern Russia, at the behest of the minister of culture. Angry Russians pelted the band’s van with eggs and tomatoes on its way out of the town of Anapa, near the concert venue.
Then, a group of Cossacks, or traditional Russian frontiersmen, known for their nationalist sentiments, assaulted the rockers in an airport lounge and tried to smother a band member with an American flag, before the police broke up the scuffle.
More: Bloodhound Gang-Russia: Jared Hasselhoff’s Flag Stunt Lands Band in Trouble in Russia.