Venezuela blasts TV show for Maduro slur

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a radio show at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas. File picture: Alejandro Cegarra

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a radio show at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas. File picture: Alejandro Cegarra

Published Sep 3, 2014

Share

Caracas - Venezuela has lashed out at the new US television show Legends for an episode that mentions Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in connection with the buying of chemical weapons to quell unrest at home.

“For lies and manipulations against President @NicolasMaduro in the series Legends we're requesting (National Telecoms Commission) Conatel open an investigation,” Information Minister Delcy Rodriguez said in a tweet late on Monday night.

“The series Legends aired on US channel TNT represents a Hollywood script typical of imperialist actions against legitimate governments,” she added.

Fox 21, the Twenty-First Century-owned producer of the crime drama, apologised to Maduro in a statement.

“Legends is obviously a work of fiction,” Fox 21 said. “The producers did not intend to imply that the show was reporting any actual events when it mentioned President Maduro's name. We sincerely apologise to President Maduro.”

Time Warner-owned cable network TNT is currently airing the first season of Legends. The disputed episode, Lords Of War, shows an undercover FBI agent, played by British actor Sean Bean, burning a suspect with an iron to get him to confess to whom he is selling VX, an extremely toxic nerve gas.

“I don't know,” the man whimpers. “There's a proxy.”

Bean responds: “And who is the proxy? Maduro.”

The suspect says: “PSUV (United Socialist Party of Venezuela). They're worried about the civil unrest in Venezuela.”

Maduro endured three months of violent street protests at the start of the year over spiralling inflation, rampant crime and shortages of basic goods ranging from diapers to corn flour.

Maduro's predecessor, the late Hugo Chavez, also frequently lampooned Venezuela's ideological foe the United States. Tensions ran especially high after a brief coup in 2002 that Chavez blamed the United States for instigating.

It remains unclear what reach the investigation into Legends will have. - Reuters

Related Topics: