The summary is:
This is a video transcript of a YouTube channel that reviews and criticizes a cartoon series called "Zina and Kesha". The cartoon series was commissioned by the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations and was supposed to teach children about safety in various situations, such as fire, flood, or nuclear explosion. However, the video host argues that the cartoon series is poorly animated, poorly scripted, poorly voiced, and poorly educational. He also suggests that the cartoon series has a hidden plot involving a creepy rescuer who stalks and endangers the children in order to win their affection. He makes fun of the cartoon's logic, graphics, references, and characters. He also questions the budget and the production process of the cartoon series, and wonders why it was made by a Ukrainian studio instead of a Russian one. He concludes that the cartoon series is a waste of taxpayers' money and that children would not watch it or learn anything from it. He also reacts to another video where someone praises the cartoon series and disagrees with their opinion.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
- The text is a transcript of a video that criticizes a cartoon series called "The Extraordinary Adventures of Zina and Kesha".
- The cartoon series was commissioned by the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations and made by an Odessa animation studio in 2011.
- The cartoon series is supposed to teach children about safety in emergency situations, but the video argues that it fails to do so and has many flaws.
- The video points out the poor quality of the animation, the voice acting, the script, the plot, and the references to celebrities and pop culture.
- The video also suggests that the main character of the cartoon, Uncle Save, is a maniac who stalks and endangers the children Zina and Kesha in order to gain their affection.
- The video questions the budget and the motives of the cartoon's creators and implies that there was some corruption or fraud involved.