© 2026 WGCU News
News for all of Southwest Florida
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

'Very Nice!': Kazakhstan, Outraged No More, Embraces Borat In New Slogan

New videos from Kazakhstan's tourism board turn the fictional journalist Borat's catchphrase "Very nice!" into a slogan to promote the Central Asian country.
Kazakhstan Travel/Screenshot by NPR
New videos from Kazakhstan's tourism board turn the fictional journalist Borat's catchphrase "Very nice!" into a slogan to promote the Central Asian country.

The first Borat movie sparked anger in Kazakhstan for its portrayal of Kazakhstanis as coarse and backward. But the sequel, which was just released, is getting a warmer reception: Kazakhstan's tourism board is using Borat's famous catchphrase "Very nice!" as its new slogan.

The phrase is the centerpiece of a new ad campaign, punctuating videos that highlight Kazakhstan's natural beauty, architecture and culture. The goal is to give people a look at a nation that the tourism agency says is Asia's best-kept secret.

While people in the videos declare the country "very nice," they don't do full-on imitations of Sacha Baron Cohen's lampoonish character – suggesting Kazakhstan might retain its status as a refuge for people who have tired of hearing friends mimic Borat's nasal exclamations such as "Mah wife!"

The first Borat film ignited outrage in Kazakhstan in 2006, prompting officials to scramble to present their young country in a true light — and to raise the possibility of a lawsuit against Cohen.

No, a Kazakhstan Embassy spokesman told NPR at the time, women in the former Soviet republic were never forced to ride on the outside of buses. And Kazakhstanis do not drink fermented horse urine – the country's traditional drink is fermented horse milk.

Cohen has said he chose Kazakhstan for his satirical mockumentaries because it's a real country about which most Americans knew little. But while the films poke fun at their nation, some Kazakhstanis say it's actually the U.S., with its interwoven traditions of freedom and discrimination, that is Cohen's main target.

"I think that first you need to carefully review the first film and, in the end, understand that apart from the name of the country, Borat has nothing at all to do with Kazakhstan," Fariza Abdraimova, a student in Almaty, Kazakhstan's largest city, told Radio Free Europe. "This is a parody of American society."

Kazakhstan Travel is putting out videos that highlight the country's architecture and scenery, hoping to counter the country's depiction in the new Borat mockumentary.
/ Kazakhstan Travel/Screenshot by NPR
/
Kazakhstan Travel/Screenshot by NPR
Kazakhstan Travel is putting out videos that highlight the country's architecture and scenery, hoping to counter the country's depiction in the new mockumentary with Sacha Baron Cohen.

As it released the new ad campaign, Kazakhstan Travel asked, "How can you describe a place this surprising in just two words? As a wise man onсe said, 'Very nice!' "

Not everyone is laughing. The Kazakh American Association recently issued a letter to Amazon Prime Video, which is streaming the new film online, accusing Cohen of attacking and dangerously oversimplifying "a highly vulnerable and underrepresented minority ethnic group."

And the author and mathematician Nassim Nicholas Taleb has accused the Borat movie of being racist and degrading, saying its creators have been given a "free pass" because the parody targets Rudy Giuliani, an ally of President Trump's.

A lively debate over how best to view the film is playing out on the Kazakh American Association's Facebook page. There, some are calling for lawsuits against Cohen. But others said the lawsuits and anger should be directed instead at Kazakhstan's leaders, calling on them to improve conditions in the oil-rich country.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.
Trusted by over 30,000 local subscribers

Local News, Right Sized for Your Morning

Quick briefs when you are busy, deeper explainers when it matters, delivered early morning and curated by WGCU editors.

  • Environment
  • Local politics
  • Health
  • And more

Free and local. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

More from WGCU
  • Parking lot, restrooms and kayak launches at site to remain open.
  • The European Starling is one of our most obvious exotic species. We see them everyday because we provide them with food and shelter. The next time you are at a stoplight, look around.You are likely to see starlings. Fast food restaurants and snack-providing gas stations are often located at intersections and garbage dumped in open trash bins, or dropped accidentally or on purpose by patrons of those businesses or by drivers getting a snack while the light is red create a smorgasbord for starlings. The convocation of utility wires at intersections also play a role. They provide perches where starlings wait for their next meal. Starlings are social birds and -- especially in late winter and early spring -- starlings can be lined up evenly spaced by the dozens – or hundreds – on the wires.Why are they so evenly spaced? They leave just enough space to allow them to take off quickly without their wings hitting their neighbor while still taking advantage of thebody heat of their neighbors.
  • Lee County Solid Waste is hosting its ninth annual “Donated not Wasted” food rescue campaign, a three-week initiative aimed at reducing food waste while helping residents facing food insecurity across the county. The recently launched campaign, which is running now through April 6, encourages seasonal residents and year-round community members to donate unopened, nonperishable food items before leaving Southwest Florida for the summer.