You may have noticed that in my Wild Kratts fanfiction I often mix a policy of criticizing totalitarian regimes, dictatorships and all sorts of Orwell questions. It's not just that I read both George Orwell's books criticizing totalitarianism (Animal Farm, 1984), or by coming from a tiny country in the center of Europe whom experienced it. I swear, George Orwell is my writer's pattern and I also wrote Wild Kratts crossovers with his both books criticizing totality, just as I am older, and in childhood and childhood movies I can almost see satire. It's the same as the famous book Lord of the Rings - you have to look for it to be an allegory of deeper political significance.

In Wild Kratts I noticed these guides, which led me to believe that this is a science fiction political allegory that could be referred to as a mix between beat generation (against consuming way of life) and the rough political sci-fi novels of George Orwell and Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 (I have read both of these books and the end 1984 really cut me off.1984, however, tells about the valenborate of an ordinary man against the authoritarian superstate in the dystopic world divided into three unfair superstates that can not beat each other. );

1. Wild Kratts has Big Brother

Have you noticed that, basically the main villain of the series - Zach Varmitech high-standing be Falcon City? He has a residence, a multi-billionaire, and probably a politician. Have you noticed how he watched (disturbed human privacy) in a lot of episodes using his inventions, and then his Zachbots tried to capture and even assassinate them without our loved heroes knowing this for the first time? Before you convince me that it's just a children's series, look at the Christmas Special, where there has been an attempted multiple murder.

I'll explain to you that you understand. These robots are pretty much like the secret police. And the both Kratt brothers are the uncomfortable Zach wants to kill.

I mean, I think about that bad guy he is a Communist. Zach is from China, where since the Cold War is the government of a party that temporarily also had its dictator. With his status, he could be a clear member of the non-democratic government in his native country. This corresponds to the behavior of the Big Brother (violation of privacy) and the use of robots for the purposes of the secret police, which still fails in the whole Wild Kratts series.

My theory has also contributed to the fact that we have not seen brothers' fathers yet (due to the confirmed feature film for 2021-2031, I think that if the creators confirm it, he survived his death and then returns in the least anticipated moment.)

If you didn't read 1984, so in 1984 was disturbing of human privacy. Big Brother in the book a dictator of the superstate named Oceania. Specifically, there are 3 superstates. And the totality is in the other two, so as you already know, the Big Brother not only bosses the Party and spies people who are then arrested by Thought Police and tortures in room 101 - Big brother is a dictator in that book.

In Wild Kratts, I think, that this is exactly what Zach is is doing. He wants to get the ultimate power over Falcon City to show everyone that the boss is here, and the main heroes would surely have eaten the defeat. Perhaps it makes sense that if the main villain came to power, he would start a totalitarian regime under his authoritarian / definitive government over the city. Our heroes think they just protect nature without realizing that the way their enemy wants to get rid of them is strikingly similar to totalitarianism.

We could simply say that they are protecting not only the animals but also their hometown without realizing that the city protects at the cost of experiencing basically something like the Orwellian vision of totalitarianism. Zach is not a mayor but there is a lot of power, and if someone is uncomfortable, then his robots will find out and sooner or later the person is definitely dead. So it's a high-pitched villain in the city playing the Big Brother (dictator) and trying to get the ultimate power over the city to get all cruelly in control, including his enemies - our beloved heroes.

This was why in one of my older stories there was a likeness to Orwell's 1984, and why in the crossover with the book Zach Varmitech he played the role of Big Brother.

2. Beat Generation allegory

If you take it around and around, there you can see allegories in the spirit of beat generation, I will write an explanation for you.

Wild Kratts crew= real living, not sitting in the office until retirement. Clear not to the dull way of life and the destruction of the planet

Gaston Gourmand= raising the human population will lead to famine and to save humanity, a lot of animals will be extinct with the human hand

Paisley= A lot of buildings will cause pollution and will be after nature

Donita Donata= Appearance and riches

Zach Varmitech= Politicians, including non-democratic political parties (I think mainly Communists)