From Viral Clip To VIP Gift: Putin Sends $22,000 Bike To Alaska Man As Surprise Gift | World News

New Delhi: A resident of Alaska was stunned after an unexpected viral fame after receiving a personal talented brand new motorcycle by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s team.
Mark Warren, a retired fire inspector of Anchorage, was presented to Mark Warren in August with a basket of olive Green (about 19 lakh) in Olive Green, which was completed only days before the US-Russian summit. The motorcycle was produced on August 12th and soon flew to Alaska.
The movement watched a chance with a Russian television team interviewing Warren while doing footwork on the former Ural motorcycle. During the interview, he talked about the difficulties of supplying pieces for the bike inspired by the Soviet period.
Add Zee News as a preferred resource
Reflecting the strange return of the events, Warren said to CNN, “Viral went, crazy and I have no idea why, because I’m just a normal man with super shops. They interviewed an old man in a Ural and think it’s cool for some reason.”
Two days before the Summit of August 15, a journalist contacted Warren with amazing news: he would buy a new motorcycle. At first he admitted to be extremely skeptical. “I assume that this was a joke,” he said.
However, after the summit, he was directed to a hotel parking lot in Anchorage, where six men he assumed to be part of the Russian delegation were waiting next to the motorcycle. “I dropped my chin. I went, ‘You must be a joke to me’,” he remembered.
While completing the documents, Warren noticed the production date of the motorcycle, which confirmed how much the delivery was. “What’s obvious here is to roll the showroom floor and probably shifts into a jet within 24 hours,” he said.
The keys were officially delivered by Andrei Leder of the Russian Embassy in the United States. “I must say that this is a personal gift from the President of the Russian Federation.”
Warren did not waste time by taking Ledenev’s riding on Pillion and another man who occupied his basket with the new Ural for a return. “Day and night,” he said. “I love the old one, but that’s much better. I’m silent, amazing. Thank you very much.”
Despite his attention, Warren remained careful about how Jest can be perceived. “If they want something from me, they will be disappointed,” he said. “I don’t want it to hate a lot of hate because I’m a Russian motorcycle. … I don’t want it for my family.”
The only request from the Russian delegation was a small price for what Warren described as a really unexpected and extraordinary experience for a few photographs and a short interview.


