Who was shocked at the project? Has Shocky's probation period passed? The world is not without good people

Account: antonshoki

Occupation: participant of the reality show “House 2”

Anton Shoki created an Instagram page quite recently, but in less than a month, he won the attention of thousands of people. And all thanks to beautiful and interesting photographs that give fans the opportunity to observe the personal life of their favorite character of the television show.

Anton Shoki's Instagram account

Anton Shoka's Instagram in a very short time managed to be filled with a lot of different photographs, these are pictures from television life, and a simple, homely role. Anton is not shy about anything, but on the contrary, the guy is proud of his beautiful, pumped up body and attractive appearance in general. Sometimes he tells fans how he spent the weekend or on the set of which TV show he visited. His entire profile, one way or another, is dedicated to television activities, but ordinary photographs of routine everyday life also appear on the star’s page. There is a certain invisible connection between Anton and his fans, because when a guy posts personal photos, the fans become some kind of witnesses to what is happening, that is, they seem to be present in his life and share happy moments with him. The guy happily communicates with fans, gives advice and shares his most intimate things. Active life on a social network even makes it more popular to some extent. Anton publishes photos from interesting people– political and social figures, also with friends and girlfriend.

Anton Shoki publishes photos from Instagram practically at the time and place of the incident, all photos and videos are signed and carry a positive character, the right attitude of subscribers for the best.

Biography of Anton Shoki

Anton Shoki biography, basic facts:

  • Anton Shoki (Gusev) was born and raised in the city of Cheboksary, spent his entire childhood in an orphanage, and only at the age of 14 was adopted by American parents.
  • Relationships with new family Things didn’t work out from the very beginning, and so the guy decided to return to his homeland.
  • He graduated from the Moscow Academy of Business and Management, an independent guy since childhood, he always achieves everything without outside interference or supreme patronage.
  • Anton is actively involved in sports and loves boxing.
  • He came to the reality show “House 2” in 2017, building a relationship with Vika Komissarova. The young people already live in the same room, which they renovated together in graffiti style.

Biography of Anton Shoki is thorny path, he has already experienced a lot, achieved a lot, but the most interesting events are yet to come, real life it's just beginning!

Anton Batrakov (Shocks) was adopted by an American family when he was 14 years old. A boy from Chuvashia, on his way to America, thought that fate had finally smiled upon him. He went to the land of freedom with a dream of flying in the sky, about becoming a pilot, about happy life in an American family, where in addition to his father and mother he will have half-brothers and sisters. But after just a few months of staying in the USA, he realized that his dreams were not destined to come true. His adoptive parents, whom he did not understand because he did not speak the language, turned him in to the police with accusations of sexual abuse of their three children, and then abandoned him completely. After several years of wandering around orphanages and foster families in the United States, Anton finally returned to Russia. And here another story began, also not like sugar, but the world, as it turned out, is not without good people

Now Anton is preparing to enter the law faculty and heads a large charity project with the support of the famous public figure and producer of the group “Tender May” Andrey Razin. The Return Charitable Center will allow Russian orphans with the same unsuccessful adoption as Anton’s to return from abroad back to their homeland - Russia.

Anton told SP-Yug about his life before his adoption to America and after returning to Russia.

Chuvash-American Odyssey

Anton ended up in an orphanage at the age of three due to a typical situation for a Russian orphan: his parents were drunk and had no time for the child. In addition, the mother, trying to arrange her personal life, changed men and constantly got into some kind of criminal situations, for which she ended up in a pre-trial detention center, and then in a colony, where she is still located.

“I went to see my mother in the colony when I returned from America,” says Anton. “Even though I didn’t know her and didn’t love her, I never forgot that she was my mother.” It's not her fault that the circumstances turned out this way. Life had it that way. Now I know that life can batter and break anyone. Therefore, I went to her to say that I forgive her. It was probably important for the mother to hear these words from her son.

About his father, Anton says that he doesn’t remember him. He left his family early. Among the relatives there is a brother from another father. He was brought up with him in an orphanage in Chuvashia until he left for America. The brother, like the mother, is now in prison.

Anton agreed to be adopted to America on the advice of his good friend, a director from Chuvashia. Yuri Spiridonov, who essentially replaced his father during that period of his life. Together they thought it would be better for Anton. After all, he will have a better chance of getting an education by training to become a pilot, which the orphan from Chuvashia so dreamed of becoming. True, Anton did not know English, but he hoped to quickly learn the language in American school.

But in reality everything turned out differently. The discord between Anton and his adoptive parents began within a couple of months. Anton did not understand his new guardians, and they did not trust the almost adult, as it seemed to them, difficult, Russian teenager from an orphanage. Anton was dragged around psychological adaptive camps, where he felt out of place. Firstly, he was the oldest among the adopted children in these camps (almost young men), and he was forced, as a small child, to sit on the laps of his guardians and sleep in the same bed with them. As Anton admitted, he just wanted to run away somewhere from this strange and unpleasant situation. And his new parents thought that the boy was wild and abnormal, and tried to protect him from contact with the external environment.

— My adoptive parents didn’t send me to a regular school, only at monasteries. They were afraid that I would find friends with whom I would spend time. But I still found a friend. I ran to him and spent the night with him.

My parents started locking me in the room with an alarm. Sensors were installed on the window and door. I couldn't even go to the toilet at night. But I broke the sensor on the window and ran away. True, the police quickly returned me. After such an outburst, my parents sent me to a mental hospital. I stayed there for several months. Doctors found no abnormalities. And then my foster family took me to the director of the psychological camp. There I was locked in a basement for 7 days. They didn't talk to me. “I sat alone, locked in the room, and like a dog they pushed a bowl under the door,” Anton says about life in a foster family.

Through Google Translator, Anton was able to communicate with his “jailers.” He said that he no longer wanted to live with the Shockey family, and they in turn sent him alone on a plane to Texas, as they told him, forever. There Anton went to school and began to communicate with other children. It seemed that life was starting to get better, but after 3 months, without explaining the reasons, Anton was put on a plane again and returned back to Shoki. Having met the boy at the airport, the American father and mother handed their adopted son over to the police, where they put “bracelets” on Anton’s hands and put him in a cell. Only 3 months later, when Anton began to be taken to court, they explained to him that the Shocs had accused him of sexually harassing their children. From then on, Anton came from a foster family under social care, who placed him in a camp for difficult children with criminal tendencies. And although the boy went through all the unimaginable examinations and was examined by both doctors and psychologists for bad inclinations and mental sanity and was declared normal, he continued to be kept in institutions for “special” children. Then there were three “professional” families, where the “dad” was paid a salary for the child’s support, and many attempts to contact the Russian consul in order to return to Russia. But several years passed before this happened. During this time, Anton’s status in the United States changed from an adopted teenager to a “state” teenager.

— When I finally got a meeting with the Russian consul, I was 16 years old. I begged to be taken to Russia. The problem was that in America I was under state custody until I came of age. And neither American nor Russian laws allowed me to return to Russia. It turned out that neither our nor the American legislation provides for the return of children in such cases with the preservation of the required benefits,” Anton recalls about all the torment that he had to endure before he was able to return to Russia. — I had to wait until I turned 18 years old (until the age of majority according to Russian laws) so that the Russian consul could provide assistance. During this time I graduated from school with a bronze medal. He worked, bought a car and wanted to go to college to train as a pilot. But because of my African American guardian (third after the Shockeys) who treated me like trash, I couldn't do it. There was a time when I spent the night in the park and there was nothing to eat because the guardian locked the house and could leave for a neighboring state with his son without even notifying me. And then mass street riots of African-Americans began in my city and I was so scared that there was only one thought about surviving at all. Then I wrote many letters to Putin, To Astakhov and to the Russian Embassy. And finally, they helped me. From Missouri I flew to Houston, and there he met me Lavrov and from there I returned to Russia.

PR against the backdrop of an orphan

— Yuri Spiridonov met me at the Russian airport. Not Astakhov, as the media wrote, not government officials, just my friend. And in the two years that I have been in Russia, not a single official, including Astakhov, has helped me. I couldn’t even get a Russian passport. There was nowhere to live. As an orphan, I was denied housing in Russia. They claim that I am listed here on paper adopted child American family Shockey. It turned out that I lost the benefits granted to an orphan there, and I didn’t receive them here. Stupidly, I threw away my American passport when I got off the plane in Russia, and then had to get it restored. It cost me a lot of money - $200. And the most remarkable thing is that so many things have been written and told about me, including Gordon on “First”, and they promoted themselves at my expense, but no one helped after the lights of the spotlights and cameras went out,” Anton, exhaling in anger with bitterness in his voice and eyes, expressed his thoughts out loud.

— I never liked PR. When I got off the plane and saw the journalists, I got scared. I didn’t want to talk about my life to all these cameras. Went back to Cheboksary. Then I realized that I had done the wrong thing. It was necessary to stay in Moscow in order to knock on some of the right doors. Our regions suffer both materially and in terms of social assistance opportunities. For a long time I could not legalize my education documents in order to enroll in higher education. I wrote and called Astakhov, but I couldn’t reach him...

I legalized the documents myself, paying 10 thousand rubles. It took, however, 2 years. Now the problem is to refresh your knowledge. But I don't weak person, I decided to enroll, so I will enroll. The knowledge of a lawyer is needed for my goal, to help orphans like me. And if it works out, then become the Commissioner under the President Russian Federation on children’s rights,” Anton shared.

The world is not without good people

— I am very grateful to Andrei Razin. He noticed me when he came to Cheboksary with the Tender May concerts. I was watching the news at the hotel and there was a story about me. He found me and invited me, along with the entire boarding school, to the “Tender May” concert. And then he said that he was taking me to Moscow immediately after the end of the tour.

He arranged for me to register, restored my Russian passport, helped me find a job, and now I have an apartment in Sochi thanks to him. And although there are still bare walls and no documents, I hope that everything will be there. The apartment, by the way, is in the same building where the “Return” charity center is planned to open. There will also be apartments for other orphans like me,” Anton said about the fateful meeting and plans for the future.

Another good friend in Anton’s life (among the few) - Andrey Isaev Deputy Secretary of the General Council of the Party " United Russia" Anton became friends with Isaev when he had the opportunity to work in the State Duma of the Russian Federation. Even though it was a short experience, it was a useful one. As Anton said, thanks to this work, he discovered a new goal in life and the direction of his current activity - the curator of the charity project “Return” - appeared.

— In Sochi, Andrei Razin and I are opening the official office of the charity Center for the return of orphans from abroad back to Russia. In October we are scheduled to fly to America to open 10 representative offices of the Return Center there. The official head office is planned to open in Washington at the Russian Embassy. Children will be able to apply there directly,” Anton spoke about the project, adding that the first important steps towards its implementation have already been taken.

— We sent 2 thousand letters to various large companies asking for help, and funds have already begun to flow into the budget of the charity project. Thanks to them, it became possible to purchase 15 apartments for orphans. The website Return-home.ru has already been created, the development of which I am working on. Now I find Russian orphans abroad who need help and who want to return to Russia,” says Anton.

Small tragedies on a large country scale

In America, of course, there is good families, where Russian orphans end up, but there are also scary cases, much worse than Anton's.

— In March, I contacted my friend Christina Knopp. She and I are from the same orphanage in Chuvashia. She also wanted to return, but did not wait. An acquaintance killed her. When I found out, I couldn’t eat or sleep for a week. It’s terrible that orphans abroad have nowhere to call or seek help in a difficult situation,” says Anton.

Christina, who died in the United States, was adopted by Americans in 2009. The girl passed away on March 23. No one told her relatives what happened to her there. To this day they do not know the circumstances of her death, and they were informed about Christina’s death only after her funeral. This is how the life of a Russian orphan girl from the Chuvash province ended in a foreign land.

Do you think it will be so

— America taught me a lot. The brain began to work differently,” admits Anton. — It was as if my brain gave out another 200% of its energy when I started learning English, and then thinking in it. And I also realized that whatever you think, it will be so. I have always tried and try to see the good in the bad. When you have a positive attitude, a lot happens.

Yes, I can go to America, but I decided to stay in Russia and change our country for the better. As they say, where you were born, you came in handy there. I'm proud of my country no matter what. I see Russia as promising and I hope that others will understand this and then everything will work out...

A look at Russian realities

“The main thing is to learn to see people and evaluate them not from the point of view of how much money a person has, but from the point of view of what he is, what he can do for himself and for others,” Anton shared his thoughts.

“Sometimes I ask myself the question: wouldn’t it be better to stay in America?” I wanted so badly to return to Russia and believed in my country, but in reality everything is different than on TV. I saw that Russia suffers greatly from corruption and this causes many troubles. It is clear that Russia is changing in better side. Russia big country, with great possibilities. Including financial ones, but people live poorly. The reason again is corruption. And now everyone is being told that there is a crisis in the country, but in reality there is no crisis - it is an artificially created situation. The money is just going in the wrong direction.

I had an incident here in Sochi when I was walking along the embankment with a bottle of beer in my hand. The police stopped me and asked for my documents. I had with me american passport. Seeing him, the policeman began to tell him very emotionally how he wanted to go to America, and how bad and hopeless things were in Russia. This is very revealing!

Ordinary people depend on officials, and they do God knows what instead of working in their place. This is why Russians have such an attitude towards their country and have no faith in the future. This is the main difference between Russia and America. Now I understand why Russians are so eager to leave for the USA, even despite the propaganda that everything is bad there. In fact, our prospects and opportunities are enormous.

There is someone “up there” and he sees everything...

— Meeting Andrey is like help from above. Yes, there was a lot of bad things in my life, but now I understand that I had to go through all these negative moments to get to who I am now and what I have now. I never tire of thanking God for everything that happened in my life. I can’t say that I often go to church, but I believe in God or whoever is above. When I feel bad, I just look at the sky and talk to HIM. I'm sure HE hears me. And you will always get what you need if you ask. Not a million dollars, of course, but some real things. “I know it from myself,” says Anton. “And after they helped me get to Moscow and restore my passport, I believed 100%.

I lived in Chuvashia, worked everywhere and in whatever way I could: as a photographer, as a bartender, and sold jackets to save up for a passport. Money was very difficult. We also needed funds for a ticket and a hotel. I asked for help so much and then they call me from Moscow, from Channel One, from Gordon’s program, and offer me participation in a TV show: they pay for travel, a week’s stay in a hotel and also give me a fee of 40 thousand. It was like a miracle!

"Dom-2" as a "panacea" for begging

— There was a story when I wanted to get to Dom-2, I even applied through my brothers Zaitsevs had every chance to pass the casting. But, firstly, I didn’t know what it was then. And secondly, I had nowhere to live and there was a problem with work due to the lack of registration and a Russian passport. A friend told me to go to Dom-2. There is a roof there, they will feed you, and they will give you more money. Plus you'll be on television. They will learn about you and maybe help you in a life situation. That's why I went there, but when I found out what it was, I refused. Although who knows what would have happened if I had gotten there. Life is so unpredictable... - Anton says.

Russian orphans must remain in Russia!

— In my orphanage in Chuvashia, where I grew up, there are now three or four children left. It can be seen that orphanages in Russia are disappearing thanks to state policy. This is cool! We can cope here without foreigners. I am categorically against our children being taken abroad. Although such as Navalny, are pushing a different policy towards our orphans. In this regard, I think that officials are simply making money from orphans. If you delve into this topic, you can understand what it’s about. we're talking about.

It is necessary to ban the export of our children abroad - this is our future, how can you be so wasteful! Think about it, in just 2 years (from 2012 to 2014) 60 thousand children were given up for adoption abroad from Russia. Now multiply exponentially by imagining that these children will have children, and then grandchildren and great-grandchildren. What could they do for their country - maybe there are geniuses among them?! In addition to the demographic issue, this is an impressive money cycle, not to mention other aspects,” Anton Batrakov-Shoki expressed his thoughts.

Anton Shoki went through an orphanage, life in the American ghetto, rejection by his adoptive parents, wandering around America and returned to his homeland to reboot his life.

Anton Batrakov (Shoki) - similar to actor Alexander Golovin from Kadetstvo - is a participant in the show Dom-2 (TNT). And this characteristic in most cases causes disgust. Like, he sits on the show, eats and lives for free, swears on camera, and also gets paid for it. Major, well-groomed and happy in appearance. Yes, you need to plow! Sometimes this happens. And sometimes it’s the other way around. By the age of 21, this guy has drunk so much that it doesn’t seem like enough. The “delights” of an orphanage, several unsuccessful adoptions in the USA, political games of officials behind their backs, life on the street and much more. Anton told “KP” how his life went, what does the producer of “Tender May” have to do with it and what he forgot in “House-2”.

"We didn't care about each other"

“I don’t really like to remember the past at the boarding school and talk about it,” Anton admits. - Because everyone in orphanages lives the same. My story is the same as the stories of thousands of children: they were found “in a landfill”, sent to the Baby House, then to the Elochka Orphanage...

He grew up in the Shumerlinsky orphanage "Yolochka". The parents were drinking and the child was just getting in the way. Anton’s mother, as a result of her antisocial lifestyle, ended up in a pre-trial detention center and a colony. He ended up in a boarding school. Elochka's wards special program sent to foster families in America to live. This is how he met Pete and Catherine Shockey, who decided to adopt the boy.

When he flew from Chuvashia to the USA, the American dream flickered before his eyes: a new dad and mom, the freest country in the world and the happiness of playing with half-brothers and sisters. English language It's easier to learn overseas - new parents will help. It turned out to be much more prosaic.

In the USA, before midnight, the carriage turned into a pumpkin.

His parents, who were unable to establish contact with Anton, began dragging him to adaptive camps, where the orphanage from Chuvashia was “socialized.” He did not accept such a school, did not tolerate it when they talked to him, his parents got angry. Then they began to lock him in a room with an alarm system, so that he would not take a step without asking. Of course the boy ran away. The police found him, and then his parents committed him to a mental hospital as inadequate. The doctors could not explain why he was being treated - there were no abnormalities.

- Why did your adoptive parents turn their backs on you?

They had a very religious Orthodox family,” Anton continues. - Every holiday we went to church, any technology, gadgets, etc. were considered “demonic.” I was forbidden a lot. I believe in God, but not to that extent, not that religious. In general, my adoptive parents created such a situation (I don’t want to go into details) that I again ended up in a boarding school for juvenile delinquents. That is, they essentially abandoned me. After a year and a half of being there, I got the Internet, and I got the opportunity to call Russia. I immediately contacted the Russian embassy with a request to take me home. But this turned out to be possible only after reaching adulthood. And I was only 16 years old then.

Shoki's family began to get rid of the boy quite cruelly. “Mom and Dad” wrote a statement against their own son Anton: they say he molested their minor children. There was no evidence. Testimony from the “victims” too. In the USA, as is known, people are imprisoned on such charges for looking askance. There was no prison. But the disenfranchised teenager, without a lawyer, could not wash away the dirty suspicions - he fell under social protection and went to a camp for difficult children with criminal tendencies. From there - to a new “family”.

- What did you do then? So did you spend them in a boarding school?

No, I ended up with a different family - African Americans. By and large, we didn't care about each other. By that time, I had graduated from school with a bronze medal, worked in a restaurant (first as a waiter, but then rose to become a manager), and wanted to study to become a pilot. But at that moment in 2014, Ferguson (the city in St. Louis where I lived) was engulfed in a wave of riots caused by the acquittal of a white police officer who shot and killed a black teenager. These events became known throughout the world. The restaurant where I worked burned down. My foster family moved to another state, and I found myself back on the streets. But by that time I had turned 18 years old, I contacted the Russian embassy to be taken away.

In 4 years, Anton went through 3 families. Sometimes the dark-skinned “father” locked the door and did not let him home, so as not to sleep with the “real” children. Anton spent the night in the park. During this time, his legal status changed from an adopted teenager to a state one. This means that the law did not allow returning to Russia.

“Pavel Astakhov prophesied mountains of gold”

- How did you achieve return to your homeland?

Wrote appeals to the website of the President of Russia, children's ombudsman Astakhov, to the Russian embassy. As usual, Astakhov and other officials promised me mountains of gold upon my arrival in Russia. I was indeed taken out of the USA (during the flight from Missouri to Houston, the boy was met by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov - Author), I returned to Cheboksary. I have no relatives in this city, but I was adopted from the Cheboksary orphanage, so I returned to this city. For a year and a half I was left almost to my own devices. I was denied housing. They called me to Channel One, they filmed stories, but then there was silence. I took on any job, sought orphan benefits, which I still have not received.

- How did you manage to get out of the vicious circle?

Through one of the news TV channels, I turned directly to the President of the Russian Federation. This story was shown on air, and everyone, of course, ran around. The producer of “Tender May” Andrei Razin and Andrei Isaev (Deputy Chairman of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation), who at that time were involved in the affairs of orphans, came to pick me up.

They collected all the necessary documents and brought me to Moscow. Andrei Razin made me the lead singer of the group " Tender May“, but we stopped collaborating because it wasn’t quite my format of music, I couldn’t work like that, and in general there were a lot of pitfalls in the contracts that I signed. They helped me get Russian passport, then they made a work book and got me a job in the State Duma of the Russian Federation as the head of the “Return” charitable foundation.

We promoted it quite successfully. But then I was sent on vacation to Sochi, where I lived whole year. In fact, I turned to officials for help in order to become a full-fledged citizen of the Russian Federation: to receive some kind of orphan benefits, housing, to be able to get higher education, that is, everything that I myself, an orphan, could not achieve in Russia. Despite the fact that Andrei Razin repeatedly gave me apartments on air in Moscow, Cheboksary, and Sochi, in fact, I did not receive anything, of course. I left Sochi for the USA again, but on the eve of the elections in September 2016, Andrei Razin finally persuaded me to return, allegedly to the apartment, which he finally got me. I think this is because of the hype around the elections, and besides, they started calling me from various programs, such as “Let Them Talk”, offering to become a participant, and asking me about it. As a result, Razin left for Israel, and I lived at his dacha in Sochi... Then I returned to Moscow to a friend whom I met in Cheboksary. He is a creative person, I learned a lot from him, worked (he is engaged in photography and various interesting projects), attended various castings.

- What will you do in Russia?

There are a lot of plans. I'm interested in different areas of life. I love music, sports (soccer, American football), I am interested in business (I would like to become an entrepreneur), politics (I follow the events happening in the world, maybe I will try myself in this field). In general, I am a passionate person, and I try to constantly develop, search for myself.

- Did you really follow the show “Dom-2” in America?

No, here in Russia. In fact, I came to the casting of “House-2” on TNT three times. I knew about this TV project. The first time I was approved, but for some reason I changed my mind. The second time I went there straight from the State Duma, in a suit: I wanted to impress one girl. But the image of the deputy did not inspire the producers at all, so they turned me down. And only for the third time they took me.

- What do you expect from “House-2”? Are you really ready to find a wife there?

I came to the TV project in order to improve my spoken language, loosen up a little, understand how and what modern young people in Russia live with, learn to be more self-confident, and, of course, find my soulmate. Not just a girl for 2-3 months, but a life partner. After all, it is here that you can “test” it, living in the same space and getting into different situations. But I think I've already found it. Here on the project everything develops more rapidly than in life. I am madly in love with Vika Komissarova. Vika recently also confessed her love to me. And although our relationship is very stormy (this can be seen on air), I only want to be with her, and at the moment I see my future with her. I’m ready to do all kinds of crazy things for her, and I’m already doing them. Sometimes it's hard to understand her behavior, but I feel like I'm on the right track. In fact, on “House-2” it’s like I’m living my childhood, which I never had. For me, this is a real home, where I can express my thoughts, point of view and where they listen to me, here I see opportunities for development.

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Today it became known that a tragedy occurred in the family of one of the ex-participants of the show Dom-2. Anton Shoki's half-brother committed suicide. Anton himself reported this. According to the latest data, Ildar was serving a 25-year sentence in prison. The reason for his suicide was most likely his imprisonment for such a long period. Psychologically, he could not cope with this sentence.

Anton Shoki does not disclose all the details about his brother’s death. The only thing he said was, “I think he developed mental problems because of this, and he committed suicide. I’m very sad and remember my brother only with warmth, we were really close.” According to Anton, the trial was dishonest and the sentence was extremely harsh, which led to mental problems for his older brother.

Ildar, Anton Shoka's brother, committed suicide

By the way, this was not the first prison term Ildar, not long ago he was released on parole, his first conviction was for theft. Almost nothing is known about the second one. What really happened and why Anton Shoki’s brother committed suicide can only be guessed at.

Anton Shoki shared in social networks memories of his brother, who committed suicide. They have different fathers, so they are each other’s brothers on the maternal side. Ildar was four years older than Anton. Their life was quite difficult. They both grew up in an orphanage; Anton went there when he was three years old.

But as an older brother, Ildar always stood up for Anton and was his mentor. “I remember we went to camp together and I stole dinner for him. My brother did not approve of this act and scolded me for it - Ildar wanted me to be honest,” Anton shared his memories.

Reality show

Not easy life story Shoki and his brother became known to the public after Anton joined the television project “Dom-2”. He told the audience and participants how he ended up in the USA and why he decided to return to his homeland.

Anton came to America after he was adopted by a family from the USA, but when the young man grew up, he decided to return to his homeland in Russia. The guy became known to the public after appearing as a participant on a scandalous TV show.

Scandal with adoptive parents

Foreign “parents” were not found common language with Anton, his character is temperamental and he could often behave very hot-tempered. The guardians accused their adopted son of sexually harassing their children and even filed a complaint with the police.

His “adventures” in America did not end there. Anton was forcibly sent to psychiatric hospital for examination, and then the walls of a special camp for difficult children with criminal tendencies awaited him.

While Shockey was in the United States, he changed four foster families. Even at this time, Anton's older brother Shoki, who committed suicide, did not leave him. He helped Anton financially, sending 20-30 thousand a month.

When Anton Shoki turned 16, he decided to return to his homeland. All the red tape with documents lasted about two years, and upon reaching adulthood, he managed to carry out his plan.

Anton Shoki now

At the moment, Anton Shoki, according to some sources, is in America; he decided to return there after he left the television project and his personal life went downhill. In the USA, he got a job as an administrator in one of the local hotels.

At the moment, there is a heated debate about the return of Anton Shoka to Dom-2. Rumors began to spread after mobile application TNT has started voting, in which viewers choose a participant who will be given a second chance and returned to the project. About 44% voted for Anton.

Anton Shoki (Batrakov) came to the reality show with his adoptive mother. A young woman talked about how her husband met an orphan from Cheboksary, took pity on him, and adopted him.

But for some reason Anton lived in his new family for only two months. And if earlier, in America, his adoptive parents gave him back to the shelter, citing the guy’s difficult character, then “mother” Oksana, after two months of living together with Shoki, decided to hand him over to house 2. She immediately warned that for his soul Anton doesn’t have a penny, so the girl who loves him must understand who she is getting involved with and not count on anything. Oddly enough, one was found on the very first evening, although even presenter Olga Buzova, who left Anton on the project for three days of the “correctional” period, did not count on this. So the probationary period has passed?

Is love not calculated?

The news reached us from the clearing that yesterday Anton and Victoria Komissarova moved into a separate room. Vika is not embarrassed by the lack of money from her chosen one; she is used to meeting such guys. But now Shoki can be calm that they definitely loved him not for his money, but for his intelligence and beauty. If they fell in love, of course, and didn’t just use it for personal gain, so as not to get eliminated in the women’s vote...