I'm not sure about the first review, but the guy's profile says he's in Kansas. Could just be the generic Rimmer lecture from his World Wide Tour 2009. I made that up, but he does seem to get around.
Any doubt Rimmer's a tool? Read below from
http://auroraprojectuk.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&thread=18
I haven't followed up to know for sure, (lazy me) but I'm guessing it's lifted from wikipedia with those footnote numbers.
Satanic rumors
Some Americans have labeled the Smurfs as Satanic because the cartoons allegedly celebrate the use of magic and sorcery. David Bay, Director of Old Paths Ministries, said that Smurfs are "Anti-God and pro-Satan".[6] In In Pursuit of Satan: The Police and the Occult (1991), Robert Dicks notes that Detective Don Rimmer of Virginia Beach, Virginia ("a Christian father of two") lectured church groups that "Papa Smurf, a seemingly innocuous cartoon character, has appeared in several television episodes wearing a pentagram, symbolic of satanic worship."[7]
During 1983, rumors of the Smurfs' satanic activities spread across Puerto Rico.[citation needed] Those who believed the theory claimed seeing Smurfs below plants in their houses, next to their beds, dressed as the devil, and so on. The rumors spread through Latin America, where people went so far as to claim that small, demon-like Smurfs propagated through their recorded albums and attacked those who would play their music. This was very much in tune with the prevalent belief of the 1980s of satanic propagation through record music, as many rock bands made open references to satanism in their work.