<p>He’s tattooed from head to toe, a warrior-like mix of blue, green and red. He’s also running in a surprising third place ahead of this week’s Czech presidential elections.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Vladimir Franz, an opera composer and painter, seems the most unlikely of candidates for a prestigious post previously held by beloved playwright-dissident Vaclav Havel and Vaclav Klaus, a professor credited with plotting the economic transition from communism to a free market.<br /><br />Some have a nickname for Franz: “Avatar”. And during a televised debate a caller compared him to “an exotic creature from Papua New Guinea.”<br /><br />But he's not short of admirers in a country where voters are increasingly tired of politicians they say are corrupt and failing to deliver on years of promises, more than two decades after the fall of communism.<br /><br />Franz has no political experience and confesses to little knowledge of economics. He says he only threw his hat in the ring after a group of admirers established the Franz for President initiative and begged him to shake up the race through his shock factor. But he's stirred up such goodwill that a leading economist offered his services for free and his campaign workers are also volunteers.<br /><br />He’s only spent $25,000 from donations on his campaign and hasn’t put up any posters.<br />Franz burst onto the political scene with an eye-catching 88,000 signatures from the public at the end of 2012 — far more than the 50,000 required by law.<br /><br />Not affiliated with any party, he has campaigned mostly on a platform highlighting graft, the importance of education and the nation's moral standing.<br /><br />"The (political) system is so enchanted with itself that it's lost the ability to self-reflect," he said in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. Czechs, he says, “are fed up with this crap.”<br /><br />He's proven particularly popular with young voters — and those not yet eligible to cast a ballot. In a mock presidential election at 441 high schools across the country a month before the vote, Franz won by a landslide, garnering more than 40 per cent of some 60,000 votes.<br /><br />He's tipped to win around 11 per cent in the first round on Friday and Saturday — not enough to make the runoffs. But he may end up kingmaker as the leading candidates — former prime ministers Jan Fischer and Milos Zeman — would be eager to pick up his following if the vote goes to a second round.<br /><br />Karel Strachota, who organized the school ballot, said young people no longer identify with existing parties.</p>
<p>He’s tattooed from head to toe, a warrior-like mix of blue, green and red. He’s also running in a surprising third place ahead of this week’s Czech presidential elections.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Vladimir Franz, an opera composer and painter, seems the most unlikely of candidates for a prestigious post previously held by beloved playwright-dissident Vaclav Havel and Vaclav Klaus, a professor credited with plotting the economic transition from communism to a free market.<br /><br />Some have a nickname for Franz: “Avatar”. And during a televised debate a caller compared him to “an exotic creature from Papua New Guinea.”<br /><br />But he's not short of admirers in a country where voters are increasingly tired of politicians they say are corrupt and failing to deliver on years of promises, more than two decades after the fall of communism.<br /><br />Franz has no political experience and confesses to little knowledge of economics. He says he only threw his hat in the ring after a group of admirers established the Franz for President initiative and begged him to shake up the race through his shock factor. But he's stirred up such goodwill that a leading economist offered his services for free and his campaign workers are also volunteers.<br /><br />He’s only spent $25,000 from donations on his campaign and hasn’t put up any posters.<br />Franz burst onto the political scene with an eye-catching 88,000 signatures from the public at the end of 2012 — far more than the 50,000 required by law.<br /><br />Not affiliated with any party, he has campaigned mostly on a platform highlighting graft, the importance of education and the nation's moral standing.<br /><br />"The (political) system is so enchanted with itself that it's lost the ability to self-reflect," he said in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. Czechs, he says, “are fed up with this crap.”<br /><br />He's proven particularly popular with young voters — and those not yet eligible to cast a ballot. In a mock presidential election at 441 high schools across the country a month before the vote, Franz won by a landslide, garnering more than 40 per cent of some 60,000 votes.<br /><br />He's tipped to win around 11 per cent in the first round on Friday and Saturday — not enough to make the runoffs. But he may end up kingmaker as the leading candidates — former prime ministers Jan Fischer and Milos Zeman — would be eager to pick up his following if the vote goes to a second round.<br /><br />Karel Strachota, who organized the school ballot, said young people no longer identify with existing parties.</p>