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#brazil culture headers
yizaicons · 1 year
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𐐪 brazil pack ♡ like or reblog if you save/use
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#rumoaohexa
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mistressemmedi · 1 year
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hi may i’m a delusional nascar/f1 fan and just wanna drop a few paragraphs in your inbox: 😊
first off, it’s really interesting the different mindsets among racing fans when it comes to back-to-back races. in nascar this is basically the norm and instead of saying double or triple headers, we literally call the weeks without nascar “off weeks”. there is quite literally a nascar race almost every weekend (including some months where every sunday is filled by a nascar race) and not having a race one week causes fans to be “bored” because there isn’t an event.
it also makes me laugh when y’all talk about how hard double and triple headers are on the crew (and drivers, but mostly the crew) considering they have to transport a whole race paddock to the new place in like three days. but in nascar, teams’ haulers/trucks go from wherever the race was, back to charlotte north carolina (where basically all the teams are HQ’ed), and then to wherever the new race is. i do think the “west coast swing” (basically three races in a row on the west coast) is the only exception, although i could be wrong. so a hauler could go from alabama to charlotte, load up on all the stuff for the new race weekend, and then go onto delaware in the span of sunday after the race to thursday. (possibly wednesday but i’m not sure) although, i do understand that sometimes double headers in f1 aren’t super close together and cover a lot more area. it’s just interesting to me in the context of thinking about the crew member’s well-being. (and also the f1 likes to make schedules weird due to contracts with circuits)
it’s just interesting to me considering i was a nascar fan before i was an f1 fan, so races back to back are kinda the norm for me. (rip me) so to now be in an environment where people frown upon back to back races is kinda similar to culture shock for me. (where something is completely different to how i’m used to it being)
but yeah, there’s some differences in scheduling/mindsets among f1/nascar fans but it’s all in good fun! just wanted to put some of these observations in your inbox ☺️
Always love the input of a different point of view :)
I think one of the factors that is different from F1 to Nascar is the fact that the same crew is flying around the world 🌍 to different timezones with very little rest.
The first double header we have this year is Azerbaijan to Miami. So you have crews flying from the homebase (let's say UK), to Azerbaijan, to then back to the [homebase] to review what went right/wrong with the past race, to then hopping on transatlantic flight, to then race again. Rinse and repeat etc.
I don't know about you but I am an absolute write off whenever I fly - I'm quite literally a zombie lmao. Plus add the different timezones 💀 I'm sure there are crew members that feel the same as well. (When I refer to crew, I'm talking about mechanics/engineers etc.).
The flyaways for the Americas have them back-to-back for three weekends in the US / Mexico / Brazil. Which means that's also an entire crew that is away from families (and home in general) a month, and you're basically on the clock the entire time you're away (sure they're "off" Mon-Wed but have you ever traveled with coworkers? You're never really off lol). Add the fact that your cargo plane may be late, so you're working until 2 am to set up the team's garage and then you're back the morning after at 7. Rinse and repeat for three/ four days straight.
On a personal level, I think the hustle and bustle of the paddock is different between F1 and NASCAR, which also mentally affects crews. NASCAR has a bit of a more relaxed element to it (I'd say IndyCar is similar in a sense as well), whereas F1 is more "stiff".
Anyways, this is not me say NASCAR is easy and F1 is difficult - they're both challenging motorsports in their own unique ways ☺️ which also means it challenges the teams and crews in different ways.
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canchewread · 3 years
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Author’s note: well, my week has sucked, how about yours? 
Right, no rest for the wicked then. So as I mentioned at the tail end of last month, I’m working on a new kind of Recommended Reading blog feature here on Can’t You Read. 
The tl;dr is these posts are designed to combine a sharable info graphic (or meme, if you must) with some short burst analysis and an important link to a related and often overlooked story by someone else. Ideally, all of this fits into an 800 or 1,000 word package that actually gives you enough time in your undoubtedly busy day to read the article I’m linking to.
Got it? Good, let’s get cracking.
American Fascism and Networks of Power
Well my friends, the last nauseating funeral gasp of the Trump era is almost over. With the recent news that (soon-to-be) former swine emperor Trump’s own Department of Justice can find no evidence of widespread election fraud, we all appear to be getting collectively closer to the final resolution of the Klepto Kaiser’s “chicken coup” and perhaps, the waning of his political influence even on the reactionary right. 
Good riddance to bad rubbish I suppose, but as I’ve repeatedly tried to explain to virtually anyone who would listen, the end of Trump is most certainly not the end of fascism in the larger Pig Empire, or even just American fascism. The reasons for this are of course myriad but a short list might look something like this:
the pre-existing and increasingly normalized strain of ideological white nationalism in our society and ingrained into non-elected portions of the state (think police, ICE, and Trump’s complete transformation of the American judiciary; similar processes are also occurring in places like India, and Brazil of course.)
A weakened incoming, center-right administration (and its “liberal” establishment lackeys) that not only lacks the courage to purge fascists from public service but also attempts to weaponize far right violence against the American left, and regards antifascist street action as being akin to terrorism or crime.
the indefinite survival of an objectively fascist opposition party that probably has a better than even chance of retaining control of the U.S. Senate.
the existence of multiple right wing, mainstream media outlets and personalities that propagate fascist ideology, which are in turn buttressed by a seemingly endless wave of Astroturfed online media and internet psyops funded and controlled by fascist, or at least hyper-capitalist to the point of being reactionary, billionaires and their lobby networks.
the continued existence of violent, reactionary street gangs, far right neo-fascist militias, fascist conspiracy cults, and of course, roughly seventy-four million people who just gleefully voted for an open fascist and in some cases, continue to agitate for what would effectively be a coup.
the need for elite capital to defend itself against social upheaval and acquire soon-to-be scare resources in the face of evidence that capitalism is simply not compatible with avoiding the impending climate apocalypse our current political and economic course is actively ensuring will come to pass.
Naturally, I could have also mentioned the ongoing political, social and economic fallout from the still-raging coronavirus crisis, but I saved that for last because I want to unpack the ways we know many of the above forces function together in action - and as luck would have it, the Covid-19 anti-lockdown protests provide an extremely clear and documented example of what might otherwise look a little bit like a conspiracy theory. 
Now as you may well be aware, a concerted and sustained disinformation campaign conducted by not only President Trump, but the larger Republican Party and right wing media has successfully weaponized the response to the coronavirus as a culture war issue in America; and that conflict is rapidly spreading across the entire Pig Empire. 
This in turn was combined with a purely Astroturf protest movement, and judicious application of billionaire reactionary funding to literal white nationalist and fascist militias, to churn out thousands of cultists, chuds and other members of the reactionary “Volk” who demanded the economy be “re-opened” no matter how many elderly, marginalized or otherwise compromised people it might kill. Which as we’ve learned the month’s since, is quite a lot.
While each of these groups would vehemently deny it, it’s quite obvious that the billionaires and their media, are working with reactionary politicians in the Republican Party to marshal an aggressive, potentially violent protest movement against their political enemies and policies that threaten their profits. The rich guys get to keep raking in the cash, the politicians (who work for the rich guys anyway) get power and support from the chuds, and the Volk get to disguise a backlash against equality, decolonization and social advances as a battle against tyranny. All of which is wrapped up in a neat little bow under the auspices of covert white supremacy, in a situation that looks a little bit like eugenics, and bears all the hallmarks of historically racist (and obviously, false) attitudes in America about the genetic and more importantly *hygienic* superiority of whites over non-whites.    
Of course and as I mentioned above, all of this might sound like a conspiracy theory, but if you’ve been clicking on the links as we go along you know that it’s all true; unfortunately, a bipartisan billionaire-owned media interest in protecting the power and influence of elite capital in the Pig Empire, by and large prevents the mainstream media from presenting all of this information in its proper context. To counter that problem, let’s turn to investigative journalist Alex Kotch, an anti-corruption muckraker of considerable ability and someone who exists at least partially (but not entirely) outside the corporate media sphere.
On October 21st, 2020, Kotch and the Center for Media and Democracy published an extraordinary story that laid bare the inner workings of American fascism (and its capitalist roots) - we’re talking about exposing the direct financial connections between billionaire propaganda networks, fascist chud militias, right wing think tanks, GOP politicians and Astroturfed anti-lockdown protests; dark money meets dirty deeds done dirt cheap in a fake uprising that ends in obstructive lawsuits, partisan impeachment recommendations and a plot to kidnap and maybe even execute the governor of Michigan for... saving lives, apparently.
This is what the fascist alliance of elite capital (DeVos Family, Koch Network,) political power and street violence looks like in direct application; this is why I’m certain American fascism will outlast Trump’s fall - it’s all there in black and white. 
Unfortunately, hardly anyone noticed it at the time because the election consumed all of the oxygen in the room; as anything involving Trump is want to do. Let’s not make that mistake again - to check out Kotch’s incredible story, click on the title header below:  
GOP Politicians and Conservative Groups Set the Stage for Attempted Kidnapping of Michigan Governor by Alex Kotch
-nina illingworth
Independent writer, critic and analyst with a left focus. Please help me fight corporate censorship by sharing my articles with your friends online!
You can find my work at ninaillingworth.com, Can’t You Read, Media Madness and my Patreon Blog
Updates available on Twitter, Instagram, Mastodon and Facebook. Podcast at “No Fugazi” on Soundcloud.
Inquiries and requests to speak to the manager @ASNinaWrites
Chat with fellow readers online at Anarcho Nina Writes on Discord!
“It’s ok Willie; swing heil, swing heil…”
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youngneemleaves · 4 years
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Journal: 2019
A list of my creative activity and all the media I have experienced throughout the year. I did a version of this eight months ago, but I wasn’t entirely satisfied with it. So I tooled about a little; and in the meantime, the activity has remained as inconsistent as my energy levels, but eventful, nonetheless. Here’s a more thorough list drawn up at the end of the year - after all, the end of 2019 is also the end of the 2010s.
The list has become rather long, so I’ve excluded online essays, stories, fanfiction, or poems that I’ve read this year. I ended up resorting to the usual 5-star rating system; because if I had to add a footnote explaining my personal 7-star rating system, the list would’ve been even longer and weirder!
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+ Creative Writing
(Obviously, no ratings for this section; that’s up to you all ;)
Beloved - a short story for Holi
Lady Aesculapius: a new short story serial -> episode 6, Sixty Thousand Bedtime Stories
Clara Oswald: The Untold Adventures (coming on April 25, 2020) -> episode 4, As You Like It
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+ Books and Audio Drama
Dave Rudden, Twelve Angels Weeping: twelve stories of the villains of Doctor Who (2018) | SFF, short stories [read the review on Downtime] - ⭐⭐⭐
Emily St. John Mandel, Station Eleven (2014) | literary fiction, SFF [review] - ⭐⭐⭐
Amitav Ghosh, Dancing in Cambodia and Other Essays (2008, first published 1998) | memoir, nonfiction, travel [review] - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Ellen Oh and Elsie Chapman (ed.), A Thousand Beginnings and Endings (2018) | SFF, short stories [did not review] - ⭐⭐⭐
Lidia Yuknavitch, The Chronology of Water (2011) | LGBTQIA, nonfiction, memoir [did not finish] - ⭐⭐⭐
Hsiu-Chuang Deppman, Adapted for the Screen: The Cultural Politics of Modern Chinese Fiction and Film (University of Hawai’i Press, 2010) | nonfiction (academics) [did not finish] - ⭐⭐⭐
Cecilia Sjöholm, The Antigone Complex: Ethics and the Invention of Feminine Desire (Stanford University Press, 2004) | nonfiction, philosophy, psychoanalysis [reread] [did not review] - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
D.N. Bryn, Our Bloody Pearl (2018) | LGBTQIA, romance, SFF [did not finish] - ⭐⭐⭐
Catherynne M. Valente, Palimpsest (2009) | LGBTQIA, SFF [did not finish] - ⭐⭐⭐
Rey Chow, Sentimental Fabulations, Contemporary Chinese Films: Attachment in the Age of Global Visibility (Columbia University Press, 2007) | nonfiction (academics) [did not finish] - ⭐⭐⭐
Shirley Jackson, The Lottery and Other Stories (1982, first published in 1949) | horror, literary fiction, short stories [currently reading] - ⭐⭐⭐
Jeanette Winterson, Weight: The Myth of Atlas and Heracles (2005) | literary fiction, SFF [did not review] - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Lauren Berlant, Desire/Love (2012) | nonfiction, philosophy, psychoanalysis [brief review] - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Melissa Broder, The Pisces (2018) | contemporary fiction, romance, SFF [currently reading] - ⭐⭐
Amitav Ghosh, The Shadow Lines (2007) | literary fiction, historical fiction, travel [currently reading] -  ⭐⭐⭐
+ Doctor Who: The Twelfth Doctor Adventures - a fan-made audio drama on the further adventures of the Twelfth Doctor: series 1 [re-listen], plus this year’s specials:
Unlikely Thieves [review] - ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
Blue Hour [review] - ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
** UNDER THE CUT: list of TV and films watched **
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+ TV Round-up
Killing Eve (BBC America, 2016 - ) ⭐⭐⭐
Dark (Netflix, 2017 - ) ⭐⭐ 1/2
Good Omens (Amazon Studios and BBC, 2019) ⭐⭐⭐
The OA (Netflix, 2016 - 2019) ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Star Wars: The Mandalorian (Disney+, 2019 - ) ⭐⭐⭐
His Dark Materials (BBC and HBO, 2019 - ) ⭐⭐⭐
The Witcher (Netflix, 2019 - )  ⭐⭐⭐⭐
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+ Films Watched
Disobedience (2017), dir. Sebastián Lelio ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
The Favourite (2018), dir. Yorgos Lanthimos ⭐⭐⭐
First They Killed My Father (2017), dir. Angelina Jolie ⭐⭐⭐
Badla (2019), dir. Sujoy Ghosh ⭐⭐ 1/2
Roma (2018), dir. Alfonso Cuarón ⭐⭐⭐
Us (2019), dir. Jordan Peele ⭐⭐⭐⭐
In the Mood for Love (2000), dir. Wong Kar Wai ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Lady Macbeth (2016), dir. William Oldroyd ⭐⭐⭐
Chungking Express (1994), dir. Wong Kar Wai ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
Stoker (2013), dir. Park Chan Wook ⭐⭐⭐
Widows (2018), dir. Steve McQueen ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016), dir. Gareth Edwards ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
High Life (2018), dir. Claire Denis ⭐⭐
The Cloverfield Paradox (2018), dir. Julius Onah ⭐ 1/2
Little Forest (2018), dir. Yim Soon-rye ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Jennifer’s Body (2009), dir. Karyn Kusama ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Fallen Angels (1995), dir. Wong Kar Wai ⭐⭐⭐
The Phantom of the Opera (2004), dir. Joel Schumacher ⭐⭐
Midsommar (2019), dir. Ari Aster ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
Star Wars: episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999), dir. George Lucas ⭐⭐ 1/2
Byzantium (2012), dir. Neil Jordan ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
Star Wars: episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002), dir. George Lucas ⭐⭐ 1/2
Star Wars: episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005), dir. George Lucas ⭐⭐⭐ *
Madeline’s Madeline (2018), dir. Josephine Decker ⭐⭐⭐
+ Studio Ghibli films:
Kiki’s Delivery Service (1989) ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2
Nausicaa in the Valley of the Wind (1984) ⭐⭐⭐
Spirited Away (2000) ⭐⭐⭐
Howl’s Moving Castle (2004) ⭐⭐⭐
The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2013) ⭐⭐⭐
* I would’ve rated it a solid 4 if not for the fridging at the end of the film.
** HEADER IMAGES CREDIT: (from top) 1. Joanna Kosinska; 2. Brazil Topno; 3. Kelly Sikkema; 4. chuttersnap [edits: mine] **
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fairlyradmother · 5 years
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I think it’s really disappointing that lesbians, mostly on tumblr, are okay with being so hateful. You don’t seem like you have the worst opinions, but I don’t understand why one part of the lgbt community allows themselves, in fact, happily hates another part of the community. We’re all just trying to live in a world that’s been defined by cis, heterosexual white males, and be happy with ourselves. You don’t ever have to interact with a trans person, so I don’t understand the hostility.
I disagree that lesbians are hateful for asserting boundaries. They've been asked to put up with a lot of corrective rape rhetoric due to the colonization of lesbian spaces by trans identified males and I think lesbians have the right to refuse. They have the right to exclusive spaces, to have privacy with other lesbians with whom they share similar experiences. They have the right to their own terms, to have their definition (homosexual females) kept intact. And they're definity not obligated to force themselves to date males who identify as transwomen. I don't see any of these concepts as hateful.
See, I wholeheartedly believe that trans people have a right to healthcare, education, food, housing, security, safety, jobs and love. I think it's a tragedy that trans people are killed in such large numbers in my country. I also know that most of these people are black transwomen in prostitution who are killed by pimps and johns (all male, no exceptions), or homophobic assholes (also male) who kill them because of this pathetic "macho" culture that is so widespread around here. And you know, I'm against pimps and johns, it's on my header. I'm against the commodification of bodies, I'm against the very concept of buying sex from someone who needs the money to survive. I'm also against racism and I'm against billionaires (as in they shouldn't exist). In my opinion, if their excess money were distributed we could end the very poverty that forces women (and transwomen) into prostitution in the first place. So no, I don't think I hate transwomen (or trans people in general) - I just don't think transwomen are women. They're male and no plastic surgery or hormones can ever change that. Being a woman is, as being a lesbian, a physical reality (that sucks most of the time in most of the world) that is defined by being born female. That's it. That's the only thing all women have in common, being of the female sex. All the rest (the clothes the makeup the hair the shoes....) are sexist stereotypes. It's insulting that someone can think they're a woman because they really like the stereotypes (femininity, the social concept of gender) associated with the female sex.
I also reject the concept of being cis since the feminine gender isn't something I identify with - it's a steaming load of crap that was thrust upon me to control me, to mark me as the lesser class. I don't identify with my oppression.
When I see that males, our oppressors, the ones who rule this world and have been raping, killing, subjecting and exploiting women for millennia, are putting on a dress and gaining access to not only places where women are often vulnerable (bathrooms, dress rooms, shelters, prisons) but also to female-only resources and spots (which were created supposedly to correct said millennia of unfairness, of women being held back by men just for being female) like scholarships, sports grants, quotas, and the like... I think it's justified to disagree and speak up. I fully agree that trans people must get help and protection, especially here in Brazil, full stop. I just don't think we can erode women's protections and rights to achieve that.
I repeat, it's not hateful to set boundaries. It's not hostility to see something unjust and take a stance against it.
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afif-am · 4 years
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Skrtel, Piala Dunia dan Ketaksuban
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Kelihatan Martin Skrtel dengan kepala berbalut menanduk masuk gol penyamaan sekaligus menghadirkan rasa senak dan remuk dalam hati penulis. Credit: https://talksport.com/football/225496/liverpool-2-2-arsenal-skrtels-header-rescues-ten-man-reds-death-141221129480/
Subuh.
"Pum!"
Kedengaran bunyi pintu bilik air aku hempaskan. Aku bengang. Astu aku bersihkan diri sebab hari itu aku ada program di luar. Sambil aku bersihkan diri, kepalaku masih terbayang-bayang Martin Skrtel menanduk masuk gol penyamaan menentang Arsenal di Anfield1 di minit-minit akhir.
"Ahhh!!! Macam mana boleh seri??!!." Aku mengeluh. Semua tahu, untuk menang di Anfield bukan mudah lagi2 sekarang. Dan untuk seri 2-2 selepas comeback sangat-sangat menyakitkan. Aku tidur dalam keadaan marah (game pukul 12) Kecewa. Bangun pun dalam keadaan marah. Mungkin ada hikmahnya mengapa Nabi suruh tidur dalam keadaan tenang. Mood aku pada hari itu terjejas. Selalu teringatkan game itu lalu aku frust. Waktu itu jahil. Terlalu memandang serious perkara hiburan sampingan ni.
Setelah mendahului selepas ditinggal 2 kali oleh Liverpool, Arsenal mendahului 2-3 di Anfield menerusi penyerang kacak berhidung mancung, Olivier Giroud. Minit 90, pekara sama berulang. Kali ini Joe Allen the great menyelamatkan maruah Liverpool.
Tapi...aku rasa takdak apa-apa. Kecewa sedikit ada tapi taklah sampai rasa bengang. Unbothered. But i guess its only natural since we're getting older. We're getting less bothered tentang about unnecessary things. Cuma masalahnya sekarang, mereka dewasa yang tak membesar. Enter obsession.
Di Korea Selatan, mereka yang tak fit Beauty Standard untuk menjadi Kpop idols akan dicaci oleh peminat yang taksub. They even have a specific word for it. Its called "Sasaeng" fans. Obses sampai memberi ancaman dan menceroboh hal privasi. You can search it up. Ada banyak kisah yang creepy pasal sekumpulan peminat macam ni.2
Begitu juga peminat bolasepak. Lihat sajalah banyak mana masalah yang timbul sewaktu game Malaysia-Indonesia haritu. Punca asalnya game bola sahaja. Betul, bola itu passion kau. Kau habis duit, travel jauh dan korban tenaga kau. Tapi sampai bertumbuk berdarahh, menghina negara orang untuk satu perlawanan bola? Sampai hilang morality kau? Tu kau bodoh.
Most of these people assume that entertainment is the sole giver of happiness. And when their sole giver of happiness didn't deliver, they retaliate in disturbing ways. Mereka react dengan cara yang kadang-kadang menjadi berbahaya. A little bit of criticism is ok, tapi sampai memberi ancaman nyawa, bergaduh, kau telah melanggar garisan kewarasan.
Aku tak katakan aku dah jumpa formula di mana aku takkan kecewa dan marah selamanya, tetapi agama telah mengajar kita tentang pemberi kebahagiaan yang sebenar, Tuhan.3
Untuk contoh yang terakhir, aku ingin kembali ke tahun 1950. World Cup final di Brazil. Brazil vs Uruguay. Brazil were the favourite as they won convincingly throughout the campaign. Penganjur perlawanan pun dah siapkan ucapan meraikan kemenangan Brazil dan general public pun dah menganggap Brazil akan muncul juara. Namun, Uruguay mengejutkan dunia menang 2-1 resulting in one of the biggest upsets in football history. Sehinggakan sebahagian penyokong membunuh diri dengan terjun daripada stand stadium. Dan beberapa kes bunuh diri juga dilaporkan beberapa hari selepas perlawanan. Sidang akhbar dan media Brazil pada waktu itu juga cuba menafikan bahawa pasukan negara mereka telah kalah. Pemain bolasepak Brazil antara yang paling terkesan dalam peristiwa ini dan ada yang mengalami tekanan. Peristiwa ini dinamakan Maracanazo bersempena nama stadium tersebut.4
Bear in mind, bolasepak di Brazil hampir boleh dibandingkan dengan agama dalam kesan dan impaknya kepada masyarakat. The sheer amount of disappointment is produced through unrivaled obsession. Make of that what you will.
Home of Liverpool FC. Bukannya kesilapan tatabahasa. Bukan Afield, namanya memang Anfield. Walaupun bukan dimulakan dengan huruf vokal. "Kenapa?" jangan tanya aku. ↩︎
https://www.scmp.com/culture/music/article/2158408/when-k-pop-superfans-turn-ugly-dark-side-korean-pop-culture-phenomenon ↩︎
Di sini aku sertakan kajian akademik berkaitan Islam dan impaknya kepada life satisfaction penganutnya. https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Frel0000259 ↩︎
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uruguay_v_Brazil_(1950_FIFA_World_Cup) ↩︎
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tasksweekly · 7 years
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[TASK 063: BRAZIL]
Shout out to anon for inspiring and @olivaraofrph​​​ for helping compile this task! There’s a masterlist below compiled of over 950+ Brazilian faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever character or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F
Ruth de Souza (96) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Dona Ivone Lara (96) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Tônia Carrero (95) Brazilian - actress.
Fernanda Montenegro (87) Brazilian [½ Italian [including Sardinian] / Portuguese, possibly other] - actress.
Marina MIranda (87) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Etty Fraser (86) Brazilian [Polish-Jewish, English] - actress.
Danuza Leão (84) Brazilian - model, socialite, journalist, writer, and actress.
Eva Wilma (83) Brazilian [German, Ukrainian Jewish], Argentinian - actress.
Maria Alice Vergueiro (82) Brazilian - actress.
Alaide Costa (81) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Elza Soares (80) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Aracy Balabanian (77) Brazilian [Armenian] - actress.
Suely Franco (77) Brazilian [Argentinian] - actress and singer.
Marilu Bueno (77) Brazilian - actress.
Tia Surica (76) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Neusa Borges (76) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Helena Ignez (75) Brazilian - actress and filmmaker.
Dja Marthins (74) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Leci Brendao (73) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Zeze Motta (73) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Eliana Pittman (73) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Gal Costa (72) Brazilian [Spanish] - singer.
Wanderlea (71) Brazilian [Lebanese] - singer.
Edyr de Castro (71) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Maria Bethania (71) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - singer.
Rosa Marya Colin (71) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Susana Goncalves (70) Argentinian / Brazilian - actress.
Regina Braga (70) Brazilian - actress.
Catia de Franca (70) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Marília Gabriela (69) Brazilian- journalist, interviewer, actress, singer, television presenter and writer.
Imara Reis (69) Brazilian - actress.
Alcione (69) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Ana Maria Braga (68) Brazilian [Portuguese, Italian] - television presenter and journalist.
Isis de Oliveira (67) Brazilian [German, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Sônia Braga (67) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified African, Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - actress.
Sônia Braga (67) Brazilian-American - actress.
Simone (67) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Elba Ramalho (66) Brazilian - songwriter, performer, poet and actress.
Maria Zilda Bethlem (66) Brazilian - actress.
Bruna Lombardi (65) Brazilian [Turkish, Italian] - actress and model.
Baby do Brasil (65) Brazilian - singer.
Watusi (65) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Unspecified European] - actress and singer.
Vera Fischer (65) Brazilian [German] - actress and beauty pageant titleholder.
Veluma (64) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and former model.
Tânia Alves (64) Brazilian - actress, dancer, singer and businesswoman.
Angela Correa (63) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Sandra de Sa (62) Brazilian [25% Black Cape Verdean, 71.7% Unspecified Other African / 2.1% Unspecified European / 1.1% Unspecified Indigenous / 0.1% Unspecified Other Race] - singer.
Maria João (born in 1955) Brazilian - former model.
Solange Couto (61) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress, model, and singer.
Iara Jamra (61) Brazilian [Lebanese] - actress.
Fafa de Belem (61) Brazilian [Portuguese] - singer and actress.
Nádia Lippi (61) Brazilian - actress.
Mii Saki (61) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress.
Christiane Torloni (60) Brazilian [Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Lília Cabral (60) Brazillian [Portuguese / Italian] - actress.
Velina Hasu Houston (60) African-American, Pikuni Blackfoot, Japanese, Chinese, Native Hawaiian, Cuban, Argentinian, Brazilian, Armenian, Greek, German, English - writer.
Elisa Lucinda (59) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Catarina Abdala (58) Brazilian [Lebanese] - actress.
Luci Pereira (57) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Carla Camurati (57) Brazilian - actress and filmmaker.
Fernanda Abreu (56) Brazilian [Portuguese / Unspecified African, Unspecified Indigenous] - singer.
Daude (56) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Tássia Camargo (56) Brazilian - actress, director, and producer.
Lisa Ono (55) Brazilian [Japanese] - singer.
Margareth Menezes (55) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Luíza Brunet (55) Brazilian - former model.
Xuxa Meneghel (54) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese, likely Polish, possibly other] - presenter, actress, singer, and businessperson.
Zezeh Barbosa (54) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Claudia Ohana (54) Brazilian [Jewish] - actress.
Bianca Byington (54) Brazilian [French] - singer, songwriter, classical guitarist, and former model and actress.
Débora Bloch (54) Brazilian [Ukrainian Jewish] - actress.
Gloria Pires (54) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - actress.
Debora Blotch (54) Brazilian [Ukrainian Jewish] - actress.
Andréa Beltrão (54) Brazilian - actress.
Izzy Gordon (54) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Patricia Pillar (53) Brazilian - actress.
Marcélia Cartaxo (53) Brazilian - actress.
Regina Casé (53) Brazilian - actress, comedian, television host, and director.
Virginia Rodrigues (53) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Juliette Binoche (53) French, Belgian [Walloon], Polish, 1/16 Brazilian [Portuguese] - actress.
Fernanda Torres (53) Brazilian [Italian] - actress.
Miwa Yanagizawa (52) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress.
Roberta Close (52) Brazilian - model. - Trans!
Luma de Oliveira (52) Brazilian [German, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress and former model.
Daniela Mercury (52) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese] - singer and actress.
Sandra Corveloni (52) Brazilian - actress.
Cristina Sano (52) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress.
Linda Perry (52) Portuguese, Brazilian - singer, songwriter, and record producer.
Mart’nalia (52) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Sophie Ward (52) English, Scottish, 1/16 Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - actress.
Maria Ceica (51) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Malu Mader (51) Brazilian [Lebanese, Portuguese] - actress.
Bebel Gilberto (51) Brazilian - singer.
Rosalia de Souza (51) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Iara Lee (51) Brazilian [Korean] - filmmaker.
Badi Assad (50) Brazilian [Lebanese / Unspecified Other] - singer.
Paula Burlamaqui (50) Brazilian - actress.
Bianca Byington (50) Brazilian - actress.
Helena Fernandes (49) Brazilian - actress.
Olga Souza (49) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Italian] - singer.
Simone Moreno (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Alexis Dechamps (48) Brazilian [Belgian, Russian, German, Argentinian] - actress.
Lica Oliveira (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and model.
Dira Paes (48) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African] - actress.
Paula Lima (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Leona Cavalli (47) Brazilian - actress.
Eda Nagayama (47) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress.
Karina Barum (47) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actress.
Ana Carbatti (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Luciana Gimenez (47) Brazilian [Lebanese, Spanish, Portuguese, possibly other] - model and show host.
Cláudia Abreu (47) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actress.
Adriana Lessa (46) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Vivianne Pasmanter (46) Brazilian [Argentinian] - actress.
Valeria Valenssa (46) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - model and dancer.
Maxine Bahns (46) German / Brazilian [Portuguese], Chinese - actress and model.
Fernanda Takai (46) Brazilian [Japanese / Portuguese] - singer.
Leticia Sabatella (46) Brazilian - actress.
Christiana Kalache (45) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actress.
Ivete Sangalo (45) Brazilian [including ¼ Spanish, Portuguese, minor Unspecified African and Unspecified Indigenous] - singer, songwriter, actress, and television show host.
Gabriela Alves (45) Brazilian - actress.
Vanessa Lóes (45) Brazilian - film and television actress.
Guta Stresser (45) Brazilian [German] - actress.
Marina de La Riva (44) Brazilian / Cuban - singer.
Isabel Fillardis (44) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Leticia Spiller (44) Brazilian - actress.
Maria Fernanda Candido (43) Brazilian [Italian] - actress and model.
Adriana Bombom (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and dancer.
Eliana Michaelichin Bezerra (43) Brazilian / Ukrainian, Russian - actress and singer.
Thalma de Freitas (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Juliana Martins (43) Brazilian - actress.
Flávia Alessandra (43) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actress.
Márcia Imperator (43) Brazilian - actress, model, TV-personality and adult actress.
Angélica Ksyvickis (43) Brazilian [Italian, Croatian, Portuguese, Russian, Polish, Romanian, Moldovan, Lithuanian, Ukrainian, Piquerobi] - presenter, actress, and singer.
Danielle Winitis (43) Brazilian [Polish, Russian] - actress and singer.
Preta Gil (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Filipina] - singer and actress.
Ana Paula Arosio (42) Brazilian [Italian] - model and actress.
Vanessa Pascale (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Maria Clara Spinelli (42) Brazilian [Italian] - actress - trans!
Gilmelândia (42)Brazilian - singer, actress and TV presenter.
Cacau Protasio (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Camila Morgado (42) Brazilian - actress.
Carla Cristina Cardoso (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Giovanna Antonelli (41) Brazilian [Italian] - actress, television presenter and producer.
Nivea Soares (41) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Sheila Mello (41) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab, Portuguese] - actress and model.
Karina Bacchi (41) Brazilian [Italian, Spanish, Unspecified African] - actress and model.
Simone Zucato (41) Brazilian - actress, theater producer, translator and medical doctor.
Joana Prado (41) Brazilian - model.
Vanessa da Mata (41) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Other] - singer.
Maria Rita (40) Brazilian [Portuguese] - singer.
Maeve Jinkings (40) Brazilian [Unspecified African, English] - actress.
Vivi Fernandez (40) Brazilian - model, actress, dancer and former adult actress.
Susana Werner (40) Brazilian [German] - model and actress.
Camila Pitanga (40) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and former model.
Fernanda Lima (40) Brazilian [Catalan, Portuguese, possibly other] - actress, model, businessperson, journalist, and television host.
Carla Cabral (40) Brazilian - actress.
Camila Pitanga (40) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and former model.
Pitty (40) Brazilian [Italian] - singer.
Cris Vianna (40) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Tania Khalil (40) Brazilian [Syrian, Spanish] - actress.
Nega Gizza (40) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Daniele Suzuki (40) Brazilian [Japanese / Italian, German, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Patricia Abravanel (40) Brazilian - presenter and businesswoman.
Adriana Alves (40) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and former model.
Valesca Popozuda (39) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Leticia Birkheuer (39) Brazilian [German, Austrian] - model and actress.
Gaby Amarantos (39) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Michelle Alves (39) Brazilian - model.
Dani Ornellas (39) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Carolina Dieckmann (39) Brazilian [German] - actress.
Gaby Amarantos (39) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Regiane Alves (39) Brazilian - actress and former fashion design model.
Juliana Baroni (39) Brazilian [Italian] - actress, dancer and singer.
Amandha Lee (38) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Portuguese, Unspecified African] - actress.
Tati Quebra-Barraco (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Kiara Sasso (38) Brazilian - actress and singer.  
Daniela Cicarelli (38) Brazilian [Italian] - former fashion model and TV show hostess.
Negra Li (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actress.
Ana Carolina da Fonseca (38) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actress.
Karin Hils (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actress.
Liliana Castro (38) Brazilian / Argentinian - actress.
Samantha Schmutz (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African, German, Austrian] - actress and singer.
Daniela Freitas (38) Brazilian - model.
Luciana Mello (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Japanese] - singer.
Morena Baccarin (38) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - actress.
Caroline Ribeiro (38) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African] - model.
Taís Araújo (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Austrian, Portuguese, possibly other] - actress.
Amanda Francozo (38) Brazilian - model.
Juliana Paes (38) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab, Unspecified African, Portuguese, Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress, television presenter, and former model.
Ellen Rocche (38) Brazilian [Italian] - actress and model.
Katiuscia Canoro (38) Brazilian - actress.
Anelis Assumpcao (37) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Fernanda Tavares (37) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Rita Cassia (37) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified African] - actress.
Geovanna Tominaga (37) Brazilian [Japanese, Italian, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Priscila Sol (37) Brazilian - actress.
Simone Spoladore (37) Brazilian - actress.
Marina Glezer (37) Brazilian [Argentinian] - actress.
Tracy Trinita (37) Chinese, Brazilian, Indonesian [Kalimantan, Minahasan] - model.
Jordana Brewster (37) English, Scottish, Irish / Brazilian  - actress and model.
Viviane Porto (37) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Milene Uehara (37) Brazilian [Italian, Japanese] - singer and model.
Mariana Aydar (37) Brazilian - singer.
Camila Guebar (37) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - model and actress.
Mary Sheila (37) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Fernanda Machado (37) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actress.
Cinthya Rachel (37) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Ceu (37) Brazilian - singer.
Adriana Lima (36) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous, Swiss, Unspecified African, Japanese] - model and actress.
Bruna Ferraz (36) Brazilian - adult model, pornographic actress and TV-personality.
Roberta Santiago (36) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Fernanda Motta (36) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - model, actress, and television host.
Quelynah (36) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actress.
Marcelle Bittar (36) Brazilian [Lebanese, Portuguese] - model.
Vanessa Jackson (36) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actress.
Lea T (36) Brazilian [Italian] - model. - Trans!
Renata Sayuri (36) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress.
Ana Cláudia Michels (36) Brazilian [German] - model.
Mariana Nunes (36) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Gianne Albertoni (36) Brazilian [Italian] - model and actress.
Sabrina Sato (36) Brazilian [½ Japanese / ¼ Swiss-German, ¼ Lebanese] - presenter, actress, comedian, reporter, model, and television personality.
Ana Hickmann (36) Brazilian [German] - model, TV host and businesswoman.
Nadja Haddad (36) Brazilian [Lebanese] - actress.
Cleo Pires (35) Brazilian [Spanish, Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Marina Elali (35) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab / Unspecified Other] - singer.
Julia Melim (35) Brazilian [Italian] - TV host, actress and producer.
Ana Beatriz Barros (35) Brazilian [Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, German] - model.
Marcelle Bittar (35) Brazilian [Lebanese] - model.
Cristina Lago (35) Brazilian - actress.
Roberta Rodrigues (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
MariMoon (35) Brazilian - youtuber.
Aparecida Petrowky (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Dani Calabresa (35) Brazilian [Italian] - actress.
Ildi Silva (35) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Dutch] - model.
Ana Braga (35) Brazilian - model.
Aline Nakashima (35) Brazilian [Japanese / Portuguese] - model.
Yzalu (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and rapper.
Taina Muller (35) Brazilian [German] - actress and model.
Lucy Ramos (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actress.
Paola Oliveira (35) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese, Spanish] - actress.
Aline Wirley (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actress.
Giselle Itie (35) Brazilian / Mexican - actress.
Nancy Randall (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] / African-American - beauty pageant titleholder.
Marjorie Estiano (35) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Camila Alves (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Portuguese, possibly other] - model and designer.
Ana Paula Araújo (35) Brazilian - model.
Juliana Alves (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and model.
Mariana Weickert (35) Brazilian [German] - model.
Ellen Oleria (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Vanessa Giacomo (34) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Cris Noronha (34) Brazilian - model.
Suyane Moreira (34) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous Amazonian, Unspecified African] - actress and model.
Letícia Persiles (34) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Sandy Leah Lima (34) Brazilian - singer-songwriter and actress.
Gracyanne Barbosa (34) Brazilian - model.
Alice Braga (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Portuguese / Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified Non-Portuguese European] - actress.
Tata Werneck (34) Brazilian [German, Spanish] - actress.
Yaya Dacosta (34) Brazilian [Unspecified West African] / African-American, Cherokee, and Irish - model and actress.
Isabeli Fontana (34) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Natalia Nara (34) Brazilian [Japanese, possibly other] - actress and model.
Priscilla Meirelles (34) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - model, host, actress, environmentalist, and beauty queen.
Marli (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Flávia de Oliveira (34) Brazilian - model.
Priscila Marinho (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Alinne Moraes (34) Brazilian [Italian] - actress.
Carol Nakamura (34) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress.
Raquel Zimmermann (34) Brazilian [German] - model.
Lidi Lisboa (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Thaís Pacholek (33) Brazilian [Polish] - actress.
Fernanda Andrade (33) Brazilian-American [Italian, Spanish Portuguese, Spanish, Swiss, and possibl Native Brazilian] - actress and model.
Daniella Sarahyba (33) Brazilian [Lebanese, Spanish] - model.
Cintia Rosa (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Fabiana Semprebom (33) Brazilian / Italian - model.
Sheron Menezzes (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actress.
Juliana Martins (33) Brazilian - model.
Paula Fernandes (33) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - singer, songwriter, and arranger.
Carol Castro (33) Brazilian - actress.
Raica Oliveira (33) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified African, Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - model.
Fernanda Vasconcellos (33) Brazilian - actress.
Lovefoxxx (33) Brazilian [Japanese / German] - singer.
Luiza Possi (33) Brazilian [Italian] - singer.
Li Martins (33) Brazilian [Japanese / Unspecified Other] - actress and singer.
Daniella Sarahyba (33) Brazilian [Lebanese, Galician Spanish, Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Cindy Mendes (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Débora Nascimento (32) Brazilian [Italian, Unspecified Indigenous / Unspecified Black] - actress and model.
Natalie Nunn (32) African-American, Brazilian, Mexican - television personality.
Tasya Teles (32) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] / Ukrainian - actress.
Erika Januza (32) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actress and model.
Jeisa Chiminazzo (32) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese, German, possibly other] - model.
Bruna Surfistinha (32) Brazilian - blogger.
Leilah Moreno (32) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Natalie Morales (32) Puerto Rican / Brazilian - journalist.
Izabel Goulart (32) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Luiza Valdetaro (32) Brazilian - actress.
Ariela Massotti (32) Brazilian - actress.
Juliana Schalch (32) Brazilian [Swiss, Portuguese, Italian] - actress.
Juliana Imai (32) Brazilian [Japanese, Portuguese] - model.
Thaila Ayala (31) Brazilian - actress and model.
Camilla Belle (31) Brazilian [Portuguese, Italian, Unspecified Indigenous] / English, German, French, Unspecified Native American (Unconfirmed) - actress.
Lucy Alves (31) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Rafaela Zanella (31) Brazilian [Italian, German] - model.
Nanda Costa (31) Brazilian [Lebanese, Unspecified Other] - actress.
Giselle Batista (31) Brazilian - actress.
Monique Alfradique (31) Brazilian - actress.
Aisha Jambo (31) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Michelle Batista (31) Brazilian - actress.
Alice Dellal (30) Iraqi Mizrahi Jewish, Ashkenazi Jewish / Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Sthefany Brito (30) Brazilian - actress.
Elisa Volpatto (30) Brazilian - actress.
Cintia Dicker (30) Brazilian [German] - model.
Akemi Katsuki (30) Brazilian [Japanese] - model.
Andressa Urach (30) Brazilian [Italian, German] - model, businesswoman and reality television personality.
Maria Casadevall (30) Brazilian [Spanish] - actress and model.
Adriana Birolli (30) Brazilian - actress.
Carol Abras (30) Brazilian - actress.
Caroline Trentini (30) Brazilian [German, Italian, possibly other] - model.
Jarina De Marco (30) Dominican [Taino, Unspecified African] / Brazilian - singer.
Isis Valverde (30) Brazilian [Italian, Celtiberian, possibly other] - actress.
Tigarah (30) Japanese / Brazilian - rapper.
Lua Blanco (30) Brazilian - singer and model.
Bruna Abdullah (30) Brazilian [Lebanese / Italian, Portuguese] - actress.
Maria Gadu (30) Brazilian - singer.
Karol Conka (30) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and rapper.
Jacqueline MacInnes Wood (30) French, Brazilian, Cree (Unconfirmed) / Scottish - actress, DJ, singer, and television host.
Bruna Erhardt (29) Brazilian [German] - model.
Dandara Mariana (29) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Luma Costa (29) Brazilian - actress.
Meisa Kuroki (29) ¾ Japanese / ¼ Brazilian - actress, model, and singer.
Lisalla Montenegro (29) Brazilian - model.
Kana Oya (29) Brazilian [Japanese] - model.
Renata Kuerten (29) Brazilian [German, possibly other] - model and television presenter.
Jacqueline Sato (29) Brazilian [50.41% Japanese / 32.9% German, Spanish, Portuguese / 11.47% Unspecified Middle Eastern / 4.95% Unspecified South Asian / 0.27% Unspecified Other Race] - actress and model.
Barbara Fialho (29) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Maddu Magalhaes (29) Brazilian - youtuber and actress.
Anna Tokiko (29) Brazilian [Japanese / Unspecified African, Unspecified European] - actress.
Mel Fronckowiak (29) Brazilian [Portuguese, Spanish, Polish, possibly Italian] - television host, actress, singer, fashion blogger, model, and writer.
Maiara Walsh (29) German, Irish, English, French / Brazilian - actress and singer.
Yasmin Brunet (29) Brazilian [Argentinian] - model and actress.
Angela Park (29) Brazilian [Korean] - pro golfer.
Flavia Lucini (28) Brazilian - model.
Louise D'Tuani (28) Brazilian - actress.
Solange Wilvert (28) Brazilian [German] - model.
Bruna Tenório (28) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified European] - model.
Pathy dos Reis (28) Brazilian - youtuber.
Caroline Francischini (28) Brazilian [Italian] - model.
Yani de Simone (28) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and model.
Lais Oliveira (28) Brazilian - model.
Tammy Di Calafiori (28) Brazilian [Italian] - actress and television host.
Emanuela de Paula (28) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified African, Dutch, Unspecified Indigenous] - model.
Juliana Lohmann (28) Brazilian - actress.
Sophie Charlotte (28) Brazilian / German - actress.
Luana Tanaka (28) Brazilian [Japanese, possibly other] - actress.
Aline Weber (28) Brazilian [German] - model.
Akemi Darenogare (27) Brazilian [Japanese, Portuguese] - model.
Mariana Molina (27) Brazilian - actress.
Lais Ribeiro (27) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Unspecified Indigenous, Portuguese] - model.
Letícia Colin (27) Brazilian - actress, singer, and presenter.
Gracie Carvalho (27) Brazilian - model.
Nathalia Kaur (27) Brazilian [Indian / Portuguese] - actress and model.
Bruna Schmitz (27) Brazilian [German, Portuguese, possibly other] - surfer and model.
Mizuho Lin (27) Brazilian [Taiwanese-Chinese] - singer.
Natascha Piva (27) Brazilian - singer.
Bianca A. Santos (27) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified African, possibly other] / Cuban [Spanish, possibly French, and other] - actress.
Martha Streck (27) Brazilian - model.
Yanna Lavigne (27) Brazilian [Japanese, French, Spanish] - actress and model.
Bruna Hamu (27) Brazilian - actress and former model.
Eunice Baia (27) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous] - actress.
Bianca Bin (27) Brazilian - actress.
Catharina Choi Nunes (27) Korean / Brazilian [Portuguese, Spanish] - model.
Jasmine Tookes (26) African-American, Brazilian, Barbadian, Unspecified European - model.
Jéssika Alves (26) Brazilian - actress.
Bárbara Evans (26) Brazilian - actress and model.
Sophia Abrahao (26) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Angélica Kvieczynski (26) Brazilian [Polish, German, Russian, Italian, Portuguese, possibly other] - gymnast.
Mariah Buzolin (26) Brazilian - actress.
Aline Dias (26) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and model.
Daiane Conterato (26) Brazilian [Italian, Polish, possibly other] - model.
Sky Ferreira (25) Brazilian [Portuguese] / Ashkenazi Jewish, Cheyenne, Scottish, English, French, Irish - singer, songwriter, model, and actress.
Mallu Magalhaes (25) Brazilian - singer.
Jessica Ellen (25) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Daniela Braga (25) Brazilian - model.
Camila Finn (25) Brazilian [German] - model.
Kaya Scodelario (25) English / Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - actress.
Agatha Moreira (25) Brazilian - model and actress.
Jamily (25) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Kefera Buchmann (24) Brazilian [German, Portuguese] - actress and vlogger.
Barbara di Creddo (24) Brazilian - model.
Iane Cardoso (24) Brazilian [Macuxi] - beauty pageant titleholder.
Jessie Rogers (24) Brazilian - youtuber, former porn actress.
Anitta (24) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Portuguese, possibly other] - singer and songwriter.
Luisa Arraes (24) Brazilian - actress.
Malu Rodrigues (24) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Vivian Amorim (24) Brazilian [Portuguese] - model and youtuber.
Gizele Oliveira (24) Brazilian - model.
MC Carol (24) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and rapper.
Laura Neiva (24) Brazilian [Portuguese, Italian, possibly other] - actress and model.
Bruna Linzmeyer (24) Brazilian [German, Portuguese, Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African] - actress.
Giovanna Lancellotti (24) Brazilian [Italian] - actress.
Mariana Santana (24) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, possibly other] - model.
Nah Cardoso (24) Brazilian - actress and youtuber.
Laura Neiva (24) Brazilian [Portuguese, Italian, possibly other] - actress and model.
Juliana Paiva (24) Brazilian - actress.
Manu Gavassi (24) Brazilian [Italian] - singer and actress.
Jeniffer Nascimento (24) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and singer.
Camila Queiroz (24) Brazilian [Portuguese, Japanese] - actress and model.
Lini Kennedy (23) Brazilian - model.
Karol Queiroz (23) Brazilian - model, instagrammer, and youtuber.
Angelica Erthal (23) Brazilian - model.
Camila Mendes (23) Brazilian [Portuguese, Italian, possibly other] - actress.
Elen Santiago (23) Brazilian - model.
Bruna Vieira (23) Brazilian - beauty guru youtuber.
Ani Mondjardim (23) Brazilian - singer.
Mia Goth (23) English, possibly other / Ashkenazi Jewish, Brazilian - actress and model.
Bruna Lirio (23) Brazilian - model.
Bruna Rocha (23) Brazilian - singer.
Habiba Da Silva (23) Brazilian, Lebanese, English - beauty guru youtuber.
Caroline Ferreira (23) Brazilian - singer.
Ana Julia Dorigon (23) Brazilian - actress and model.
Luma Grothe (23) Brazilian [German, Japanese, Unspecified African, possibly other] - model.
Isabelle Drummond (23) Brazilian - actress.
Ari Westphal (23) Brazilian - model.
Julia Goldani Telles (22) Mexican [Spanish, probably other] / Brazilian [Italian, probably other] - actress and ballet dancer.
Raissa Santana (22) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - model.
Cindy Mello (22) Brazilian - model.
Marina Ruy Barbosa (22) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actress.
Flavia Pavanelli (22) Brazilian - beauty guru youtuber.
Ana Hikari (22) Brazilian [Japanese, Portuguese] - actress.
Isabella Santoni (22) Brazilian [Italian] - actress.
Ludmilla (22) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Isabella Ridolfi (22) Brazilian  - model.
Heslaine Vieira (22) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Marcela Ohio (22) Brazilian - beauty pageant titleholder. - Trans!
Larissa Murai (21) Brazilian [Japanese] - actress and singer.
Alice Wegmann (21) Brazilian [German] - actress.
Isabella Scherer (21) Brazilian - instagrammer and actress.
Marina Nery (21) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - model.
Hanna Romanazzi (21) Brazilian - model and actress.
Julia Abe (21) Brazilian / Japanese - model.
Marina Moschen (20) Brazilian - actress.
Barbara Valente (20) Brazilian - model.
Louane Emera (20) German, Polish / Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - singer and actress.
Letícia Medina (20) Brazilian - actress.
Giullia Buscacio (20) Portuguese, Brazilian, Italian - actress.
Barbie Ferreira (20) Brazilian - model.
Valentina Sampaio (19) Brazilian - model and actress. - Trans!
Sasha Meneghel (19) Brazilian [½ Jewish, at least 1/16 Italian, Portuguese, likely Polish, possibly other] - actress, model, and athlete.
Samile Bermannelli (19) Brazilian - model.
Ariel Moura (19) Brazilian - model. - Trans!
Maju Trindade (19) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese] - model and youtuber.
Waleska Gorczevski (19) Brazilian - model.
Alissa Salls (19) Brazilian - model and instagrammer.
Monalysa Alcantara (18) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - model.
Yogi Keira (18) ¾ Japanese / ¼ Brazilian - singer.
Aira Ferreira (17) Brazilian - model.
Ana Giulia Zortea (17) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress and pro swimmer.
Larissa Manoela (16) Brazilian - actress and singer.
Livia Inhudes (16) Brazilian - youtuber.
Giovanna Chaves (15) Brazilian - actress, singer, and model.
Júlia Gomes (15) Brazilian - singer and actress.
Giovanna Rispoli (15) Brazilian [Italian] - actress.
Any Gabrielly (15) Brazilian - singer and actress.
Dhu Moraes (born 1953) Brazilian - actress.
Camilla Amado (born in 1942) Brazilian - actress and teacher.
Giovanna Ferrarezi (?) Brazilian - youtuber.
Vic Hollo (?) Brazilian - youtuber, former viner.
Victoria Brito (?) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - model.
Lorena Maraschi (?) Brazilian  - model.
Bruna Meneghetti (?) Brazilian - model.
Hanne Linhares (?) Brazilian - model.
Sage Galesi (?) Cheyenne, Apache, Lakota Sioux / Brazilian [Unspecified European] - actress and singer.
Gabriella Nunes (?) Brazilian - model.
Thalissa Teixeira (?) Brazilian - actress.
Mariah da Penha (?) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actress.
Laryssa Dias (?) Brazilian - actress and dancer.
Branca Feres (?) Brazilian - synchronized swimmer, model, and actress.
Bia Feres (?) Brazilian - synchronized swimmer, model, and actress.
Christiana Guinle (?) Brazilian - actress and producer.
Cristina Lark (?) Brazilian - actress.
M
Nelson Sargento (93) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actor.
Leonardo Villar (93) Brazilian - actor.
Pedro Farah (91) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Clementino Kele (89) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Tony Tornado (87) Brazilian [Unspecified African] / Guyanese - actor and singer.
Lima Duarte (87) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actor.
Isaac Bardavid (86) Brazilian [Turkish Jewish] - actor.
Mauro Mendonca (86) Brazilian - actor.
Joao Gilberto (86) Brazilian - singer and guitarist.
Silvio Santos (86) Brazilian [Sephardic Jewish, Greek, Turkish] - tv host.
Sergio Ricardo (85) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor and filmmaker.
Monarco (84) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Othon Bastos (84) Brazilian - actor.
Ary Fontoura (84) Brazilian - actor.
Milton Gonçalves (83) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and playwright.
Bira (83) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Tarcísio Meira (82) Brazilian - actor.
Ken Kaneko (82) Brazilian [Japanese] - actor.
Jose Mojica Marins (81) Brazilian [Spanish, possibly other] - actor.
Zuzuca do Salgueiro (81) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Reginaldo Faria (80) Brazilian - actor and film director.
Wilson Moreira (80) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Reginaldo Faria (80) Brazilian - actor and director.
Daniel Filho (80) Brazilian [Catalan] / Argentinian - actor.
Amir Haddad (80) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Martinho da Vila (79) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Dom Salvador (79) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Ivan de Almeida (79) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Antonio Pitanga (78) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Erasmo Carlos (76) Brazilian - singer.
Jorge Mautner (76) Brazilian [Austrian Jewish / Yugoslav] - musician, actor, and filmmaker.
Roberto Carlos (76) Brazilian - singer.
Laerico de Freitas (76) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and musician.
Ney Matogrosso (76) Brazilian - singer.
Gilberto Gil (75) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Jorge Ben Jor (75) Brazilian [Ethiopian] - singer.
Caetano Veloso (75) Brazilian - musician.
Nei Lopes (75) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Pedro Ortaca (75) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous] - singer.
Milton Nascimento (74) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Dori Caymmi (74) Brazilian [Italian / Unspecified Other] - musician.
Paulinho da Viola (74) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Ney Latorraca (73) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - actor.
Chico Buarque (73) Brazilian [Portuguese, Dutch] - musician and writer.
Geraldo Azevedo (72) Brazilian - singer and guitarist.
Lucio Yanel (71) Brazilian / Argentinian - musician.
Jose de Abreu (71) Brazilian - actor.
Joao Bosco (71) Brazilian [Lebanese] - singer and guitarist.
Gaucho da Fronteira (70) Brazilian / Uruguayan - singer.
Gesio Amadeu (70) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Gilbert Stein (69) Brazilian [Egyptian Jewish] - singer.
Luis Vagner (69) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Tony Ramos (69) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actor.
Paulinho da Costa (69) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Luís Melo (69) Brazilian - actor.
Jose Mayer (68) Brazilian [Lebanese] - actor.
Jorge Aragao (68) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Antônio Fagundes (68) Brazilian - actor.
Djavan (68) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Dutch] - singer.
Raimundo Fagner (68) Brazilian [Lebanese / Unspecified Other] - singer and actor.
Neguinho da Beija-Flor (68) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Daniel Benzali (67) Brazilian [Jewish] - actor.
Joao Mulato (67) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Unspecified European] - singer.
José Dumont (67) Brazilian - actor.
Ricardo Blat (66) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Jose Augusto (64) Brazilian - singer.
Sergio Assad (64) Brazilian [Lebanese] - musician.
Gelson Oliveira (62) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Nego (62) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Beto Barbosa (62) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - singer.
Cosme dos Santos (62) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Skowa (61) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Walter Salles (61) Brazilian [Portuguese, distant Sephardic Jewish, possibly other] - filmmaker, film producer, and editor.
Romeu Evaristo (61) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Fernando Meirelles (61) Brazilian - film director, producer and screenwriter.
Gil Brother (60) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Patricio Bisso (60) Brazilian / Argentinian - actor.
Ciro Pessoa (60) Brazilian - singer, guitarist, and poet.
Fausto Fawcett (60) Brazilian - rapper, actor, and writer.
Fauzi Beydoun (59) Brazilian [Lebanese, Italian] - singer and guitarist.
Arlindo Cruz (59) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Walter Afanasieff (59) Brazilian [Russian] - musician.
Amin Khader (58) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Guy Ecker (58) Brazilian - actor.
Serginho Meriti (58) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Chico Diaz (58) Brazilian / Paraguayan - actor.
Sergio Kato (57) Brazilian - actor.
Carlos Takeshi (57) Brazilian [Japanese] - actor.
Arnaldo Antunes (57) Brazilian - musician.
Leo Jamie (57) Brazilian - musician and actor.
Sergio Kato (57) Brazilian [Japanese] - actor.
Marquinhos de Oswaldo Cruz (56) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Andre Mattos (56) Brazilian - actor.
Frejat (55) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - singer.
Ze Miguel (55) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Ivo Meirelles (55) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Dany Roland (55) Brazilian [French, Portuguese, Italian], Argentinian [French, Portuguese, Italian, Egyptian] - musician and actor.
Lenilton (55) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Vitor Ramil (55) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - singer.
Nasi (55) Brazilian - musician and actor.
Carlinhos Brown (54) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Marcos Palmeira (54) Brazilian - actor.
Mauricio Mattar (53) Brazilian [Lebanese] - actor.
Ailton Graca (53) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Alexandre Frota (53) Brazilian - actor and former model.
Carlos Sato (53) Brazilian [Japanese] - actor.
Chico Cesar (53) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Unspecified Indigenous] - singer.
Daniel Munduruku (53) Brazilian [Munduruku] - writer.
Claudio Botelho (born in 1964) Brazilian - actor.
Adriano Garib (52) Brazilian [Syrian, Lebanese / Italian] - actor.
Octavio Muller (52) Brazilian - actor.
Alvaro Tito (52) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Carlos Saldanha (52) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - director, producer, and animator.
Eduardo Silva (52) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Andre Abujamra (52) Brazilian [Lebanese, Italian] - musician.
Maricio Goncalves (51) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Marcelo Yuka (51) Brazilian [Japanese, possibly other] - drummer.
Sebastian Soul (51) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and singer.
Flavio Bauraqui (51) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Irmao Lazaro (50) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Enrique Diaz (50) Brazilian / Paraguayan - actor.
Delicio Luiz (50) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Toni Garrido (50) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actor.
DJ Jamaika (50) Brazilian / Jamaican - rapper.
Sergio Loroza (50) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and singer.
Silvetty Montilla (50) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - drag queen, actor, and singer.
Pit Passarell (49) Brazilian [Argentinian] - musician.
Serginho Procopio (49) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Marcelo D2 (49) Brazilian - rapper.
Otto (49) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Dutch] - singer and actor.
Edi Rock (49) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Kleber Lucas (49) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Matheus Nachtergaele (49) Brazilian [Belgian] - actor and director.
Thaide (49) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper and actor.
Max Cavalera (48) Brazilian [Italian, other] - musician.
Pericles (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Ndee Naldinho (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Vanderlei de Lima (48) Brazilian - pro long distance runner.
Max Cavalera (48) Brazilian [Italian] - singer and guitarist.
Mr. Catra (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
David Brazil (48) Brazilian - actor and promoter.
Ice Blue (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
X (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Luciano Szafir (48) Brazilian [Jewish] - actor and model.
KL Jay (48) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Thogun Teixeira (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper and actor.
Anderson Muller (47) Brazilian [Lebanese, German] - actor.
Netinho de Paula (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer and actor.
Ines Brasil (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African, German] - singer.
Seu Jorge (47) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African] - singer.
Alexandre Nero (47) Brazilian - actor and singer.
Mano Brown (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Fabio Lago (47) Brazilian - actor.
Xandre de Pilares (47) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Fabio Assuncao (46) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actor.
Marcelo Batista (46) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and rapper.
Gero Camilo (46) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Portuguese, Dutch] - actor and singer.
Caco Ciocler (46) Brazilian - actor.
Marquinhos Gomes (46) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Andre Matos (46) Brazilian - musician.
Ed Motta (46) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Lui Mendes (46) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Murilo Benício (45) Brazilian - actor.
Black Alien (45) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Eriberto Leao (45) Brazilian - actor.
Jacare (45) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and dancer.
Rogerio Flausino (45) Brazilian - singer.
Rappin’ Hood (45) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Nicolas Trevijano (45) Brazilian [Argentinian] - actor.
Max Viana (44) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Emanuel Rego (44) Brazilian - pro volleyball player.
Leandro Hassum (44) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Japinha (44) Brazilian [Japanese, Italian] - musician.
Saulo Vasconcellos (44) Brazilian - actor and singer.
Marcelo Falcao (44) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Juliano Son (44) Brazilian [Korean] - singer.
Dexter (44) Brazilian - rapper.
Bukassa Kabengele (44) Brazilian [Congolese, Belgian] - actor and singer.
Xis (44) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Selton Mello (44) Brazilian - actor and director.
Sergio Menezes (44) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Robert Scheidt (44) Brazilian [German] - pro sailor.
Felipe Duarte (44) Brazilian - actor.
Reynaldo Gianecchini (44) Brazilian [Italian] - actor.
BNegao (44) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Octaviano Costa (44) Brazilian [Lebanese / Unspecified Other] - actor.
Jaime Camil (44) Mexican [Egyptian, possibly other] / Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - actor, singer, and host.
MV Bill (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor, rapper, and filmmaker.
Adriano Cintra (43) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, German, Portuguese] - musician.
Lino Krizz (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer, rapper, and actor.
Dudu Nobre (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Antonio Pedro Tabet (43) Brazilian - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Afro-X (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Bruno Campos (43) Brazilian - actor.
Belo (43) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Gabriel o Pensador (43) Brazilian [Italian] - rapper.
Criolo (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer, rapper, and actor.
Anderson Silva (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - MMA fighter.
Rodrigo Santoro (42) Brazilian [Portuguese, including Azorean, possibly other] / Italian] - actor.
Alexandre Barillari (42) Brazilian - actor.
DJ Marky (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Sergio Abreu (42) Brazilian - actor.
Ken Chang (42) Brazilian [Taiwanese-Chinese] - actor and singer.
Buchecha (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Ferrez (42) Brazilian - rapper and author.
Jair Oliveira (42) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Japanese] - singer.
Gustavo Kuerten (41) Brazilian [German, some Polish and Austrian] - retired tennis player.
Malvino Salvador (41) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab, Portuguese] - model and actor.
Alexandre Pires (41) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Vladimir Brichta (41) Brazilian [Russian, German] - actor.
Leo Maia (41) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Malvino Salvador (41) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab, Portuguese] - actor and model.
DJ Patife (41) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - musician.
Bob Burnquist (41) Swedish, Brazilian - professional skateboarder.
Pregador Luo (41) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Curumin (41) Brazilian [Japanese, Spanish] - singer.
Kamau (41) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Wagner Moura (41) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - actor.
Kamau (41) Brazilian [Kenyan] - rapper.
Gustavo Haddad (41) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Daniel de Oliveira (40) Brazilian - actor.
Andre Sa (40) Brazilian - pro tennis player.
Théo Becker (40) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actor, model and singer.
Daniel Bueno (40) Brazilian  - model, reality television personality and actor.
Leandro Firmino (39) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Henri Castelli (39) Brazilian - actor and model.
Ivan Miyazato (39) Brazilian [Japanese] - musician.
Ivo Muller (39) Brazilian - actor.
Mouhamed Harfouch (39) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Leandro Firmino (39) Brazilian - actor.
Thalles (39) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Thiago Lacerda (39) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actor.
Matheus Rocha (38) Brazilian - filmmaker.
Lazaro Ramos (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Bruno Santos (38) Brazilian - model.
Max B.O. (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Marcos Veras (38) Brazilian - actor.
Gustavo Gianetti (38) Brazilian [Portuguese] - actor, model and singer.
Andre Marinho (38) Brazilian - musician (Br’oz).
Anderson Lau (38) Brazilian [Chinese] - actor.
Franco Finato Scornavacca (38) Brazilian - singer (KLB).
Naldo Benny (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Pedro Andrade (38) Brazilian - actor and model.
Lazaro Ramos (38) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Thierre Di Castro Garrito (38) Brazilian - actor and Mister Brazil 1996.
Dan Nakagawa (38) Brazilian [Japanese] - actor and singer.
Marcos Veras (37) Brazilian - actor and filmmaker.
Caio Blat (37) Brazilian [Unspecified Arab, Catalan] - actor.
Fabrizio Moretti (37) Italian / Brazilian - musician and songwriter.
Rocco Pitanga (37) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Francimar Barroso (37) Brazilian - MMA fighter.
Dado Dolabella (37) Brazilian / Spanish - actor and singer.
Bibiano Fernandes (37) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous Amazonian, possibly other] - MMA fighter.
Diego Miguel (37) Brazilian - model.
Caua Reymond (37) Brazilian [Swiss, Portuguese, Unspecified Indigenous] - actor.
Anderson Freire (37) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Rodrigo Hilbert (37) Brazilian [Polish, Italian] - actor and model.
Moufid Aziz (born in 1980) Brazilian [Moroccan] - model.
Rafael Verga (36) Brazilian [Portuguese, Italian] - model.
Bruno Belarmino (36) Brazilian - actor.
Maicon (36) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - professional footballer.
Leandro Finato Scornavacca (36) Brazilian - singer (KLB).
Sergio Marone (36) Brazilian [Italian] - actor.
Elano (36) Brazilian [German, Italian, possibly other] - retired footballer.
Juan Manuel Tellategui (36) Brazilian / Argentinian - actor.
Michel Teló (36) Brazilian [Italian] - singer and songwriter.
Jhean Menezes (36) Brazilian - musician (Br’oz).
Andre Ramiro (36) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and rapper.
Hermann Nicoli (35) Brazilian - model.
Vinicius Machado (35) Brazilian - actor.
Rafael Zulu (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Luis Lobianco (35) Brazilian - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Bruno Gagliasso (35) Brazilian [Italian] - actor.
Ibere Thenorio (35) Brazilian - youtuber (Manual do Mundo).
Fabricio Boliveira (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Anderson Varejão (35) Brazilian - professional basketball player.
Thiago Frago (35) Brazilian - actor.
Babu Santana (35) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Rodiney Santiago (35) Brazilian - model.
Marcos Pitombo (35) Brazilian - actor.
Adriano Bolshi (35) Brazilian [Japanese] - actor.
Marcos Pitombo (35) Brazilian - actor.
Oscar Tintel (35) Brazilian - musician (Br’oz).
Paulo Nagamura (34) Brazilian [Japanese, Italian, possibly other] - retired soccer player.
Bruce Driscoll (34) Brazilian - musician.
Alexandre Rodrigues (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Rolan Bell (34) Brazilian [Jamaican, possibly other] - actor.
Antonio Campos (34) Brazilian [Portuguese, Sephardic Jewish, possibly other] / Italian/Sicilian - director, screenwriter, and producer.
Akihiro Sato (34) Brazilian [Japanese] - model and actor.
José Carlos Moreira (34) Brazilian - professional sprinter.
Dani Alves (34) Brazilian [Portuguese, Unspecified African, possibly other] - professional footballer.
Fabio Porchat (34) Brazilian - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Alejandro Claveaux (34) Brazilian [French, Spanish] / Uruguayan - actor.
Marcelo Melo (34) Brazilian - pro tennis player.
Thiaguinho (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Romulo Pires (34) Brazilian - model.
Jonathan Haagensen (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Norwegian] - actor and model.
Joao Vicente de Castro (34) Brazilian - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Ryan Hollweg (34) Brazilian [German] / White [Unspecified] - professional hockey player.
Obina (34) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Unspecified Indigenous] - professional footballer.
Fabio Lucindo (33) Brazilian - actor.
Lucas Silveira (33) Brazilian - musician.
Thiago Santos (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - model.
Junior Lima (33) Brazilian - musician.
Sergio Hondjakoff (33) Brazilian [Russian, Portuguese] - actor.
Miro Moreira (33) Brazilian - model.
Robinho (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - professional footballer.
Bruno Finato Scornavacca (33) Brazilian - singer (KLB).
Richard Brancatisano (33) Brazilian [Italian] / Other Unspecified - actor.
Mateus Verdelho (33) Brazilian - model and rapper.
Yuri Nishida (33) Brazilian [Japanese] - singer.
Lucas Gil (33) Brazilian -  model and Mister Brazil World 2007.
Phellipe Haagensen (33) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Norwegian] - actor.
Gabriel Totoro (33) Brazilian - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Evandro Soldati (32) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - model.
Tiago Splitter (32) Brazilian [Ashkenazi Jewish, German, possibly other] - professional basketball player.
Andre Ziehe (32) Brazilian - model.
Jui Huang (32) Brazilian [Taiwanese-Chinese] - actor.
David Correy (32) Brazilian - singer.
Emicida (32) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Rafael Lazzini (32) Brazilian - model.
Taio Cruz (32) Nigerian / Brazilian - singer, songwriter, record producer, rapper, and entrepreneur.
Rafael Infante (32) Brazilian - actor and musician.
J-Son (32) Brazilian / Swedish - rapper.
Rincon Sapiencia (32) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Rodrigo Calazans (32) Brazilian - model.
Ronaldo (32) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Portuguese] - footballer.
Rafael Cardoso (31) Brazilian - actor.
Gregorio Duvivier (31) Brazilian [Belgian, possibly other] - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Edilson Nascimento (31) Brazilian - model.
Projota (31) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - rapper.
Bernado Velasco (31) Brazilian - actor and model.
Rodrigo Massa (31) Brazilian - actor and singer.
Jonas Sulzbach (31) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2010 and reality tv star.
Jayme Matarazzo (31) Brazilian [Italian] - actor.
Klebber Toledo (31) Brazilian - actor and model.
Reinaldo Dalcin (31) Brazilian - model, mechanical engineer, and Mister Brazil 2013.
Diego Hypolito (31) Brazilian - pro gymnast.
Harry Louis (30) Brazilian - actor, model, and musician.
Cesar Cielo (30) Brazilian [Italian, Portuguese, possibly other] - competitive swimmer.
Alexandre Cunha (30) Brazilian - model.
Rômulo Arantes Neto (30) Brazilian - actor and model.
Caio Cesar (30) Brazilian - model.
Icaro Silva (30) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor and singer.
Joe Penna (30) Brazilian - youtuber.
Franklin David (30) Brazilian - model, reporter and DJ.
Jesus Luz (30) Brazilian - model and DJ.
Marcello Melo Jr. (29) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor, singer, songwriter, musician and model.
Willian (29) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - professional footballer.
Fabio Audi (29) Brazilian - actor, filmmaker, and musician.
Darlan Cunha (29) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor.
Kondzilla (29) Brazilian - youtuber.
Leo Santana (29) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - singer.
Thomaz Bellucci (29) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - professional tennis player.
Tiago Abravanel (29) Brazilian [Sephardic Jewish, Greek, Turkish] - actor and singer.
Wesley Safadao (29) Brazilian - singer-songwriter.
Douglas Silva (29) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor.
Thomaz Bellucci (29) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - professional tennis player.
Felipe Neto (29) Brazilian - youtuber.
Michel Gomes (28) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor.
Caio Castro (28) Brazilian - actor and model.
Alfred Enoch (28) English / Brazilian [Afro-Barbadian] - actor.
Gui Fedrizzi (28) Brazilian - model.
Daniel Matsunaga (28) Japanese / Brazilian [Unspecified European, possibly other] - model and actor.
Gusttavo Lima (28) Brazilian - singer.
Ian Matos (28) Brazilian - professional diver.
Leo Rodriguez (28) Brazilian - singer.
Micael Borges (28) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor and singer.
Anderson Tomazini (28) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2015 and actor.
Marco Pigossi (28) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - actor.
George Sauma (28) Brazilian [Palestinian, possibly other] - actor and musician.
Arthur Aguiar (28) Brazilian - actor and singer.
Charles Oliveira (27) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - MMA fighter.
Renato Ferreira (27) Brazilian - model.
Lucas Malvacini (27) Brazilian - model, actor, youtuber, and Mister Brazil 2011.
Arthur Zanetti (27) Brazilian [Italian, Spanish, possibly other] - pro gymnast.
Guilherme Leicam (27) Brazilian - actor and singer.
Vini Uehara (27) Brazilian [Italian, Japanese, possibly other] - singer and model.
Gabriel Burger (27) Brazilian - model.
Lucas Feuerschutte (27) Brazilian - youtuber.
Felipe Martins (27) Brazilian - professional footballer.
Mateus Solano (26) Brazilian [Italian Jewish, possibly other] - actor.
Lucas Bernardini (26) Brazilian - actor.
Marcelo Chierighini (26) Brazilian - pro swimmer.
Peterson dos Santos (26) Brazilian - professional sprinter.
Humberto Carrão (26) Brazilian - actor.
Alok (26) Brazilian [Italian, Lebanese, Portuguese, possibly other] - DJ and producer.
Marlon Teixeira (26) Brazilian [½ Portuguese, ¼ Unspecified Indigenous, ¼ Japanese] - model.
Lucas Montandon (26) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2014 and actor.
Fiuk (26) Brazilian [Armenian, Spanish, possibly other] - singer and actor.
Luan Santana (26) Brazilian - singer.
Arthur Sales (26) Brazilian [Unspecified European, possibly other] - model.
Jesuita Barbosa (26) Brazilian - actor.
Alok (26) Brazilian [Israeli, Ukrainian Jewish, Latvian Jewish, possibly other] - musician.
Francisco Lachowski (26) Brazilian [Polish / German, Portuguese, possibly other] - model.
Conrado Dess (26) Brazilian - singer and actor.
Mauricio Destri (26) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - actor.
Luccas Neto (25) Brazilian - youtuber.
Yudi Tamashiro (25) Brazilian [Japanese, possibly other] - singer.
Jessey Stevens (25) Brazilian - model and instagrammer.
Neymar (25) Brazilian [Unspecified African, Portuguese, possibly other] - professional footballer and actor.
Chay Suede (25) Brazilian - actor.
Nego do Borel (25) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - singer.
Rodrigo Simas (25) Brazilian - actor.
Pyong Lee (25) Brazilian [Korean, possibly other] - actor and youtuber.
Lucas Medeiros (25) Brazilian - model.
Rael Costa (25) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - model.
John Guidetti (25) 5/8 Swedish, ¼ Italian, 1/8 Brazilian - footballer.
Arlindo Neto (25) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - singer.
Kim Freire (24) Brazilian - model.
Antonio Carlos (24) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - actor.
Pablo Morais (24) Brazilian - model.
Leo Bruno (24) Brazilian - model.
Sergio Malheiros (24) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor.
Isaquias Queiroz (23) Brazilian - professional sprint canoeist.
Ricardo de Souza (23) Brazilian - professional sprinter.
Jonathan Couto (23) Brazilian - singer (P9).
Thiago Braz da Silvia (23) Brazilian - professional pole vaulter.
Caique Gama (22) Brazilian - singer.
Whindersson Nunes (22) Brazilian - youtuber.
Ghilherme Lobo (22) Brazilian - actor.
Thiago Modesto (21) Brazilian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Italian, Portuguese, possibly other] - singer.
Matheus Santana (21) Brazilian - professional swimmer.
Lucas Dambros (21) Brazilian - model.
Rafael Vitti (21) Brazilian [Italian, possibly other] - actor and musician.
Pedro Afonso Rezende (21) Brazilian - youtuber (rezendeevil).
Vitor Assan (21) Brazilian [Lebanese, Italian, Portuguese, possibly other] - singer.
Marco Tulio (21) Brazilian - youtuber (AuthenticGames).
Nicolas Prattes (20) Brazilian [Austrian, Portuguese, possibly other] - actor.
Vyni Takahashi (20) Brazilian [Japanese, possibly other] - actor.
Rafael Lange (20) Brazilian - youtuber.
Diego Francisco (20) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor.
John Klarner (19) Brazilian [German, possibly other] - actor and model.
Lino Facioli (17) Brazilian [Austrian, Italian, Portuguese, German, possibly other] - actor.
Jean Paulo Campos (14) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - actor and singer.
Caian Maroni (?) Brazilian - model.
Gabriel Vieira (?) Brazilian - model.
Alexandre Malaquias (?) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - singer.
Edilson Ferreira Leite (?) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 1997.
Lucas Facchini (?) Brazilian - model.
David Y.W. Pond (?) Brazilian [Chinese, possibly other] - actor.
Ramilio Zampiron Junior (?) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2000.
Lucas Cristino (?) Brazilian - model.
Gabriel Loureiro (?) Brazilian - model.
Vinicius Ribeiro (?) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2008.
Da Ghama (?) Brazilian [Unspecified African, possibly other] - guitarist.
Bruno Endler (?) Brazilian - model.
Gabriel Gomieri (?) Brazilian - model.
Rael da Rima (?) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - singer.
Willian Rech (?) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2012.
Andre Bona (?) Brazilian - model.
Diego Fragoso (?) Brazilian - model.
Rafael Portugal (?) Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - actor and youtuber (Porta dos Fundos).
Diego Galante (?) Brazilian - instagrammer.
Carlos Franco (?) Brazilian - Mister Brazil 2016.
Davi Sabbag (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Uo).
Mateus Carrilho (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Uo).
Dan Rodrigues (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Celso Otoniel (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Murillo Santos (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Davison Lopes (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Paulo Victor (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Josenel Santos (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Manoel Junior (?) Brazilian - musician (Banda Vingadora).
Kew Malta (?) Brazilian - model, actor, dancer, and singer.
Igor Von Adamovich (?) Brazilian - singer (P9).
Guilherme dos Santos (?) Brazilian - musician (P9).
Pe Lu (?) Brazilian - musician (Restart).
Nelson Meirelles (?) Brazilian - musician.
Marcelo Lobato (?) Brazilian - drummer.
Lauro Farias (?) Brazilian - bassist.
Ebel Perrelli (?) Brazilian - musician.
Thales Silveira (?) Brazilian - musician (Mallavoodoo).
Mario Lobo (?) Brazilian - musician (Mallavoodoo).
Alexandre Bicudo (?) Brazilian - musician (Mallavoodoo).
Misael Barros (?) Brazilian - musician (Mallavoodoo).
Aguinaldo Filho (?) Brazilian - actor.
NB:
Liniker (22) Brazilian [Unspecified African] - Genderfluid - singer.
Pabllo Vittar (22) Brazilian - Genderfluid - singer.
ICK:
Alessandra Ambrosio - appropriation.
Hailey Baldwin - appropriation.
Gisele Bündchen - racism.
Henry Zaga - not black but took a black role in New Mutants.
Bruna Marquezine (22) Brazilian - not indigenous but took an indigenous role.
Luis Salem - is a cis man but took a trans woman role in O Cla Das Divorciadas.
Luis Miranda - is a cis man but took a trans woman role in Geracao Brasil.
Aggro Santos - accused of two counts of rape.
Arthur Mariano - made anti black racist “jokes”.
Fellipe Arakawa - made anti black racist “jokes”.
Henrique Flores - made anti black racist “jokes”.
Pe Lanza - accused of beating own mother.
Giselli Monteiro - not Indian but takes Indian roles in Bollywood.
Bruna Abdullah - not Indian but takes Indian roles in Bollywood.
Izabelle Leite - not Indian but takes Indian roles in Bollywood.
Gabriela Bertante - not Indian but takes Indian roles in Bollywood.
Carol Duarte - is a cis woman but took a trans man role in A Forca Do Querer.
43 notes · View notes
torentialtribute · 5 years
Text
Mark Hateley’s boy Tom on ‘doing a Leicester’ in Poland
There is a famous British name behind a famous story that is currently taking place in Polish football.
Small provincial club Piast Gliwice are two games away from & # 39; Leicester City do & # 39; and win the competition for the first time in their history.
And the anchoring of their midfield is 29-year-old Tom Hateley, son of the former AC Milan Glasgow Tom Hateley is the 29-year-old anchoring of the midfield for Piast Gliwice "class =" blkBorder img-share "/>
<img id =" i-2fe6cea21b9512b4 "src =" https://dailym.ai/2OTvk2r /05/15/11/13521942-0-image-a-9_1557915328379.jpg "height =" 428 "width =" 634 "alt =" <img id = "i-2fe6cea21b9512b4" src = "https: // i. dailymail.co.uk/1s/2019/05/15/11/13521942-0-image-a-9_1557915328379.jpg "height =" 428 "width =" 634 "alt =" 29-year-old anchorage of the midfield for Polish Piast Gliwice silk "
Tom Hateley is the 29-year-old anchoring of Polish silk Piast Gliwice
He has joined Gliwice in 2018, a city in southern Poland, whose previous sporting fame to fame was the birthplace w of the World Cup winner Lukas Podolski, before he moved to Germany at the age of two.
The stadium of Gliwice contains only 10,000 but is unlikely the summit of the Ekstraklasa at a point before Legia Warsaw which enters the last week of the season.
Victories road to Pogon Szczecin on Wednesday and Lech Poznan on Sunday takes place a historical title.
& # 39; It's similar to the Leicester story & # 39 ;, Hateley says. & # 39; We have a medium-sized budget for the Polish competition and we had a hard time last year.
& # 39; But since we returned from the winter vacation, we have won 12 to 15. When we beat Legia in Warsaw, everyone started to believe we could do it.
Hateley a striker for England and his father Tony
< img id = "i-8a5843562af97ff1" src = "https://dailym.ai/2E99OTi" height = "346" width = "634" alt = "Tom, pictured with his wife Hannah and daughter Eloise, is at the center of a remarkable story"
<img id = "i-8a5843562af97ff1" src = "https: //i.dailymail .co.uk / 1s / 2019/05/15/11 / 13522174-0-image-m-12_1557915348931.jpg "height =" 346 "width =" 634 "alt =" Tom, pictured with his wife Hannah and daughter Eloise , is at the center of a remarkable story "
& # 39; We play a and 4-4-1-1 with two wingers with their heels on the sidelines. I am a box-to-box midfielder, no 8 if you want.
& # 39; The trainer Waldemar Fornalik was the manager of Poland, he is very tactical, no stone is left untouched. And the team is a good balance between Polish and overseas players.
We have boys from Serbia, Spain, Slovenia, Denmark. We have an attacker from Ecuador, Joel Valencia, who has been nominated for the protagonist of the year.
& # 39; The chemistry is good, we often go out to eat together and in the field, the greater the confidence, the more risk you take with the ball that can render. The atmosphere on Polish grounds is lively, a little more intimidating than in England or Scotland with the Ultras and Pyro shows.
& # 39; But we have a reputation as a family club. Sunday is already sold out. & # 39;
Hateley was told by Tranmere manager Ronnie Moore that his short-term contract would not be renewed in Prenton Park when the first chance to play in Poland came through an agent
<img id = "i-fc673775f3e0c2fe" src = "https://dailym.ai/2WNK4TK "height =" 471 "width =" 634 "alt =" Small provincial club Piast Gliwice are two games away from & # 39; do a city in Leicester & # 39; in Poland Piast Gliwice are two games away from & # 39; do to Leicester City & # 39; in Poland "
Small provincial club Piast Gliwice are two games away from & do to Leicester City & # 39;
Someone who was born in Monte Carlo while his famous father played for Monaco, the ability to travel and adventure was too good to refuse. spoke to Henrik Ojamaa, an old teammate from Motherwell, about Poland because he had played there, and I recommended it.
I went outside and the facilities were good. I also spoke with my mother (Bev) and my sister about what it was like for families abroad.
& # 39; Football looks good in a way, but it was important to hear about it from their point of view.
I have always been interested in trying a different culture and lifestyle.
& # 39; We came back from Wroclaw (in 2016) when our first child Eloise
& # 39; We came back from Wroclaw (in 2016) when our first child Eloise was born, but when the call came to go back to Gliwice, I didn't hesitate.
<img id = "i-46d767db9ee4d02d" src = "https://dailym.ai/2E9qsC4 image-a-16_1557915735646.jpg "height =" 423 "width =" 634 "alt =" Hateley & # 39; s side is two games away from winning the competition for the first time in their history Hateley & # 39; s side are two games away from winning the competition for the first time in their history.
Hateley & s side, two games are removed from winning the competition for the first time in their history.
& # 39; My daughter is now three, she is in the really nice international children's room in Katowice where we live (25 minutes from Gliwice).
One of her teachers speaks English, a Polish, she's already pretty bilingual! I took Polish lessons when I went to Wroclaw so I can make ends meet.
& # 39; My wife can say hello and thank you! But the me este people in Poland speak english, which is good.
& # 39; Food is probably the biggest difference. & # 39;
& # 39; Food is probably the biggest difference. The chocolate doesn't taste the same, you can't get Cadbury & # 39; s milk! But nothing to stop enjoying our time here & # 39;
Hateley & # 39; s earliest football memories were from his father who played for Glasgow Rangers.
& # 39; I would go to Ibrox as a young boy and kick the ball in executive boxes with Brian Laudrup & # 39; s They are Nicolai.
& # 39; They were great memories, when they heard a roar, I went to the window to see if they had scored! At that time we were allowed to enter the changing room and training grounds as children. I am not sure if that would be the case. I'm still a fan of Glasgow Rangers. Hateley, who played for Motherwell in 2011, admits that he is still a supporter of Glasgow Rangers "class =" blkBorder img-share "/>
Hateley, playing for Motherwell in 2011, admits that he is still a supporter of Glasgow Rangers. Motherwell in 2011, acknowledges that he is still a supporter of Glasgow Rangers.
While Mark was a was bustling center-forward movement, Tom is an elegant midfielder who played his early career as a holder but has been licensed to
& # 39; Coming to Poland has made a better all-round & # 39;
& # 39; The man I looked up to grow up was Xabi Alonso, a round player, mainly in the technical field and with possession of the ball.
& # 39; I have another year to go with my contract, but at some point I would like to play in England asks me if I can play in England, 100 percent yes. I am now at the right age, I feel at my physical peak. "
In addition to lifting a trophy, the root of the Champions League football is for both Gliwice and the Polish champions who have access to the later qualification rounds.
Hateley has had previous experience, Motherwell reached the Champions League qualifiers when he was in Fir Park, knocked out by Panathanaikos, of a man-of-the-match bottle of champagne after being beaten by Peter Crouch & # 39 ; s Stoke in the League Cup.
Hateley & # 39; s father Mark scored a famous header for England in the Maracana against Brazil "
<img id =" i-30f8a46d782179bd "src = "https://dailym.ai/2WEis3n" height = "418" width = "634" alt = "<img id = "i-30f8a46d782179bd" src = "https://dailym.ai/2WEis3n" height = "418" width = "634" alt = "<img id =" i-30f8a46d 782179bd "src =" https://dailym.ai/2WEis3n "height =" 418 "width =" 634 "alt = "for England in the Maracana against Brazil"
Hateley & s father Mark scored a famous header for England in the Maracana against Brazil
He kept in touch with the exciting title race in England.
We played on Sunday afternoon so that I could be home in time to see Manchester City finish in Brighton and win the competition.
& # 39; I am still a big football fan and I enjoyed seeing City and Liverpool meet each other throughout the season. & # 39;
Mark Hateley got a famous move from Portsmouth to AC Milan after scoring a header for England in the Maracana against Brazil.
It was one of those & # 39; Wow & # 39; moments that football spits out occasionally. Gliwice wins the Polish title with the next generation Hateley in the team and also comes in that category.
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365footballorg-blog · 6 years
Text
MLS Cup to World Cup: How Rodney Wallace landed at NYCFC | MLS Flight Path
October 25, 201812:00PM EDT
As Rodney Wallace rose in the world of soccer, he had claims to two soccer-playing nations which have emerged as keen Concacaf rivals.
Rodney Wallace’s MLS Flight Path
Costa Rica
Wallace was born in San Jose, Costa Rica, but moved with his family to the United States at age 9 — specifically, so his mother could take a job with the Organization of American States. The news of their move came just as Wallace made the youth squad at Alajuelense, one of Costa Rica’s biggest clubs.
“I was skeptical about the move,” Wallace said. “I didn’t know about the soccer culture in the United States. I just knew I had the opportunity to play for this big club, and regardless of how young you are, you know you have dreams and there are things you want to do.”
At first, Wallace found the U.S. to be a stark contrast from life in Costa Rica, where after-school pickup games were commonplace and as he put it, “You’d make two goals out of anything you could find.”
Washington, D.C.
Wallace found a club team in his new home of Rockville, Maryland, and despite not having his soccer cleats with him the first time out — he recollects, “It was pouring rain that day, and I was slipping all over the place” — he showed enough skill and knowledge of the game to impress the coaches and embark on his development. That process included U.S. Youth Soccer’s Olympic Development Program, which he notes was crucial in his evolution as a player.
Wallace playing for the University of Maryland Terrapins
Wallace then won a scholarship to play college soccer at the University of Maryland, helping the Terrapins win a national championship in his second season. “I always wanted to go there; I knew that for a fact,” he said. “I’d grown up going to those games, and watching those guys, and knew I wanted to play on that field. It was always packed, with energy, it seemed like the best college environment. It had the feel of a professional game.”
After strong NCAA campaigns in 2007 and 2008, he decided to enter the MLS SuperDraft, going through the Combine before becoming part of a class that included Omar Gonzalez, Matt Besler, Stefan Frei, Sam Cronin and Chris Pontius. Wallace was selected sixth overall by his hometown team, D.C. United, which he termed “a dream come true,” noting that, like his college team, “it was a team I grew up watching.”
Wallace was drafted sixth overall in the 2009 MLS SuperDraft
Portland
Wallace would play in D.C.’s 2009 opening match, score his first MLS goal a month later, and become a solid contributor in his first two seasons, though an injury sidelined him for much of 2010. That November, he was traded to the Portland Timbers, a club who, while a long-established brand in American soccer, were entering their inaugural MLS season.
“I had no idea what I was getting myself into, but it seemed like a good opportunity to get out and experience something else,” he recalled. Wallace had only known the D.C. area since moving from Costa Rica. Portland definitely looked different and felt different — but his gauge of the fans’ excitement led him to feel he was in a good place.
Then, in the Timbers’ MLS home debut, he scored a first-half goal that helped them notch their first league win.
“I remember the coach making a speech before the game, about how historic this night would be, and he asked us who was going to make history, who was going to score that goal, who would going to cement their name in such a special place.” Scoring a goal in that game — especially considering his parents were in the audience to witness history — made it especially special for Wallace.
2011 also marked another dream come true for Wallace: He received his first call-up to the Costa Rican national team, and became part of a legendary 2014 qualifying campaign (best remembered by Americans for the 2013 SnowClasico in Denver) that saw the Ticos advance to the World Cup for the third time in four cycles, after missing out on the prior tournament in South Africa. Wallace, unfortunately, wasn’t able to be part of the squad that made an impressive run to the quarter-finals — he tore his ACL in a 2013 playoff match, and wasn’t able to recover in time to feature in Brazil.
Wallace’s fifth and final year in Portland was nothing short of magical. The Timbers made the playoffs, went on a run that included an 11-round penalty-kick shootout to dispatch Sporting Kansas City, and after getting past their Cascadia rivals in Vancouver and conference-leading FC Dallas, they traveled to Columbus for the chance to win their first-ever MLS Cup.
Wallace celebrates winning the 2015 MLS Cup
Within seven minutes, the Timbers were up 2-0. Diego Valeri scored 27 seconds into the match; as Wallace recalls, “that gave us a bunch of energy” — which he channeled into a diving header that would, even with Columbus pulling a goal back in the 17th minute, stand as the match and MLS Cup winner.
“It was one of those moments where you feel like something special is going to happen,” Wallace said of his goal. “Once you feel what your teammates are feeling, you know you’re feeling the same thing, and looking each other in the eye, it’s contagious.”
Portugal
For Wallace, though, that momentous game would be his last in a Timbers jersey. He was eager to test the waters in Europe, and got an opportunity to move to FC Arouca, a team in Portugal’s top-tier Primeira Liga, in the midst of what would be a Europa League-qualifying season.
Though the move initially seemed like the right one for Wallace, he would find himself on a completely different path in just a couple month’s time — transferred to Brazilian team Sport Recife.
Brazil
“I wanted to take my career to a different level,” Wallace said of the move to Arouca. “When I got there, the team just didn’t stop winning, they were doing well, and they were clicking.
“You can only work as hard as you can, and support and respect the bigger picture,” he said, noting that it’s hard to join a team even midseason, let alone one that has a group of players in sync. “That’s exactly what I had to do. It was difficult for me to get on the field as much as. I wanted to, but I was very fortunate to be in that environment because it was so different.”
Wallace playing for Recife
Though he characterizes mostly sitting on the sidelines as difficult, he feels it strengthened him mentally and made him all the more eager to take the field again with Sport Recife. “There’s so much talent there,” he said of the top Brazilian league. “The atmosphere is incredible. The fans were non-stop. The quality was very high. I enjoyed my time there.”
New York
Though Wallace had opportunities to stay in Brazil, he and his family couldn’t pass up the option provided them at the start of 2017: A return to the United States and MLS, for a New York City FC team who had just completed their inaugural season. “Getting calls from [then-coach] Patrick Vieira and [director of football operations] Claudio Reyna, telling you about what direction they want the team to go, and that you’re one of those pieces,” he recalled. “It seemed like a great opportunity.”
Now that Wallace has experienced life at his new club — not to mention life in the Big Apple — he says, “it’s a privilege to play for this club, not only because you’re part of something super special … you’re representing New York, one of the best cities in the world. It’s pretty remarkable. That’s why we perform on the pitch — the responsibility is to put this club at the highest level.”
Wallace joined NYCFC in 2017
In helping to ready NYCFC for a second-straight playoff run, Wallace has also elevated his game to reach the ultimate goal that cruelly eluded him in 2014 — a trip to the World Cup as part of the Costa Rica team that again qualified for the quadrennial tournament.
“It’s amazing to represent your country,” Wallace said. “Growing up, those are your heroes playing on the national team. I was always fortunate to have passion and love for those colors, for Costa Rica. Even being in the States, I would watch those games. I had always been connected to that.
“Playing in the World Cup, I feel like it’s the ultimate level you can reach,” he added. “Not many players have the privilege to live that. I was honored by that. You look across the field, and you’re playing against Serbia, against Brazil, against Switzerland. It’s surreal.”
Though Costa Rica couldn’t repeat their 2014 run, only lasting through the group stage at Russia 2018, Wallace knows how much of an accomplishment it is to just get to the World Cup. After all, he playes alongside teammates and against MLS opponents who felt the absence of World Cup action acutely this summer — as part of the squad that bested the Americans on the field and in the Concacaf standings.
“I live in the United States, and I grew up here, but I play for Costa Rica, and I give everything I have for that national team, for my teammates there. After the qualifiers, people ask me how I feel about the U.S. not making it, and I’m just glad Costa Rica made it. All my focus and concentration was on that. It’s unfortunate that it didn’t happen for the U.S.; I have friends on the team, and I feel for them. Those relationships are important at the end of the day.”
Wallace has 29 caps for Costa Rica
“But in order for me to get to the World Cup, somebody has to get left behind. It’s a competition, and at the end, you’re either there or you’re not. It’s competitive, it’s good for Concacaf to have the quality, and it’s good for MLS to have the players that are in those national teams. There’s more success for the players, and for the league, and that’s exactly what’s happening right now. It’s a great time to be in this league.”
Wallace, who’s already written himself into the league’s lore with his two prior teams, feels there’s more history to be written with his third. “From the beginning of the year, we’ve had a championship as a goal,” he noted of he and his NYCFC teammates. “We’ve carried ourselves in that manner, on the field, every time we train, every time we play.”
And that would no doubt please the hometown fans who happen to wear both varieties of red, white and blue.
Series: 
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MLS Cup to World Cup: How Rodney Wallace landed at NYCFC | MLS Flight Path was originally published on 365 Football
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marilynngmesalo · 6 years
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France tops Uruguay 2-0 to advance to World Cup semifinals
France tops Uruguay 2-0 to advance to World Cup semifinals https://ift.tt/eA8V8J France tops Uruguay 2-0 to advance to World Cup semifinals
NIZHNY NOVGOROD, Russia — A shot that flew directly at the hands of the opposing goalkeeper turned into a World Cup goal for Antoine Griezmann.
The France striker scored the second goal in his team’s 2-0 quarterfinal victory over Uruguay on Friday, sending a seemingly easy-to-save shot at a waiting Fernando Muslera. But the ball hit the keeper on the palms, bounced off and looped over his head and into the net.
The victory gave France a spot in the World Cup semifinals. The 1998 champions will next face either Brazil or Belgium on Tuesday in St. Petersburg.
Griezmann didn’t celebrate what was his third goal of the tournament.
“I was playing against a lot of friends,” said Griezmann, who is teammates with Uruguay defenders Diego Godin and Jose Gimenez at Atletico Madrid, “so I think it was normal not to celebrate.”
Raphael Varane gave France the lead with a header in the 40th minute. Griezmann sent in a free kick from the right side and Varane raced across the area. He got his head to the ball and sent it into the far corner behind Muslera.
Griezmann scored his goal, which was similar to the one scored by Real Madrid forward Gareth Bale against Liverpool goalkeeper Loris Karius in the Champions League final, in the 61st minute.
“We all saw that it was not a very common goal, but Muslera has been a very important pillar for all this process and through all our work on our way up to here, so I’m not going to wash my hands putting any responsibility on my players,” Uruguay coach Oscar Tabarez said. “This is the kind of thing that I will discuss with the players in the locker room.”
Griezmann is a Frenchman who plays professionally in Spain, but he has a special fondness for Uruguay. He likes the traditional South American drink mate, he speaks Spanish like someone from the South American country and he’s been pictured wearing the team’s jersey.
Godin, who was playing for Uruguay on Friday, is also the godfather of Griezmann’s daughter.
“I love Uruguayan culture and I love Uruguayans, so I have a lot of respect for them,” Griezmann said.
France went on to reach the World Cup final the last two times it advanced to the semifinals. They won their only World Cup in 1998 on home soil, and in 2006 lost to Italy on penalties.
The match at Nizhny Novgorod Stadium pitted France’s speed against Uruguay’s stubborn defence and its occasional attacking threats. But with Uruguay striker Edinson Cavani injured and on the bench and Luis Suarez neutralized, it was France that scored the goals.
Suarez, who scored two goals in the group stage, didn’t get a single touch on the ball in France’s penalty area for the entire match. Cavani scored both goals in the 2-0 win over Portugal in the round of 16, but he sat on the bench with an injured left calf he picked up in that match.
Four minutes after Varane gave France the lead, Uruguay nearly equalized. France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris dived to his right and got a hand on a header from Martin Caceres, pushing it just wide of the goal.
“Our goalkeeper made a great save,” Griezmann said.
MBAPPE’S CHANCES
Although he didn’t score, 19-year-old France forward Kylian Mbappe again looked dangerous on the attack, trying to slice in from the right wing or directing quick passes into Uruguay’s defence.
Mbappe, who has modeled his game after Cristiano Ronaldo and is being compared to Zinedine Zidane, also picked up a second-half yellow card for falling to the ground as if in agony after a touch from an opponent.
Mbappe scored twice against Argentina to become the first teenager with multiple goals in a World Cup knockout game since a 17-year-old Pele in 1958.
NO LONGER UNBEATEN
Heading into the match, Uruguay had been unbeaten in 2018 and Muslera had the best save percentage of any goalkeeper at the tournament who had played more than one match. He had 11 saves and had allowed only one goal in four World Cup matches in Russia.
A country of only 3.5 million, Uruguay won World Cup titles in 1930 and 1950 and then waned. But it has undergone a revival in the last 12 years under the 71-year-old Tabarez, a former elementary school teacher.
The country was trying to reach the semifinals for the second time in the last three World Cups.
“It seems that the four games we won before this one are worth nothing, but that’s not true,” Tabarez said. “Today we played against opponents that were stronger than we were.”
//<![CDATA[ ( function() { pnLoadVideo( "videos", "EcD3qhIq3eg", "pn_video_324918", "", "", [] ); } )(); //]]> Canoe Click for update news world news https://ift.tt/2IZEyFZ world news
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Is Cheating in Soccer More Acceptable in Some Countries than Others?
In November 1952, the British author H.E. Bates penned a newspaper article affectionately describing soccer as “the most beautiful game in the world,” a phrase famously adopted by Pele for his 1977 autobiography.
While this has become almost synonymous with the sport, it was never really true, even long before Bates wrote his column. During the inaugural 1930 World Cup, some of the fouls were so brutal that games like Argentina’s 6-1 semi-final win over the US left many of the American team missing teeth or hospitalized with torn lips and stomach injuries.
But as the World Cup’s iconic stature has grown over the past 88 years, its darker side has evolved, with mass brawls and broken legs replaced by a more cerebral cunning—the cynical dives and penalty box grappling which sometimes overshadows the breathtaking skills and sublime goals.
The 2018 World Cup has already seen everything from Neymar’s outrageous slow-motion dive against Costa Rica, to French defender Lucas Hernandez’s remarkably brazen admission that he was deliberately throwing himself to the turf to try and get Aussie defender Mathew Leckie sent off.
But such moments elicit different types of reactions from fans and media around the globe depending on a range of factors from their allegiance, to the result, the team’s performance, and how the incident is perceived in that particular culture.
As a result, some of the World Cup’s darker moments can be extremely divisive.
Four years ago, Brazil striker Fred was widely criticized for diving to win a penalty during Brazil’s opening World Cup game against Croatia. French striker Loïc Rémy was particularly incensed when watching the incident, calling for Fred to be “punished.”
However, following Hernandez’s cheeky confession about his antics against Australia, there has been no apology from the French camp and little criticism in the French media, save for a light-hearted video from Le Figaro. Instead, the backlash came from the US—with USA Today dubbing Hernandez, the “World Cup’s most blatant cheater”—and legions of outraged Australian fans who bombarded the French player’s social media accounts with abuse.
Hernandez’s cheating admission provoked a particular outcry in Australia, a country which prides itself on the traditional values of sportsmanlike conduct. For Australians, it’s embedded deeply into the national psyche that it’s not only important to compete hard but compete fairly. “It’s because Australian sport prides itself on the gladiatorial aspect,” Huw Bonello, a journalist for Daily Telegraph Australia, told VICE Sports via email. “No matter what the odds are against you, you play hard but always fair. That’s how you are respected.”
With France winning that game 2-1, the French response (or lack of) was yet another example of how many nations are willing to condemn cheating when they are the victims, but look the other way when their own players are the perpetrators.
“First and foremost, every country supports their own and people love to win,” Sao Paulo based sociologist Jeffrey Lesser told VICE Sports in a phone call. “So when the national team wins, their journalists and supporters are typically willing to forgive certain behaviors far more than when the team loses.”
However, in some countries such high profile gamesmanship can lead to a backlash from the team’s own supporters, especially if they’re not living up to expectations.
While Neymar is Brazil’s talisman, his constant diving has seen him become the subject of widespread mockery, even from his own fans. Some pundits believe Neymar’s antics have been magnified by Brazil’s slow start in the World Cup. “We fans…always expect Brazil to play well and to play beautiful, technical football because those are Brazil’s trademarks,” legendary Brazilian striker Marta wrote in the Guardian.
For Asian teams, such as Japan and South Korea, a certain degree of play-acting is tolerated, but if a player’s diving became a high-profile topic because it changed the course of a match, the public and media would turn on him as it would be viewed as tarnishing the country’s reputation.
“South Koreans are even more outraged than most at any perceived cheating against them,” Korean soccer expert Steve Price told VICE Sports in a Facebook message. “However, things like a Korean player diving to gain an advantage are still accepted by the Korean public. The K League was one of the first to adopt VAR but it hasn’t stopped the diving and bothering the referee, just like every other league in the world. However something more major would probably draw a backlash from the Korean public as it would bring shame on Korea.”
But while diving is relatively ubiquitous, it’s some of the World Cup’s most controversial moments of all which have particularly divided opinions on what’s deemed acceptable on a football field, and what isn’t.
In the dying seconds of Uruguay’s quarter-final clash with Ghana at the 2010 World Cup, Luis Suarez kept his country in the World Cup by deliberately handling Dominic Adiyiah’s goal-bound header off the line. Suarez was immediately red carded with Ghana awarded a penalty to try and seal the match. But amid scenes of almost unbelievable tension, star striker Asamoah Gyan could only hit the crossbar, and Uruguay eventually went on to win in a penalty shootout.
Suarez was subsequently vilified across the world—both for his actions and his jubilant touchline celebrations after Gyan’s miss. One Journalist wondered “Why can’t football tackle cheats?” While some called for FIFA to hand Suarez an extended ban.
However to this day, Uruguayan fans and journalists view Suarez’s actions in a very different light. They regard his behavior as heroic, rather than cheating.
“We see it in a very different way,” Luis Roux, a journalist for Uruguayan newspaper El Observador, told VICE Sports via email. “Our belief is that Suarez’s intention was not cheating—like Maradona’s handball for example—but avoiding defeat. And we also see Suarez’s celebrations after Gyan missed the penalty, in a different way. Other countries, like the British, think that Suarez should have been ashamed instead of expressing his joy. Uruguayans disagree, we think it was right that he was proud of his sacrifice for the team. Ghana should have won the game, but they missed the penalty. We do not see that as our fault.”
Because of this perception, and a number of high profile incidents involving Latin American players—from Suarez to the aforementioned Hand of God in 1986 to Rivaldo’s infamous playacting to get Turkey’s Hakan Ünsal sent off in 2002—a stereotype has emerged that Latin American players are more likely to turn to underhanded tactics in crucial World Cup matches.
But is this really true? Some Latin American pundits believe so, ascribing it partly to the conditions in which players like Suarez, Maradona, and Neymar grew up in.
“You have to realize that all these kids grow up in the barrios, the poor neighborhoods,” Chilean soccer commentator Luis Tapia, who works for TV station Univision, told VICE Sports in a phone call. “A lot of them don’t even finish primary school. In Europe, many of the star players have grown up in youth academies with beautiful pitches, freshly cut grass, painted lines, readily available water, places where they feel comfortable. In Latin America, the equivalent players start playing soccer without shoes, in stones and dirt. So here, it’s the game of the ‘hood. It’s about survival. These players grow up trying to provide for their families, so they learn to do whatever it takes to make sure that you don’t lose. Other people may take it as unfair play, but it’s part of the game.”
Tapia and others point to linguistic evidence of this mentality. In Argentina and Uruguay, there’s an expression called viveza criolla, which translates as “native cunning” and refers to a culture of trying to get a psychological edge over the opposition wherever and whenever possible.
“The Spanish-speaking countries also talk about picardía, which means to be crafty, to play with your senses, use your cunning to do things the referee doesn’t see,” Diego Pena, a Mexican radio commentator for Univision, told VICE Sports in a phone call.
But not everyone agrees with this. After all, the World Cup is littered with incidents of cynical behavior from European players—in the 1990 World Cup final Rudi Voller dived to win West Germany a decisive penalty against Argentina, while a study of gamesmanship at the 2010 World Cup found Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo to be among the worst offenders.
From a sociological perspective, Lesser believes that neither culture nor the legacy of an impoverished upbringing are likely to be factors in a player trying to bend the rules. He points to Belgian striker Romelu Lukaku who grew up in abject poverty and yet was commended for his sportsmanship against Tunisia in the group stages.
“This generation of soccer players are very internationalized,” he told VICE Sports. “A lot of the big Latin American stars play for European clubs. So this makes me doubt that it’s something in Latin American culture which makes a player turn to gamesmanship.”
Instead, Lesser suspects that the real answer is linked to the sheer amount of attention devoted to the World Cup across the globe.
“The players we tend to think of first when it comes to gamesmanship are the likes of Ronaldo, Neymar, the highest paid players in the world,” he says. “So maybe it’s not an accident that it’s these players who are constantly under intense scrutiny regarding everything they do, who feel like they’re being targeted by everybody. That’s tough and that probably leads to behaviors that aren’t always under control.”
Is Cheating in Soccer More Acceptable in Some Countries than Others? syndicated from https://australiahoverboards.wordpress.com
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hsews · 6 years
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Tom MarshallESPN FC
The Angel de Independencia in Mexico City overflowed with green-clad fans; TV crews set up in players’ homes to capture the reaction of family members and the party went on long into the night.
It was Oct. 2, 2005 and Mexico had won the Under-17 World Cup. “Los Ninos Heroes” (“The Heroic Children”) had just overcome none other than Brazil 3-0 in the final in Lima, and in Mexico the celebrations erupted as if El Tri had won the real thing. Mexico had never won a World Cup at any age category, and for one of soccer’s sleeping giants, it felt like a coming of age.
“It was a watershed moment for Mexican football,” said the team’s coach, “Chucho” Ramirez. “Even today I still get people congratulating me.”
Leading that team was Carlos Vela, with his cultured left foot, vision, explosiveness and sheer brilliance. A year younger than the rest of the squad, Vela was the tournament’s top scorer with five goals. He dazzled.
“As soon as he touched the ball, his ability, quality, speed and technique hit you,” Ramirez said, remembering the first time he saw Vela play. “I said immediately that this kid had something very different from the rest of the team.”
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In the 3-0 final win, Vela opened the scoring in the 31st minute with a low diving header from a Giovani dos Santos cross. Just 66 seconds later, Mexico had the ball in the back of the net once again and Vela played a crucial part. The 16-year-old had won the ball back straight from the kick-off, moved towards two Brazilian players, enticing them into the tackle before jinking back and passing square. It wasn’t a move that was played on repeat, but it opened up the pitch for Mexico and Omar Esparza went on to score.
The passage of play had all the hallmarks of the kind of fluid movement and flair associated with 1970s Brazil, and it encapsulated the subtle genius that is Vela playing soccer. Moments like that entranced Mexico and lulled fans into believing that El Tri‘s time had come, with Vela destined to become their first world superstar since Hugo Sanchez.
“[Vela] liked to almost make fun of opponents and sometimes he’d take them all on and score,” said Luis Manuel Diaz, who coached Vela at Chivas in a youth side that also included Javier Hernandez. Vela played under Diaz on the left wing with Hernandez on the right, although there was no doubt that Vela was the standout talent.
That World Cup win reluctantly turned the smiley teenager — one of his nicknames is “the hyena” — into a celebrity in Mexico. There was no turning back for Vela or others like Dos Santos and Efrain Juarez.
“I had the opportunity to leave the country very quickly — I was in Barcelona for two years — and for me it opened the panorama to understand that we’d achieved something very important for Mexico, not for the world,” recounted Juarez, who currently plays for Vancouver Whitecaps.
“You’d won something important at youth level but nothing at the full international level.”
Almost 13 years on from the festivities, trying to make a concrete kind of judgement on Vela’s career offers contradictions.
On one side, Vela’s decision to reject a call-up for the Olympics in 2012 and the World Cup in 2014, without ever fully explaining why, clouds public opinion. On the other, Vela became one of the best forwards in Spain, and rather than coming to Major League Soccer this season as a “retirement” move, he’s shown why LAFC invested so heavily in him and made him the franchise’s first-ever player.
But here’s the thing that Mexico fans should agree on. Whatever people think of Vela’s past, the 29-year-old can still be Mexico’s game-changer at Russia 2018 and he remains El Tri‘s most talented forward, despite the dizzying rise of Hirving Lozano and Hernandez’s achievements in Europe. Just like in 2005, he’s still a player that seduces, the kind of artist on the ball that makes you want to believe. We saw that in Mexico’s famous 1-0 win over Germany, in which Vela wasn’t overshadowed or overawed by Mesut Ozil, Thomas Muller or Julian Draxler.
Carlos Vela showed against Germany that he’s still one of Mexico’s best options. Ian MacNicol/Getty Images
Just don’t expect Vela to be overly concerned about any of the debate that has hung around him for years. The extraordinary thing about Vela may well be that he’s an ordinary person trapped in the goldfish bowl of world soccer.
“I think that what I don’t like is everything that surrounds a footballer,” Vela said in a 2014 interview with Canal+. “The fame, the people idolizing you, the press, not being able to have a normal life like normal person.
“I think that is what has held me back a little in football.”
After that 2005 World Cup, a normal life was always going to be difficult, and that became even clearer when Arsene Wenger’s Arsenal signed him from Chivas in November of the same year. Having previously played with youngsters of his age and without a debut in Mexico’s top division, Vela was suddenly thrust into a whole new world, left to survive in London and hold his own in training sessions with elite players like Thierry Henry, Dennis Bergkamp and Robin van Persie.
Like Mexico teammate Hernandez, Vela comes from a soccer family. His father played for Pioneros FC in Cancun, his older brother Alejandro is at the tail end of a career that has seen him float between Mexico’s first and second division and his other brother Enrique was, until recently, the head coach of Pioneros. But while Mexico’s now-record scorer Hernandez had already made an impact for Chivas by the time he signed from Manchester United in 2010 and could speak English, Vela had none of that experience when he moved to England.
The Vela family hail from the Caribbean beach town of Cancun, a very different place when Vela was growing up than today’s super resort, and almost a different country from the big cities of Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey. Vela’s happy-go-lucky and laid-back personality perhaps reflects his place of origin.
“They are a normal, middle-class working family,” explained Ramirez. “I know his parents and I can tell you that they are very good people who gave Carlos a very good education at home because you immediately see that.”
From an early age, Vela’s personality and outlook on life shone through. There’s an interview with a local station just after he arrived Celta Vigo, where he was loaned from Arsenal in February 2006 due to work-permit issues. The politeness and dry wit were evident even at age 17, as were his ideals when it came to the professional game and its relationship with happiness.
“My family has taught me to keep my feet on the ground and be humble,” Vela says when asked about dealing with all the fan letters he was receiving. “You can have all the fame and all the money, but the important thing is the person. All the rest can help, but it isn’t important.”
It’s not too far removed from his statements over 10 years later, in January after signing for LAFC from Real Sociedad, a move that was widely lampooned in Mexico.
“In Mexico, everything is criticized,” Vela said then. “If you stay, if you don’t play, if you are bad, because you could go to a better team, there is always criticism and if you come here [to MLS] they criticize as well.
“In the end, the important thing is that you decide where you will be happy and where you can do well, to show that as well as being footballers, we are people.”
At Arsenal, Wenger picked up early on the Mexican needing more determination to get to the very top.
“He is naturally gifted, quick, intelligent and with very good technique, so you now want him to add that combative, determined side that makes the difference,” was Wenger’s take in 2008. “He’ll quickly be a world-class striker when he adds that to his game.”
The debate around whether Vela ever reached his peak is common in Mexico. He certainly found a home at Real Sociedad, after moving initially on loan from Arsenal in 2011, and achieved a status few Mexicans ever have in Spain.
The coastal Basque town of San Sebastian provided a safe haven for Vela, a place he settled after bouncing around from Arsenal on loan to Salamanca, Osasuna and West Brom. For the first time in his career, Vela made a consistent impact, scoring 12 goals in his first season in La Liga, 14 in his second and 20 in 2013-14, a feat that saw La Real qualify for the Champions League and him named as a candidate for best forward in La Liga alongside Cristiano Ronaldo and Diego Costa. (Yes, Vela was chosen ahead of Barcelona’s Lionel Messi.)
Vela was happy off the field and it was showing on it, as he became La Real‘s player of the year in 2012 and 2013.
“He’d walk through San Sebastian and drink coffee in front of the beach. He was a normal guy and we like that a lot here,” said San Sebastian journalist Oscar Badallo Gomez, who wrote “Los extranjeros de mi Real” (“Foreigners at my Real Sociedad”) and included Vela on the front cover. “Sometimes the stars don’t go out or only go to expensive restaurants, but Vela would go to expensive ones, cheap ones and would walk around the city like anyone else.
“On top of that, with his game, his goals, his passes and his crosses, we’ve had some very good years.”
After more than a few unsuccessful stops, Carlos Vela flourished with Real Sociedad. David Ramos/Getty Images
Real Sociedad has been a springboard to bigger clubs for many players down the years, and while Vela’s teammate and friend Antoine Griezmann moved to Atletico Madrid in the summer of 2014 off the back of historic success in San Sebastian, Vela was seemingly content to remain.
“The two of them were very good friends. They watched NBA together, went about San Sebastian to the theater, to dine, to clubs,” said Badallo Gomez. “But then you’d speak to Griezmann and he’d be looking for offers from big clubs to go there. Not for more money, but to win titles.
“I don’t think that money moves Griezmann, nor Vela,” he continued. “Vela could’ve earned more money in a different club, but he used to say he didn’t want to go to other teams because he was happy here and that was most important.”
But as Vela was establishing himself and fulfilling that potential in Europe, his national team career and relationship with Mexico was messy. Vela and Efrain Juarez were slapped with six-month bans from the Mexican federation following a party in a Monterrey hotel in September 2010, while more experienced players like Rafa Marquez, Carlos Salcido, Gerardo Torrado and others were only fined. In the game against Colombia earlier the same evening, Vela had reportedly ignored instructions from interim coach Efrain Flores.
After that episode, former Mexico goalkeeper Antonio Carbajal said Vela could “go to hell.” Former striker Carlos Hermosillo added that the forward had “no discipline,” and Alberto Garcia Aspe opined that Vela “needs psychological help.”
It was noticeable that one former player who didn’t pile on was Vela’s idol Hugo Sanchez, who has stuck up for Vela on more than one occasion down the years.
The last time Vela featured for Mexico before his temporary international retirement was in March 2011. At the time he was still trying to establish himself at Arsenal. Vela came all the way over from Europe to play 58 minutes in games against Venezuela and Paraguay, but when calls came for the Olympics in 2012 and Brazil 2014 and with Vela flying in from La Liga, the player simply said no.
“When you don’t betray yourself, you are guaranteed personal success,” Vela explained in a letter ahead of the last World Cup. “I’ll never betray myself or the people that believe in me.”
Vela returned to the national team in November 2014 with a statement performance. He netted two goals in Mexico’s 3-2 victory over the Netherlands, who had controversially knocked El Tri out of the World Cup just months previously, a stark reminder of what Mexico had missed. Now at Russia 2018, Mexico fans must be hoping that deep down inside Vela, there is a real longing to make a significant impact in Russia. The signs are tentatively positive after that performance against Germany.
Vela recently became a father, has seven goals in his first 12 games in MLS and has radiated a sense of maturity of late.
“It’s an accumulation of things,” Vela said of his form in a May 26 news conference. “When you are young you believe that you can do everything and you are invincible.
“Sometimes we take incorrect decisions, and from those you learn. … Having a family has helped me a lot. I focus better and it’s important for me that they support me and make me a better person.”
Is this Vela’s moment? It will certainly be his last (and only) World Cup in his prime. But whatever the doubters say, he’s still very much a player capable of leading Mexico to success, just like in those heady days of 2005.
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tasksweekly · 7 years
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[TASK 034: INDONESIA]
Shout out to anon for inspiring this task! There’s a masterlist below compiled of over 170+ Indonesian faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever character or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite Indonesian faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by a Indonesian artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on Indonesian culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
Note: If you’re using this masterlist for casting purposes please do further research before casting any of the following.
Ladies:
Nh. Dini (81) Javanese - novelist.
Nani Widjaja (73) Indonesian - actress
Yatti Octavia (62) Indonesian - actress.
Christine Hakim (60) Padang, Aceh, Banten, Pekalongan, Madiun, Middle East - actress.
Lydia Kandou (54) Manado, Dutch - actress.
Nia Daniati (52) Indonesian - singer & actress.
Meriam Bellina (51) Sundanese, Sundanese - actress.
Vicky Burky (51) Dutch-Javanese - actress & aerobic instructor.
Paramitha Rusady (50) Indonesian - singer, actress & presenter.
Donna Harun (49) Dutch-Indonesian - actress.
Ayu Azhari (47) Indonesian - actress & author.
Ria Irawan (47) Indonesian - singer & actress.
Kiki Fatmala (47) Sundanese / Pakistani - actress.
Diah Permatasari (46) Indonesian - actress & model.
Unique Priscilla (46) Indonesian - model & actress.
Nia Zulkarnaen (46) Indonesian - singer & actress.
Sophia Latjuba (46) Bugis-Javanese / German-Austrian - actress & singer.
Devi Permatasari (43) Indonesian - actress, presenter & model.
Desy Ratnasari (43) Indonesian - actress.
Anggun (42) Indonesian, Javanese - singer & songwriter.
Carmit Bachar (42) Israeli Jewish / Dutch, Indonesian, Chinese - singer, dancer & actress.
Tamara Bleszynski (42) Polish, Sunda - actress, singer, and model.
Helsi Herlinda (42) Indonesian - actress & model.
Nadya Hutagalung (42) Indonesian, Batak / Australian - model, actess & VJ.
Maia Estianty (41)  Indonesian - songwriter, music producer, singer, dancer & actress.
Krisdayanti (41) Indonesian - actress & singer.
Tuwuh Adijatitesih Amaranggana (41) Indonesian - actress, model & singer.
Andi Soraya (40) Indonesian - actress.
Sarah Azhari (39) Indonesian - model, singer & actress.
Cut Tari (39) Aceh-West Sumatera - actress & model.
Kinaryosih (38) Indonesian - actress & model.
Marsha Timothy (38) Indonesian - actress.
Rossa (38) Indonesian (Javanese) - singer.
Vonny Cornellya (37) Indonesian - actress.
Olla Ramlan (37)  Indonesian - presenter, model, TV personality & socialite.
Happy Salma (37) Indonesian - actress, model & writer.
Nafa Urbach (36) Ashkenazi Jew of Dutch-German descent / Javanese - actress & singer.
Titi Rajo Bintang (36) Indonesian - actress & musician.
Pinkan Mambo (36) Indonesian - singer.
Soimah Pancawati (36) Indonesian - comedian, singer, pesindhèn & presenter.
Julia Perez (36) Indonesian - actress, dangdut singer, model & announcer.
Dewi Sandra (36) British / Betawi - singer, dancer, actress & model.
Tracy Trinita (36) Chinese, Brazil, Kalimantan, Minahasa - model.
Nirina Zubir (36) Indonesian - actress.
Mona Ratuliu (35) Indonesian - actress & presenter.
Atiqah Hasiholan (35) Yemeni, Batak - actress.
Ladya Cheryl (35) Indonesian - actress.
Titi Kamal (35) Malay - actress & singer.
Dewi Driegen (34) Dutch, 1/4 Indonesian - model.
Dian Sastrowardoyo (34) Indonesian - model.
Renata Kusmanto (34) Indonesian - model & actress.
Imelda Therinne (34) Minangkabau - actress & model.
Cathy Sharon (34) French, Manado, Chinese - actress.
Syahrini (34) Indonesian - TV personality & socialite.
Michelle Branch (33) Irish / Indonesian, Dutch, French - singer & actress.
Tania Gunadi (33) Indonesian - actress.
Masayu Anastasia (33) Indonesian - actress & model.
Mariana Renata (33) French father of Jewish descent / Indonesian mother of Javanese-Chinese-Italian descent - actress.
Rianti Cartwright (33) British / Sundanese - actress, model & VJ.
Luna Maya (33) of Indonesian and Austrian descent - actress & singer.
Sandra Dewi (33) Chinese, Japanese, Hakka, Sundanese - actress & model.
Sharena Gunawa (33) Indonesian - actress & model.
Audy Item (33)  Indonesian - singer.
Fahrani Van Empel (32) Indonesian - model & actress.
Carissa Putri (32) of Malay-Indonesian-German-Dutch descent - actress & model.
Baby Margaretha (32) Indonesian - model & actress.
Prisia Nasution (32) Indonesian - martial artist, model & actress.
Nadine Chandrawinata (32) Javanese, Chinese / German - model.
Dewi Persik (31) Indonesian, Chinese - singer.
Nabila Syakieb (31) Indonesian - actress.
Andini Aisyah Hariadi (31) Indonesian - jazz singer.
Angel Karamoy (30) Indonesian - actress.
Agnez Mo (30) Chinese-Indonesian - singer, songwriter, and actress.
Laura Basuki (29) Indonesian-Vietnamese - actress.
Agni Pratistha (29) Indonesian - actress & beauty queen.
Aura Kasih (29) Indonesian - singer.
Shandy Aulia (29) Indonesian, Malay - actress.
Herfiza Novianti (29) Indonesian - actress & model.  
Zaskia Adya Mecca (29) of Sunda-Aceh-German descent - actress & presenter.
Candice Swanepoel (28) Afrikaner (Belgian [both Flemish and Walloon], Dutch, French, German), with distant African (Angolan and Ethiopian), English, Indian, Indonesian, and Norwegian - supermodel.
Julie Estelle (28) French-American / Chinese-Indonesian - actress & model.
Sekar Sari (28) Indonesian - actress.
Laudya Cynthia Bella (29) Sundanese - pop singer & actress.
Asmirandah Zantman (27) Dutch / Sunda-Betawi - actress & singer.
Acha Septriasa (27) Indonesian - actress & singer.
Gracia Indri (27) Indonesian - actress, singer, model & presenter.
Whulandary Herman (27) Minangkabau - host, model & beauty pageant titleholder.
Jessica Mauboy (27) Indonesian, Australian Aboriginal - singer, songwriter & actress.
Danilla Riyadi (27) Indonesian - singers.
Sherina Munaf (26) Indonesian - singer & actress.
Dewi Rezer (26) Betawi / French -  actress, presenter & model.
Patricia Gunawan (26) Indonesian - model & presenter.
Maria Selena (26) Indonesian - beauty pageant titleholder.
Zaskia Sungkar (26) Indonesian, Yumeni - actress, singer & fashion designer.
Alyssa Soebandono (25) Indonesian - actress & singer.
Manohara Odelia Pinot (25) Caucasian, Indonesian Bugis - model.
Boy William (25) Indonesian - actor & VJ.
Kezia Warouw (25)  Indonesian - model & beauty pageant titleholder.
Ayu Gani (25) Indonesian, Chinese - model.
Fildha Elishandi (25) Indonesian - actress.
Ratna Kharisma Adzana (24) Indonesian - actress.
Manda Cello (24) Indonesian - actress, singer & model.
Ayu Ting Ting (24) Indonesian - dangdut singer.
Pevita Eileen Pearce (24) Indonesian / Welsh - actress & singer.
Jessica Mila (24) Javanese / Dutch-Manado - actress & model.
Cinta Laura (23) German / Indonesian - singer & model.
Angela Nazar (23) Indonesian - singer, actress & model.
Sheryl Gething, (23) Australian / Indonesian - singer & actress.
Maudy Ayunda (22) Indonesian - actress & singer.
Chintya Fabyola (22) Indonesian - beauty pageant titleholder.
Mikha Tambayong (22)  Indonesian - actress, model & musician.
Alexa Key (22) Indonesian, German - actress.
Rachel Amanda (22) Indonesian - actress & singer.
Chelsea Islan (21) Indonesian / American - actress.
Yuki Kato (21) Japanese /  Indonesian - actress.
Anggika Bolsterli (21) Indonesian / Swiss = actress/
Lulu Antariksa (21) Indonesian / German - actress & singer.
Dinda Kirana (21) Indonesian - actress & singer.
Prilly Latuconsina (20) Muslim Moluccan, native of Pelauw in Haruku Island of Maluku Province / Sundanese - actress.
Dinda Hauw (20) Indonesian - actress.
Elvira Natali (20) Indonesian - author, singer & actress.
Brianne Tju (18) Chinese, Indonesian - actress.
Natasha Wilona (18) Indonesian - actress.
Haley Tju (16) Chinese, Indonesian - actress.
Helene Jansen (?) Dutch / Indonesian - model.
Darell Ferhostan (?) Dutch / Indonesian - model.
Advina Ratnaningsih (?) Dutch / Indonesian - model.
Marini (?) Indonesian / Dutch - singer and actress.
Male:
Remy Sylado (71) Indonesian - author, actor & musician.
Eddie Van Halen (62) Dutch, Indonesian (Javanese), 1/16th Italian - musician, songwriter & producer.
Deddy Mizwar (62)  Indonesian / Betawi - actor.
Barry Prima (61) Dutch / Indonesian - actor & martial artist.
Opie Kumis (56) Indonesian - actor & comedian.
Sitok Srengenge (51) Indonesian - poet, actor & dramatist.
Pierre Coffin (49) French / Indonesian (Javanese) - animator, film director & voice actor.
Marcus Schenkenberg (48) Dutch, possibly 1/4 Indonesian - model.
Yayan Ruhian (48) Indonesian - martial artist & film actor.
Armand Van Helden (47) Dutch, Indonesian, French, Lebanese - DJ.
Lukman Sardi (45) Indonesian - actor.
Tora Sudiro (43) Indonesian - actor & comedian.
Bucek Depp (43) Betawi of Arab descent / Dutch - model & actor.
Winky Wiryawan (43) Indonesia - actor.
Mark-Paul Gosselaar (43) Dutch Jewish, German, Dutch, Indonesian - actor.
Andre Taulany (42) Indonesian - actor, comedian and singer.
Marcellino Lefrandt (42) Indonesian, American - actor & lecturer.
Frans Mohede (41) Dutch Moluccan, Sangirese - singer, actor & Muay-thai instructor.
Surya Saputra (41) Indonesian - actor, singer, and model.
Leonardo Ringo (39) Indonesian - radio announcer, songwriter, singer & music video director.
Reuben Elishama (38) Indonesian - actor & singer.
Donny Alamsyah (38) Indonesia - actor.
Alex Abbad (38) Indonesian, Yemeni - actor & presenter.
Christian Sugiono (36) Indonesian, German - actor & tech entrepreneur.
Aming Sugandhi (36) Indonesian - comedian.
Joe Taslim (35) Indonesian, Chinese - actor, model & martial artist.
Mike Lewis (35) Indonesian - actor & model.
Oka Antara (35) Balinese - rapper.
Vino Bastian (34) Indonesian - actor & model.
Ras Muhamad (34) Indonesian - reggae singer.
Iko Uwais (34) Betawi - actor, stuntman, fight choreographer, and martial artist.
Nicholas Saputra (33) German / Indonesian - actor, model & television personality.
Zack Lee (32) half Indonesian and British / Indonesian father of Javanese and Chinese - actor, model & boxer.
Irwansyah (32) Indonesian - actor & singer.
Chico Jericho (32) Thai / Batak - actor.
Darius Sinathrya (31) Indonesian, German - model & actor.
Raffi Ahmad (30) Indonesian - presenter, actor & singer.
Rio Dewanto (29) Indonesian - actor & model.
Ajun Perwira (29)  Indonesian -actor, presenter & musician.
Arifin Putra (29) Indonesian, German - actor.
Muhammad Tulus (29)  Indonesian, Malay - singer.
Jonas Rivanno (29) Indonesian, German, Dutch - actor & singer.
Ross Butler (26) British Dutch /  Indonesian - actor.
Billy Syahputra (26) Indonesian - actor, presenter & comedian.
Deva Mahenra (26) Indonesian - actor & model.
Wolfgang Van Halen (25) Dutch, Italian, English, Indonesian (Javanese), distant Irish - musician.
Ahmad Al Ghazali (19) Indonesian - DJ & singer.
Rizky Febian (19) Indonesian - singer, songwriter, actor and TV presenter.
Alex Van Halen (?) Dutch, Indonesian (Javanese), 1/16th Italian - musician & songwriter.
Caca Handika (?) Indonesian - dangdut singer.
Trans:
Dorce Gamalama (53) Indonesian.
-C
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readtheking · 6 years
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Nearly the whole world dreams to reach the stage, but  it all resumes to just 32; that's the number of teams that qualify for the FIFA World Cup every 4 years. On a planet as crowded as ours you'd hesitate to label something as a global event if it only reached 32 out of nearly 200 countries, yet I am of the opinion that it is. It would be sacrilegious not to consider it as such. I am not from Argentina. I am originally from Haiti. Our national team hasn't qualified for a World cup since 1974. At the age of 26 I have never had the joy of seeing them compete for the title of best in the world on such a big stage. That did not stop me from enjoying every single world cup since 1998. I still remember hearing pins drop after every header from Zinedine Zidane in that final. (Most of Haiti supports Brazil in the World Cup) The final game of the tournament is the most watched sporting event on the planet, with over 1 billion people having tuned in, in 2014. Everyone from everywhere, casual and ultra fans alike come together to enjoy what has become a global sentiment. It has stopped being just an event for decades. It's a party, It's patriotism, It's a celebration of humanity and its cultures. It's bragging rights or the right to put up with online bullying for the next 4 years. Ask a Brazilian soccer fan what the last few years have been like for them if you don't believe me. The number 7 probably triggers anxiety in most brazilians today after their 7-1 loss to Germany in front of their home fans. Those of us without a dog in the fight pledge our allegiances to other flags, whether it is because of friendship with their people, our love for their athletes, or their odds of actually winning the whole thing, no one wants to be left out, and I'm no different. My love for the Spanish language has always drawn me to South American cultures. And my love for classy, mesmerizing football has always drawn me closer to Argentina. At least that is the kind of football that they used to play. Most of my compatriots may love the samba boys, but I rather scream on top of my lungs con los pibes after every goal. Argentina by default has always been considered one of the top dogs of the competition, though that's more because of history rather than recent performances. Expectations have never been so low of the albicelestes. But after losing 2 Copa America Finals to Chile, and a World Cup Final to Germany, we can't really blame anyone for losing confidence in the team. Yes, we, since I become Argentine every world cup year. I will be drinking fernet and crashing afternoon asadas this summer, but I also intend to document every game, every goal, and every emotion the albicelestes make us experience. And if it comes down to crying, we'll do it again together and hope to do better in 4 more years, because that's what the world cup is about. It's about coming together for a celebration; an unforgettable party of love, of joy, of tears, of numerous contradicting emotions; and when it's all over, we impatiently cross days off of our calendars until the next one comes around.
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adanservin49-blog · 6 years
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iyarpage · 6 years
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12 Ways to Design the Perfect Site Navigation
Header navigation menus can often be overlooked when it comes to inventive and creative web design. But as the primary way users explore and interact with your website, investing in engaging header navigation means site visitors spend more time on your site and end up seeing much more than just your landing page. There’s no point having brilliant web design on your inner pages if your header doesn’t make it easy (and fun) to click through to it.
So we’ve put together a roundup of websites which have made the most of their navigation menus with beautiful, sleek, and innovative design. Take a look below and get inspired!
1. Sistrix
Sistrix is the German company behind popular SEO software package Sistrix Toolbox. As such, their website (including their popular SEO news blog) gets regular traffic from digital experts. When that’s your target market, there isn’t much room for sloppiness when it comes to web design.
Keeping things sleek and stylish, the Sistrix navigation menu is comprised of four simple drop down menus: Toolbox, Blog, Resources and Support. Hovering over each header reveals a list of relevant links, each represented by a simple icon. This is a particularly smart idea when your website has as many pages as Sistrix’s has.
Just showing a block of text can be overwhelming when trying to navigate through a big website, but these well-designed icons quickly direct the visitor to where they need to go. Looking for help with mobile SEO? A simple smartphone icon draws the eye and gets you there much quicker. Streamlining the user experience for site visitors is one of the main functions of a good navigation header, and this is something the Sistrix site nails.
2. Supple
One of the key services offered by Australian digital marketing company Supple is their web design makeovers. This means that having a good navigation menu on their own is as much about demonstrating their design prowess as it is about helping visitors navigate their services. One of the key things that helps Supple’s header navigation stand out is the simple, yet eye-catching, use of animation and colour.
For example, their phone number is represented with a colourful animation that cycles between orange and black text. Beyond simply helping site visitors know what number to dial to get in touch, it adds a dynamic flair to the navigation menu.
Other eye-catching uses of animation is the hover effect on the navigation menu to expand the text like what >> what we do, how >> how we do it, etc. It’s small touches like this which make navigating the site fun, meaning visitors are likely to spend more time browsing through multiple pages.
3. Reiss 
When you’re a fashion brand, it’s smart to show off your latest designs as much as possible. While many drop-down navigation menus are purely text-based, UK fashion brand Reiss highlights their New Arrivals catalogue using images in the drop-downs for womenswear and menswear, two of their core product categories. It helps that they’ve invested in high-quality photography—with pictures that look this great, why not incorporate them as a key part of the navigation experience?
4. Vibrains
Vibrains is a portfolio for Emiliano Borzelli, a front end developer. When it comes to the site, it’s truly out of this world. Picking a clear design motif like ‘space’ gives a cohesive look to the whole site. Everything from the logo design to the key info icons utilise space imagery. A simply animated banner makes browsing the site feel like floating in outer space, but the absolute standout design feature is a fully animated animation of the solar system when you jump into the process section. 
With to-scale representations of our neighboring planets, it evokes the childlike fascination people have with space to keep visitors engaged with navigating through the site. If you’re as obsessed with this animation as we are, you’ll be glad to hear we tracked down the open source code for it on CodePen here!
5. Weecom 
Brazil-based digital agency Weecom utilise a hamburger-menu button to keep their homepage looking sleek and minimalist, with navigation options only popping up as you hover over the icon. It’s a pretty standard approach to navigation headers, but what we love about Weecom’s site is how scrolling down the page causes the hamburger icon to switch from top-left to bottom-right. It’s a simple, dynamic touch that proves how important it is to use navigation menus that work around the main content of the page.
6. Mashable
When you’re a content nexus like Mashable, it can be a tall order displaying all your content in a conventional navigation menu. Headings, subheadings, sub-subheadings—making sure you have clarity is key to providing a good user experience for your site visitors.
That’s where their mega-menu comes in. Once you hover over the ‘More’ tab a drop-down menu spanning the entire length of your screen becomes visible. This provides the space to include a series of columns—like ‘Channels’ or ‘Company’—under which your list of subheadings can be displayed. If you’re designing a site that’s hosting a lot of content, considering a mega-menu like this one is a strategic way to handle navigation.
7. Oars
Another example of a mega-menu, travel service Oars uses a clear navigation layout to help you find what you want. For example, hovering over Destinations showcases a mega-menu divided up into Oars’ local United States destinations, International destinations, National Parks and Rivers.
Another great addition to the mega-menu design is the use of images under Your Experience, Stories+Video and Plan+Reserve headers. Making the most of the space they have, these eye-catching image panels engage site visitors and encourage click-through.
8. Paper Collective
Specializing in stunning art prints for the home or office, it’s clear Paper Collective has an eye for good design. Accordingly, they’ve made clever use of a slide-out sidebar menu—meaning that navigating their site never obscures their homepage product images, but shifts them slightly to the right instead.
9. Olympics
Maybe we’re design nerds, but one of our favourite parts about the Olympic Games is seeing the logo designs each host city comes up with. Completely individual to the culture and design sensibilities of the time, they’re a great way to look back on past Games. 
This is something the navigation menu design for the IOC homepage seems mindful of—as you hover over the main ‘Olympic Games’ header each Olympic Games is represented alongside its specific logo. Laid out in a simple, streamlined way that makes navigation by chronology easy, this site sets a gold-standard for good menu design.
10. Next Stop
Next is a UK brand that sells everything from clothes to shoes, to flower arrangements, to furniture. As such, their navigation menu has to do a lot of heavy-lifting to display their comprehensive catalogue of products. One of the techniques they use is accordion tabs—when you hover over their Home & Furniture header you’ll see a sub-menu of tabs you can click through to see links for bedroom furniture, kitchen fittings and more! If your company has a wide range of products online, this method of dividing up headings, subheadings and sub-subheadings is a fantastic way to go.
11. ESPN
Smart navigation design means knowing what people are looking for and displaying that as easily as possible. For sporting media empire ESPN, most of their customer base are looking for one thing: the score.
With a keen awareness of this, ESPN has made the smart decision to display a Top Events navigation menu above their standard menu, giving quickview results for the latest scores in the most popular games. In combination with the standard menu (which utilises team logos under NBA, NFL, AFL, NRL & Cricket headers for easy browsing) it’s design that’s directly informed by how and why people use the ESPN site.
12. Bentley
Bentley is a brand which is held in high regard for their sleek car designs and, so it would seem, sleek web design too. A clever layout has made navigating the Bentley site a joy. Clicking the Models header in the top menu causes a sidebar to appear. As you hover over each car model range, you’re given a stylish sideview of the individual models on offer.
With a reputation for beautiful cars, it’s no surprise high-quality images feature so heavily in the Bentley navigation menu. It’s a lesson we can all learn when it comes to web design: if you’ve got it, flaunt it!
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Source p img {display:inline-block; margin-right:10px;} .alignleft {float:left;} p.showcase {clear:both;} body#browserfriendly p, body#podcast p, div#emailbody p{margin:0;} 12 Ways to Design the Perfect Site Navigation published first on http://ift.tt/2fA8nUr
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