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#carlos estévez
jareckiworld · 1 year
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Carlos Estévez — Carousel City  (oil and watercolor pencil on canvas, 2022)
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thunderstruck9 · 5 months
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Carlos Estévez (Cuban, 1969), Cruzar en el Desierto, 1995. Watercolor, gouache and crayon on paper, 27½ × 39½ in.
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polkadotmotmot · 2 years
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Carlos Estévez - The Encounter of the Souls, 2020
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apropositodime · 18 days
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Io piena di cielo🪐
Io e le mie Lune🌒🌕🌘
Io sono tutto quanto lo zodiaco,
nel senso che ho i difetti di ogni segno.
Patrizia Valduga
🎨Carlos Estévez
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Carlos Estévez
source: iamjapanese
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bluart106 · 11 months
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Carlos Estévez
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shanahazuki · 3 months
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Cabaret de Diez presenta "¡MUAK! El país de los besos en abonos chiquitos" en el Teatro Bar El Vicio
Cabaret de Diez presenta "¡MUAK! El país de los besos en abonos chiquitos" en el Teatro Bar El Vicio
La compañía Cabaret de Diez sigue cautivando al público con su exitosa obra “¡MUAK! El país de los besos en abonos chiquitos” en el Teatro Bar El Vicio. Esta producción, escrita por Carlos Alexis, cuenta con un elenco estelar que incluye a Mónica Magdiel, Lucía Villegas, Daniel Berthier, Conny Cambambia y Laurencia Mariscal, acompañados por la vibrante música en vivo de Ana Estévez. Dirigida por…
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chicagocubsreactions · 2 months
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MLB players dressing down Nike, Fanatics over new uniforms that look ‘like a replica’
[Original article]
The top story of spring training so far has nothing to do with the seams and stitches on a baseball. Instead, the talk of spring is all about the seams and stitches of the new jersey that Major League Baseball’s on-field uniform provider has rolled out for this season: the Nike Vapor Premier.
Nike claims the new jersey is softer, lighter and stretchier than the previous model. Many players say it’s worse. In clubhouses around the league on Wednesday, they criticized the jerseys’ poor fit, cheap look, inconsistent quality and small lettering.
“It looks like a replica,” Angels outfielder Taylor Ward said. “It feels kind of like papery. It could be great when you’re out there sweating, it may be breathable. But I haven’t had that opportunity yet to try that out. But from the looks of it, it doesn’t look like a $450 jersey.
“So far, thumbs down.”
At his locker, Angels reliever Carlos Estévez was in a tizzy over the new threads. He pulled out a couple tops and pairs of pants to show that the shades didn’t match. He laughed at the spacing and shrunken nature of the lettering on the back of the jersey. And he bemoaned the fact he can’t customize his pants to his preference, the way pitchers once could, tailoring the fit to their big dumpers and tree-trunk thighs.
“When I wear my pants, I feel like I’m wearing someone else’s pants,” Estévez said.
“I could see Estévez (flexing),” Ward said, “and it just ripping in the back.”
An airing of sartorial grievances that began earlier this week at the St. Louis Cardinals complex in Jupiter, Fla. has resulted in Nike, which engineered and designed the jerseys, and Fanatics, which manufactured them, facing blowback from big leaguers and baseball fans alike. The complaints prompted players to take their displeasure to their union, and the MLBPA is now involved in relaying the players’ concerns.
But anyone paying attention only to official channels would have little idea what the fuss was about. As that storm of criticism brewed in clubhouses, MLB and Nike ran a joint press release about the new jersey that included rave reviews from Cardinals third baseman Nolan Arenado (“It’s almost like wearing my favorite shirt out on the field”), Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman (“much more breathable, with vents on the numbers and better airflow all around”) and reigning NL MVP Ronald Acuña Jr. (“Feeling free in the jersey is the best feeling in the world”). All wear Nike gear in games. So do several other stars who have publicly praised the jerseys since Nike debuted them at the 2023 All-Star Game: Mike Trout, Kenley Jansen, Corbin Carroll and Jason Heyward.
Chicago Cubs shortstop Dansby Swanson, who has a Nike endorsement deal, said he reached out to Nike contacts Tuesday to discuss the new jerseys. He’s all for the new materials, he said, but some of the design decisions — like the specific shade of blue on the Cubs jerseys — are worth reconsidering.
“Cubbie blue is its own blue, right?” Swanson said. “This blue on the uniform is a little bit different than Cubbie blue. So how can we just recapture that?”
Swanson’s broader point was that in the design process, Nike may have removed some elements that make each team’s jersey their own. In Cardinals camp, for example, they lamented losing the chain-stitching of player names on the jersey.
“You wouldn’t change the font of, let’s say, the (Atlanta) Falcons,” Swanson said, referring to his favorite National Football League team. “They have a little bit of a futuristic block lettering. That’s unique to their jersey. You wouldn’t then go put that on the New York Giants jersey.” He added, “With some of those things, it’s like this makes a Cubs uniform a Cubs uniform. It doesn’t need to change. I think that they will probably have to end up figuring out a way to kind of go back to what it used to be.”
It is unclear whether these uniforms will differ from those worn in the regular season.
Nike did not respond to a request for comment.
While the jerseys themselves have changed, the main parties in the creation process have been the same since Nike became MLB’s official on-field uniform provider in December 2019, reportedly paying more than $1 billion for a 10-year deal. (Under Armour initially won that bid, back in 2016, but that deal fell apart and Nike swooshed in.) Nike partnered with Fanatics — which had purchased MLB’s 2005-19 uniform supplier, Majestic, in April 2017 — to manufacture the jerseys. So the Nike jerseys are now produced by Fanatics, out of the same Pennsylvania factory where Majestic jerseys were once made.
Chris Creamer, who runs SportsLogos.net, explained in an email Wednesday that it’s surprisingly common for one company to create jerseys for another brand like Fanatics is now doing for Nike. When Fanatics takes over as the National Hockey League’s uniform outfitter this fall, the Fanatics-branded jerseys will be manufactured at the same Quebec factory as the Adidas ones NHL players are wearing this season.
“The money exchanged in these deals is really just for that brand’s corporate logo on the jersey,” Creamer wrote. “The leagues or the companies involved don’t seem too bothered by who is actually producing it.”
A Fanatics spokesperson declined to comment.
Nike claims that in designing the Nike Vapor Premier it “body-scanned more than 300 baseball players to dial in the ideal fit — more athletic and form-fitting than the previous chassis,” which is clothes-speak for template. But a common complaint among players is that Nike has limited the customization of jerseys.
Pitchers, in particular, are huffing about their pants. Before last year, according to multiple pitchers, they had several measurements taken for their pants, which then were tailored. Nike has since simplified the fitting process, and tailoring is not on the table. (“You’re telling me that Fernando Tatis is going to be on the field without painted-on pants?” a pitcher joked. “Robbie Ray with some baggy pants?”)
Some clubhouse managers have taken on the task of tailoring.
Yankees reliever Tommy Kahnle, who fans have given the nickname “Tommy Tightpants,” has leaned into the look. He reached into his locker for his new trousers Wednesday and gave them a “stretch test” with his hands. Not tight enough. Kahnle hadn’t actually put them on yet, but he knew.
“I like the old ones,” Kahnle declared.
A Dodger said he was swimming in his pants.
A Tiger loudly complained, “These pants they made are terrible.”
Among the design tweaks Nike made to this year’s jersey, according to Uni Watch’s Paul Lukas, are stretchier fabric, changing home jerseys from white to a subtle off-white, narrowing the placket (the vertical strip on the front of the shirt upon which the buttons sit), altering the belt loops, moving the MLB logo down on the back of the jersey and reducing the size of the last-name lettering. The latter change has fans fuming and players scratching their heads.
(Link to tweet showing the difference in the jerseys)
Tigers catcher Jake Rogers, who had no other complaints about the jerseys (“It feels good”), noticed that the lettering was visibly smaller this year. “You see an old jersey, my name was like this,” he said, gesturing with his hands, “using up a lot of room.”
“Look at the last names, bro,” Estévez said. “I’m 6-foot-6. This is going to look tiny on me.”
“I think the last names look really bad honestly,” a Cardinals player said. “I saw someone on Twitter said this looks like a Walmart jersey.”
Nike will sell three versions of the Nike Vapor Premier jerseys to fans: Limited Jersey (“inspired by the on-field jersey”), Game Jersey (“replica player jersey”) and Elite Jersey (“authentic jersey, as worn by player on-field”). Only the Limited jersey is currently available; an Acuña can be had for $174.99.
Now situated at Cubs spring training in Mesa, Ariz., Swanson has been sort of stuck in the middle, privy to both complaints from players about the jerseys and chats with Nike employees about them.
“It’s one of those things where there’s good and bad,” Swanson said. “It’s hard to sit here and just blast them about it or praise them for it. There’s stuff on both sides, and I think the beauty is they’re willing to have those conversations. Obviously, if it’s a change of anything, initial reactions are always going to be (strong). But I do think there are some things that could be altered to make it better.”
Whether or not Nike makes changes, this jersey looks different. It feels different. It’ll take time, however, to know whether the Nike Vapor Premier is actually better or worse than the version before it. When Majestic in 2016 introduced its “Cool Base” jersey — lighter, moisture-wicking, more flexible — they felt thinner and cheaper, Creamer said. There were design complications. There was criticism. But eventually, everyone moved on.
Reds catcher Luke Maile said changing jerseys is like changing toilet paper.
“You notice it at first,” he said, “but after a while, it’s just your toilet paper.”
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goalhofer · 8 months
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2023 Los Angeles Angels Roster
Pitchers
#17 Ōtani Shōhei (Ōshū, Japan)
#28 Aaron Loup (Boutte, Louisiana)
#31 Tyler Anderson (Las Vegas, Nevada)*
#40 Sam Bachman (Fishers, Indiana)**
#43 Patrick Sandoval (Mission Viejo, California)
#44 Ben Joyce (Knoxville, Tennessee)**
#47 Griffin Canning (Rancho Santa Margarita, California)
#48 Reid Detmers (Nokomis, Illinois)
#51 Jaime Barría (Ciudad Panama, Panama)
#52 Dominic Leone (Norwich, Connecticut)*
#53 Carlos Estévez (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)*
#54 José Suárez (Ciudad Naguanagua, Venezuela)
#58 Robert Daniel (Montgomery, Alabama)**
#59 José Soriano (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)**
#61 Austin Warren (Fayetteville, North Carolina)
#63 Chase Silseth (Farmington, New Mexico)
#65 José Quijada (Caripito, Venezuela)
#73 Chris Rodriguez (Miami Gardens, Florida)
#78 Kenny Rosenberg (Santa Clarita, California)
Catchers
#14 Logan O'Hoppe (Islip, New York)
#21 Matt Thaiss (Jackson Township, New Jersey)
#33 Max Stassi (Yuba City, California)
#35 Chad Wallach (Orange, California)
Infielders
#2 Luis Rengifo (Ciudad Naguanagua, Venezuela)
#3 Joseph Ward (Oviedo, Florida)
#4 Andrew Velazquez (Bronx, New York)
#5 Eduardo Escobar (Villa De San Luis Rey De Cura, Venezuela)*
#6 Anthony Rendon (Houston, Texas)
#8 Mike Moustakas (Los Angeles, California)*
#9 Zach Neto (Miami, Florida)**
#10 Gio Urshela (Cartagena De Indias, Colombia)*
#18 Nolan Schanuel (Boynton Beach, Florida)**
#23 Brandon Drury (Grants Pass, Oregon)*
#25 C.J. Cron; Jr. (Phoenix, Arizona)*
#75 Trey Cabbage (Blaine, Tennessee)**
Outfielders
#7 Jordon Adell (Louisville, Kentucky)
#15 Randal Grichuk (Rosenberg, Texas)*
#16 McKenzie Moniak (Carlsbad, California)
#27 Mike Trout (Millville, New Jersey)
Coaches
Manager Phil Nevin (Placentia, California)
Hitting coach Marcus Thames (Louisville, Mississippi)
Assistant hitting coach Phil Plantier (Manchester, New Hampshire)
Pitching coach Matt Wise (Montclair, California)
Assistant pitching/bullpen coach Bill Hezel (Bonney Lake, Washington)
Bullpen catcher Drew Butera (Orlando, Florida)
Batting practice pitcher Mike Ashman (Fairbanks, Alaska)
1B coach Damon Mashore (Ciudad Ponce, Puerto Rico)
3B/catching coach Bill Haselman (Saratoga, California)
Quality assurance coach Tim Buss (Dodgeville, Wisconsin)
Field coordinator Romar Gil (Chula Vista, California)
Assistant coach Ali Modami (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Assistant coach Jason Brown (Long Beach, California)
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jareckiworld · 10 months
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Carlos Estévez — Symbiosis (oil and watercolor pencil on canvas, 2018)
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screenwritinggym · 4 months
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Actor Charlie Sheen (Carlos Irwin Estévez) - Watch this - Apocalypse EXPLAINED - READ the Synopsis - Transformers: Rise of the Beasts
This movie is a high-stakes sci-fi adventure that merges the worlds of Transformers with human characters. It kicks off with Unicron, a planet-consuming entity, attacking the Maximals’ homeworld. The Maximals, led by Optimus Primal, flee to Earth with a powerful Transwarp Key, pursued by Unicron’s heralds, the Terrorcons.
The story then shifts to Earth in 1994, focusing on Noah Diaz, who unwittingly encounters the Autobot Mirage disguised as a Porsche. Concurrently, museum intern Elena Wallace discovers the Transwarp Key hidden in an ancient statue. This discovery sets off a chain of events as the Autobots, led by Optimus Prime, and the Terrorcons arrive on Earth to retrieve the key.
The conflict escalates as battles ensue, leading to revelations about the key being split in two halves to prevent Unicron’s access. Elena and the Autobots embark on a mission to find the second half in Peru, facing the threat of Scourge corrupting their allies and attempting to unleash Unicron.
Noah, initially aiming to protect Earth by destroying the key, eventually allies with Optimus to prevent Unicron’s invasion. A massive battle unfolds between Autobots, Maximals, and the Terrorcons. Noah, aided by Bumblebee and using an exo-suit fashioned from Mirage’s damaged body, plays a crucial role in the conflict.
In a dramatic climax, Optimus sacrifices himself to stop Unicron, but Noah and Primal manage to save him and thwart Unicron’s plans, leaving the Autobots stranded on Earth. The conclusion sees the Autobots accepting Earth as their new home, Noah finding unexpected opportunities, and the promise of continued protection for Earth.
The mid-credits scene hints at Noah’s resourcefulness in repairing Mirage, showcasing his growing connection to the Autobots’ world.
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ellabina · 7 months
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Behind The Scenes Of Charlie Sheen's Publicized Meltdown On 'Two And A Half Men'
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Charlie Sheen, the son and third child of Martin Sheen's four children changed his name from Carlos Irwin Estévez before embarking on his career. This name change was reminiscent of his fathers transition, from Ramón Antonio Gerardo Estévez.
In 2003 Sheen landed a role alongside Jon Cryer, another '80s star in the CBS sitcom "Two and a Half Men."
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polkadotmotmot · 1 year
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Carlos Estévez - Las caminadoras de trenes, 2022
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juarezesdeporte · 9 months
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EN PLAN GRANDE!!
Julio Urías celebró su cumpleaños con una salida de 10*****El pitcher mexicano de los Dodgers cerró con broche de oro el fin de semana de la ‘Fernandomanía’ festejando su décimo triunfo de la temporada en el partido en que Los Angeles derrotó 8-3 a los Rockies de Colorado
Veinticuatro horas después haber cumplido 27 años y dos días después de que la novena californiana retirara el número 34 de Fernando Valenzuela, el lanzador sinaloense tiró una joya ante Colorado, en la que ponchó a 12 de los 25 rivales que enfrentó, no otorgó base por bolas y admitió tres carreras limpias, 4 hits, en siete innings pitcheados.
Con este resultado, Urías pone su récord de 10-6, mejorando su porcentaje de carreras limpias a 4.35.
Una de las carreras que aceptó el ‘Culichi’ fue producto del también pelotero tricolor Alan Trejo, quien le conectó un jonrón para empatar momentáneamente 3-3 el marcador en la cuarta entrada. Con su vuelacercas, Trejo impulsó a Elías Díaz.
El cerrador nayarita Víctor González sacó los últimos tres outs para sellar el triunfo de Urías.
En la ofensiva de Dodgers lucieron el jardinero Chris Taylor, quien se fue de 2-1 con dos carreras impulsadas, y el campo corto Miguel Rojas, quien llevó a la registradora otras cuatro, incluyendo un cuadrangular solitario en la cuarta entrada.
Llega Ohtani a 41 jonrones
Houston.- El manager de los Angelinos de Los Angeles, Phil Nevin, insistió antes del partido de ayer en que la fatiga del brazo que provocó que la estrella bidireccional Shohei Ohtani se saltara su próxima apertura programada en el montículo no lo afectaría en el plato.
Entonces Ohtani salió y lo dejó claro.
Ohtani conectó su jonrón número 41, líder de la Liga Americana, y los Angelinos vencieron 2-1 a los Astros de Houston para evitar una barrida en tres juegos.
El primer jonrón de Ohtani desde el 3 de agosto puso a los Angelinos arriba 2-0 en la sexta entrada. Houston lo redujo a 2-1 en la mitad inferior, pero los Angelinos finalmente recibieron ayuda de su cuerpo de lanzadores después de perder cada uno de los primeros dos juegos de la serie 11-3. Su bullpen lanzó tres entradas en blanco para asegurar la victoria.
Nevin dijo que Ohtani regresará a la rotación durante una serie en casa contra Cincinnati que comienza el 21 de agosto.
“Realmente se metió en uno hoy”, dijo Nevin. “Creo que los cambios han sido geniales. Esto no tiene nada que ver con su bateo, ¿de acuerdo? es su brazo. No una lesión. Sólo cansado. Si me inscribieras para él perdiéndose sólo una apertura a lo largo de la temporada, sería el primero en levantar la mano”.
Ohtani no estuvo disponible para los reporteros.
El abridor de Los Angeles, Chase Silseth (4-1), permitió cuatro hits y ponchó a cinco en cinco entradas en blanco. Carlos Estévez ponchó a dos en el noveno para su salvamento número 25.
“Viste los dos primeros juegos. Fue bueno capitalizar hoy con el pitcheo”, dijo Estévez. “Silseth, hombre, ése fue un trabajo increíble. Eso fue realmente bueno. Y luego llegó el bullpen, lo logramos y eso se siente realmente bien y también sentimos que estamos mostrando a los jugadores de posición como, ‘Oye, lo logramos, no te preocupes’”.
José Urquidy (2-3) de Houston permitió tres hits y una carrera en más de cinco entradas en su segunda apertura desde que regresó de la lista de lesionados.
Eduardo Escobar conectó un doble al jardín izquierdo con un out en el tercero y los Angelinos tomaron una ventaja de 1-0 cuando anotó con un doble con dos outs de Mickey Moniak.
Hubo un out en el cuarto cuando Kyle Tucker conectó un doble por regla. Jon Singleton recibió base por bolas con dos outs, pero los Astros se fueron con las manos vacías cuando Mauricio Dubón conectó un roletazo en una jugada forzada.
Ohtani conectó a Parker Mushinski para un tiro de 448 pies al jardín central con dos outs en el sexto.
Singleton volvió a recibir base por bolas con dos outs en la parte baja de la entrada, pasó a tercera con un sencillo de Dubón y anotó con un lanzamiento descontrolado de José Soriano.
Houston consiguió un sencillo de Chas McCormick con un out en el octavo. Matt Moore luego ponchó a Singleton y Dubon.
“Simplemente no conseguimos los grandes hits con corredores en posición de anotar”, dijo el manager de los Astros, Dusty Baker. “Tuvimos varias oportunidades y casi fallamos. (Yordan) Álvarez estuvo cerca, muy cerca. Así que solo tenemos que apegarnos a eso”.
Los Angelinos llenaron las bases con dos outs en el noveno ante Rafael Montero, pero Ryne Stanek se hizo cargo y retiró a Randal Grichuk para dejar a todos varados.
José Altuve de Houston se fue de 4-0 con una base por bolas para romper una racha de hits de 14 juegos. 
(Carlos Canela / Agencia Reforma)
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baseballjerseynumbers · 10 months
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Matt Koch takes 54. Last worn by Carlos Estévez in 2022.
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reportwire · 1 year
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Winning! See Charlie Sheen Through the Years
Although Charlie Sheen grew up in a family of celebrated actors, he wasn’t always “winning!” The New York City native (real name Carlos Estévez) started acting as a child, making an uncredited appearance in his father Martin Sheen’s 1974 made-for-TV movie The Execution of Private Slovik. Charlie did not make his own foray onto the big screen, however, until 10 years later when he had a small role…
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