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Old August 28th, 2021 #401
Ray Allan
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Originally Posted by Lutador Branco View Post
Thank you Comrade Ray for bringing Brazilian fighter Tay Conti back to this thread in the two beautiful videos.

I saw your post today; and our Brazilian Women thread continues on.

One question: is the English spoken by Tay good, or does it have a different accent?
I could understand her just fine.
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Old August 28th, 2021 #402
Lutador Branco
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I could understand her just fine.

Okay, great!

I downloaded the videos to my private collection.
 
Old August 29th, 2021 #403
Lutador Branco
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Two Brazilian journalists:


Nathália Fruet

https://telejornalismo.fandom.com/pt...C3%A1lia_Fruet

Wiki Telejornalismo

in: Caxias do Sul, Journalists of Rio Grande do Sul, Reporters of Rio Grande do Sul

Nathalia Fruet
Birth
1984
Caxias do Sul
Works
Band RS reporter from 2012 to 2013
Reporter for RBS TV Porto Alegre from 2013 to 2020
Reporter for SBT Brasília since 2020












Cristina Ramos

https://twitter.com/cristinatramos

Cristina Ramos
@cristinatramos
Journalist RBSTV Pelotas/RS










Last edited by Lutador Branco; August 29th, 2021 at 11:36 PM.
 
Old August 29th, 2021 #404
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Tatá Werneck

Full name: Talita Werneck Arguelhes
Born: August 11, 1983 (37 years old)
Rio de Janeiro - RJ
Brazil
Height: 1.52m
Spouse: Rafael Vitti

Talita Werneck Arguelhes (Rio de Janeiro, August 11, 1983), better known as Tatá Werneck, is a Brazilian actress, humorist, presenter, musician, reporter and voice actress.


The Brazilian actress Tatá Werneck and the Brazilian actor Tiago Leifert sing a Brazilian version of ''Total Eclipse of the Heart'' in the advertising film of the telephone company Claro.



 
Old August 30th, 2021 #405
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https://www.womenshealthmag.com/uk/f...ne-hot-brazil/


Quote:
The Truth Behind Why (It Seems) All Brazilian Women Are Sexy

Toned, lithe and unfathomably hot. With all eyes on Rio, we find out what makes Brazilians the world’s most watchable nation…

BY CLEMMY MANZO
05/08/2016


There’s only one thing that rivals Brazil’s obsession with the beautiful game, and that’s its quest for a beautiful body.

The country breeds Victoria’s Secret models like we churn out tax avoiders.

And sure, Gisele, Adriana, Alessandra (need we go on?) scooped the genetic lottery, but they’re the blueprint for a nation chasing the ultimate in body perfection.

Echoes of their honed, toned, Amazonian curves glide along the Ipanema shoreline, as commonplace as drunken hen parties in Blackpool.

“For us, it’s always bikini season,” says Cristiana Arcangeli, the Brazilian entrepreneur behind Beauty’In collagen drinks and sweets, and to Brazil what Karren Brady is to England (smart, rich, gorgeous).

“We embrace our bodies in a way other women don’t. Brazilian women aren’t ashamed to look sexy. Vanity is not a bad thing here.

"There’s no shame in admitting you want to look good and being prepared to work hard to achieve it.”
So while we might not be ready to embrace their barely there swimwear preferences, their health and fitness secrets are another matter. Come on, ladies, spill the black beans...

While #strongnotskinny may have been the hashtag of many since 2014, it’s a mantra that’s long driven Brazilian body culture.


Strong Not Skinny

“Women here have never had the desire to be skinny,” says Arcangeli. Skinny just isn’t sexy and it’s sex appeal that defi nes attractiveness.

“Brazil still has a culture of machismo and Brazilian women want to look good for their men, not other women.”

So the curves are there to stay – and the motivation is to make them as toned as possible.

Cue a healthy gym habit. Memberships are cheap (good gyms are around Ł20 a month) and public areas like beaches are often fitted with free-to-use equipment, too.

In a country where the boom-boom (bum) is queen, there are entire sections devoted to butt toning.

Kickback machines, which work the glutes, are one of the most popular pieces of kit and women feel perfectly at home in the weights room.

“Brazilian women aim to be healthy and strong rather than just skinny,” says Ruth Ferguson, who lived in Brazil for a couple of years designing bikinis.

“It’s common to tell a girl she’s looking strong. In the UK, we might take this as an insult, but in Brazil it’s a genuine compliment.”
But those bodies aren’t built on squats alone– or empanadas for that matter. And when it comes to the Brazilian diet, it’s not just what they eat that’s significant, but how they eat.


The Brazilian Diet

Meal times are an event in Brazil. Wolfing down a sarnie while one-handedly tackling an Excel spreadsheet? It just isn’t done.

The lunch hour is a basic human right and often the main meal of the day. “Because we actually make the time to eat, there’s less of a demand for convenience food, so we eat very naturally. We don’t have much that’s processed,” explains Arcangeli.

While we might arrive home late from work to a bottle of Pinot and a rogue bag of Mini Cheddars, it’s a little different in Brazil, where even the middle classes often have maids.

“There’s no doubt eating healthily is easier when you have someone to prepare food for you,” admits Arcangeli.

“I’ll come back from the gym and my cook has an egg white omelette and a salad waiting for me.”

Outside the home, Brazil’s food industry is both cause and effect of a body-aware culture. The climate means fruit and vegetables are plentiful and cheap.

Acai – a superfood indigenous to the Amazon basin– was a staple in your average Brazilian juice bar long before we were hunting it down in Whole Foods.

And the weigh-before-you-pay salad bars are handy for fostering self-restraint.

In Rio, like other beach cities around the world (think Sydney and LA), healthy eating choices and cutting-edge fitness trends are born from the demands of a population that spends much of its downtime getting semi-naked in public.

They might be bred of vanity, but their upshot is health.

“Brazilian women don’t have restrictive diets but they’re very aware about making healthy choices,” says Paula Davidson, nutritionist to Rio’s elite.

“Most of my female clients base their diets on lean proteins, such as eggs, queijo minas [a soft, very light white cheese], yoghurt, meat, chicken, fish and seafood.”


And to drink...

And while they may love a party, Brasileiras don’t binge drink. Yes, they invented caipirinhas, but in Brazil, women get tipsy not trolleyed. “It’s just not common for girls to get out-of-control drunk,” says 29-year-old Fernanda Serson from Săo Paulo.

“It’s considered very unattractive... apart from during Carnival, when anything goes!”

A tip straight from the bars of Rio: ask for your caipirinha with sweetener or without sugar and replace the cachaça with vodka or sake. It will shave off valuable calories from the 350 you’d usually down (if only it could save you the hangover).

Besides, Brazilians don’t need to drink for confidence – they’re brought up on it. It’s inate in both genders.

“I think that is what sets us apart,” says celebrity personal trainer Leandro Carvalho. “My dad still wears his Speedos now even though he’s in his seventies! You just grow up in an environment where displaying your body is always the norm, so you’re very comfortable with it from an early age.”

Nip & Tuck Culture

And this is where we meet the shining paradox upon which our obsession with Brazilian beauty rests. This may be the country of body confidence, but it’s also the home of lipo and butt implants.

Brazil has the second highest rate of cosmetic surgery in the world (after the US), with an estimated 1.5 million cosmetic procedures yearly. A staggering 38% of them performed on women aged 19 to 35.

Its cosmetics industry is the third largest in the world (soon to overtake Japan in second place). Weekly manis, pedis and waxes are standard and extreme procedures such as chemical peels are on par with a trip to the dentist.

So why does a culture that seems so comfortable with flashing more than a little skin feel the need to go to such lengths to perfect it?

Alexander Edmonds, author of Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex And Plastic Surgery In Brazil explains it:

“Because there is no taboo around the desire to look good, cosmetic surgery has become normalised.”
It’s come to be seen as a routine, self-esteem-boosting part of life.

Even Brazil’s most powerful woman, President Dilma Rousse, had an extreme makeover (including eyelid surgery) before winning the 2010 elections.

“In the US or UK, a politician’s cosmetic surgery might be seen as evidence of vanity or a sign of untrustworthiness,” says Edmonds. “But in Brazil, she’s just making the best of herself.”

In fact, cosmetic procedures are seen as a right, deserved by all. Some clinics over discounted, even free, surgery – largely thanks to surgeon Ivo Pitanguy, ‘the pope of plastic surgery’.

His Rio ward now performs 1,800 ops a year for people with low incomes, including cosmetic procedures like butt lifts.

Of course, knowing about their love of surgery doesn’t make the cult of Brazilian beauty any less alluring.

Any woman who has the body and the confidence to wear the sorts of bikinis that creep into places we’ve repeatedly banned our boyfriends from will always be a source of fascination.

But while we can still afford our gym membership, we’ll be taking the long road to a Brazilian body, thanks very much. Roll on the squats.
 
Old August 31st, 2021 #406
Ray Allan
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Ah, that explains Larissa Lima from 90-Day Fiance' and all the cosmetic surgery she had done. I believe Coltie paid over $1000 for her Botox injections, then Erickie shelled out big bucks for her boob and butt jobs. Then Larissa got deported back to Brazil, so neither one of those guys got to enjoy that very long.
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Old August 31st, 2021 #407
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Yes, Comrade Ray; and from my personal observations in Brazil, I see that Brazilian women seek to enhance the beauty that Nature has given them...
 
Old September 2nd, 2021 #408
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Talking

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Old September 2nd, 2021 #409
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The show can not stop!

This thread got richer with Brazilian pianist Eliane Rodrigues.

Thank you for this valuable contribution, Comrade Ray.
 
Old September 4th, 2021 #410
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Mari

Marianne Steinbrecher, better known as Mari (Săo Paulo, August 23, 1983), is a Brazilian volleyball player. It acts as tip and opposite. She currently plays for Fluminense.

https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marianne_Steinbrecher














 
Old September 4th, 2021 #411
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Alinne Moraes

Aline Cristine Dorelli de Magalhăes e Morais, stage name Alinne Moraes (Sorocaba, December 22, 1982), is a Brazilian actress.

https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alinne_Moraes













Last edited by Lutador Branco; September 4th, 2021 at 02:42 PM.
 
Old September 13th, 2021 #412
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Footwear fair in Franca, Săo Paulo, Brazil.

Report produced by the National Agency shows the 11th Footwear and Leather Fair in Franca, Săo Paulo, in 1979. Brasil Hoje n° 274 (1979). National Archives. National Agency Fund. BR_RJANRIO_EH_0_FIL_BHO_274


 
Old September 13th, 2021 #413
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Video about the importance of gymnastics and physical culture in Brazil.

Video shows gymnastics and dance performance. Brazil Today n° 277. National Archives. National Agency Fund. BR_RJANRIO_EH_0_FIL_BHO_0277_0001



 
Old September 16th, 2021 #414
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Nathalia Passarinho

Brazilian journalist.

Winner of the Roche 2019 Award in the Written Journalism category with the work “Exclusive: Inside a 'secret abortion clinic' on WhatsApp”.

Graduated in Social Communication at Centro Universitário de Brasília (2005-2009) and Master in Latin American Studies at Oxford University (2016 – 2017), in the United Kingdom. She has been working as a reporter for BBC News Brasil since September 2017, where she writes about politics, economics and health, as well as participating live in BBC World Service television and radio programs to discuss topics related to Brazil.

https://premiorochedeperiodismo.com/...ia-passarinho/














Last edited by Lutador Branco; September 16th, 2021 at 12:05 PM.
 
Old September 23rd, 2021 #415
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The traditional Grape Festival in Caxias do Sul, Brazil.



 
Old September 23rd, 2021 #416
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The traditional Grape Festival in Caxias do Sul, Brazil.
That was an interesting video from 1972. Fast forward to 2018:



https://www.tuaradio.com.br/noticias...-caxias-do-sul



https://boaforma.abril.com.br/estilo...lheita-da-uva/

And 2019:



https://revistanews.com.br/2019/01/1...lheita-da-uva/
 
Old September 27th, 2021 #417
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Some Brazilian women soccer fans.

If someone wants to date or marry a Brazilian woman, they must like soccer.

I didn't repeat any of the previously posted photos in this thread.











Last edited by Lutador Branco; September 27th, 2021 at 03:06 PM.
 
Old September 29th, 2021 #418
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Rosamaria

Rosamaria Montibeller (Nova Trento, April 9, 1994), Brazilian volleyball player. She was part of the Brazilian under-23 world champion team in 2015, being chosen the best player in the world in her position. For the senior team, she won the gold medal at the 2017 South American Championship in Colombia, and in the same year the last edition of the Grand Prix in China and the runner-up in the Champions League in Japan.

https://rosamariamontibeller.com/pt/









 
Old September 30th, 2021 #419
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Originally Posted by Lutador Branco View Post
Some Brazilian women soccer fans.

If someone wants to date or marry a Brazilian woman, they must like soccer.
That tends to be a very negative quality in a woman, it usually means she is dumb as dog shit, is a major whore, she´s an antiracist, and ela gosta da porra de negros...



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Last edited by Hugo Böse; September 30th, 2021 at 03:44 AM.
 
Old September 30th, 2021 #420
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Soccer is part of Brazilian culture, but it is a very serious problem when some women date black players; this is absolutely unacceptable.

I played amateur soccer myself, and in the past there was a greater participation of brilliant white Brazilian players, such as Zico, Rivellino, Tostăo, Taffarel and Falcăo.

Last edited by Lutador Branco; September 30th, 2021 at 08:59 AM.
 
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