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#alonzo lopez
muxas-world · 2 months
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Wait i saw you tags what do you men pedro shade alonzo on twiter ?? When?
Actully is old news maybe pople on here alredy posted but he in his best interpretation of valentino rossi (i mean he try in twiter rl aun esta por ver) when a like two things one in tiktok and other in twiter? Implying alonzo was a dirty rider so yea..
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The 1. Say someting when is alonzo gona try to be normal in the races...( idk what would be the best tranlestion but yeah)
2. Alonso has a obsessive fixation and a complex with pedro , apart from being a repeat pig on track this undesirable plenty(or shuld no be in) in the championship
Both are still like by pedro to this day so yeah 😭
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missmysterious56 · 2 years
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guys ive fully got 10 people to watch the show this week alone. ive watched the first episode about 7 times. I've already rewatched the show 3 times over. this feels like a problem. is this a problem? do i have a problem?
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artistaforever · 8 months
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Bea and Sanya in All Out Sundays
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artisticlegshake · 10 months
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TEEN MALE BEST DANCER TOP 22 (LAS VEGAS)
Juan Pacheco - LARKIN
Bosco Wong - CSPAS
Alonzo Dock - STARS ELITE
Kyle Tucker - INFINITY
Griffin Abrahamse - THE COMPANY SPACE
Cade Kaiser - BONI’S EN TOURE
Adin Pracic - CSPAS
Patricio Lopez - FLASHDANCE
Javier Garduno - MUZE CREATIVE
Hudson Pletcher - PRODIGY
Dylan Miller - LEVEL
Cooper Macalalad - THE BASE
Logan Marumoto-Kaleimamahu - 24-7 DANCE
Cayman Lee - DKCBA
Cameron Kennedy - LINDA DOBBINS
Noah Fournier - FLASHDANCE
Nolan Turnbull - DANCE THEME
Johnny Grey - ACADEMY OF NV BALLET
Grayson Skarsvaag - NOR CAL
Chance Peacock - ROYAL DANCE WORKS
Gabriel Kleeman - PAS DE DEUX HAWAII
Issac Diaz - BOBBIE’S
*Top 12 in bold!
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byneddiedingo · 10 months
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Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (Roman Polanski, 1974)
Cast: Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston, Perry Lopez, John Hillerman, Darrell Zwerling, Diane Ladd, Roy Jenson, Roman Polanski, Richard Bakalyan, Joe Mantell. Screenplay: Robert Towne. Cinematography: John A. Alonzo. Production design: Richard Sylbert. Film editing: Sam O'Steen. Music: Jerry Goldsmith.
Where there's money, there's murder, and where the sun shines brightest, the shadows are darkest. That's why film noir was invented in Hollywood, and why California's greatest contribution to American literature may have been the pulp fiction of James M. Cain and the detective novels of Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and Ross Macdonald. Chinatown, which draws on that tradition, has a kind of valedictory quality about it, harking back to the 1930s roots of noir, although the genre's heyday was the postwar 1940s and paranoia-filled early 1950s. (Curtis Hanson would exploit that latter era in his 1997 film L.A. Confidential.) But it's also very much a film of the 1970s, which is to say that 42 years have passed and Chinatown is showing its age. The revelation that Katherine (Belinda Palmer) is both the daughter and the sister to Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway) no longer has the power to shock that it once did, incestuous rape having become a standard trope of even TV drama. Nor does the "dark" ending, which director Roman Polanski insisted on, despite screenwriter Robert Towne's preference for a more conventionally hopeful resolution, seem so revolutionary anymore. It remains a great film, however, thanks to those quintessential '70s stars, Dunaway and Jack Nicholson, in career-defining performances, the superb villainy of John Huston's Noah Cross, and Roman Polanski's deft handling of Towne's intricate screenplay, carefully keeping the film limited to the point of view of Nicholson's Jake Gittes. Production designer Richard Sylbert and costume designer Anthea Sylbert (Richard's sister-in-law), aided by cinematographer John A. Alonzo, are responsible for the stylish evocation of 1930s Los Angeles. The atmospheric score is by Jerry Goldsmith.
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remixinc · 1 month
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Smirnoff | Clan from Bloomclouds on Vimeo.
Bitter Citric - El toque Smirnoff al mundo de los aperitivos Directores: CLAN Productora: PRIMO
Datos del spot - ANUNCIANTE: Diageo - MARCA: Smirnoff Bitter Citric - AGENCIA: Digitas Buenos Aires - MANAGING DIRECTOR: Juan Cáceres - DIRECTOR GENERAL CREATIVO: Leo Orsolini - DIRECTORA DE OPERACIONES: Mercedes Alonzo - DIRECTOR DE CLIENT SERVICES: Lucas Piacentini - REDACTORES: Whalys Clark y Sofía Barbieri - DIR. DE ARTE: Tomas Riera, Nahuel Villagra y Miguel Vázquez - SUPERVISORA DE CUENTAS: Luz Giordano - PRODUCCIÓN AGENCIA: Berty Gimenez y Brotons, Federico Puricelli, Pia Oliva - PRODUCTORA: Primo - DIRECTORES: CLAN - PRODUCTOR EJECUTIVO: Ale di Michele / Sole Pérez Veiga - PRODUCTOR: Germán Lentini - DIRECTOR DE FOTOGRAFÍA: Mariano Monti - DIRECTORA DE ARTE: Valentina Luppino - EDITOR: Alejo Santos - BANDA: Pendex Music - MEZCLA DE SONIDO: Papapost - CORRECCIÓN DE COLOR: Ale Lescano - POST PRODUCCIÓN: Pickle House - COORDINACIÓN DE POST PRODUCCIÓN: Seba Lopez - RESPONSABLES POR EL CLIENTE: Guadalupe Fernandez Burgoa, Florencia Cuyas, Juan Mignaquy.
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copblaster · 5 months
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LAPD Officer Audrey J. Lopez Alonzo
https://copblaster.com/blast/51924/lapd-officer-audrey-j-lopez-alonzo?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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don-lichterman · 2 years
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Cristela Alonzo to Star in CBS Comedy Produced by Jennifer Lopez
Cristela Alonzo to Star in CBS Comedy Produced by Jennifer Lopez
If you’ve seen the ABC sitcom Cristela, you’ll likely know the name Cristela Alonzo, the first Latina woman to create, produce, write, and star in her own primetime comedy in the U.S. For the first time since the series was canceled after a one-season run in 2015, the  Mexican American stand-up comedian is finally returning to the small screen with a new show from CBS—She Gets It From Me!…
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muxas-world · 13 days
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I come to spred some acosta lore cause some pople thing my girl is boring wich is not ;
. Pedro changes crushes (his favorite rider) as girl change his clothes one day is kenny robert another day is casey others some random guy depend on his mod
.he goes and likes coments calling him an idot or to much of an ego an the seme time liking a post calling him the next big thing ✌🏼
. He does have a wrid homexual hate relationship whit alonzo López and fermin (who pedro likes to pretent they dont exist)
. Last year he liked coments calling fermin and alonzo bad riders and dirty and they shulb be aput of the sport (he totally over reated they have a contat ad in the case of alonzo well he kinda was talking to much qhit the pres)
Im conclucion the kid is a petty bxht he just likes to play the mature kid (and problay finds this old men in the grid boring as fuck)
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junkyard-gifs · 3 years
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Andrés Pérez Lopez covering Alonzo and João Paulo de Almeida covering Mistoffelees, 2006 Dutch tour.
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artistaforever · 8 months
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The leading ladies of GMA
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londonrih · 3 years
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At this point I feel like I rant wayyy too much😭
⚠️another rant incoming, I’m truly sorry⚠️
I just really hope the rookie writers don’t make this same mistake again:
Jackson was in 3 relationships: Geno Brown, Sterling Freeman/ Skipper Young, and I guess you can count Isaac Young.
I may need a recap someone please correct me with this statement, but did Geno disappear? I literally forgot what happened to Geno! I remember they had an argument and made up, all in episode 17 of season 1.
Then after Geno, we have Sterling Freeman aka Skipper Young which ever name you prefer- we all thought STERLING, was such a good guy, talented actor and such, just to find out that he worked with a cult leader (3x07), and was once arrested as Skipper. Jackson broke off the relationship and that was that.
Then we have Isaac Young, I liked Isaac the most, I really wanted to see more of Isaac (horse cop) and Jackson together more. They went on a date don’t know how that went never got clarification, and boom never heard from Isaac again??🤔. Like they could’ve been SUCH a cute couple.
Then, boom Jackson was killed in the season 4 premiere. I wish we got to see more of Jackson and Isaac’s storyline. Now I’m afraid that they’ll show two characters flirt a lot and not get together and a tragedy happens.
And I’m afraid they’ll do that with Chenford. They don’t pay attention to all of the other relationships , I mean the only relationship they paid attention to that isn’t a main relationship was Wopez. Look at them, you know they were about to get married but you know La Fiera was mad because of the truth and kidnapped her, like can they at least get married first??🤦🏾‍♀️ Now they have a whole baby. Baby Jackson Lopez- Evers (Wopez).
And again- I’m afraid that they won’t look at all the other relationships, they only care who John dates which most of us don’t care🤦🏾‍♀️ like they’re just going to break up after a few episodes meaning half the season until the very end of the season they’re going to break up and BOOM, John has a new,new,new,newer girlfriend🙄.
So PLEASE give us chenford don’t ignore the chenford ship, don’t ignore chenford’s relationship make them canon so i, and the rest of the chenford fandom can be HAPPY!
I really hope they don’t do that with Nyla’s love triangle either, more specifically with Alonzo..
Thank you for your time!
PS. I’m excited for the new episode, just not so excited about how Jackson-less it’ll be..
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asitrita · 3 years
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Italian borthers’ surname
I’ve been thinking about the names and surnames Hima and/or the fandom gave to Hetalia characters. The names of the Italian borthers never seem to make mcuh sense to me. Feliciano is indeed an Italian name (and Spanish too), but I’m not sure how common it is, or if it is a good representative for Northern Italian people. Romano is “Roman” in Spanish, I don’t know if it’s a name in Italy, and I’m sorry if it is, but it sounds weird to me that someone’s named after a nationality or ethnic group. (Actually, I think Romano is a surname in Italy, isn’t it?).
But I what struck me the most was their surname. As far as I know, Vargas is a Spanish surname, not an Italian one, though it seems some Italian families do carry this surname. I was just wondering what would be a proper Italian surname that would be common enough in most Italian regions so as to better represent the Italian characters. I’ve been thinking that maybe Hima gave the Italian brothers the surname Vargas to emphasize the link both of them (more so South Italy) have had with Spain in the past. However, eventhough there are some Spanish surnames in Italy (most commonly in Southern Italy, but also in some Northern cities which had some slightly Spanish influence due to comercial links with the Spanish coasts adn politics), Vargas doesn’t seem to be very common (though it does exist). Some common Italian surnames of Spanish origin or related to Spain would be Spagnolo, Spagnoli, Catalano, Navarra, etc. But all these are named after Spain itself, or Spanish regions. I think it would be a bit weird to have the representations of Italy carrying a surname named after another nation/country. So, considering that Hima’s intentions were to give the Italian brothers an Italian surname that reflected their historical relationship with Spain, I’ve thought that surnames such as Almirante (or Amirante) and Olivares would be a much better choice, since they’re Spanish in origin, but are not like “hey, I’m a Spaniard”. However, these don’t seem to be very common, in fact, they aer quite rare. I’ve been searching for more or less common surnames in Italy of Spanish origin, and I found Perez (meaning “son of”, or “belonging to the house of” Peter/Pedro/Piero), Lopez (”son of/belonging to the house of” Lope) and Martinez (from Martín). The problem I find with these surnames is that they’re written just like in Spanish, but without the diacritical mark. I was searching for a surname that sounded and looked more... Italian. And I’m biased here, because I’m Spanish, so whatever sounds Italian to me may sound everything but italian for actual Intalians, so I’m sorry if I’m messing up. That’s why I thought of a quite uncommon surname (though slightly more common than Vargas), that is of Spanish origin and does sound and look Italian (to me, that’s it). That’s the surname Alonzi, deribed from the Spanish name and surname Alonso, which has already been subject to a process of “italianization”. It is also most common in the region of Lazio which is kind of... in central Italy, so it’s not too North/South specific (it is actually quite uncommon everywhere but in this region). It is also the most “common” (it really isn’t common at all) of all its variants (Alonso, Alonzo, etc). However, there’s another surname I liked that might be related to Spain, Corona, so if the purpose was to emphasize the relationship between Italy and Spain, it would 100% serve its purpose. It’s also quite more common than Alonzi, and it has two possible ethimologies. The first one points to an Italian origin of the surname, so it is certain it is an Italian surname (which is what I’m really looking for), while the second one points out it may very well be of Spanish origin, a shortening of the Spanish word “coronel” (colonel). It is present in all Italian regions, though more so in Sardinia, which used to be part of the Spanish Kingdom (and the Crown of Aragon). I think this would make a good surname because it has two possible origins, one of them being Spanish, but doesn’t sound like a typical Spanish surname (like Vargas, Lopez or Perez). Turth is Corona does mean crown in Spanish, so it 100% sounds Spanish and is a common word in this language, but it is not a Spanish surname, an no one would think it is unless explained otherwise. Summing up, I like both these options, though it must be said that Corona is way more common than Alonzi. Both sound “more Italian” to me (though again, Italians may think otherwise and they would be the ones on the right), and both are more common than Vargas, none of them would be confused by a Spanish surname, and yet both of them do reflect the ties between both countries. Finally, once again, I’m aware these surnames I mentioned are not very common in Italy anyway. By now, I’m already used to the Vargas surname, but I would just prefer a more Italian sounding surname. I hope I didn’t offend anyone, and if there’s any Italian out there who thinks different, feel free to correct anything I’ve said, since I really don’t know much about Italy and I may have messed up a little bit. It would also be nice to know what Italians think about this. I’m aware there are way more common surnames in Italy than the ones I mentioned, but I was looking to retain that connection to Spain the official surname has.
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Al Pacino in Scarface (Brian De Palma, 1983)
Cast: Al Pacino, Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Robert Loggia, Miriam Colon, F. Murray Abraham, Paul Shenar, Harris Yulin. Screenplay: Oliver Stone, based on a screenplay by Ben Hecht, Seton I. Miller, John Lee Mahin, W.R. Burnett adapted from a novel by Armitage Trail. Cinematography: John A. Alonzo. Art direction: Edward Richardson. Film editing: Gerald B. Greenberg, David Ray. Music: Giorgio Moroder.
Brian De Palma's Scarface ends with a dedication of the film to Howard Hawks and Ben Hecht, the director and the author of the story for the 1932 Scarface. As well it might, for De Palma's film and Oliver Stone's screenplay follow the outlined action and many of the characters of the earlier film far more closely than many remakes do. Most of the major characters have counterparts in the 1932 film: the Italian Tony Camonte becomes the Cuban Tony Montana; the first Tony's best friend, Guino Rinaldo, becomes Manny Ribera; Tony's sister, Cesca, becomes Gina; his boss Johnny Lovo's mistress, Poppy, becomes Tony Montana's boss Frank Lopez's mistress, Elvira. Both Mama Camonte and Mama Montana are sternly disapproving presences, and the appropriate characters are bumped off in more or less the same sequence and circumstances as in the earlier film. Because of the relaxation of censorship, there's a little heightening of some subtext from the first film: Gina (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) taunts Tony Montana (Al Pacino) with having incestuous feelings for her more explicitly than Cesca ever dares with Tony Camonte. And although the earlier film was thought to be excessively violent, the remake goes boldly where it didn't dare, starting with a chainsaw murder and ending with a veritable orgy of gunfire, including that of Tony's "little friend," a grenade launcher. The violence of De Palma's film first earned it an X rating, which was bargained down to an R after some suggested cuts -- although De Palma has claimed that he actually released the film without the cuts, and no one noticed. The remake's violence also turned off many of the critics, although it received a strong thumbs up from Roger Ebert. Since then, of course, the movie has become a cult classic, and more people have seen the remake than have ever seen the original. Which is a shame, because the original, despite some occasional slack pacing and the inevitable antique feeling that lingers in even pre-Production Code movies, is a genuine classic, while De Palma's version feels like a rather studied attempt to go over the top. Screenwriter Stone was never noted for subtlety, and while Al Pacino is one of the great movie actors, De Palma lets him venture into self-caricature, especially with what might be called his Cubanoid accent. On the other hand, Steven Bauer -- who was born in Cuba and sounds nothing like Pacino's Tony -- is a more appealing sidekick than George Raft was, and Michelle Pfeiffer, in one of her first major film roles, makes a good deal more of Elvira than Karen Morley did of Poppy, even though Pfeiffer is asked to do little more than look beautifully sullen and bored throughout the film. Scarface is at best a trash classic, a movie whose impact is stronger than one wants it to be. 
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d-criss-news · 3 years
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The Biden/Harris Presidential Inaugural Committee announced additional programming in advance of the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on January 20. The theme of the now five consecutive nights of events is “America United.”
On Saturday, January 16 is America United: An Inauguration Welcome Event Celebrating America’s Changemakers. The event will “celebrate America, reflect and honor our history, and highlight the incredible diversity of the nation” and kick off the five days of programming.
Whoopi Goldberg, actor Nik Dodani, comedienne and actress Cristela Alonzo, musician Darren Criss, Representative Grace Meng, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Resistance Revival Choir will participate. The Welcome Event will feature a special performance by the Grammy-nominated Black Pumas. It will stream live from 7:00-8:30 PM ET at bideninaugural.org and on Presidential Inaugural Committee social media pages.
Also announced today is United We Serve: A Celebration of the National MLK Day of Service on Monday, January 18. According to the release, thousands of volunteers across the country will participate in the National Day of Service, which will then be celebrated by entertainers and inspiring speakers such as Aloe Blacc, Rev. Dr. Bernice King, Martin Luther King III, Chesca, Rep. Sharice Davids, Rosario Dawson, Andra Day, Yo-Yo Ma, Rev. Al Sharpton, Sean Patrick Thomas, Diane Warren, Lynn Whitfield and Bebe Winans. The event will stream live from 8:00-9:00 PM ET at bideninaugural.org and on the inaugural committee’s social media pages.
Those events are in addition to the already-announced Memorial and Nationwide Tribute to Remember and Honor the Lives Lost to Covid-19 on Tuesday the 19th. At 5:30 p.m. ET, a D.C. ceremony will feature a lighting around the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. The inaugural committee has invited cities and towns around the country to join in illuminating buildings and ringing church bells.
Inauguration Day events include President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris laying wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery with former Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton and the former First Ladies in attendance.
Tom Hanks will host the primetime Celebrating America special that will culminate the inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.
Along with appearances from the 46th POTUS and 49th VPOTUS, the Ricky Kirshner and Glenn Weiss-produced 90-minute show will feature “The Star-Spangled Banner” courtesy of Lady Gaga; a “musical performance” by Jennifer Lopez, the details of which were not disclosed; and performances from Justin Timberlake, Demi Lovato, Ant Clemons and longtime Democrat supporter Jon Bon Jovi.
Celebrating America will air on multiple networks. Starting at 8:30 p.m. ET, the unity-aiming special will be carried by ABC, NBC, CBS, MSNBC and CNN, I hear. Additionally, the Weiss-directed show will be seen on Amazon Prime Video, Microsoft Bing, NewsNOW from Fox, and AT&T DIRECTV and U-verse as well as the Presidential Inaugural Committee’s social media feeds.
In a lead-up to Wednesday’s ceremony, the Biden team is bringing in some fictional D.C. heavyweights for a January 15 fundraiser. Unveiled today, the Conversations with Actors from The West Wing, Scandal, and Designated Survivor event will see Designated Survivor regular and ex-Obama staffer Kal Penn playing ringmaster.
On January 17th, another star-studded fundraiser takes place. Dubbed the We the People Concert, the event will be hosted by Keegan-Michael Key and Debra Messing. It will feature Ben Harper, Carole King, will.i.am, Fall Out Boy, James Taylor, AJR, Michael Bivens, Connie Britton, Sophia Bush, Jaimie Camil and Cal Penn. The festivities begin at 8 PM ET.
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