ZOKA مؤسس
| موضوع: اوباما الفنان رجل دماغ صاحب مزاج ههههههههههه الأحد يوليو 12, 2009 11:44 pm | |
|
الصورة دى التقطت للرئيس اوباما وهو ينظر الى الفتاه البرازيليه مايارا تافارس (Mayara Tavares) صاحبه ال 17 عاما
اثناء ختام فعاليات القمه التى اقيمت فى ايطاليا لبحث الازمه الاقتصاديه واسعار البترول وغيرها وبجوارة ساركوزى رئيس فرنسا
ودة نص المقال فى الجريدة البرازيليه
Tom Phillips, Rio De Janeiro July 12, 2009 . IT'S one thing to turn a man's head, but quite another when that man is the American president — and another when the moment is captured by photographers and published worldwide
A 17-year-old Brazilian girl became an overnight celebrity in Rio de Janeiro after apparently catching US President Barack Obama's eye at the G8 summit in Italy.
Mayara Tavares was not so much the Girl from Ipanema as the Girl from Barro Vermelho (Red Clay), a rundown neighbourhood on the impoverished western outskirts of Rio de Janeiro.
Ms Tavares, a social activist, was reportedly chosen to take part in the Junior G8 summit after working on a human rights study in two notorious Rio shantytowns, among them the Complexo do Alemao, a sprawling network of favelas, or settlements, home to about 160,000 people.
In an interview with Brazilian television earlier this month she said that travelling to the G8 was an "inexplicable feeling".
Hundreds of readers contacted news websites in Brazil to comment on the photograph. "This young lady must be phenomenally beautiful," wrote one. "After all, even Sarkozy had to hang on to his jaw."
But a video on the American broadcaster ABC's website shows that the "Bottomgate" photograph was an innocent frame that did not deserve to be turned into an internet scandal.
President Obama was in fact turning to the woman in the black top and print skirt who is just behind him and to his right. He took her hand to help her down the steps.
But Carla Bruni, the wife of French President Nicolas Sarkozy, on the other hand, may be ruing her decision to snub the summit, as the ABC clip suggests President Sarkozy stole a lingering look at the Brazilian woman.
| |
|