Category: Celebrating Life
Lights, Malmö – pay my drink, mister.
Fun to see old friends and acquaintances from Malmö star in a music video where they go all the way into decadence, dress up as party queens and dance the night away. This video has a big Made in Malmö stamp on it, the director of the video, the singer, the models, the streets. All of it. Go Malmö, go!
Makes me miss my wifey Emilia and think about those white wigs she bought for us, it’s time to use them very soon – don’t you think? I mean, it’s what we do.
Lunch time!
SPJO3D
Head Shoulders Knees and Toes
Momotombo @ Bar Uruk Kalli
“You really needed this, right?”
The huge smile on my face when dancing to along to the electronic madness of the Nicaraguan band Momotombo yesterday must have been very revealing, a live concert was exactly what my whole body had been longing for!
Momotombo plays an energetic electronic fusion of something that sounds like post-rock, jazz, funk and sampled beats from random songs. The atmosphere was really, really good and people were completely letting go and dancing their heads off. The concert was set up in the bar that has become my favourite here in the city, Uruk Kalli, a place that features artistic vibes, interesting details, and a very pleasant evening breeze.
Also, obvious highlight of the night, I got to play with my new camera.
Oh, and apparently I forgot to set the video settings, so you’re getting this in low-res. Sorry about that! :)
Throwin’ deuces in the air
My beloved Josie, to the left above, just sent me this photo from 2006 a couple of days ago. We were on our way to a party with the car full of happy girls, I was the designated driver as always, and my expression is just too hilarious to not share it. Peace!
“Chuckin the deuce”
To throw your hand up to hail someone or greet a friend done by throwing your hand up showing the peace sign backwards.
Originally from Houston, Texas.
– UrbanDictionary.com ”
Čajorije, šukarije.
Photo from Anders & Irina’s wedding. Åhus, Sweden, 2010
Kayah & Goran Bregovic – Čaje Šukarije
Kayah i Bregovic (1999)
Two random facts:
1. The Swedish word “tjej” (girl) actually comes from the Romani version: tjaj, or čaj, which means both girl and daughter.
2. Circumstances led me to learn and speak a fair amount of Romani when I was 15-19.
..ma phir urde pala mande, čaje!
Exitoso Carnaval de Nicaragua 2013
So I just got an email from Erick Ruiz José from the Canal 8 TV channel here in Nicaragua, they were one of the TV teams who surprised me while I was taking photos of the carnival by putting a big camera in my face and asking “What do you think of Nicaragua?!” There were so many things I could have said about the context, about the athmosphere, about the country or even about the objectification of bodies – but I just couldn’t find a way to put it into the surprise moment and I didn’t have the heart to start criticizing anything in the midst of the great vibe of the event – so I just went with the least creative but most easy answer: “The people are very good, very beautiful, I LIKE IT!“
Maybe not the best performance right there, but hey – Look mom, I’m on TV in Nicaragua! haha
Alegría por la vida!
Yesterday I was at the 4th yearly carnival in Nicaragua, “Alegría por la vida!” was it’s catchy slogan that the MC was screaming through the microphone more than often, Joy for life.
In proper Rio de Janeiro style, dancers from different dance groups, cultural associations and districts of Nicaragua showed off their tranditional dances, glittery little outfits and, strangely, a lot of coloured contact lenses. The athmosphere was great, the audience was cheering and clapping, and the dancers seemed to enjoy despite those sky-high heels. To my surprise, about half of the artists were actually men in women’s outfits with full-on make up and often socks for breasts, and I was very schocked when the group from the Caribbean coast didn’t only do their traditional “African dance” with an extemely sexist touch, but also had a sequence where an old man screams and bites the shell of a coconut off with his teeth, cracks the coconut open against the ground and eats it like a wild beast before pouring the coconut water over himself and throwing the rest at the audience..
But apart from what I think of these kind of extremely objectifying events, children in high heels, and rather disgusting reinforcements of old stereotypes, I was having a really good time.
The whole event is run by the government and was supported by hundreds of youth from the political movement Juventud Sandinista. They were responsible for keeping people off the main street where the dancers were passing and basically wanted me to take their picture all the time, awesomely, I got access to walk into the street and get very close to the dancers instead of in the seats of spectators or behind the row of people.
So, here’s what I got: