#kuwaiti fc
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dear-indies · 5 months ago
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Hi! Could you help me, I’m trying to find a fc for an arabic/Middle East woman (can be partially) that could look to be in the age 25 to 35, bonus points if it’s a faceclaim with medieval pictures!
Thank you!
Nur Fettahoğlu (1980) Kosovo Albanian and Turkish - has period resources in Muhtesem Yuzyil and Kardeş Çocukları.
Meryem Uzerli (1983) Turkish and German - has period resources in Muhtesem Yuzyil.
Beren Saat (1984) Turkish - period resources in Muhtesem Yuzyil.
Fahriye Evcen (1986) Turkish and Circassian - period resources in Çalıkuşu - has spoken up for Palestine!
Hande Doğandemir (1985) Turkish - period resources in Muhteşem Yüzyıl: Kösem.
Melisa Aslı Pamuk (1991) Turkish - has period resources in Kurt Seyit ve Şura - has spoken up for Palestine!
Medalion Rahimi (1992) Iranian and Mizrahi Jewish - has period resources in Still Star-Crossed.
Maddison Jaizani (1995) Iranian / White - period resources in Versailles.
and then:
May Calamawy (1986) Palestinian-Jordanian / Egyptian.
Denise Bidot (1986) Kuwaiti / Puerto Rican.
Marwa Agrebi (1987) Tunisian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Zaraah Abrahams (1987) Iraqi and Barbadian / Afro Jamaican.
Amina Khalil (1988) Egyptian.
Yasmine Sabri (1988) Egyptian.
Nadia Hilker (1988) Tunisian / White.
Heba Magdy (1988) Egyptian.
Marina Golbahari (1989) Afghan.
Mouna Hawa (1989) Palestinian.
Selin Şekerci (1989) Arab and Azerbaijani.
Rakeen Saad (1989) Palestinian and/or Jordanian.
Yasmine Al-Bustami (1988) Palestinian, Jordanian / Filipino.
Dina Shihabi (1989) Palestinian, Saudi Arabian / Norwegian, German, Haitian.
Shirine Boutella (1990) Algerian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Rosaline Elbay (1990) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Eda Ece (1990) Turkish - has spoken up for Palestine!
Aiysha Hart (1990) Saudi Arabian / British - has spoken up for Palestine!
Zahraa Ghandour (1991) Iraqi - has spoken up for Palestine!
Dana Al Salem (1992) Bahraini.
Sara Lalama (1993) Algerian.
Younes Bendjima (1993) Algerian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Tara Emad (1993) Egyptian / Yugoslav Montenegrin - has spoken up for Palestine!
Pınar Deniz (1993) Turkish [Lebanese].
Salma Abu-Deif (1993) Egyptian.
Mina El Hammani (1993) Moroccan - has spoken up for Palestine!
Hanan Tarq (1994) Yemeni / Ethiopian.
Ebru Şahin Osman (1994) Turkish - has spoken up for Palestine!
Arienne Mandi (1994) Chilean and Iranian - is pansexual.
Huda Elmufti (1994) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Hager Ahmed (1994) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Ahsen Eroğlu (1994) Turkish - has spoken up for Palestine!
Sezgi Sena Akay (1995) Circassian Turkish.
Mona Farouk (1995) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Asmaa Galal (1995) Egyptian.
Tijan Marei (1996) Circassian Turkish / German.
Imaan Hammam (1996) Egyptian / Moroccan - has spoken up for Palestine!
Iman Meskini (1997) Tunisian / Norwegian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Mayan El Sayed (1997) Egyptian.
Melis Sezen (1997) Turkish - has spoken up for Palestine!
Bahar Şahin (1997) Turkish - has spoken up for Palestine!
Mayan El Sayed (1997) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Leem Lubany (1997) Palestinian.
Angel Guardian (1998) Palestinian and Filipino.
May Elghety (1998) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Hey anon! I saw a post the other day saying that people would prefer if everybody used SWANA instead of Middle East.
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tasksweekly · 6 years ago
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[TASK 136: KUWAIT]
There’s a masterlist below compiled of over 180+ Kuwaiti faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Hayat Al-Fahad (1948) Kuwaiti - actress, broadcaster, writer and producer.
Zahrah al Kharji (1962) Kuwaiti - actress.
Huda Hussein (1965) Kuwaiti - actress and producer.
Shemayel (1969) Kuwaiti - singer.
Jamal Al Najadah (1975) Kuwaiti - actress, fashion designer, and media personality.
Haya Al Shuaibi (1979) Kuwaiti - actress and comedian.
Lamya Tareq (1979) Kuwaiti - actress.
Emma Shah (1981) Kuwaiti / Iranian - singer, composer, pianist, guitarist, actress, writer, dancer, and director.
Fatima Al Qadiri (1981) Kuwaiti - musician.
Haya Abdulsalam / Haya Abdul Salam (1983) Kuwaiti - actress and director.
Noha Nabil (1984) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (nohastyleicon) and beauty blogger.
Dalalid / Dalal AlDoub (1986) Kuwaiti - youtuber (dalalaldoub).
Yalda Golsharifi (1986) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (ygolsharifi).
Denise Bidot (1986) Kuwaiti / Puerto Rican - model.
Shujoun Al-Hajri (1988) Kuwaiti - actress and broadcaster.
Ascia / Ascia AKF / Ascia Al Faraj (1989) Kuwaiti / Unspecified White - model, instagrammer (ascia), youtuber (The Hybrids - Ascia & Ahmad), blogger, and fashion designer.
Fouz Alfahad (1990) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (therealfouz).
Fatma Alqadeeri (1993) Kuwaiti - tv host.
Rawan Bin Hussain (1996) Kuwaiti - model and instagrammer (rawan).
Khattafya (1996) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (khattafya) and youtuber (Khattafya and AlKhattafSisters).
Lulu Al Khataf (?) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (lulualkhataf) and youtuber (lulualkhataf and AlKhattafSisters).
Lady Walaa (?) Kuwaiti, Unknown - model (Instagram: lady_walaaly)
Haya Alobaid (?) Kuwaiti - model (Instagram: kuwaity_haya)
Souad Abdullah (?) Kuwaiti - actress.
Fatima Al Safi (?) Kuwaiti - actress and media personality.
Dana Gharib (?) Kuwaiti, Lebanese  - model, media personality, actress and Miss Kuwait for 2015 - 2016.
Dana Al Tuwarish (?) Kuwati / Iraqi - Instagrammer (daneeda_t).
Bibi Alabdulmohsen (?) Kuwati - Instagrammer (bibii63).
Maram / Mariam Al Belushe (?) Kuwati - actress and singer.
Hanan Alnajadah (?) Kuwati - makeup artist and YouTuber.
Lulu Al-Aslawi (?) Kuwati - TV host.
Shayman (?) Kuwati - TV host.
F - Athletes:
Nada Aljeraiwi (1985) Kuwaiti - cyclist.
Maryam Arzouqi (1987) Kuwaiti - sports shooter.
Najla Aljeraiwi (1988) Kuwaiti - cyclist.
Danah Al-Nasrallah (1988) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Noura Alameeri (1988) Kuwaiti - cyclist.
Faye Sultan (1994) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Maha Alsheraian (?) Kuwaiti - paralympic discus thrower.
M:
Mohammed Al Manea (1930) Kuwaiti - actor.
Saad Al Faraj (1938) Kuwaiti - actor.
Ibrahim Al-Sallal (1940) Kuwaiti - actor.
Fakhri Odeh (1941) Kuwaiti - actor.
Jassim Al-Nabhan (1944) Kuwaiti - actor.
Mohammed Al-Mansor (1948) Kuwaiti - actor.  
Dawood Hussain (1958) Kuwaiti - actor.
Ahmad Johar (1958) Kuwaiti - actor, director and writer.
Abdallah Al Rowaished (1961) Kuwaiti - singer.  
Tariq Al-Ali (1966) Kuwaiti - comedian and actor.
Basharno / Beesho / Maystro / Bashar al-Shatti (1982) Kuwaiti - singer, songwriter and actor,
Shuaib Rashed (1983) Kuwaiti - talk show host.
Talal Alrashed (1983) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (talal.alrashed).
Ibrahim Dashti (1986) Kuwaiti - singer.
Mutref al Mutref (1986) Kuwaiti - singer.
Fahad Awadh (1986) Kuwati - model (Instagram: fahad_awadh86).
Abdulla Aljasser (1987) Kuwati - singer, songwriter, media personality, social media celebrity and TV presenter.
Humood AlKhudher (1989) Kuwaiti - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Waqar Malik (1989) Kuwaiti - actor, singer, and fashion influencer.
Goubran Bahou (1990) Kuwaiti - facebook star (Goubtube).
Bader Eidan (1992) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (badereidan).
Kwili (1995) Kuwaiti - youtuber (Kwili).
Hassan Alattar (1998) Kuwaiti - singer.
Zain Aldraie (?) Kuwaiti - model and bodybuilder (Instagram: zainaldraie).
Yousef Al-Qenaei (?) Kuwaiti - filmmaker.
Zahed Sultan (?) Kuwaiti - musician.
M - Athletes:
Mraljeb Ayed Mansoor (1939) Kuwaiti - long-distance runner.
Saoud Obaid Daifallah (1944) Kuwaiti - long-distance runner.
Younis Abdallah (1948) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Mohamed Saad (1949) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Fawzi Burhma (1950) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Abdul Aziz Abdul Kareem (1952) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Abdul Latif Abbas (1953) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Fahed Salem (1953) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Mohamed Al-Zinkawi (1953) Kuwaiti - shot putter.
Ibrahim Muzaffer (1953) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Abdul Kareem Al-Awad (1953) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Ibrahim Al-Rabeeah (1954) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Saleh Faraj (1955) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Abdullah Abdulrahman (1955) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Fahad Al-Farhan (1955) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Ali Al-Khawajah (1957) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Khaled Khalifa Al-Shammari (1957) Kuwaiti - middle distance runner.
Khaled Hussain (1958) Kuwaiti - middle distance runner.
Mohamed Abdul Wahab (1958) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Khaled Ghaloum (1958) Kuwaiti - hammer thrower.
Sulaiman Qabazard (1958) Kuwaiti - diver.
Ali Al-Baluchi (1959) Kuwaiti - boxer.
Adham Hemdan (1959) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Kamal Al-Athari (1959) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Abdul Nasser Al-Sayegh (1959) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Abdulla Abuqrais (1959) Kuwaiti - diver.
Hisham Al-Sharaf Rashad (1960) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Mohamed Eyiad (1960) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Essa Abbas (1960) Kuwaiti - long jumper.
Tareq Al-Ghareeb (1961) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Najem Najem (1961) Kuwaiti - discus thrower.
Faisal Buressli (1961) Kuwaiti - basketball player.
Kazem Hasan (1961) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Waleed Al-Mohamed Abdulmuhsin (1961) Kuwaiti - rower.
Abdul Majeed Al-Mosawi (1962) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Ahmed Al-Ahmed (1962) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Khaled Jahrami (1962) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Saleh Marzouk (1962) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Kifah Al-Mutawa (1962) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Mohamed Al-Thuwani (1963) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Ebrahim Al-Cattan (1963) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Osama Al-Khurafi (1963) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Jasem Al-Dowaila (1963) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Naji Mubarak (1964) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Khaled Al-Assaf (1964) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Yousuf Al-Hammad (1964) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Khaled Al-Awadhi (1964) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Ali Hasan (1965) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Ghanem Zaid (1965) Kuwaiti - javelin thrower. .
Waleed Al-Bekheet (1965) Kuwaiti - hammer thrower.
Sayed Al-Tubaikh (1965) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Mohamed Ghaloum (1965) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Faisal Al-Harshani (1966) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Hussain Safar (1966) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Adel Al-Najadah (1966) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Hasan Al-Shammari (1967) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Younes Al-Mashmoum (1968) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Mohamed Bu Sakher (1968) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Salman Mohamed Hussain (1968) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Zeyad Abdulrazak (1969) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Abdul Marzouk Al-Yoh (1969) Kuwaiti - triple jumper.
Musayed Al-Azimi (1969) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Husain Al-Mutairi (1969) Kuwaiti - boxer.
Saud Al-Muwaizri (1969) Kuwaiti - boxer.
Nahedh Al-Murdh (1970) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Hussain Mohamed Hassan (1970) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Sultan Al-Otaibi (1970) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Hamed Sadeq (1971) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Mohamed Al-Hamar (1971) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Saqer Al-Surayei (1972) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Saleh Al-Sharrah (1973) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Mishal Sayed Al-Harbi (1975) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Abdelmohsen Shahrayen (1976) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Bader Abdul Rahman Al-Fulaij (1977) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Bashar Abdullah (1977) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Fawaz Al-Shammari (1977) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Bashar Omar (1979) Kuwaiti - middle distance runner.
Fawzi Al-Shammari (1979) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Mohammad Ghareeb (1980) Kuwaiti - tennis player.
Ahmad Gholoum (1980) Kuwaiti - shot putter.
Musaed Abdullah (1981) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Mohammad Al-Azemi (1982) Kuwaiti - middle distance runner.
Faisal Al-Mahmeed (1983) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Ahmad Ajab (1984) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Hussain Fadhel (1984) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Mohammad Ashkanani (1984) Kuwaiti - basketball player.
Ali Al-Zinkawi (1984) Kuwaiti - hammer thrower.
Talal Al-Enezi (1985) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Khalid Ajab (1986) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Saleh Al-Haddad (1986) Kuwaiti - track and field athlete.
Ahmad Abdulghafour (1987) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Mohammad Madwa (1987) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Abdullah Maqdes (1987) Kuwaiti - tennis player.
Majid Al-Ali (1987) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Fahad Al Enezi (1988) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Abdulaziz Al-Mandeel (1989) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Hamad Aman (1989) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Ebrahim Al-Zofairi (1989) Kuwaiti - middle distance runner.
Abdulaziz Al-Shatti (1990) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Sulaiman Abdulghafour (1991) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Abbas Qali (1992) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Essa Mohammed Al-Zankawi (1992) Kuwaiti - discus thrower.
Ahmed Al-Dhefiri (1992) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Yousef Karam (1993) Kuwaiti - sprinter.
Yaqoub Mohamed Al-Youha (1993) Kuwaiti - hurdler.
Faisal Ajab Al-Azemi (1994) Kuwaiti - footballer.
Ahmad Almutairi (1994) Kuwaiti - track and field athlete and wheelchair basketball player.
Yousef Al-Askari (1994) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Hamad Aladwani (?) Kuwaiti - paralympic track and field athlete.
Adel Al-Ghaith (?) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Dhari Almutairi (?) Kuwaiti - paralympic shot putter.
Ahmad Al-Hahdoud (?) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Jamal Ameen (?) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Isaac Atish Wa-El (?) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Ahmed Al-Arbeed (?) Kuwaiti - fencer.
Sayed Farhad (?) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Ali Heidar Ali Mohamed (?) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Faisal Marzouk (?) Kuwaiti - swimmer.
Abdul Latif Rozaihan (?) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Hussain Shareef (?) Kuwaiti - judoka.
Problematic:
Sondos Alqattan (1991) Kuwaiti - instagrammer (sondos_aq) and beauty blogger. - Has said that domestic workers shouldn’t deserve days off and other rights.
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fcsuggestor · 4 years ago
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name: denise bidot age/dob: thirty-four/june 13, 1986 known for: model ethnicity: kuwaiti and puerto rican instagram
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rotanawrites · 5 years ago
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Denise Bidot Static Icons
Day 8/50
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Under the cut, you’ll find #168 static icons in size 100 x 100 of American model Denise Bidot. She is half Kuwaiti and half Puerto Rican, so cast her correctly.
These fit @tasksweekly tasks #002: Icons, #005: Body Diversity, #043: Puerto Rico, and #136: Kuwait.
In celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month (September 15 - October 15), I’m releasing resources for at least one Latine fc a day every day from September 1st - October 15th. For all of those resources, click the link here!
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fairplay999in-blog · 5 years ago
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Ten Shortest Managerial Reigns in the Premier League
There have been numerous infamous sacking in the world of football, some more scandalous than others. However, have you ever wondered what the shortest managerial reigns were? Let’s have a look at the 10 instances where managers were sacked before they could even get comfy in their offices,
1. Brian Clough — 44 Days (Leeds United) 1974
A match made in hell, as most people claim. Strangely, Clough had bad-mouthed the club when he was still in charge of Derby. Later, he was appointed as manager of the Leeds United, which unsurprisingly, was not well received by fans of The Peacocks. Clough took charge of the club in July, and after just one win in six games, he was effectively dismissed. What’s more? His terror spell made it to the silver screen with the adaptation of the novel The Damned United.
2. Jock Stein — 44 Days (Leeds United) 1978
Another manager who couldn’t quite get going at Leeds again. The Celtic manager was apparently the first manager of British origin to clinch the European Cup. Additionally, during his tenure at Celtic Park, he won the league title 9 times. What followed after the amazing stint was a dry spell lasting for 13 years, following which he decided to make the switch to Leeds United. His tenure for The Peacocks didn’t last long, to say the least. The Scotland National Team job became available soon after his arrival at Leeds, and he promptly accepted.
3. Alex Mcleish — 41 Days (Nottingham Forest) 2013/14
Following Sean O’Driscoll’s dismissal at the hands of Forest’s new Kuwaiti owners, that too after a 4–2 Boxing Day victory over Leeds United, Mcleish stepped up as the boss. The Championship club were just one point off from the play-offs. However, Mcleish’s arrival didn’t help their prospects, securing only one win from his seven in-charge. Apparently, the inability to acquire transfer targets left the manager fuming. He was then removed soon after.
4. Les Reed — 41 Days (Charlton Athletic) 2006
Reeds was originally the FA’s technical director before departing to The Valley to become Ian Dowe’s assistant. Following the removal of Dowe as manager, Reed was chosen as the successor. Disaster soon ensued as Charlton only won a single game and were knocked out of the League Cup by League Two side Wycombe. Alan Pardew replaced him on Christmas Eve, and was later voted to be the ‘worst manger of all time’ in an unofficial poll. Harsh!
5. Steve Claridge — 36 Days (Millwall FC) 2005
Claridge was a player at The Den before deciding to try his luck as a manager. This decision was met with cheer from Millwall fans. But his managerial career ever took off. Dennis Wise replaced him in the summer of 2005. Strangely, he never took charge of a single competitive fixture. Reports suggest that his axing was done right after a board room talk. Chairman Theo Paphitis instead appointed and stated,” We had a strong chance of being relegated under Steve.”
6. Steve Coppell — 33 Days (Manchester City) 1996
Coppell was in-charge of London club Crystal Palace for two spells. He chose to move to Manchester City. However, like the other managers on this list, it didn’t turn out well. His tenure lasted six games and cited stress as the reason for his resignation. Coppell was then right back at Selhurst Park as chief scout and became the boss yet again in the year that followed.
7. Paul Hart — 28 Days (Queens Park Rangers) 2009/10
Previous managers Paulo Sousa and Jim Magilton had already been shown the boot in the same year, prior to Hart’s appointment as manager. A tiff with Adel Taarabt didn’t make his job easier with trigger happy owner Flavio Briatore. Hart didn’t enjoy a bright tenure at Loftus Road, with only one win out of five games in the bag. He was promptly dismissed later by the Italian owner.
8. Mickey Adams — 13 days (Swansea City) 1997
In the span of just 18 months Adams was the sixth manager to be given the Vetch Field. Following three losses in three weeks, Adams put in his resignation. The reason cited? Apparently, the Swans had lied to him about the club’s transfer kitty.
9. Dave Bassett — 4 Days (Crystal Palace) 1984
Bassett was only three days into the job at Wimbledon — his first, by the way, when he accepted an offer to take charge of Crystal Palace. He never actually signed an official contract but did put in four days of work before reconsidering and stayed at the Dons. He stated,”I gave it some serious thought, but in the end it just did not feel right.” But 12 years later, he did manage the Eagles.
10. Leroy Rosenior — 10 minutes (Torquay) 2007
Yes, you read that right. Rosenoir had initially managed Torqaut between 2002 and 2006 and came back in the following year to replace Keith Curle — or so he thought. The former Hammers striker’s appointment came at the exact same time the club was being purchased by a local consortium. And when Colin Lee was announced as the new chief executive at Plain Moor, his first task was to dismiss Rosenior and draw in Exeter assistant manager Paul Buckle as chief. His 600-second reign is the shortest managerial reign in the history of English football.
It’s safe to say it will never be beaten.
Looking for quality football betting portals? Head over to Fairplay999 today!
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dvlidas · 8 years ago
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this is my third attempt at this shindig! will it be any better? no promises LOL!
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ANGELIQUE MARIE AVERY
so this is angelique and she is just such a basket case oh my god :(
she was diagnosed with mast cell disease when she was 4 and it has affected her HER WHOLE LIFE (if you’ve ever seen the trailer for the movie everything, everything than this is basically how her life was like. she has the same disease as that character bish i did my research)
so growing up, she was raised by a single mom who is super intelligent! scientist that has worked w startups & nasa, etc. her mother is originally from cote d’ivoire (hence the french name)
her dad left when he realized that her disease would affect their whole life. basically just wasn’t man enough to stick around :/ she hasn’t seen him or heard of him since
so mast cell disease is where your body is producing too many cells, resulting in being allergic to everything? very difficult to go outside/be in crowded places bc ur body goes into a shock of some sorts? plz google this if u wanna know more idk 
so just like in everything, everything (wow so original!1) she lived her whole life inside her house, had filters and things to make her environment supa dupa safe vvv tech-y house thanks to her momma.
no friends/outer connections except her mom and maids/ppl gettin in and out of the house
her friends were just ppl in books!! she loves reading and painting and that was her form self expression growing up
her life changed at 17 bc she had a huge fight w her mom and basically left the house to spite her?? came back nd was totally fine even tho she thought she was gonna die woot woot1!
this raised a lot of questions bc she should b sick but she isn’t DUN DUN DUN
turns out, she was sick at one point but only for the first few years of her diagnosis and after that her mast was gone. 
SO ALL THIS TIME SHE WASN’T FUCKIN SICK OMGOMG
but her mom hid it from her and kind of made herself believe that angelique couldn’t go outside
in a twisted kind of way it was out of love? bc her mom didn’t want her to go off and leave her the way her dad did & she didn’t want to expose her to pain and things that would just /occur/ when ur a teen
she has moved out of the house and into a lil apartment w some roomies & studyin art!! (plot ideas hmu)
is fascinated by the most minuscule things, almost childlike!! adores nature will literally stare at a flower for a good half-hour studying every part of it 
so even tho she is so booksmart she is hella naive when it comes to the way the world works ig? she’s still figuring life out plz help her out
v sarcastic but lw gullible
like how can u b so smart yet so dumb? well thank her mother for that smh
now has a rocky relationship with her mom bc she’s like “u kept me away from all of this fun wow what a mc’bitch”
somewhat trying to search for her dad? not really trying hard enough but at the same time is so interested in just getting to know everything and ‘finding herself’ what a cliche. 
HAWA AMINAH SALEH
wow ok this one might be my most problematic of the batch. a literal heaux™ with no consideration! for! other! people’s! feelings!
if u thought i was gonna whitewash this bella hadid fc u got me fuccced up
#palestinianprincess w no care in the fucking world, or, at least that’s what she thinks.
is actually just a regular shmegular girl from the suburbs of sacramento that decided to one day just bounce the fuck outta this bitch and travel the world??
comes from a big palestinian family who just genuinely love and look out for eachother but this bitch just decided to fuckin leave bc she was just over being stuck in one place
basically hops from city to city, posing as a different alter ego in each city just for the fun of it. russian model named alexia who only wears red lipstick when she was in spain, greek hotel heiress named elise when she was in brazil?? who knows whats next? no one except her
just does it for the thrill of it and being whoever she wants to be in the moment. is the literal life of the party and will find herself in the weirdest situations due to her alter egos (partying on a kuwaiti prince’s yacht? nbd just a regular tuesday for hawa!!)
literal definition of no ragrets
found herself in london and just kind of ~drifted~ away from her cray alter egos and genuinely enjoyed the place she was in
stayed a couple of months, kept up a job and was kind of couch-hoppin from a few homies/one night stands UNTIL a casting agent had walked into the shop she worked at and just loved her face and her personality
next thing u kno she is apart of a new tv show and is makin some serious $$$
i mean if u were basically acting for ur day to day life might as well start making a living out of it
she is just overall problematic & thinks she’s the queen of everything
is super argumentative and will not back down until she wins the fight/argument like plz try her
very clever and just a party chick/ just a piece of aesthetically pleasing trash
actually has some potential to be a good person just hasn’t tapped into it yet just give her time
1 note · View note
dear-indies · 3 years ago
Note
Hi! I’m looking for a middle eastern female fc with a fair few resources, around their twenties or early thirties. Thanks!
Dalal AlDoub (1986) Kuwaiti - hijabi.
Özge Gürel (1987) Turkish.
Dilara Aksüyek (1987) Turkish.
Mona Haydar (1988) Syrian - hijabi.
Burcu Biricik (1989) Turkish.
Selin Şekerci (1989) Turkish.
Genevieve Kang (1989) Korean, Scottish Irish, Lebanese, Apache, and Spanish.
Leyla Lydia Tuğutlu (1989) 
Burcu Özberk (1989) Turkish.
Yağmur Tanrısevsin (1990) Turkish.
Melisa Aslı Pamuk (1991) Turkish.
Bensu Soral (1991) Turkish.
Elçin Afacan (1991) Turkish.
Deniz Işın (1991) Turkish.
Başak Gümülcinelioğlu (1991) Turkish.
Sofiya Cheyenne (1991) Taíno, Dominican, Syrian, and Italian - has a form of dwarfism called spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita.
Ayça Ayşin Turan (1992) Turkish.
Demet Özdemir (1992) Turkish.
Neslihan Atagül (1992) Turkish.
Çağla Demir (1992) Turkish.
Esra Bilgiç (1992) Turkish.
Medalion Rahimi (1992) Iranian and Mizrahi Jewish - she/they.
Beste Kökdemir (1993) Turkish.
Hande Erçel (1993) Turkish.
Sofia Carson (1993) Colombian – including Arab [Syrian, Lebanese, Palestinian], Spanish, possibly English, possibly other.
Ahsen Eroğlu (1994) Turkish. 
Pelin Uluksar (1994) Turkish.
Ebru Şahin (1994) Turkish.
Maddison Jaizani (1995) Iranian / British.
Aybüke Pusat (1995) Turkish.
Özge Özacar (1995) Turkish.
Dilan Çiçek Deniz (1995) 
Aslıhan Malbora (1995) Turkish.
Natacha Karam (1995) Lebanese / Irish.
Yaprak Medine (1996) Turkish.
İlayda Alişan (1996) Turkish.
Afra Saraçoğlu (1997) Turkish.
Esfir Khan / Dahlia Lou (1997) Naskapi, Ojibwe, Oglala Lakota Sioux, Hunkpapa Lakota Sioux, Sihasapa Lakota Sioux, Yankton Dakota Sioux, Nakoda Sioux, Jicarilla Apache, Iranian, Armenian, and Russian - is autistic and openly bisexual.
Özge Yağız (1997) Turkish.
Bahar Şahin (1997) Turkish.
Melis Sezen (1997)Turkish.
Simay Barlas (1998) Turkish.
Melisa Döngel (1999) Turkish.
Cemre Baysel (1999) Turkish.
Jihane Almira Chedid (2000) Javanese Indonesian and Lebanese.
Hafsanur Sancaktutan (2000) Turkish.
Josie Totah (2001) Palestinian / Lebanese, Italian, Irish, German - trans.
Sude Zülal Güler (2001) Turkish.
Here ya go! 
8 notes · View notes
tasksweekly · 6 years ago
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[TASK 141: SAUDI ARABIA]
In celebration of Arab American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 530+ Saudi Arabian faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. Special thanks to @brownapollo for helping us out with this masterlist! If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Mariam Al-Ghamdi (1949) Saudi Arabian - actress, director, and writer.
Ibtisam Lutfi (1950) Saudi Arabian - singer-songwriter and oud player.
Wajant Rahbini (1951) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Nagya Al.Rabiea (1955) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Laila al Salman (1961) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Sanaa Bakr Yones (1961) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Nabila Khashoggi (1962) Saudi Arabian, Turkish / English - actress, philanthropist, and businesswoman.
Amira El fadl (1968) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Aghadeir El Saeid (1972) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Eman El-Koseby (1974) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Haifaa al-Mansour (1974) Saudi Arabian - director.
Rania Mohammed (1975) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Waed / Hanan Baker Younis (1977) Saudi Arabian / Iraqi - singer.
Lojain Omran (1977) Saudi Arabian - television presenter.
Maha Salem (1977) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Budoor Abdullah (1977) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Nawal Mohamed (1978) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Yasmine Gelani / Yasmine Al-Jilany (1978) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Sanaa Ibrahim (1979) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Ahd / Ahd Hassan Kamel (1980) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Shams / Shams Bandar Al-Aslami (1980) Saudi Arabian, Kuwaiti - singer.
Afaf El Salman (1980) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Remona (1980) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Mayson Al Rwuily (1980) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Ahd Kamel (1980) Saudi Arabian - actress and filmmaker.
Hind Mohammed (1981) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Hend Mohamed (1981) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Qamar Al Turk (1982) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Rimas Mansour (1983) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Lamar (1983) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Maram Abdelaziz (1984) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Mashael (1984) Saudi Arabian, Lebanese, Bahraini - singer.
Elham Ali (1985) Saudi Arabian, Bahraini - actress, television presenter, and media personality.
Nur (1985) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (nurberxo).
Chihanh (1986) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Zoë Badwi (1986) Saudi Arabian, Egyptian / Irish - actress, singer-songwriter, and model.
Marwa Mohamed (1987) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Reem Abdullah (1987) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Hala (1987) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Mary Jean Lastimosa (1987) Saudi Arabian / Filipina - actress, model, Miss Universe Philippines 2014, and television presenter.
Sumaya Rida (1988) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Nura / Nura Habib Omer (1988) Saudi Arabian / Eritrean - actress, rapper, and singer.
Alanoud Al Harbi (1988) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Aseel Omran (1989) Saudi Arabian - actress and singer.
Nasra Al-Harby (1989) Saudi Arabian / Moroccan - actress.
Wardah Khan (1989) Saudi Arabian / Kashmiri Pakistani - actress and model.
Sarah Algaber (1989) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Haya Sawan (1989) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (hayasawan_official).
Daryna Tkachenko (1989 or 1990) Saudi Arabian / Russian, Ukrainian - model.
Aiysha Hart (1990) Saudi Arabian / British - actress and screenwriter.
Yamour / Yamoor (1990) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Samah Zidan (1991) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Dalia Mubarak (1991) Saudi Arabian / Unspecified Black - singer.
Hala Abdallah (1991) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (thehala).
Khairiya Abu Laban (1992) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Sara Murad (1992) Saudi Arabian - tv presenter.
Model Roz (1992) Saudi Arabian - model (instagram: model_roz).
Amy Roko (1992) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (amyroko).
Nermin Mohsen (1993) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Malak Youssef (1993) Saudi Arabian - model and Miss Saudi Arabia 2017.
Sukkari Life (1994) Saudi Arabian - youtuber.
Jana Hisham (1994) 5/8 Saudi Arabian, 1/8 Malaysian, 1/8 Bangladeshi, 1/8 Turkish - youtuber.
Njoud Al Shammari (1995) Saudi Arabian - youtuber.
Khawla Al-Enazi (1995) Saudi Arabian - actress, model, media personality, activist, and artist.
Nora Bo Awadh (1995) Saudi Arabian - actress, media personality, social media personality, activist, and artist.
Christina Nadin (1995) Saudi Arabian - model.
Waad Mohammed (1999) Saudi Arabian - actress, model, and singer.
Taleedah Tamer (2000) Saudi Arabian / Italian, Greek - model.
Danyah Shafei (2000) Saudi Arabian - tv presenter.
Banen Naem (2002) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Banen Stars) and instagrammer (banennaem123).
Leesa A (?) Saudi Arabian - rapper.
Abeer Sinder (?) Saudi Arabian / Unspecified Black - actress and youtuber.
Fatima AlBanawi (?) Saudi Arabian - actress and filmmaker.
Rotana / I Am Rotana / Rotana Tarabzouni (?) Saudi Arabian - singer-songwriter.
Hatoon Kadi (?) Saudi Arabian – comedian and activist.
Dina (?) Saudi Arabian - musician (The AccoLade).
Lamia (?) Saudi Arabian - musician (The AccoLade).
Dareen (?) Saudi Arabian - musician (The AccoLade).
Amjaad (?) Saudi Arabian - musician (The AccoLade).
Jiaying Blue Han-Keating (?) Saudi Arabian / Chinese - model.
Aixa Kay (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Yara Alnamlah (?) Saudi Arabian - makeup artist, blogger, YouTuber. (Instagram: yara.makeup).
Tara Bella (?) Saudi Arabian / Unknown - model (Instagram: tara.bella_).
Basma Elkhereiji (?) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (basmaelkhereiji).
Sultana İnatcık Nur (?) Saudi Arabian, Turkish - model (Instagram: tara.bella_).
Wania (?) Saudi Arabian / Pakistani - model (Instagram: _waanniiaa_).
Lamazi (?) Saudi Arabian - model (Instagram: lamazi_model).
Amani Mubarak (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Marwa Salem (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Samar Al-Bayat (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Shaimaa al-Tayeb (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Manayer Khaled (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Maha Ezz El Din (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Reem AlHabib (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Meela Al-Zahrani (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Shimaa El Fadl (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
Maha Zein (?) Saudi Arabian - actress.
F - Athletes:
Lubna Al-Omair (1987) Saudi Arabian - fencer.
Sarah Attar (1992) Saudi Arabian / Unspecified White - middle-distance runner.
Dalma Rushdi Malhas (1992) Saudi Arabian - equestrian.
Wojdan Shaherkani (1992) Saudi Arabian - judoka.
Jasmine Alkhaldi (1993) Saudi Arabian / Cebuano Filipina - swimmer.
Kariman Abuljadayel (1994) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Joud Fahmy (1994) Saudi Arabian - judoka.
Yasmin Siraj (1996) Saudi Arabian / Iranian - figure skater.
M:
Ali Al-Mdfa (1937) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hassan Dardir (1938) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Lutfi Zinni (1940) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Talal Maddah (1940) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saad Khedr (1943) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saeed Basiri (1943) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdel Rahman El Kharigi (1944) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed El Mofreh (1945) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ali El Huyerini (1945) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed Altoyan (1945) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hamad Al-Mazaini (1945) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulaziz Al Hammad (1946) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saad Khader (1946) Saudi Arabian, Unspecified Black - actor, director, and producer.
Mohamed El Ali (1947) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hani El-saady (1948) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abd Alrahman Alkhateeb (1949) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Abdu (1949) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Ali Al Saba (1951) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abu Zuhair / Ali Al-Seba / Ali Al-Sebaa (1951) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abadi Al Johar (1953) Saudi Arabian - composer.
Fouad Bakhsh (1953) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abd al-Ilah Nawar (1955) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Talal Alharbi (1956) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulrahman Alrkrac (1956) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saleh El Zayer (1957) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim El Harbi (1957) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mutreb Fawaz Al Ouni (1958) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Magdy El-Kadi (1958) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdelaziz El Mobdel (1958) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdullah Al Sadhan (1958) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdel Khalek al-Ghanem (1958) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed Alkanhal (1959) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Samir Al Nassir (1959) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Rashid Al Shamrani (1960) Saudi Arabian - actor and writer.
Bashir Al Ghoneim (1960) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Rashed Alshamrani (1960) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Nasser Al Qasabi / Nasser Qassim Al Qasabi (1961) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mahdy El Baqmy (1961) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Khaled Sami (1961) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Khalid Mengah (1961) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim Gabr (1961) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Omar El Gasser (1962) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Emad Al Youssef (1962) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulmohsen Elnemr (1963) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Awad Abdallah (1963) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim Al-Hsawi (1964) Saudi Arabian - actor and poet.
Ibrahim Al Hesawi (1964) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Amer El-Hamoud (1964) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yousef Al-Jarrah (1965) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdallah El Senany (1965) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdullah Elamer (1965) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdelelah El Senany (1965) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mashal Al-Halil (1965) Saudi Arabian - actor.
‎Khalid Alharbi‎ (1966) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hassan Assiri (1967) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Heitham Al-Sayed (1968) Saudi Arabian / English - rapper and singer.
Fayez Al-Malki (1969) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Said Garaish (1969) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Rashed Al Majed / Rashed Al Majid (1969) Saudi Arabian / Bahraini - singer.
Anbar El Dossary (1970) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abd el baqy Al bakheet (1970) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Al-Assa (1971) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Fahd Al-Hayyan (1971) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdelaziz El Fareehi (1971) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim Bosaad (1971) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Fahad Al-Hian (1971) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Rashed Al Fares (1971) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Abd el Aziz El Shemary (1972) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Noor Hussin (1972) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abd El Aziz El Skirien (1972) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Torky El Youssef (1973) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed El Haggy (1973) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hamed Al-daban (1973) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ahmad AlShugairi (1973) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Talal Alsider (1973) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdelhamid El Awwam (1973) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Waleed El Ghannam (1974) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Khaled Al Buraiki (1975) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hani Nazer (1975) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Asad Alzahrani (1975) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Faisal El Emiri (1975) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Habib Al-Habib (1976) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulaziz Alsharikh (1976) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hani Derar (1976) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mamdouh Salem (1976) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed Almoqbel (1976) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yasser Meshraf (1977) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Said Saleh (1977) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Moshael Almoteary (1977) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdallah Alzahrani (1978) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saleh Alhanaky (1979) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Omar El Doghery (1979) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Maitham El-Rezk (1979) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Faisal Al-Saif (1979) Saudi Arabian - tv presenter.
Ibrahim El Hakami (1979) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Majed Motreb Fawaz (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hisham Abdulrahman (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor and singer.
Torky El Sadhan (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hesham Al-Huwaysh (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Farouk Al-Shouaibi (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Tarek El Harby (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdel Mohsen El Shameri (1980) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Turki Al-Sadhan (1981) Saudi Arabian - actor and tv host.
Ahmed Alhassan (1981) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ahmed Shoaib (1981) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Dorian Aldorian (1981) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulaziz Abdulrahman (1982) Saudi Arabian / Jordanian - singer.
Ali Al-Gofaily (1982) Saudi Arabian - presenter.
Faisal El Eissa (1982) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Faisal Al-Essa (1982) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Meshal Al dayel (1982) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Wael Ghazi (1983) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulaziz Al Mulifi (1983) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ali AL-Saad (1983) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim Alkhairallah (1983) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Bin Ishaq (1983) Saudi Arabian / Yemeni - youtuber (The Baigan Vines Official) and instagrammer (mohammedbinishaq).
Bader Saleh (1984) Saudi Arabian, Yemeni - comedian and presenter.
Murad Mohammad (1984) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ahmad AL Hazmi (1984) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Badr Al mtrify (1984) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Iyad Al Nounou (1984) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (iyadnn).
Nayef Fayez (1984) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yacob Alfarhan (1984) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed El-Chdokhi (1985) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Fahad Albutairi (1985) Saudi Arabian - actor, stand-up comedian, and screenwriter.
Faisal Falattah (1985 or 1986) Saudi Arabian / Unspecified Black - model.
Fares El Madani (1985 or 1986) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Ahmad Fathalddin (1985) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Theyab Al-Jasir (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Faisal Al Omari (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Bader Ellehid (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Al-Harthi (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Wael El-Harby (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdallah Ahmed (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Muhannad Aljamaily (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Slow Moe / Moe Halhel (1986) Saudi Arabian - rapper.
Faisal Al-Zahrani (1986) Saudi Arabian - TV host.
Muhannad Al Jumaili (1986) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Tarek / Tarek Ebéné (1986) Saudi Arabian - rapper (K.I.Z.).
Omar Hussein (1986) Saudi Arabian - comedian and CEO of UTURN Entertainment.
Hisham Fageeh (1987) Saudi Arabian - actor and comedian.
Saifan Mohammed Al-Otaibi (1987) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Al Kraidees (1987) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdullah Al-Jumah (1987) Saudi Arabian - author.
Feras Bugnah (1987) Saudi Arabian - actor, youtuber, and filmmaker.
Saleh Abuamrh (1987) Saudi Arabian - author.
Marwan Fagui (1987) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Hussain Sallam (1987) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (S7S).
Bader Al Zaidan (1987) Saudi Arabian - author.
Meshaal El Etieby (1988) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Majed Al-Madani (1988) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Abass Ibrahim (1988) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Mohamed Taher (1988) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Sultan Al Salem (1989) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Turki Almohsen (1989) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (تركي المحسن).
Majid ElAbid (1989) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Prince Stefan / Stephan Andrei Anlocotan (1989) Saudi Arabian / Hiligaynon Filipino - actor and model.
Fadel Almustafa (1990) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Khaled Saqer (1990) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Sultan Al-Rashed (1990) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Alaa Ebrahim (1990) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (DvLZStaTioN) and instagrammer (3ala2o).
Jihad Al Mofadda (1990) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Saudi Gamer - سعودي جيمر).
Hamza Hawsawi (1991) Saudi Arabian, Unspecified Black - singer.
Abdelaziz Al Shareef (1992) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Rakan Abdullah Alsadhan (1992) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Thunayyan Khalid (1992) Saudi Arabian - youtuber and instagrammer (thunayyan16).
Faisal Binladen (1992) Saudi Arabian, Yemeni - instagrammer (faisalbinladen).
Firas Al-Juhani (1992) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Fir4sGamer).
oPiiLz (1992) Saudi Arabian - youtuber.
Naser Aldosary (1993) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saud Alhomud (1993) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (قناة سعود Saud Channel l).
Bader Al-Shaeebi (1994) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdullah Bakr (1994) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (TheSaudiReporters | سعودي ريبورترز ) and instagrammer (boodyzozo).
Abdulaziz Bakr (1994) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (TheSaudiReporters | سعودي ريبورترز ) and instagrammer (zozobakrtv).
Anas Iskander (1994) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Anas Iskander I انس اسكندر).
Aamer Bin Ishaq (1994) Saudi Arabian / Yemeni - youtuber (The Baigan Vines Official) and instagrammer (aamer.bin.ishaq).
Montadher Al-Zayer (1995) Saudi Arabian - musician.
Meshal Al Jaser (1995) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Folaim Ya Gholaim).
AnEsonGib (1996) Saudi Arabian - youtuber.
BasSTOP (1996) Saudi Arabian - youtuber.
Abdulrhman Bin Ahmed (1997) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Tarek (1997) Saudi Arabian - youtuber.
KhalafZone (1997) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (KhalafZone | خلف زون).
Mohammed Tarazi (1997) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (M7MDXD).
Moha Shmri (1997) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Moha).
Rashed (1998) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (zSHOWz) and instagrammer (ziibordo8a).
RakanTime (1999) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (راكان تايم | RakanTime).
King Luxy (2000) Saudi Arabian - instagrammer (luxyking).
Abdullah Khaleel (2001) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Dyler Tv (2001) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (DYE LAH).
Manar (2001) Saudi Arabian - youtuber (Manr).
Rabeh Sager / Rabeh Saqer (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Jacob Moha (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mamdouh Saif (?) Saudi Arabian - musician.
Abdel Majid Ibrahim (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Ammar Sabban (?) Saudi Arabian - puppeteer, voice actor, podcaster and writer. 
Mamoun Hassan (?) Saudi Arabian - filmmaker.
Bandar Mougri (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Fouad Al-Hitar (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Murshid Atta (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
Ibrahim Al-Hsawi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor and poet.
Mohammed Al-Hamdan (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Muhammad Aman (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Aidross El Aidross (?) Saudi Arabian - singer.
AbdelMajeed Al Hammamy (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim Al-Hajjaj (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hassan Ashour (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Eid Saud (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Wael Mohammed Hamza (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ali El-Shehabi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yousef Aldakhil (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hesham Alghamdi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Turky Mehreq (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saad Tallas (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saad Sultan (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Khaled AbdelAziz (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdallah Bal'eis (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdullah Rafa (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Eid Saad (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Khaled Al.Aboudy (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Sultan Al.Mekbaly (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Ibrahim ELFiryaan (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saleh El-Olayyani (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Sayed Abdulrahman (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Sultan Al Assaf (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohammed Aldbekhi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Saleh El Zeer (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Naser El Kanhal (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed Bakhsh (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yaser Qarout (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdulbari Al Bani (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Jamil ALQahtani (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Hussam Abu Sabra (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Sultan Alnafisi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Abdullrahman Al Gohani (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Aymn Barakat (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed Alshawqabi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Rashed El Warthan (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yahya Bakash (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Nawaf al Rkabi (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mahfouz El-Mansaf (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Samy Hazem (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohsen El Shahry (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Yusef Al Yusef (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Fahed Elrakf (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Loay Mohammed Hamza (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
Mohamed Hamza (?) Saudi Arabian - actor.
M - Athletes:
Said Khalil Al-Dosari (1948) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Mansour Al-Juaid (1948) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Kamil Al-Abbasi (1950) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Ahmed Al-Assir (1952) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Abdullah Al-Shaye (1954) Saudi Arabian - cyclist.
Bilal Said Al-Azma (1955) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Hamed Al-Bishi (1956) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Mohamed Abd Al-Jawad (1962) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Shaye Al-Nafisah (1962) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yousuf Al-Thunayan (1963) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Khalid Al-Mansour (1964) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohamed Fahd Al-Bishi (1965) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Khaled Al-Khalidi (1965) Saudi Arabian -shot putter.
Hassan Al-Absi (1966) Saudi Arabian - cyclist.
Hussein Al-Bishi (1966) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Saleh Al-Dawod (1968) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Khalid Al Temawi (1969) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Salem Al-Ahmadi (1969) Saudi Arabian - triple jumper.
Fahad Al-Mehallel (1970) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fuad Anwar Amin (1972) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Al Hasan Al-Yami (1972) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mansour Al-Mousa (1972) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Sami Al-Jaber (1972) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ken Noguchi (1973) Saudi Arabian / Japanese - alpinist.
Mohammed Al-Jahani (1974) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Tisir Al-Antaif (1974) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohamed Hamed Al-Bishi (1975) Saudi Arabian - sprinter.
Abdullah Al-Waked (1975) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Nawaf Al-Temyat (1976) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mukhlid Al-Otaibi (1976) Saudi Arabian - long-distance runner.
Manaf Al-Saeed (1976) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Hussein Abdulghani (1977) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Saheb Al-Abdullah (1977) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammad Sharifi (1978) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mansoor Al-Najai (1978) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Hussein Al-Sabee (1979) Saudi Arabian - long jumper
Ahmed Al-Kudmani (1979) Saudi Arabian - swimmer.
Saleh Al-Saqri (1979) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulrahman Al-Shoaibi (1980) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abbas Al-Qaisoum (1980) Saudi Arabian - weightlifter.
Ahmed Al-Bahri (1980) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammed Ameen (1980) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammad Al-Shalhoub (1980) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fahad Al-Shammari (1981) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mubarak Ata Mubarak (1981) Saudi Arabian - hurdler.
Mohammed Al-Khuwalidi (1981) Saudi Arabian - long jumper.
Abdulrahman Al-Bishi (1982) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammad Khouja (1982) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yasser Al-Qahtani (1982) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulmutalib Al-Traidi (1982) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Bader Al-Kharashi (1982) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Awidhah Al-Aamri (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Hassan Al-Raheb (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulrahman Al-Qahtani (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Naif Al-Harthi (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Omar Abdulaziz (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Essa Al-Mehyani (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ahmed Otaif (1983) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Bader Al-Khamees (1984) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Saad Al-Harthi (1984) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdoh Otaif (1984) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yasser Al-Mosailem (1984) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Taisir Al-Jassim (1984) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Majed Al-Marshedi (1984) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ahmad Abbas (1985) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yahia Al-Shehri (1985) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mazin Ahmed Al-Huthayfi (1985) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulhaleem Al-Amoudi (1986) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al Asta (1986) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulmajeed Al-Ruwaili (1986) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Jassem Al-Hamdan (1986) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulaziz Al-Nashi (1986) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Sultan Al-Nemri (1986) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Khaled Al-Zylaeei (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Jamaan Al-Dossari (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohsen Al-Eisa (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Hamad Al-Juhaim (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammad Al-Sahlawi (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fahad Al-Dossari (1987) Saudi Arabian / Thai - footballer.
Meshal Al-Enezi (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ali Al-Amri (1987) Saudi Arabian - long-distance runner.
Mohammed Al-Zaer (1987) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Hani Alnakhli (1986) Saudi Arabian - paralympic athlete.
Odai Amr (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Mayouf (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fawaz Al-Maghati (1987) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ahmed Al-Abdulali (1988) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Hisham Al-Obaidi (1988) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Mohammed Al-Qaree (1988) Saudi Arabian - decathlete.
Bader Al-Muhana (1988) Saudi Arabian - swimmer.
Ahmed Al-Fraidi (1988) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Salman Al-Hariri (1988) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Housain Al-Mogahwi (1988) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Naif Hazazi (1988) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullaziz Al-Dawsari (1988) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Raed Al-Amri (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Waleed Bakshween (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Zamil Al-Sulim (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulrahim Jaizawi (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Sultan Ghunaiman (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fahad Al-Saqri (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ibrahim Al-Zubaidi (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Hussain Al-Showaish (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Salman Al-Faraj (1989) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulaziz Al-Jebreen (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Majrashi (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yahya Al-Shehri (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammed Al-Menqash (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Tariq Al-Amri (1990) Saudi Arabian - long-distance runner.
Abdulazez Saeed (1990) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Abdulrahman Al-Barakah (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Muneer Abu Alrahi (1990) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Mohammed Al-Fuhaid (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Turki Al-Aliweh (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Enezi (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Badr Al-Sulaitin (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ibrahim Zaid (1990) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Hammad (1990) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Mahdi Al-Salem (1990) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Mousa Al-Aoufi (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Morad Al-Rashidi (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Amiri Kurdi (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Awadh Khrees (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ali Al-Zaqaan (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Maan Khodari (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ahmed Al-Kassar (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yasser Al-Fahmi (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Sultan Al-Shammeri (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ahmed Abdulla (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Salem Al-Dawsari (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yahya Dagriri (1991) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Saeed Al-Zahrani (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Yasser Al-Shahrani (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fares Al-Ayyaf (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fahad Al-Swilem (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mansor Hamzi (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Jamal Bajandouh (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Hafith (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Otayf (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Hattan Bahebri (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammed Al-Breik (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Abbas (1992) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Fawaz Al-Qarni (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Wesam Wahib (1992) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohammed Al-Saiari (1993) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Saleh Al-Amri (1993) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Faisel Masrahi (1993) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Saleh Al-Shehri (1993) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Bladi (1993) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Hulaili (1994) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Abdulmohsen Fallatah (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulrahman Al-Rio (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulhadi Al-Harajin (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abbas Al-Saffar (1994) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Abdulrahman Al-Ghamdi (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mohsen Al-Duhaylib (1994) Saudi Arabian - weightlifter.
Mohammed Al-Kwikbi (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Sulaiman Hamad (1994) Saudi Arabian - judoka.
Abdulfattah Asiri (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Mansor Al-Najar (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulellah Al-Malki (1994) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ali Al-Saffar (1995) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Abdullah Qaisi (1995) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Fahad Al-Farhan (1995) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Abdullah Al-Salam (1995) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Abdullah Al-Arraf (1995) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdullah Al-Jouei (1995) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Omar Al-Sonain (1995) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulaziz Al-Aryani (1996) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Osama Al-Khalaf (1996) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Ali Al-Ibrahim (1997) Saudi Arabian - handball player.
Sadiq Al-Mohsin (1997) Saudi Arabian - handball player
Muteb Al-Mutlaq (1997) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Sami Al-Najei (1997) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulrahman Ghareeb (1997) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulelah Al-Amri (1997) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Hussain Al-Hizam (1998) Saudi Arabian - pole vaulter.
Yahya Khormi (1998) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Faris Abdi (1999) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Abdulaziz Al-Abduassalam (?) Saudi Arabian - footballer.
Problematic:
Qusai / Qusai Kheder (1978) Saudi Arabian - rapper, singer-songwriter, DJ, television personality, and producer - Appropriated dreads as seen in one of his Q&A videos.
Ibrahim Saleh (1986) Saudi Arabian - youtuber and comedian - Misogynist/Sexist which got his YouTube channel shut down.
Shanina Shaik (1991) Saudi Arabian, Pakistani / Lithuanian - model - Cultural appropriation.
11 notes · View notes
theconservativebrief · 6 years ago
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Mohamed “Mo” Salah, who plays soccer for Liverpool, England, as well as for Egypt, has just come off a season in which he established himself as one of the most exciting players in the world. A Muslim of North African heritage, he plays, excels, and is adored in Britain, a country in which anti-Muslim sentiment is increasingly part of mainstream political and cultural discourse.
And he should be one of the stars of the upcoming 2018 World Cup later this month — if, that is, he makes it to the tournament at all. Due to a recent injury, that’s now in question.
Salah started playing organized soccer as a teenager on an Egyptian team called the Arab Contractors. He joined Egypt’s national team in 2011 at age 19 and moved to Europe the following year. His first years were promising but patchy, and to say this has been a breakout season for Salah is a massive understatement.
The 25-year-old had never scored more than 19 goals in a single season. This year, he scored 44 goals, with an eye-opening 32 in the Premier League. The only player with better stats in Europe was Barcelona’s Lionel Messi, widely considered to be one of the two best players in the world.
But his stardom doesn’t just come from what he does on the soccer pitch; it also comes from who and what he is off it. His brilliance combined with his charming personality and his faith have made him a hero in Egypt, where his face adorns Ramadan lanterns.
He is arguably the Arab world’s finest homegrown soccer player and most prominent sports star, and hundreds of millions of fans follow his every move.
Here’s what you need to know about Salah: why he’s so popular, and why some are hopeful that his enormous popularity in Britain may help combat the Islamophobic attitudes all too prevalent in the UK and beyond.
The first thing you notice about Salah as he moves around the soccer field is his speed. He’s quick. Very quick. Sizzlingly quick.
He was brought to European football by FC Basel, of Switzerland, after a scouting process that included an exhibition match against Egypt’s under-23 international team. It was supposed to be a warmup game ahead of the Olympics, but as their president, Bernhard Heusler, later confessed to Sky Sports:
The only reason we wanted this match was because of the chance to see Mohamed Salah play live. I will never forget what I saw that day on that pitch. … I had never seen a player with so much speed in my entire life.
Of course, speed means nothing in soccer if you can’t use the ball — this is why Usain Bolt’s dream of playing for Manchester United may never come to pass.
That’s what makes the second thing you notice about Salah so important: His speed doesn’t seem to cost him anything. The ball sticks obligingly to his feet, leaving his eyes free to dart around, searching for the right pass or putting himself in the best position to try to score.
Which leads to third thing you notice: Salah’s wonderful finishing ability. There is a calm and quiet precision about his shooting — a precision that looks, in the moment, an awful lot like inevitability.
Salah scores them all. He’ll roll the ball gently into an empty net if the situation demands it. But when the only route to goal is through the spectacular, then he’s more than capable.
Here’s a video of Salah in action:
[embedded content]
Put all of that together and the result is one of the most exciting soccer players in the world.
But while it’s his skill on the pitch that has made him a hero in Liverpool and Egypt, it’s his emergence in Europe at a time when anti-Muslim bigotry is becoming increasingly normalized across the continent that has made him a figure of intense interest.
It has even led people to wonder if his athletic excellence might play some part in combating intolerance.
There is a calm and quiet precision about his shooting — a precision that looks, in the moment, an awful lot like inevitability
Liverpool’s legendary manager Bill Shankly once said, “If you are first, you are first. If you are second, you are nothing.” But the club Shankly once led hasn’t been English champions since 1990, and it’s been a long and at times agonizing period of nothing.
This is a club looking for a hero. A club that has seen other heroes — Steven Gerrard, Luis Suarez — pass through without bringing that elusive Premier League title. Salah hasn’t brought a title yet either, but he carries the promise: Next year will be Liverpool’s year.
You can see this in Salah’s songs and Salah’s T-shirts, and in the rhapsodic smiles Salah provokes on Liverpool faces. There would be a certain entertaining irony if they were led back to the promised land by a man nicknamed the “Egyptian King.”
As Sports Illustrated notes, Liverpool fans even coined a song for Salah sung to the tune of the 1990s pop hit “Good Enough.” The lyrics are, well, not the usual thing you hear in a sports arena:
Mo Sa-la-la-la-lah, Mo Sa-la-la-la-lah!
If he’s good enough for you, he’s good enough for me. If he scores another few, then I’ll be Muslim too.
If he’s good enough for you, he’s good enough for me. Sitting in the mosque, that’s where I wanna be!
Mo Sa-la-la-la-lah, Mo Sa-la-la-la-lah!
Salah is the leading star of Egypt’s national team, the Pharaohs, and his popularity in his home country even exceeds his standing in Liverpool.
More than a million people submitted write-in votes for Salah in Egypt’s 2018 presidential election, and while the eventual result — Salah pushed the actual opposition candidate into third place — says little for the plurality of Egyptian democracy, it says plenty for Salah’s popularity.
After Salah’s shoulder was dislocated — accidentally? carelessly? deliberately? — by Real Madrid’s Sergio Ramos in Champions League final on May 26, the outcry across social media was remarkable. One Twitter user joked, “Qataris, Saudis, Emiratis, Kuwaitis, Egyptians, Omanis all cursing Sergio Ramos. Thank you Ramos. You united the whole Arab world.”
Islamophobia isn’t new, and certainly isn’t limited to Britain. But Matthew Feldman of Teesside University in the UK says the country, at this moment, has an “acceptance of anti-Muslim discourse that we would find absolutely noxious if it was about someone from an ethnic minority or other religious background” — a claim that will ring true to anybody familiar with Britain’s public conversation.
Even the Times, revered as the national newspaper of record, recently had to apologize for the “enormous offense” caused when it distorted a story regarding Muslim foster families. Meanwhile the governing Conservative Party is facing calls for an inquiry into the “more than weekly” incidents of Islamophobia within in its membership.
Regardless of the views of bigots, it is perhaps Salah’s significance to other Muslims that is the most heartening consequence of his rise to superstardom
How, then, does a much-loved and widely feted Muslim soccer player fit into this?
Salah is not the only Muslim in the Premier League, or even in Liverpool’s squad, but he is certainly the most high-profile, and, to put it bluntly, he appears the most Muslim to a nation reared on stereotypes. His is a public faith, openly expressed.
Indeed, it’s telling that this conversation is only happening now; British football culture has generally preferred to ignore the Muslims on the pitch.
A recent article in the New York Times quoted Miqdaad Versi, assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain:
He is someone who embodies Islam’s values and wears his faith on his sleeve. He has a likability. He is the hero of the team. Liverpool, in particular, has rallied around him in a really positive way. He is not the solution to Islamophobia, but he can play a major role.
Not everybody shares this view, though.
Asked by the New Yorker about Salah, Joseph Massad, a historian and modern Arab studies professor at Columbia University, noted that former France captain Zinedine Zidane “received much adulation” within France, “but his fame has not mitigated the ongoing Islamophobia of mainstream French culture, and I strongly doubt that Salah’s fame will in any way decrease the mainstream Islamophobia in British culture.”
As Nikesh Shukla, editor of The Good Immigrant, a book of essays by people of color reflecting on their positions in British society, puts it:
The biggest burden facing people of colour in [Britain] is that society deems us bad immigrants — job-stealers, benefit-scroungers, girlfriend-thieves, refugees — until we cross over in their consciousness [by] winning races, baking good cakes…
Or scoring goals.
Islamophobia, then, ends not with the valorization of exceptional Muslims — who are, by definition, exceptions — but in the acceptance of ordinary Muslims. Whether there is a path to the latter through the former remains to be seen.
And as Asif Sujid has noted at the Conversation, the chant described above “is conditional. The chant makes clear that it is only ‘if’ Salah continues to score goals that his displays of Muslimness will be accepted.”
But regardless of the views of bigots, it is perhaps Salah’s significance to other Muslims that is the most heartening consequence of his rise to superstardom. As the New Yorker’s Yasmine Al-Sayyad puts it:
What stands out to me most about Salah, who is far more conspicuously Arab and Muslim than I am, is that he doesn’t seem concerned with trying to blend into anything. He is simply himself. That, more than anything else he has done on the field, is what I admire most.
So will this brilliant more-than-a-footballer make it to Russia? As mentioned above, Salah left the Champions League final early due to injury and was later diagnosed with a dislocated shoulder. That was on May 26, and the Egyptian Football Association estimated that he’ll be fit again in three weeks.
Egypt’s first World Cup match is against Uruguay on June 15. Salah could very well miss that game. Egypt is being optimistic, but since it’s not favorites to win that game anyway, it might hold him back. But he should be back for Egypt’s second game, against Russia, on June 19.
The fear, in truth, isn’t that Salah will miss the tournament. This is the man who scored the penalty that took Egypt to its first World Cup since 1990 and he’d have to be bedridden not to make it out there in some capacity.
Instead, Egyptian fans worry that Salah simply won’t be himself. By the time he returns, he’ll have missed all of Egypt’s warmup games, and going straight from weeks off to matches against some of the world’s most skilled soccer players will be a monstrously difficult task.
Another comparison with Zidane may be unfortunately apt: France’s inspirational captain was rushed back from injury to appear at the 2002 tournament, yet only played one game, was visibly underpowered, and contributed little as France slumped out of the competition without scoring a single goal.
Let’s assume for a moment that Salah returns and is at, or close to, his best. How far could Egypt go in the World Cup?
The Pharaohs play a cautious brand of soccer. Their priority is to maintain a strong defensive unit, reinforced by the midfield. Salah’s speed therefore becomes a counterattacking weapon: If Egypt’s opponents stray too far forward in their attempts to break down the Egyptian defense, they may leave space behind for Salah to exploit.
The World Cup begins with a group stage, in which four teams play each other once in a round-robin format, with the best two progressing to the next stage. Egypt is in Group A along with host-nation Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Uruguay. The South American team is the favorite to win the group, thanks mostly to their attack, which is led by Barcelona’s Luis Suarez and Paris Saint-Germain’s Edinson Cavani.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is the weakest team in the competition, according to FIFA’s rankings, and should finish in last place.
Much depends, then, on Egypt’s game against Russia. Typically, tournament hosts benefit from the atmosphere and the fact that they are on familiar turf, as well as perhaps the odd lenient refereeing decision or two.
But Russia is an unsettled team and hasn’t won a game since October 7, 2017. Egypt certainly won’t be feeling intimidated.
Should the Pharaohs make it past the hosts, things will get really tricky. The two qualifiers from Group A will face the qualifiers from Group B, expected to be the 2010 winner, Spain, one of the favorites for the tournament; and the Euro 2016 winner, Portugal. As such, reaching the last 16 would represent a good tournament for Egypt. Anything beyond that will be dreamland.
But that’s the true value of Salah. When he’s playing for a team you support, you can’t help but dream.
Original Source -> Soccer star Mo Salah’s massive popularity is changing perceptions of Muslims in the UK
via The Conservative Brief
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w9lha-blog · 7 years ago
Video
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griffinandreatd · 7 years ago
Text
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Qatar Airways is the biggest loser in its dispute with Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. Pictured is a view of Qatar's A350XWB sharklet parked next to Qatar's second A380. FC Media
Skift Take: One thing to watch is whether the move to isolate Qatar Airways will have the unintended consequence of a spillover effect that would see many of the region's carriers face an adverse impacts on their brands.
— Dennis Schaal
With Qatar increasingly isolated from its Gulf neighbors in an escalating geopolitical crisis, the economic and financial implications are starting to emerge.
The country — which has been accused of supporting Islamist militant groups by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt — relies on other Gulf states for about 20 percent of its imports and almost half of its tourists, according to Dubai-based Arqaam Capital Ltd. Billions of dollars of infrastructure projects are also at stake as it prepares to host the 2022 soccer World Cup.
“We expect the move to cut diplomatic ties with Qatar could have significant economic ramifications for its economy, but to have barely an effect on the rest of the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council),” said Arqaam’s head of equity research Jaap Meijer. “We expect consumer prices in Qatar to be affected first, though economic growth and government projects should also be affected.”
Here’s a look at how the crisis could impact transport in the region:
Possible Winners: Gulf Air and Singapore Airlines Ltd, which compete with Qatar Airways on its top routes, are the main carriers that stand to benefit.
“If we also take into account the possible negative branding impact across all GCC carriers, then the real beneficiaries are Singapore Air, Lufthansa and the key local airlines from top routes such as Malaysia Airlines, Philippine Airlines, Thai and Sri Lankan,” said Diogenis Papiomytis, director of aerospace at Frost & Sullivan.
Other airlines on these routes such as Kuwait Airways, Saudia and Air France-KLM are also likely to see increased demand.
Omani and Iranian ports could stand to benefit, according to Neil Davidson, senior analyst at Drewry Shipping Consultants Holdings Ltd. Existing container trade to Qatar mostly goes through the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia.
The alternative could be operating feeder vessels from hub ports in countries that aren’t part of the boycott. Kuwaiti ports are also an option but would result in a big diversion.
Potential Loser: State-owned Qatar Airways is set to be one of the biggest losers of the crisis. It operates 52 daily flights to the four Arab countries, according to data from scheduling firm OAG. About 30 percent of the carrier’s revenue could be affected, said Frost & Sullivan’s Papiomytis.
The network impact is huge; the financial impact depends on the length of closures, he said.
— With assistance from Mahmoud Habboush, Claudia Carpenter, Deena Kamel, Anthony DiPaola and Tugce Ozsoy.
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
This article was written by Filipe Pacheco and Ahmed A Namatalla from Bloomberg and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].
http://ift.tt/2rks16U
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graymarandaas · 7 years ago
Text
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Qatar Airways is the biggest loser in its dispute with Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. Pictured is a view of Qatar's A350XWB sharklet parked next to Qatar's second A380. FC Media
Skift Take: One thing to watch is whether the move to isolate Qatar Airways will have the unintended consequence of a spillover effect that would see many of the region's carriers face an adverse impacts on their brands.
— Dennis Schaal
With Qatar increasingly isolated from its Gulf neighbors in an escalating geopolitical crisis, the economic and financial implications are starting to emerge.
The country — which has been accused of supporting Islamist militant groups by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt — relies on other Gulf states for about 20 percent of its imports and almost half of its tourists, according to Dubai-based Arqaam Capital Ltd. Billions of dollars of infrastructure projects are also at stake as it prepares to host the 2022 soccer World Cup.
“We expect the move to cut diplomatic ties with Qatar could have significant economic ramifications for its economy, but to have barely an effect on the rest of the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council),” said Arqaam’s head of equity research Jaap Meijer. “We expect consumer prices in Qatar to be affected first, though economic growth and government projects should also be affected.”
Here’s a look at how the crisis could impact transport in the region:
Possible Winners: Gulf Air and Singapore Airlines Ltd, which compete with Qatar Airways on its top routes, are the main carriers that stand to benefit.
“If we also take into account the possible negative branding impact across all GCC carriers, then the real beneficiaries are Singapore Air, Lufthansa and the key local airlines from top routes such as Malaysia Airlines, Philippine Airlines, Thai and Sri Lankan,” said Diogenis Papiomytis, director of aerospace at Frost & Sullivan.
Other airlines on these routes such as Kuwait Airways, Saudia and Air France-KLM are also likely to see increased demand.
Omani and Iranian ports could stand to benefit, according to Neil Davidson, senior analyst at Drewry Shipping Consultants Holdings Ltd. Existing container trade to Qatar mostly goes through the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia.
The alternative could be operating feeder vessels from hub ports in countries that aren’t part of the boycott. Kuwaiti ports are also an option but would result in a big diversion.
Potential Loser: State-owned Qatar Airways is set to be one of the biggest losers of the crisis. It operates 52 daily flights to the four Arab countries, according to data from scheduling firm OAG. About 30 percent of the carrier’s revenue could be affected, said Frost & Sullivan’s Papiomytis.
The network impact is huge; the financial impact depends on the length of closures, he said.
— With assistance from Mahmoud Habboush, Claudia Carpenter, Deena Kamel, Anthony DiPaola and Tugce Ozsoy.
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
This article was written by Filipe Pacheco and Ahmed A Namatalla from Bloomberg and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].
http://ift.tt/2rks16U
0 notes
rollinbrigittenv8 · 7 years ago
Text
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Qatar Airways is the biggest loser in its dispute with Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. Pictured is a view of Qatar's A350XWB sharklet parked next to Qatar's second A380. FC Media
Skift Take: One thing to watch is whether the move to isolate Qatar Airways will have the unintended consequence of a spillover effect that would see many of the region's carriers face an adverse impacts on their brands.
— Dennis Schaal
With Qatar increasingly isolated from its Gulf neighbors in an escalating geopolitical crisis, the economic and financial implications are starting to emerge.
The country — which has been accused of supporting Islamist militant groups by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt — relies on other Gulf states for about 20 percent of its imports and almost half of its tourists, according to Dubai-based Arqaam Capital Ltd. Billions of dollars of infrastructure projects are also at stake as it prepares to host the 2022 soccer World Cup.
“We expect the move to cut diplomatic ties with Qatar could have significant economic ramifications for its economy, but to have barely an effect on the rest of the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council),” said Arqaam’s head of equity research Jaap Meijer. “We expect consumer prices in Qatar to be affected first, though economic growth and government projects should also be affected.”
Here’s a look at how the crisis could impact transport in the region:
Possible Winners: Gulf Air and Singapore Airlines Ltd, which compete with Qatar Airways on its top routes, are the main carriers that stand to benefit.
“If we also take into account the possible negative branding impact across all GCC carriers, then the real beneficiaries are Singapore Air, Lufthansa and the key local airlines from top routes such as Malaysia Airlines, Philippine Airlines, Thai and Sri Lankan,” said Diogenis Papiomytis, director of aerospace at Frost & Sullivan.
Other airlines on these routes such as Kuwait Airways, Saudia and Air France-KLM are also likely to see increased demand.
Omani and Iranian ports could stand to benefit, according to Neil Davidson, senior analyst at Drewry Shipping Consultants Holdings Ltd. Existing container trade to Qatar mostly goes through the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia.
The alternative could be operating feeder vessels from hub ports in countries that aren’t part of the boycott. Kuwaiti ports are also an option but would result in a big diversion.
Potential Loser: State-owned Qatar Airways is set to be one of the biggest losers of the crisis. It operates 52 daily flights to the four Arab countries, according to data from scheduling firm OAG. About 30 percent of the carrier’s revenue could be affected, said Frost & Sullivan’s Papiomytis.
The network impact is huge; the financial impact depends on the length of closures, he said.
— With assistance from Mahmoud Habboush, Claudia Carpenter, Deena Kamel, Anthony DiPaola and Tugce Ozsoy.
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
This article was written by Filipe Pacheco and Ahmed A Namatalla from Bloomberg and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].
0 notes
dear-indies · 3 years ago
Note
Okay so I know Michelle Rodriguez is problematic, do you guys know of any alternate fcs? Specifically for a tough girl gearhead like letty from the fast and furious movies? I’d also appreciate a younger fc as well. Like early to mid 20s
General alts for Michelle, she's Puerto Rican / Dominican:
Erica Mena (1987) Afro- Puerto Rican and Dominican - bisexual. 
Harmony Santana (1991) Puerto Rican and Dominican - trans.
Gabriella Lascano (1991) Puerto Rican and Dominican.
Haskiri Velazquez (1995) Dominican / Puerto Rican.
Selangie Arlene Henriquez (1995) Puerto Rican and Dominican.
Valenzia Algarin (?) Puerto Rican / Dominican.
Either of Puerto Rican or Dominican descent:
Lisa Marie Varon (1971) Puerto Rican / Turkish.
Roselyn Sanchez (1973) Puerto Rican.
Karen Olivo (1976) Puerto Rican [Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] / Dominican and Chinese.
Andrea Navedo (1977) Puerto Rican.
Daniella Alonso (1978) Puerto Rican / Inca Peruvian and Japanese.
Amirah Vann (1978) African-American / Puerto Rican.
Dania Ramirez (1979) Afro-Dominican and Spanish.
Maria-Elena Laas (1983) Puerto Rican.
Omahyra Mota (1983) Dominican.
Juliana Harkavy (1985) Dominican, African, Chinese / Ashkenazi Jewish - has chosen not to label her sexuality.
Carmen Carrera (1985) Puerto Rican-Peruvian - trans.
Monica Raymond (1986) Dominican / English and Ashkenazi Jewish - bisexual.
Denise Bidot (1986) Puerto Rican / Kuwaiti.
Nomi Ruiz (1986) Puerto Rican - trans.
Joseline Hernandez (1986) Afro-Puerto Rican - bisexual.
Natti Natasha (1986) Dominican.
AJ Lee (1987) Puerto Rican.
Siya (1987) African-American / Puerto Rican - lesbian.
Leiomy Maldonado (1987) African-American and Puerto Rican - trans and queer. 
Briana Venskus (1987) Puerto Rican, Lithuanian and Italian.
Stephanie Nogueras (1989) Puerto Rican - deaf.
BIA (1990) Afro-Puerto Rican / Italian.
Ruby Modine (1990) Puerto Rican [Spanish, African, possibly other] / English, some Swedish, Scottish, German, Dutch, likely 1/16th Danish.
Mj Rodriguez (1991) African-American / Puerto Rican - trans.
Denise Mercedes (1991) Afro-Dominican.
Audrey Littie (1991) Puerto Rican, Mexican, African American.
Ariana DeBose (1991) Puerto Rican, African-American, Italian / English, Scottish, French - queer.
Paige Hurd (1992) African-American / Puerto Rican.
Shyrley Rodriguez (1993) Puerto Rican.
Symphani Soto (1993) Puerto Rican, African-American and Unspecified Native.
Jamila Velazquez (1995) Puerto Rican, Dominican, and Ecuadorian.
Leslie Grace (1995) Afro-Dominican.
Arisce Wanzer (1996) Afro-Dominican.
Rico Nasty (1997) African-American / Puerto Rican.
Coi Leray (1997) Puerto Rican, Cape Verdean, German, African-American.
Lala Baptiste (1999) Trinidadian, Puerto Rican, and European.
Ashley Reyes (?) Puerto Rican and Lithuanian.
Non-binary suggestions:
Sivan Alyra Rose (1999) Chiricahua Apache, Afro-Puerto Rican, and Creole - genderfluid (she/they) and pansexual.
Victo Ortiz (?) Puerto Rican - they/them en español elle/le. 
Younger, badass vibes regardless of ethnicity:
Cierra Ramirez (1995) Colombian / Mexican.
Adeline Rudolph (1995) Korean / German.
Brianna Hildebrand (1996) Mexican / German, English, Irish - gay.
Ella Balinska (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Polish, English.
Tati Gabrielle (1996) African-American / Korean.
Vitória Strada (1996) Brazilian.
Chelsea Zhang (1996) Chinese.
Anya Chalotra (1996) Indian / British.
Taveeta Szymanowicz (1996) Afro-Caribbean / Polish.
Imaan Hammam (1996) Egyptian / Moroccan.
Sydney Park (1997) African-American / Korean.
Nicole Maines (1997) - trans.
Jorja Smith (1997) Afro-Jamaican / English.
Kiana Ledé (1997) African American, Cherokee / Mexican.
Becky G (1997) Mexican – including Spanish [Andalusian, Aragonese, Asturian, Cantabrian, Castilian, Extremaduran, Leonese, and Valencian], Basque, Galician, Indigenous, and African, as well as distant Portuguese, remote German and Italian.
Alva Bratt (1998)
Banita Sandhu (1998) Punjabi Indian.
Maya Hawke (1998)
Chloe Bailey (1998) African-American.
Joanna Pincerato (1998) Mexican, Syrian. Swedish, Italian.
Erin Kellyman (1998) Afro-Jamaican / Irish.
Savannah Smith (2000) African-American.
Angourie Rice (2001)
31 notes · View notes
glenndorothytc · 7 years ago
Text
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Qatar Airways is the biggest loser in its dispute with Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. Pictured is a view of Qatar's A350XWB sharklet parked next to Qatar's second A380. FC Media
Skift Take: One thing to watch is whether the move to isolate Qatar Airways will have the unintended consequence of a spillover effect that would see many of the region's carriers face an adverse impacts on their brands.
— Dennis Schaal
With Qatar increasingly isolated from its Gulf neighbors in an escalating geopolitical crisis, the economic and financial implications are starting to emerge.
The country — which has been accused of supporting Islamist militant groups by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt — relies on other Gulf states for about 20 percent of its imports and almost half of its tourists, according to Dubai-based Arqaam Capital Ltd. Billions of dollars of infrastructure projects are also at stake as it prepares to host the 2022 soccer World Cup.
“We expect the move to cut diplomatic ties with Qatar could have significant economic ramifications for its economy, but to have barely an effect on the rest of the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council),” said Arqaam’s head of equity research Jaap Meijer. “We expect consumer prices in Qatar to be affected first, though economic growth and government projects should also be affected.”
Here’s a look at how the crisis could impact transport in the region:
Possible Winners: Gulf Air and Singapore Airlines Ltd, which compete with Qatar Airways on its top routes, are the main carriers that stand to benefit.
“If we also take into account the possible negative branding impact across all GCC carriers, then the real beneficiaries are Singapore Air, Lufthansa and the key local airlines from top routes such as Malaysia Airlines, Philippine Airlines, Thai and Sri Lankan,” said Diogenis Papiomytis, director of aerospace at Frost & Sullivan.
Other airlines on these routes such as Kuwait Airways, Saudia and Air France-KLM are also likely to see increased demand.
Omani and Iranian ports could stand to benefit, according to Neil Davidson, senior analyst at Drewry Shipping Consultants Holdings Ltd. Existing container trade to Qatar mostly goes through the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia.
The alternative could be operating feeder vessels from hub ports in countries that aren’t part of the boycott. Kuwaiti ports are also an option but would result in a big diversion.
Potential Loser: State-owned Qatar Airways is set to be one of the biggest losers of the crisis. It operates 52 daily flights to the four Arab countries, according to data from scheduling firm OAG. About 30 percent of the carrier’s revenue could be affected, said Frost & Sullivan’s Papiomytis.
The network impact is huge; the financial impact depends on the length of closures, he said.
— With assistance from Mahmoud Habboush, Claudia Carpenter, Deena Kamel, Anthony DiPaola and Tugce Ozsoy.
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
This article was written by Filipe Pacheco and Ahmed A Namatalla from Bloomberg and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].
http://ift.tt/2rks16U
0 notes
davidbernardpg · 7 years ago
Text
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Airline Winners and Losers in Qatar Impasse
Qatar Airways is the biggest loser in its dispute with Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. Pictured is a view of Qatar's A350XWB sharklet parked next to Qatar's second A380. FC Media
Skift Take: One thing to watch is whether the move to isolate Qatar Airways will have the unintended consequence of a spillover effect that would see many of the region's carriers face an adverse impacts on their brands.
— Dennis Schaal
With Qatar increasingly isolated from its Gulf neighbors in an escalating geopolitical crisis, the economic and financial implications are starting to emerge.
The country — which has been accused of supporting Islamist militant groups by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt — relies on other Gulf states for about 20 percent of its imports and almost half of its tourists, according to Dubai-based Arqaam Capital Ltd. Billions of dollars of infrastructure projects are also at stake as it prepares to host the 2022 soccer World Cup.
“We expect the move to cut diplomatic ties with Qatar could have significant economic ramifications for its economy, but to have barely an effect on the rest of the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council),” said Arqaam’s head of equity research Jaap Meijer. “We expect consumer prices in Qatar to be affected first, though economic growth and government projects should also be affected.”
Here’s a look at how the crisis could impact transport in the region:
Possible Winners: Gulf Air and Singapore Airlines Ltd, which compete with Qatar Airways on its top routes, are the main carriers that stand to benefit.
“If we also take into account the possible negative branding impact across all GCC carriers, then the real beneficiaries are Singapore Air, Lufthansa and the key local airlines from top routes such as Malaysia Airlines, Philippine Airlines, Thai and Sri Lankan,” said Diogenis Papiomytis, director of aerospace at Frost & Sullivan.
Other airlines on these routes such as Kuwait Airways, Saudia and Air France-KLM are also likely to see increased demand.
Omani and Iranian ports could stand to benefit, according to Neil Davidson, senior analyst at Drewry Shipping Consultants Holdings Ltd. Existing container trade to Qatar mostly goes through the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia.
The alternative could be operating feeder vessels from hub ports in countries that aren’t part of the boycott. Kuwaiti ports are also an option but would result in a big diversion.
Potential Loser: State-owned Qatar Airways is set to be one of the biggest losers of the crisis. It operates 52 daily flights to the four Arab countries, according to data from scheduling firm OAG. About 30 percent of the carrier’s revenue could be affected, said Frost & Sullivan’s Papiomytis.
The network impact is huge; the financial impact depends on the length of closures, he said.
— With assistance from Mahmoud Habboush, Claudia Carpenter, Deena Kamel, Anthony DiPaola and Tugce Ozsoy.
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
This article was written by Filipe Pacheco and Ahmed A Namatalla from Bloomberg and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].
http://ift.tt/2rks16U
0 notes