#magdalena carrasco
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multishipper-baby · 1 year ago
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HI for the playlist thingie, maybe golxy or goldami? or, i'd also be interested to know what songs you relate to eakwynn !! :3
Ohhh yes this was very interesting. Having two Golden ships together really makes the differences between both dynamics pop.
Golxy
Vice by POP ETC
Enamorado tuyo by Cuarteto de Nos
Mardy Bum by Arctic Monkeys
Animal by Neon Trees
Goldami
Bleed Magic by I DONT KNOW HOW BUT THEY FOUND ME
Hypnotic by Zella Day
Sick by Barcelona
My Copycat by Orange Caramel
As for Eakwynn... I have 12 songs for them in a Spotify playlist asdvdisvdjsvsk I'm predictable on that front. Some of these choices are pretty self indulgent and/or based on AUs/headcanons.
Black Sea by Natasha Blume (I had this song as a tag for them back when I had a FHS roleplay blog <3)
Million Dollar Man by Egon Rakim and Thomas Lacroix
Ashes by Stellar
Prófugos by Soda Estereo
Killshot by Magdalena Bay
Uno X Uno by Manual Carrasco
White Wedding by Billy Idol
Church by Fall Out Boy
Ocean Drive by Duke Dumont
Extranjero by 1915
Love Me, Just Leave Me Alone by Jewel
Love Me For Ever by Juveniles (be warned that the music video is uh. Weird)
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aschenblumen · 2 years ago
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Andrew Lloyd Webber, Jesucristo Superstar («Todo estará en paz»). Arreglos y dirección musical de Teddy Bautista, producción de Camilo Sesto. Versión original en español por Camilo Sesto (Jesús), Teddy Bautista (Judas) y Ángela Carrasco (María Magdalena).
Basta ya de angustias, deja los problemas, olvida las penas. (...) Velaré tu sueño.
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adanlupercio · 1 year ago
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Adan Lupercio: A Passionate Advocate for Education and Community Empowerment
Adan Lupercio is a respected leader in the field of education policy and community empowerment. With over 15 years of experience championing equity in education, uplifting immigrant voices, and driving positive change through government affairs, Adan has built an impressive career marked by unwavering dedication and integrity.
A Staunch Advocate for Quality Education
Adan's passion for education began early on, during his formative years as a student in the California public school system. As a young immigrant from Mexico, Adan gained first-hand experience of the challenges faced by English learners, students of color, and children from low-income neighborhoods.
Vowing to be a voice for the underserved, Adan dedicated his career to ensuring access to quality education for all students. As the Chief Government Affairs Officer at Rocketship Public Schools, he successfully advocated for policies supporting charter schools in California's highest-need communities. Later at the California Charter Schools Association, Adan oversaw legislative advocacy for 37 counties, influencing impactful policies to close the achievement gap.
"Every child, regardless of ZIP code, deserves a high-quality education. That belief guides everything I do." - Adan Lupercio
A Seasoned Professional in Government Affairs
With over 15 years of experience, Adan is a seasoned expert in government relations, strategic communications, coalition building, and policy analysis. He leverages his skills to create systemic change, advising executives, board members, and community leaders on legislative matters.
Some highlights of Adan's acclaimed government affairs career include:
Developing targeted advocacy campaigns for education nonprofits and political candidates as a Partner at Proyecto Á
Spearheading the policy agenda for San Jose Councilmember Magdalena Carrasco as her Chief of Staff
Building strategic partnerships and influencing policy change for Rocketship Education as Head of Government Affairs
Engaging diverse stakeholders and delivering policy wins for the California Charter Schools Association as Chief Government Affairs Officer
An Exceptional Leader and Relationship Builder
Beyond his policy and advocacy expertise, Adan is an exceptional leader and relationship builder. He forges deep community ties, connecting people across sectors to drive collaborative change. Adan's ability to bring people together coupled with his unwavering integrity has earned him immense respect.
As Chief of Staff, Adan established critical relationships with key stakeholders and managed complex communications strategies for the Councilmember's office. At Rocketship Education, he united education leaders, parents, and policymakers to advance the charter school movement.
A Living Embodiment of the American Dream
As a former DACA recipient, Adan's personal journey epitomizes the American Dream. His appointment as the Chief of Staff for Councilmember Carrasco as the first undocumented immigrant in California made history. It spoke to Adan's spirit of resilience and his exceptional leadership capabilities.
For immigrant youth and budding leaders, Adan serves as a powerful role model. His story is one of courage, compassion, and an unshakable dedication to public service. Despite obstacles, he never lost sight of his north star - to uplift others through education and community empowerment.
Adan Lupercio's storied career in government affairs and education policy is defined by an unwavering moral compass, inspirational leadership, and a lifelong commitment to equity. He continues to break barriers and uplift others as a courageous advocate for quality, inclusive education for all.
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cervanteslucena · 2 years ago
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El pasado viernes participamos en las olimpiadas escolares, consiguiendo 21 medallas en las diferentes pruebas. Nuestra enhorabuena a todo el alumnado que participó.
Nuestro medallero:
Oro
- Magdalena Mora (Altura)
- Natalia Torralbo (Peso)
- Araceli Maíllo (Longitud)
- Andrés Rodríguez (Fondo)
- Infantil femenino (Relevos)
- Cadete masculino (Relevos)
Plata
- Inés Valcárcel (Peso)
- Manuel Sánchez (Longitud)
- Miguel Ángel Ramírez (Fondo)
- Rosario Martínez (Velocidad)
- Marina Muñoz (Velocidad)
- Cadete femenino (Relevos)
Bronce
- Inma Barranco (Altura)
- Adrián Cubero (Altura)
- María Córdoba (Peso)
- Julia Arias (Longitud)
- Álvaro Reyes (Longitud)
- Emilio Herrera (Fondo)
- Rodrigo Bergillos (Fondo)
- Alejandro Herrero (Velocidad)
- Marcos Carrasco (Velocidad)
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ivanreycristo · 2 years ago
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VIRGINIA MAESTRO.. no te olvides q en Operacion TriUnFO hiciste la prueba para ser MARIA MAGDALENA en JESUCRISTO SUPERSTAR ambientada en el ORIENTE MEDIO actual pero no te seleccionaron xq apesar de tus 25 años segun los del Casting dabas IMAGEN de ser CASI una ADOLESCENTE.. y cuando llevabas la CAMISETA de JESUCRISTO SUPERSTAR te caiste de un SOFA y te hiciste daño en la ESPALDA mientras q tu profesor ANGEL LLACER (=YACER=ACOSTARSE).. llevaba CAMISETA de BLACK KISS (=BESO NEGRO)
X cierto.. A mi me parecio mas desafortunada la eleccion de la dominicana ANGELA ALTA-GRACIA CARRASCO como MARIA MAGDALENA en el JESUCRISTO SUPERSTAR en el q invirtio una FORTUNA Camilo SESTO para representarlo.. Pues las JUDIAS son blanquitas como tu jaja
Y no te olvides q una antecesora de ANGEL LLACER fue Laura JORDAN (rio donde bautizaba JUAN BAUTISTA y de donde traen AGUA para bautizar a los BORBONES).. murio de CANCER hace poco
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moradadabeleza · 4 years ago
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Magdalena Carrasco
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rotgospels · 4 years ago
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if the saints transcend historical time by becoming one with Christ, each act of transcendence is rooted in the earthly reality of their temporal existence.
Magdalena Carrasco, “Spirituality and Historicity in Pictoral Hagiography: Two Miracles by St. Albinus of Angers. 
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mmckenzieport · 6 years ago
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By Melissa McKenzie & Carolyn Schuk
In 2005, a CNN article called Related lobbyist Jude Barry one of five political consultants to watch and likened him to Karl Rove, the political strategist famous for his plan to achieve a permanent party majority in government by sowing division, systematic gerrymandering and framing the debate by planting messages in the news media.
A 2007 Atlantic Monthly article called George W. Bush’s administration the “Rove Presidency.” Rove, wrote Joshua Green, “cast himself …as someone … with the wherewithal not just to exploit the political landscape but to reshape it.”
Barry has not achieved Rove’s national reach, but he has demonstrated similar ambition and expertise in Rove’s strategies. The Santa Clara equivalent of Rove’s permanent majority is City government dominance by Mayor Lisa Gillmor and her allies.
Gillmor achieved a solid four-vote majority when Council Member Kathy Watanabe was appointed to fill the Council seat that opened after Gillmor was appointed Mayor. Vicious negative campaigning in the 2016 election solidified that majority and created enduring partisan acrimony that Gillmor has relentlessly manipulated for political advantage.
With her four-vote block as the bulldozer, Gillmor transformed City Hall into a compliant operation to execute her political will and herself into an executive mayor in all but name.
The Weekly has detailed much of Barry’s activity in local politics, including his ascendency in San José politics as staff aide to former Mayor Ron Gonzales and a member of Mayor Sam Liccardo’s “kitchen cabinet.” These roles showed Barry’s adeptness in the role of trusted advisor to city officials on a broad spectrum of matters.
But in San José Barry is just one of many political players. Santa Clara has proven a better fit for Barry. So good a fit that some call him Santa Clara’s 8th Council Member.
The picture emerges from many small details.
Meetings Unrelated to Clients
Barry regularly meets with Santa Clara City Council Members, which wouldn’t be surprising except that many of those meetings do not pertain to Related’s City Place. Since the first public calendars were published in March 2016, Barry has had 15 meetings with current and former City officials unrelated to his client.
Barry’s first recorded non-Related meeting with Mayor Lisa Gillmor was on March 24, 2017 when the Mayor and Council Member Debi Davis met with Barry about the “Project for Public Spaces event at SCU.”
They met again on March 25, 2017 when Barry took part in a “Tri-Village visioning dinner” to discuss the Winchester/Stevens Creek Boulevard area. The meeting also included Hosam Haggag, Kirk Vartan and representatives from the CORE Companies, among others.
On July 6 of this year Barry and Gillmor met with Cupertino Mayor Darcy Paul and Hyperloop Transportation Technologies CEO Dirk Ahlborn, to discuss “Hyperloop opportunities.”
Vice Mayor Kathy Watanabe notched her first meeting unrelated to Related with Barry just last month when the pair had lunch to discuss “transportation issues,” a topic frequently listed on Council Calendars.
Council Member Pat Kolstad also had a meeting with the lobbyist. The lunch, listed as “social” with “no City discussion” occurred on Mar. 31, 2017.
City Council Member Teresa O’Neill and Barry met on March 20, 2016 to discuss VTA issues, March 30, 2017 about transportation (Barry was listed as a land-use consultant for that meeting), April 28, 2017 about transportation issues at El Camino Real and Scott (again Barry was listed as a land-use consultant), Aug. 18, 2017 again about transportation, Sept. 29, 2017 to discuss “Bay Area transportation issues,” and March 7, 2018 to talk about “transportation plans and initiatives.”
Barry and O’Neill also met on July 5, 2016 to talk about Santa Clara elections, July 12, 2017 about the stadium audit (Barry was formerly employed by the San Francisco 49ers) and most recently on Aug. 7, 2018 for lunch to talk about “Thomas Aquinas’ Theory of Just War and interpretations of the Beatitudes.”
The Weekly has verified from multiple commissioners, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, that Barry tried to meet with them privately. Lobbyist laws do not apply to Commissioners and their calendars are not required to be public.
Barry’s most strikingly unusual involvement in Santa Clara’s public business goes beyond conversations with Council Members.
City records show that Barry was hired in 2017 by City sub-contractor Tulchin Research to devise convincing campaign statements for a ballot measure intended to get voter approval for hundreds of millions in bonds for a new aquatics and community center.
Later that year, Barry appeared on the timesheet of Peter Hillan, a City PR consultant, discussing Gillmor’s then-upcoming interview with the San Francisco Chronicle editorial board about a confidential Stadium Authority performance audit report.
Close Ties To Those In Control
Barry’s relationship with Gillmor goes back at least to 2010 when the two worked on the Measure J campaign to build Levi’s Stadium, which Gillmor spearheaded.
O’Neill has an evidently long and friendly relationship with Barry — his most frequently reported meetings are with her, as are most of the ones that are unrelated to his lobbying client
In 2016, Barry and Gillmor arrived together at a Christmas party at O’Neill’s that Davis and Watanabe also attended. This social event was not reported on any calendar, despite the Council’s stated desire for transparency.
Friends and Moneymaking Find Homes in Santa Clara
After Barry surfaced in Santa Clara, so did his subscription software businesses, former clients, and business and political partners and their political methods.
In 2016 the Santa Clara Police Officers Association PAC ran a money funneling operation that channeled money from developers into independent expenditures for Gillmor’s slate of candidates.
This was the same tactic used in Magdalena Carrasco’s 2014 San José City Council campaign, run by Barry’s political and business partner John Shallman. In that campaign $100,000 in “gray money” — partly from a developer front organization, the Neighborhood Empowerment Committee — was funneled through the Fraternal Order of Police PAC for independent expenditures.
Shallman is a lobbyist, and Barry a former lobbyist, for the California Apartment Association, whose PAC donated $10,000 to the 2016 Santa Clara POA PAC’s independent expenditure operation — more than it ever donated in a Santa Clara election.
Shallman himself was never employed in Santa Clara. But Barry’s longtime business political associate Stephen Churchwell was and still is.
Churchwell was hired to defend the City in the recent California Voting Rights (CVRA) lawsuit. He was hired despite having no experience litigating a CVRA case and when the City already had an experienced CVRA litigator on contract. Churchwell is also directing the City’s appeal of the unfavorable decision.
In May 2017 the Silicon Valley Organization, or SVO, (formerly the Silicon Valley Chamber of Commerce) began meeting with Santa Clara public officials.
In 2012 Barry ran a charter schools PAC with former SVO executive and former San José employee Jay Rosenthal to run a negative campaign against County Board of Education Trustee Anna Song. Barry was also a lobbyist for SVO in 2015.
Barry operates four online election-related businesses — AllPoint Pen, VeraFirma, VoterPros, VoxLoca — which first appeared in Santa Clara in 2016.
That year police chief candidate Patrick Nikolai paid $10,000 for Barry’s VoterPros campaign-in-a-box service. Reportedly, Barry also tried to sell the service to other candidates but they weren’t buying.
In 2016 Davis and Silva’s campaign websites used a service that solicited cell phone numbers for opt-in text message updates. In January 2018 Barry’s robo-text service VoxLoca made its public debut, and was used in June by the police union PAC for a push poll on June’s Measure A — an unreported expenditure to date.
Don’t Just Report the News, Fake The News
Barry is an old hand at using the press to promote his clients and denigrate opponents. But political consultants are starting to skip the middleman and run their own “news” operations.
Fake news has been seen before in Santa Clara.
During the 2002 campaign the “Mission City News” appeared in mailboxes the weekend before the election. Published by longtime political operator Christopher Stampolis, this “newspaper” contained campaign ads as well as misleading “news” that a candidate for Mayor had been found in violation of California’s campaign laws.*
Fast forward 14 years: In 2016 Barry became a trusted advisor for the contemporary digital equivalent of the Mission City News.
During the 2016 election a blog appeared calling itself an alternate “news” source for Santa Clara. Its founder, fired Weekly sports writer Robert Haugh wrote on Oct. 20, 2016 that the blog was spurred by his belief that “Santa Clara deserves better: better news coverage, better ethics in campaigning and better transparency.”
Despite Haugh’s stated intention of increasing transparency in the Mission City, he failed to make the most important disclosure of all: that Mayor Gillmor and Council Member O’Neill were behind starting the blog — something that would explain Haugh’s consistently flattering coverage of the Mayor and her slate during the 2016 election.
Messages in the Weekly’s possession portray Gillmor and O’Neill as actively interested in helping Haugh to start his blog — including finding financing for it — and show Barry in the role of a confidant and an advisor.
In a meeting not reported on Gillmor’s or O’Neill’s calendar, Haugh had lunch with the duo on Sept. 1, 2016. The meeting discussed “news in Santa Clara and ideas on how there could be another news medium there digital based [sic],” according to messages obtained by the Weekly.
In these messages Haugh says, while Gillmor couldn’t directly finance the operation because of Council, “she’ll send me the contact info.” Gillmor provided Barry’s name as someone who could find the funding to start a newspaper. The two had conversations, according to the messages the Weekly has seen.
They discussed the ins and outs of news and strategized on how a news outlet would be possible. In several messages, Barry’s interest was confirmed.
“[Barry] is interested, I didn’t know he started San Jos einside [sic],” said one message.**
In other messages Haugh said, “He wasn’t as worried on start up costs, as opposed to income for me and staff,” and “Working on the $$$ to get going.”
In these messages Haugh claims Barry does not direct anything Haugh publishes, but that the lobbyist has “given some good tips.” Reporters from other Bay Area news outlets have privately described turning down Barry’s attempts at story placement only to see his pitch in Haugh’s blog soon after.
Since the blog began, the City appears to have allied itself with Haugh; giving him privileged City Hall access via unnamed “sources,” trying to interfere with real news organizations’ ability to report on City Hall, and discrediting news sources that don’t follow the Gillmor party line. Haugh, for his part, regularly bashes local newspapers and reporters.
Operating Behind the Curtain
After Barry’s arrival, City 2016 elections reverted to the toxic negative campaigning that the City’s campaign ethics programs were supposed to eliminate. That campaign established a new low.
Previous elections have been heated, but no one running for police chief has ever, to anyone’s knowledge, suggested that his opponent was a dirty cop.
In 2016 the police union PAC funded hit pieces suggesting that the incumbent police chief was dishonest — amplified by Gillmor’s battle cry of “rot and stink” that would be cleaned up by her candidate, Nikolai.
Local attorney, and 2012 Council candidate, John Mlnarik set out to prove Barry was the mastermind behind the campaigns of Debi Davis, O’Neill, Watanabe, Tino Silva and the shadowy political group Stand Up for Santa Clara, filing FPPC complaints against all of them.
“Davis has informed numerous members of the public that Jude Barry is providing professional campaign advice to her and her campaign,” Mlnarik stated in his allegations, on Oct. 14, 2016. (Mlnarik has his resentments, too: Barry planted a hit piece about him in the Metro in 2013.)
“Yet there is no report of Davis paying for Barry’s services on Davis’ Form 460. If Barry is not being paid for his consulting services, an in-kind contribution from Related Companies would be required as Barry is being paid to act as a political operative in Santa Clara.
“The vote to approve the Related Companies development project being advocated for was taken on June 28, 2016,” he continued, “two days before the pre-election reporting period began.”
Likewise, Mlnarik said Barry conducted Silva’s, Watanabe’s and O’Neill’s campaigns, noting that Silva spoke in favor of the Related development at a June 2016 City Council meeting. In October 2016, Silva received $3,000 in donations from individual Related executives in New York and Southern California.
Mlnarik further alleged that Barry was, “acting as the political consultant for Stand Up for Santa Clara.”
Stand Up for Santa is a Clara pro-Gillmor and anti-stadium agitprop website started and run by Santa Clara Youth League (SCYSL) officials and employees Silva, Steve Robertson and Gabe Foo, according to their own public statements. The site does not identify itself as a business, political or non-profit entity.
The FPPC dismissed Mlnarik’s complaint, saying that there was “insufficient evidence.” But the FPPC fined Davis, Silva and Watanabe for filing financial reports late (Jan. 2017) showing $4,000 expenditures in July 2016 for political consulting from Foo Robertson Consulting, incorporated Dec. 29, 2016 — after the election — and whose principal is SCYSL president Gabe Foo.
Foo Robertson Marketing has no Santa Clara business license and no website. But it does have one important client: Mayor Gillmor, according to her September 2018 campaign filing.
Independent sources have told the Weekly that developer donations to the police union PAC were solicited by a committee run by Lisa Gillmor, and that Barry was one of four making the calls, which suggested that it would be a good idea for developers to “participate.”
Every Picture Tells a Story
Perhaps Barry is simply at the right place at the right time to find his name attached to so much that is happening in Santa Clara. A mountain of coincidences could be just that, except for a Silva 2016 post-election party photo in the Weekly’s possession, along with a chain of email messages beginning with the party invitation.
“Thank you,” Davis replied to the invitation from Silva, the party was “on my calendar,” and she told Silva the party was his 2018 campaign “kickoff” — something that was derailed by the Superior Court’s order that Santa Clara must elect its Council from six single-member districts and the court’s ruling about election sequencing.
Barry posed for a party photograph with Silva’s campaign committee. The image was distributed to the guest list — which included Gillmor, O’Neill, Watanabe and Davis as well as the soccer league’s Foo and Field, and Charter Review Committee Members and Measure A advocates Hassam Haggag, Beverly Silva and Saskia Feain.
Describing it as an “awesome group,” Foo asked recipients not to post the photo on social media.
It is said every picture tells a story. The story this picture suggests is about a lobbyist who has inserted himself deeply into Santa Clara City Hall to the point of being an all-but-in-name council member, supporting an all-but-in-name executive mayor.
Referring back to the example of Karl Rove, some might even be prompted to call the Gillmor administration the Barry administration.
* Stampolis was indicted for failing to report this as a campaign mailer, but a judge dismissed it with the logic that newspapers can go out of business after one or two issues.
**Although Barry wrote frequently on San José Inside, the Weekly found no evidence that he was among its founders.
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diario-de-un-muppet · 6 years ago
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Es una ópera rock con música de Andrew Lloyd Webber y letras de Tim Rice, que primero surgió como álbum conceptual en 1970 y un año después dio el salto a los escenarios de Broadway como musical. El argumento se centra en los últimos siete días de la vida de Jesús de Nazaret, comenzando con los preparativos de su llegada a Jerusalén y finalizando con la crucifixión. 
El 12 de julio de 1971 se celebró el primer concierto oficial ante 13.640 personas en el Civic Arena de Pittsburgh, Pensilvania, con Jeff Fenholt como Jesús, Carl Anderson como Judas e Yvonne Elliman como María Magdalena, para después embarcarse en un tour por 54 ciudades estadounidenses.
La producción recibió críticas divididas y, al igual que otras versiones posteriores, fue condenada por algunos grupos religiosos que organizaron protestas en la puerta del teatro. Tim Rice declaró que el musical no mostraba a Cristo como un dios, sino como un simple hombre que estuvo en el lugar adecuado en el momento oportuno, y algunos cristianos tomaron sus palabras como una blasfemia. La postura de Judas y sus críticas hacia Jesús tampoco gustaron y fueron consideradas ofensivas. Al mismo tiempo, la comunidad judía denunció que el musical trasmitía un mensaje antisemita al culpabilizar al pueblo hebreo de la muerte de Jesús y presentar a tres personajes judíos (Caifás, Anás y Herodes) como villanos principales de la función.
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tasksweekly · 6 years ago
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[TASK 111: CHILE]
In celebration of September 15th to October 15th being Latinx Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 620+ Chilean 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:
Belgium Castro (1921) Chilean - actress and teacher.
Carmen Barros (1925) Chilean - actress and singer.
María Teresa Fricke (1927) Chilean - actress.
Teresa Münchmeyer (1928) Chilean - actress and landscape painter.
Shenda Román (1928) Chilean - actress.
Delfina Guzmán (1928) Chilean - actress.
Mario Lorca (1930) Chilean - actress and director.
Violeta Vidaurre (1930) Chilean - actress.
Mireya Moreno (1931) Chilean - actress.
Luz Jiménez (1934) Chilean - actress, theater director, and teacher.
Gabriela Medina (1935) Chilean - actress.
Sonia Mena (1936) Chilean - actress.
Grimanesa Jiménez (1937) Chilean - actress.
Gloria Münchmeyer (1938) Chilean - actress.
Isabel Parra (1939) Chilean - singer-songwriter and interpreter of Latin American musical folklore.
Gabriela Hernández (1939) Chilean - actress.
Silvia Santelices (1940) Chilean - actress.
Palmenia Pizarro (1941) Chilean - singer.
Dagmar Lassander (1943) Chilean, German / French - actress.
Coca Rudolphy (1943) Chilean - actress.
Monica Carrasco (1947) Chilean - actress.
María Elena Duvauchelle (1947) Chilean - actress.
Gloria Laso (1947) Chilean - actress and director.
Ana Reeves (1948) Chilean - actress and director.
Gloria Benavides (1948) Chilean - actress, singer and comedian.
Patricia Maldonado Aravena (1950) Chilean - television presenter.
Teresita Reyes (1950) Chilean [Palestinian / Unknown] - actress.
Jacqueline Boudon (1951) Chilean - actress, comedian, director and pedagogue.
Elsa Poblete (1952) Chilean - actress.
Rosa Ramírez (1953) Chilean - actress and director.
Consuelo Holzapfel (1954) Chilean [German] - actress and director.
Silvia Novak (1955) Chilean - actress.
Malucha Pinto (1955) Chilean - actress, theater director and dramatist.
Claudia di Girolamo (1956) Chilean [Italian] - actress.
Fedora Kliwadenko (1956) Chilean - actress.
Loreto Valenzuela (1956) Chilean - actress and director.
Maricarmen Arrigorriaga (1957) Chilean [Basque] - actress.
Marcela Medel (1957) Chilean - actress.
Roxana Campos (1958) Chilean - actress.
Carmen Disa Gutiérrez (1959) Chilean - actress.
Maria Izquierdo Huneeus (1960) Chilean - actress, director and screenwriter.
Paulina García (1960) Chilean - actress, theatre director and playwright.
Esperanza Silva (1960) Chilean - actress and director.
Adriana Vacarezza (1961) Chilean [Basque, Italian] - actress.
Magdalena Max-Neef (1961) Chilean - actress.
Andrea Tessa (1961) Chilean [Italian] - singer-songwriter, TV presenter, and actress.
Irene Llano (1962) Chilean - actress and singer.
Elena Muñoz (1962) Chilean - actress, dramatist and scriptwriter.
Luz Croxatto (1962) Chilean - actress, director and screenwriter.
Sandra O'Ryan (1962) Chilean - actress.
Graciela Araya (1962) Chilean - singer.
Pilar Cox / María Pilar Cox Balsamina (1963) Chilean [Uruguayan] - ex-model, television presenter and actress.
Ximena Rivas (1963) Chilean - actress.
Coca Guazzini (1953) Chilean [Italian] - actress.
Valentina Vargas (1964) Chilean [French] - actress.
Carmina Irrigation (1964) Chilean - actress and manager.
Lisa Guerrero (1964) Chilean / English - actress, model, tv host, sportscaster, and journalist.
Viviana Rodríguez (1964) Chilean - actress.
Marcela Osorio (1964) Chilean - actress.
Katty Kowaleczko (1964) Chilean [Polish] - actress.
Carolina Arregui (1965) Chilean [Crotation, Basque] - actress.
Amparo Noguera (1965) Chilean - actress.
Cecilia Bolocco (1965) Chilean [Italian, Arbëresh / German] - actress, tv host, and Miss Universe 1987.
Myriam Hernández (1965) Chilean - singer-songwriter and television presenter.
Carmen Gloria Arroyo (1965) Chilean - tv host.
Claudia Celedón (1966) Chilean [Basque] - actress.
Elvira López (1966) Chilean - actress.
Natalia Cuevas (1966) Chilean - singer, comedian, impressionist, and actress.
Ana María Gazmuri (1966) Chilean - actress.
Lorene Prieto (1967) Chilean [New Zealand] - actress.
Charlotte Lewis (1967) 1/4 Chilean, 1/4 Iraqi, 1/4 Irish, 1/4 English - actress.
Macarena Mina (1968) Chilean [Italian] - Miss Chile 1989.
Javiera Parra (1968) Chilean - musician and singer.
Francesca Ancarola (1968) Chilean [Italian] - singer and songwriter.
Catalina Saavedra (1968) Chilean - actress.
Alessandra Guerzoni (1968) Chilean [Italian] - actress.
Paulina Gálvez (1969) Chilean / Spanish - actress.
Andrea Freund (1969) Chilean [German] - actress, director and producer.
Catalina Guerra (1969) Chilean - actress.
Karen Doggenweiler (1969) Chilean [German, Swiss / Spanish, Aragonese] - tv presenter.
Paula Urrutia (1969) Chilean - actress and director.
Claudia Burr (1969) Chilean - actress.
Aline Kuppenheim (1969) Chilean [French] - actress.
Paola Volpato (1969) Chilean [Italian] - actress.
Colombina Parra (1970) Chilean - musician and singer.
Alejandra Fosalba (1970) Chilean - actress
Alex Castillo / Alexandra Castillo (1971) Chilean - actress and dancer.  
Cecilia Amenábar (1971) Chilean [Basque] - actress, model and artist.
Paz Bascuñán (1971) Chilean - actress.
Claudia Acuña (1971) Chilean - jazz vocalist, songwriter and arranger.
Magdalena Matthey (1971) Chilean - singer-songwriter.
Heidrun Breier (1971) Chilean [Romanian, possibly German] - actress and director.
Ángela Contreras (1971) Chilean - actress.
Katyna Huberman (1971) Chilean Jewish - actress.
Leonor Varela (1972) Chilean [Syrian, Hungarian, French / Galician, possibly other] - actress and model.
Tamara Acosta (1972) Chilean - actress.
Karla Constant (1972) Chilean - tv host.
Amaya Forch (1972) Chilean [German, English] - actress and pop singer.
Ivette Vergara (1972) Chilean - tv presenter.
Francisca Imboden (1972) Chilean - actress.
Tilde de Paula / Anatilde de Paula Diaz (1972) Chilean [Brazilian / Cuban] - tv presenter, journalist, and author.
Berta Lasala (1973) Chilean - actress.
Paola Bruna / Paola Åhlund (1973) Chilean - singer and artist.
Francisca Merino / Pancha Merino (1973) Chilean - actress and television presenter.
Andrea Eltit (1973) Chilean - actress.
María Eugenia Larraín (1973) Chilean [Basque, German] - model and socialite.
Taira Court (1973) Chilean - actress and designer.
Francisca Gavilán (1973) Chilean - actress and singer.
Sigrid Alegría (1974) Chilean - actress.
Antonella Ríos (1974) Chilean - actress and presenter.
Angelica Neumann (1974) Chilean - actress, producer and designer.
Blanca Lewin (1974) Chilean - actress.
Ingrid Isensee (1974) Chilean - actress , director, broadcaster and industrial designer.
Yazmin Vazquez (1974) Chilean - tv host.
Renata Bravo (1974) Chilean - actress, comedian and radio presenter.
Úrsula Achterberg (1974) Chilean - actress.
Carolina Paulsen (1974) Chilean - actress.
Victoria Gazmuri (1974) Chilean - actress.
Claudia Pérez (1974) Chilean - actress.
Javiera Contador (1974) Chilean - actress, comedian and television hostess.
Mariana Loyola (1975) Chilean - actress.
Claudia Cabezas (1975) Chilean - actress.
Itatí Cantoral (1975) Chilean, Mexican [Spanish, including Andalusian, possibly other], French / Argentinian [Italian] - actress, singer, dancer, and producer.
Gabriela Aguilera (1975) Chilean - actress and singer.
Íngrid Cruz (1975) Chilean - actress.
Antonia Fernández (1975) Chilean - actress
Jenny Cavallo (1975) Chilean - actress.
Paola Giannini (1976) Chilean - actress
Ilona Elkin (1976) Chilean / Finnish - actress.
Elvira Cristi (1976) Chilean - actress and model.
Daniela Aleuy (1976)  Chilean - singer and songwriter.
Denisse Malebrán (1976) Chilean - singer, songwriter and vocalist.
Tonka Tomicic (1976) Chilean [Croatian] - model and television presenter.
Daniella Campos (1976) Chilean [English] - TV presenter and beauty pageant titleholder.
Mónica Godoy (1976) Chilean [English] - actress.
Deetah / Claudia Ogalde (1976) Chilean - rapper and singer.
Alicia Ika (1976) Rapa Nui [Chilean / Unknown]  - actress, musician and surf instructor.
Carolina Nissen (1976) Chilean - singer.
Paola Bontempi (1977) Chilean [German, possibly other] - actress and tv host.
Ana Tijoux (1977) Chilean - musician.
Charissa Chamorro (1977) Chilean - actress.
Paula Sharim (1977) Chilean [Lebanese Jewish, Egyptian Jewish, possibly other] - actress.
Connie Achurra (1977) Chilean - tv host.
Diana Bolocco (1977) Chilean [Italian, Arbëresh / German] - tv host.
Sussan Taunton (1977) Chilean [English, possibly other] - actress.
Ana Sol Romero (1977) Chilean - tv host.
Nicole  / Denisse Lillian Laval Soza (1977) Chilean [Spanish]  - singer-songwriter.
Patricia López (1977) Chilean - singer and actress.
María José Prieto (1977) Chilean - actress.
America Olivo (1978) Chilean, Mexican, Italian, Basque, Spanish / Belgian, Irish - actress, singer, and model.
Carla Ballero (1978) Chilean - actress and reality tv personality.
Daniela Jacques (1978) Chilean - actress.
Carmen Gloria Bresky (1978) Chilean - actress.
Natalia Contesse (1978) Chilean - folk musician and historian.
Siboney Lo (1978) Italian, Chilean - actress.
Jennifer Mayani (1979) Chilean [Sindhi] - actress and model.
Daniela Lhorente (1979) Chilean - actress and singer.
Francisca Ayala (1979) Chilean - tv host.
Catherine Mazoyer (1979) Chilean / French - actress.
Mane Swett / Maria Elena Swett (1979) Chilean - actress.
Jani Duenas / Alejandra Duenas (1979) Chilean - actress and comedian.
Cote de Pablo (1979) Chilean - actress and singer.
Macarena Teke (1979) Chilean - actress.
Paulina Mladinic (1980) Chilean [Croatian, Basque] - model.
Celine Reymond (1980) Chilean - actress and singer
Javiera Hernández (1980) Chilean - actress and director.
María Paz Jorquiera (1980) Chilean - actress and comedian.
Adela Secall (1980) Chilean - actress.
Mariana Derderián (1980) Chilean [Syrian / Unknown] - actress and singer.
Francisca Lewin (1980) Chilean - actress.
Elita Löfblad / Helita Mariam Löfblad Letelier (1980) Chilean - model and reality tv star.
Maria Luisa Godoy (1980) Chilean - tv personality.
Paola Lattus (1980) Chilean - actress.
María José Bello (1980) Chilean - actress.
Gabriela Barros (1980) Chilean - actress, model and Miss Universo Chile 2004.
Adriana Barrientos (1980) Chilean [Yaghan, Spanish] - model, actress, vedette celebrity.
Fernanda Urrejola (1981) Chilean - actress.
Michelle Morgan (1981) Chilean - actress.
María Luisa Mayol (1981) Chilean - actress.
Begoña Basauri (1981) Chilean - actress.
María José Illanes (1981) Chilean - musician, model and actress.
Isabel Bawlitza (1981) Chilean - fashion model and beauty pageant titleholder.
Ignacia Allamand (1981) Chilean - actress.
Dayana Friend (1981) Chilean - actress.
Fernanda Urrejola (1981) Chilean [Basque, Spanish] - actress.
Ximena Abarca (1981) Chilean - pop singer and actress.
Pamela Díaz (1981) Chilean [Basque, Spanish] - model and media celebrity.
Elisa Zulueta (1981) Chilean [Basque] - actress.
Catalina Aguayo (1981) Chilean - model and actress.
Carolina de Moras (1981) Chilean [French] - model, actress and television presenter.
Nathalia Aragonese (1981) Chilean - actress and theater director.
Andrea Velasco (1981) Chilean [Italian, possibly other] - singer.
Javiera Díaz de Valdés (1981) Chilean [Basque, Spanish] - actress.
Medina / Medina Valbak / Andrea Valback (1982) Chilean, possibly other - singer-songwriter.
Lucy Cominetti (1982) Chilean - actress.
María Dalmazzo (1983) Colombian / Chilean, Italian - actress.
Yamna Lobos (1983) Chilean - dancer, television host, and actress.
Manuela Martelli (1983) Chilean [Italian] - actress.
Belén Montilla (1983) Chilean - Miss Universo Chile 2006.
Javiera Mena (1983) Chilean - singer and guitarist.
Pia Mechler (1983) Chilean, German, Polish, Scottish - actor.
Sofia Garcia (1983) Chilean - actress
Mon Laferte / Norma Monserrat Bustamante Laferte (1983) Chilean [French] - singer-songwriter and actress.
Loreto Aravena (1983) Chilean - actress.
Belenaza Mora (1983) Chilean - comedian and tv personality.
Emilia Noguera (1983) Chilean - actress, theater director and playwright.
Pia Miller / Pia Loyola (1983) Chilean - actress, model, and tv presenter.
Alison Mandel (1983) Chilean - actress.
Rocsi Diaz (1983) Chilean / Honduran - television personality and model.
Charmaine / Charmaine Náyade Carrasco (1984) Chilean - singer-songwriter.
Natalia Lafourcade (1984) Chilean, French Basque / Mexican, possibly small amount of English - singer and songwriter.
Maura Rivera (1984) Chilean - dancer and tv personality.
Carla Jara (1984) Chilean - actress and animator.
Renata Ruiz (1984) Chilean - model.
María Gracia Omegna (1984) Chilean - actress.
Camila Hirane (1985) Chilean - actress.
Karla Souza (1985) Chilean [likely Portuguese] / Mexican - actress.
Eliane Gagnon (1985) Chilean, French - actress.
Daniela Aranguiz (1985) Chilean - tv host.
Nataly Chilet / Nataly Chilet Bustamante (1985) Chilean [Ukrainian, possibly other] - beauty pageant titleholder.
Andrea García-Huidobro (1985) Chilean - actress and director.
Juanita Ringeling (1985) Chilean - actress.
Oona Chaplin (1986) Chilean [Mapuche, Spanish, Romanian] / Irish, Scottish, English - actress.
Vale Ortega / Valeria Ortega Schettino (1986) Chilean - model and tv host.
María de los Ángeles García (1986) Chilean - actress.
Tomasa Del Real / Valeria Cisternas (1986) Chilean - singer and rapper.
Vanessa Ceruti (1986) Chilean [Italian, Russian] - model, actress, Miss Universe Chile 2011 and Elite Model Look Chile 2004.
K-Réena / Katherine Macarena Contreras Contreras (1986) Chilean - pop, soul, and R&B singer.
Gianella Marengo (1986) Chilean - model and tv host.
Ximena Huilipán (1986) Chilean [Mapuche] - model and actress.
Cat Rendic (1986) Chilean - dancer.
Majo Martino (1986) Chilean - tv host.
Viviana Shieh (1986) Chilean [Taiwanese] - actress and singer.
Tanya Del Solar (1986) Chilean - model and Miss Piel Dorada 2010.
Oona Chaplin (1986) Chilean [Mapuche, Spanish, evidently Romanian] / English, Irish, 1/16th Scottish  - actress.
Luli Love / Nicole Moreno (1987) Chilean - model, dancer, and panelist.
Nicole Polizzi (1987) Chilean - reality television personality, author, dancer and professional wrestler.
Daniela Ramírez (1987) Chilean - actress.
Maira Bodenhöfer (1987) Chilean - actress.  
Snooki / Nicole Polizzi / Nicole LaVelle (1987) Chilean [Romani, Unspecified Middle Eastern, Unspecified South Asian, Unspecified East Asian, Jewish, Russian, Croatian, Macedonian, Slovakian, Spanish (including Andalusian)] - tv personality, dancer, and author.
Francisca Valenzuela (1987) Chilean - singer, poet, and multi-instrumentalist.
Isidora Urrejola (1987) Chilean - actress.
Sofía Viacava (1987) Chilean [Italian] - model and Miss Chile Continente Americano 2010.
Maite Orsini (1988) Chilean [French, Italian]  - actress, model, and reality tv personality.
Valeska Díaz (1988) Chilean - actress.
Natalia Reddersen (1988) Chilean [German] - actress.
Sara Paxton (1988) Chilean, Mexican [Spanish and Dutch Jewish, some German] (born into the Jewish faith) / Irish, Scottish, English, very distant French (convert to Judaism) / - actress, singer and model.
Daniela Vega (1989) Chilean - actress and singer. - Trans!
Lorenza Izzo (1989) Chilean [Spanish, Italian, English, possibly other] - actress and model.
Karla Vasquez (1989) Chilean - actress and singer.
Daniella Monet (1989) Chilean [Spanish, Croatian] / Italian - actress, singer, and tv personality.
Catalina Vallejos (1989) Chilean - model, television personality and Miss ATP in 2009 and Calle 7 in 2010 and 2011.
Jena Lee / Sylvia Garcia (1990) Chilean - singer and composer.
Carolina Vargas (1990) Chilean - actress.
Ana Luisa König (1990) Chilean [German, Irish] - model and Miss Universo Chile 2012.
D-Niss / Denise Rosenthal (1990) Chilean - actress, model, dancer and singer-songwriter.
Mariana di Girolamo (1990) Chilean [Italian] - actress.
Catalina Cáceres (1990) Chilean - model, Nuestra Belleza Chile and Miss Universo Chile in 2016.
Dominique Gallego (1990) Chilean [Galician. English] - media model, television reality personality, promoter and actress.
Kathy Contreras (1990) Chilean - actress, model, and dancer.
Miranda Bodenhöfer (1990) Chilean - ballet dancer and actress.
Tanza Varela (1991) Chilean [Spanish] - actress and model.
Camila Recabarren (1991) Chilean [Basque] - model and Miss World Chile 2012.
Maria del Pilar (1991) Chilean - singer.
Kel Calderón / Raquel Calderón (1991) Chilean [Basque] - actress, singer and lawyer.
Luciana Echeverría (1991) Chilean - actress, model, singer and television presenter.
Natalie Sifferman (1991) Chilean / Unspecified White  - actress.
Luciana Echeverría (1991) Chilean [Basque] - actress, singer and television presenter.
Carolina Mestrovic (1991) Chilean [Croatian, Italian]  - singer, actress and TV host.
Alma Jodorowsky (1991) 1/4 Chilean [Ukrainian Jewish], 3/4 French - actress, singer, and model.
Camila Andrade (1991) Chilean - model, TV Host and Miss World Chile 2013.
Piyoasdf (1991) Chilean - singer and youtuber.
Kika Silva (1992) Chilean [Spanish] - model and television panelist.
Constance Piccoli (1992) Chilean - actress and singer.
Alicia Rodríguez (1992) Chilean - actress.
María Jesús Matthei (1992) Chilean - TV Host, model and beauty pageant titleholder.
Valentina Villagra (1992) Chilean - youtuber.
Ilonka Obilinovic (1992) Chilean - youtuber.
Claudipia Chic (1992) Chilean - youtuber.
Ivica Llanca (1992) Chilean - youtuber.
Diandra / Diandra Flores (1994) Chilean / Finnish - singer-songwriter.
Cecilia Sanchez (1994) Chilean - model (Instagram: cecisanmar).
Fernanda Sobarzo (1994) Chilean - model and Miss World Chile 2015.
Hellen Toncio (1994) Chilean - volleyball player and Miss Universo Chile 2014.
Camila Cuevas (1995) Chilean - youtuber.
Bramty Juliette (1995) Chilean - youtuber.
Camila Gallardo (1996) Chilean - singer.
Rogue Anastasia (1996) Chilean - youtuber.
Catalina Joy (1996) Chilean - Tik.Tok and Musical.ly star.
Belén Soto (1997) Chilean - actress and model.
Inna Moll (1997) Chilean - youtuber.
Trinidad de la Noi (1998) Chilean [French] - model, actress and Elite Model Look Chile 2012.
Xiomara Herrera (1998) Chilean - dancer.
Christell / Christell Jazmín Rodriguez Carrillo (1998) Chilean - singer.
Nuvia_OuO (1998) Chilean - Twitch star.
Teresita Commentz (2001) Chilean - actress.
Jeannette Pualuan (?) Chilean [Lebanese, possibly other] - singer-songwriter.
Macarena Darrigrandi (?) Chilean [Egyptian Jewish, possibly other] - actress.
Clara Lyons Parsons (?) Chilean [Spanish, Italian, English, possibly other]  - model.
Daniela Gomez (?) Chilean, Colombian - actress.
Allie Escaffi (?) Chilean, Argentinian - actress and model.
Tamara Almeida (?) Chilean, Ecuadorian - actress.
Kaylah Zander (?) Chilean / Unspecified European - actress.
Daniela Manyoma (?) Chilean - Miss International Queen Chile 2014. - Trans!
Tatiana Leiva (?) Chilean, Unspecified Other - writer and actress.
Macarena Carrere (?) Chilean - actress.
Lizzy Snaps / Lizzy Sullivan (?) Chilean - tv host.
Alexandra Dionelis (?) Chilean  / Greek - actress.
Marina Catalán (?) Chilean - actor.
Clara Aranovich (?) Chilean / Argentinian - actress, writer and director.
Bella Wholey (?) Chilean - actress.
Camila Correa Soya (?) Chilean [French, Hungarian] - actress and singer.
Alicia Ceron (?) Chilean - actress.
Karen Sotomayor (?) Chilean / Brazilian - actress.
Catalina Palacios (?) Chilean - actress, singer and television presenter.
Violeta Vidaurre (?) Chilean [German, Beligan] - actress.
Melissa Araya (?) Chilean - actress.
Francie Perez (?) Chilean, possibly other - actress.
Danielle Marina Jones (?) Chilean / African-American - actress.
Javiera Beltrami (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: javibeltrami).
Millie Wood V (?) Chilean, Russian - actress, model, Playboy Spain (Instagram: millie_wood92).
Jose Cruz (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: josefinacruz.t).
Monica Ramos (?) Chilean - harpist.
Bea de Tapia (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: beatapias).
Chiara Leone (?) Chilean - model.
Rosa Labordé (?) Chilean / Unspecified Eastern European - actress, playwright, director, and screenwriter.
Agustina Schwember (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: agustinaschwember).
Elizabeth Schall (?) Chilean - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and pianist.
Grace Barrejon (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: gracebarrejon).
Carmen Aguirre (?) Chilean - actress and writer.
Em Meades (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: emmeades).
Domi Palacios (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: domipalacios).
Jocelyn Osorio (?) Chilean - actress and model.
Emmanuelle Lussier-Martinez (?) Chilean / French - actress.
Daniella Tobar (?) Chilean - actress.
Uranía Haltenhoff (?) Chilean [German / Greek] - beauty pageant titleholder and Miss Chile 1990.
Constanza Silva (?) Chilean - model and beauty pageant titleholder.
Camila Stuardo (?) Chilean - model and a beauty pageant contestant.
Cecilia Echenique (?) Chilean - singer.
Cristina Gallardo-Domâs (?) Chilean [French] - singer.
Pascuala Ilabaca (?) Chilean - singer and songwriter.
K-Bust / Karla Bustamante (?) Chilean - singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist.
Verónica Villarroel (?) Chilean - soprano.
Isidora Cabezón (?) Chilean - actress.
Tichi Lobos (?) Chilean - actress.
Nadia Milton (?) Chilean - actress and singer.
Valentina Muhr (?) Chilean - actress.
Javiera Ramos (?) Chilean - actress.
M:
Claudio Spies (1925) Chilean [German Jewish] - musician.
Lucho Gatica (1928) Chilean [Basque] - bolero singer, film actor, and television host.
Leon Schidlowsky (1931) Chilean [Russian Jewish, Polish Jewish] - musician.
Fernando Farías (1932) Chilean - actor.
Nissim Sharim (1932) Chilean [Lebanese Jewish, Egyptian Jewish] - actor.
Alejandro Sieveking (1934) Chilean - actor, director, and playwright.
Jorge Aravena Llanca (1936) Chilean - photographer, writer, researcher and singer-songwriter.
Héctor Noguera (1937) Chilean - actor and teacher.
Patricio Manns (1937) Chilean [French, German] - composer, author, poet, novelist, essayist, play writer and journalist.
Julio Numhauser (1938) Chilean [German Jewish] - musician.
Germán Casas (1939) Chilean - singer.
Lorenzo Aillapán (1940) Chilean [Mapuche] - poet, actor, film producer, anthropologist.
Eduardo Carrasco (1940) Chilean - musician, university professor of philosophy, author, and one of the founders of the Chilean folk music group Quilapayún.
Julio Jung (1942) Chilean - actor.
Sergio Hernández (1942) Chilean - actor.
Eduardo Parra Pizarro (1943) Chilean - musician.
Hugo Medina (1943) Chilean - actor.
Nelson Brodt (1943) Chilean  - actor, director, playwright and teacher.
Buddy Richard (1943) Chilean - singer-songwriter.
Willy Benítez (1946) Chilean - actor and comedian.
Pepe Soza / José Soza (1946) Chilean - actor, tv host, and director.
Benny Mardones / Ruben Mardones (1946) Chilean - singer-songwriter.
Óscar Castro Ramírez (1947) Chilean - actor, playwright and theatrical director.
Mario Mutis (1947) Chilean - musician.
Óscar Hernánd (1947) Chilean - actor.
Patricio Contreras (1947) Chilean - actor.
Exequiel Lavandero (1947) Chilean - actor.
Alejandro Castillo (1948) Chilean - actor.
Raúl Sendra (1948) Chilean - actor and tennis player.
Mauricio Pesutic (1948) Chilean [Spanish] - actor and director.
Pepe Secall / José Secall (1949) Chilean - actor.
Eduardo Gatti (1949) Chilean [French, Italian] - singer-songwriter.
Osvaldo Silva (1949) Chilean - actor, director, and producer.
Antonio Macia (1950) Chilean / Argentinian - actor and screenwriter.
Paco Saval (1950) Chilean - keyboard player, producer, composer and singer.
Humberto Gatica (1951) Chilean - musician.
Anderson Cooper (1951) 1/16 Chilean [Unspecified Indigenous, Bantu, Spanish], 17/16 mix of English, Dutch, Scottish, Irish, French Huguenot - tv personality, journalist, and author.
Gonzalo Robles (1952) Chilean - actor.
Cristián García-Huidobro (1952) Chilean - actor and comedian.
Patricio Strahovsky (1952) Chilean - actor.
Rodolfo Pulgar (1953) Chilean - actor.
Fernando Ubiergo (1953) Chilean - singer-songwriter and musician.
Mauricio Redolés (1953) Chilean - singer-songwriter, musician, and poet.
Oscar Lopez (1953) Chilean - singer, guitarist, and composer.
Francisco Reyes (1954) Chilean [French] - actor.
Alfredo Castro (1955) Chilean - actor, screenwriter and theatre director.
Cristián Campos (1956) Chilean - actor.
Alejandro Goic (1957) Chilean - writer, actor and director.
Felipe Armas (1957) Chilean - actor , producer , television director and businessman.
Joe Vasconcellos (1959) Chilean [Brazilian] - singer-songwriter and composer.
Erto Pantoja (1960) Chilean - actor.
Tom Araya (1961) Chilean - singer, songwriter, and musician.
Luis Gatica (1961) Chilean [Basque, possibly other] / Puerto Rican - actor.
Pablo Ausensi (1961) Chilean - actor.
Rodrigo Bastidas (1961) Chilean - theater director, dramatist, screenwriter, broadcaster and actor.
Luis Gnecco (1962) Chilean - actor.
Alain Johannes (1962) Chilean [Austrian, Dutch] - singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist.
Otilio Castro (1962) Chilean - actor and director.
Renato Munster (1962) Chilean - actor.
Fernando Larraín (1962) Chilean [Basque] - actor , broadcaster, comedian and animator.
Brontis Jodorowsky (1962) Chilean [Ukrainian Jewish] / French - actor and director.
Sebastián Dahm (1963) Chilean - actor and teacher.
Fareed Haque (1963) Chilean / Pakistani - guitarist.
Cristian Amigo (1963) Chilean - guitarist, composer, improviser, and ethnomusicologist.
Luis Dubó (1964) Chilean - actor.
Álvaro Rudolphy (1964) Chilean - actor.
Felipe Izquierdo (1964) Chilean - actor, comedian, communicator and businessman.
Pablo Striano (1964) Chilean - actor.
Andrés Díaz (1964) Chilean - cellist.
Luis Jara (1965) Chilean [Spanish]  - singer, ex-actor and TV host.
Cristóbal Jodorowsky / Axel Jodorowsky (1965) Chilean [Ukrainian Jewish] / Mexican - actor, writer, playwright, trainer, painter, and tarologist.
Álvaro Scaramelli (1965) Chilean [Italian] - singer, composer and therapist.
Boris Quercia (1965) Chilean - actor, director, screenwriter, producer and writer.
Claudio Narea (1965) Chilean - rock musician, singer, and songwriter.
Alfredo Perl (1965) Chilean - pianist.
Remigio Remedy (1965) Chilean - actor.
Juan Falcón (1965) Chilean - actor.
Carlos Embry (1966) Chilean - actor.
Juan Carlos Valdivia Lena (1966) Chilean - tv host.
Daniel Muñoz (1966) Chilean - actor and folklorist.
Jordi Castell (1966) Chilean [Palestinian, Catalan] - tv presenter and photographer.
Francisco Melo (1966) Chilean - actor and producer.
Ramón Llao (1967) Chilean - actor.
Pablo Macaya (1967) Chilean - actor.
Rodrigo Muñoz (1967) Chilean - actor and comedian.  
Beto Cuevas (1967) Chilean - singer, plastic artist, painter, and actor.
Rodrigo Andrés González Espíndola (1968) Chilean - musician.
lvaro Morales (1968) Chilean - actor, theater and television.
Marcelo Alonso (1969) Chilean - actor.
Claudio Valenzuela (1969) Chilean - guitarist, singer, and composer.
Anton Reisenegger (1969) Chilean [German] - singer and guitarist.
Horatio Sanz / Horacio Sanz (1969) Chilean - actor and comedian.
Alejandro Silva (1969) Chilean - guitarist, bassist, and songwriter.
Rafael Araneda (1969) Chilean [Basque, possibly other] - tv presenter.
Adam Buxton (1969) Chilean / British - actor, comedian, writer, and broadcaster.
Manuel García (1970) Chilean - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Fernando Solabarrieta (1970) Chilean [Palestinian / Basque] - tv personality.
Carlos Patricio Díaz (1970) Chilean - actor.
Pablo Schwarz (1970) Chilean - actor.
Felipe Braun (1970) Chilean - actor.
Ricardo Villalobos (1970) Chilean - DJ.
Luis Uribe (1970) Chilean - actor.
Francisco Pérez-Bannen (1971) Chilean - actor.
Felipe Viel (1971) Chilean - actor and tv presenter.
Frank Pando (1971) Chilean - actor.
Sergio Lagos (1972) Chilean - musician and tv presenter.
Michio Nishihara Toro (1972) Chilean [Japanese, possibly other] - musician.
Álvaro Véliz (1972) Chilean - singer.
Juan Pablo Sáez (1972) Chilean - actor.
Cristián Sánchez (1972) Chilean - tv presenter.
Daniel Alcaíno (1972) Chilean - actor.
Pedro Carmona-Alvarez (1972) Chilean - musician, poet, and novelist.
Claudio Espinoza (1973) Chilean - actor.
Promis / Jose F. Promis / José Francisco Promis Hoyuelos (1973) Chilean - singer-songwriter, keyboardist, pianist, and composer.
Jason Liebrecht (1973) Chilean - actor.
Carmen Disa Gutiérrez (1973) Chilean - actor.
Marcial Tagle (1973) Chilean - actor.
Juan Pablo Ogalde (1973) Chilean - actor.
Rodrigo Sepúlveda (1973) Chilean - tv personality.
Carlos Díaz León (1973) Chilean - actor.
Víctor Montero (1973) Chilean - actor.
Claudio González (1973) Chilean - actor.
Sebastián Layseca (1974) Chilean - actor and director.
Pablo Francisco (1974) Chilean - comedian.
Cristián de la Fuente (1974) Chilean [French] - actor, presenter, model and producer.
Lincoln Cáceres (1974) Chilean - actor.
Patricio Castillo (1974) Chilean [Spanish] - actor, singer-songwriter, and performer.
Nicolás Fontaine (1974) Chilean - actor and director.
Álvaro Espinoza (1974) Chilean - actor.
Daniel Rojas (1974) Chilean [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - pianist and composer.
Andrés Gómez (1975) Chilean - actor.
Rodrigo Salinas (1975) Chilean - actor and comedian.
Néstor Cantillana (1975) Chilean - actor.
Felipe Ríos (1975) Chilean - actor and director.
Pedro Pascal (1975) Chilean - actor.
Nicolás Saavedra (1975) Chilean - actor.
José Martínez (1975) Chilean - musician, comedian and actor.
Andrés Palacios (1975) Chilean - actor.
Leo Quinteros (1975) Chilean - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Méndez / DJ Méndez / Leopoldo Jorge Méndez Alcayaga (1975) Chilean - DJ, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Diego Muñoz (1976) Chilean - actor.
Daniel Valenzuela (1976) Chilean - tv host.
Andres Burgos (1977) Chilean - youtuber.
Iván Álvarez de Araya (1977) Chilean - actor.
Américo / Domingo Jhonny Vega Urzúa (1977) Chilean [Basque] - singer.
Pablo Díaz (1978) Chilean - actor and producer.
Marko Zaror (1978) Chilean [Palestinian, possibly other] - actor, martial artist, and stuntman.
Francisco Celhay (1978) Chilean - actor.
Jesus Cosialls (1978) Chilean - actor.
Gonzalo Valenzuela (1978) Chilean - actor and model.
Benjamín Vicuña (1978) Chilean - actor and buisnessman.
Luciano / Lucien-N-Luciano / Nicol Et Lucien / Robert Crazy / Luciaen / Lucien Nicolet (1978) Chilean / Swiss - DJ.
Benjamín Vicuña (1978) Chilean - actor.
Gonzalo Valenzuela (1978) Chilean - actor and boxer.
Ricardo Fernández Flores (1978) Chilean - actor.
Santiago Cabrera (1978) Chilean [Spanish, Basque, small amounts of French, Belgian, Flemish, 1/32 English, 1/64th Irish, 1/64th German, possibly other] - actor.
Pablo Vargas Becerra (1978) Chilean - dancer and choreographer.
Sebastián Silva (1979) Chilean [Basque] - director, actor, screenwriter, painter and musician.
Diego Casanueva (1979) Chilean - actor.
Nick Puga (1979) Chilean - actor, writer, and producer.
Leo Rey (1979) Chilean - singer.
César Sepúlveda (1979) Chilean - actor.
Adan Jodorowsky (1979) Chilean [Ukrainian Jewish] / Mexican - actor, musician, and director.
Ignacio Franzani (1979) Chilean - tv presenter.
Christian de la Cortina (1979) Chilean - actor, producer, director, and writer.
Rodrigo Diaz Rioseco (1979) Chilean - dancer.
Álvaro Gómez (1980) Chilean - actor.
Sergio Freire (1980) Chilean  - actor,comedian, and screenwriter.
Fille Danza (1980) Chilean - rapper.
Pablo Cerda (1980) Chilean - actor, director, and screenwriter.
Matías Novoa (1980) Chilean - actor and model.
Arap Bethke / Ricardo Arap Bethke Galdames (1980) Mexican [Chilean / German] - actor.
Fernando Milagros (1980) Chilean - singer.
Alvaro Estrella (1980) Chilean - singer and dancer.
Cristián Arriagada (1981) Chilean [Basque, Croatian] - actor.
Mario Horton (1981) Chilean - actor.
Alain Soulat (1981) Chilean - tv host.
Cristóbal Tapia Montt (1981) Chilean - actor and producer.
Tiago Correa (1981) Chilean / Brazilian  - actor.
Gepe / Daniel Alejandro Riveros Sepúlveda (1981) Chilean - singer-songwriter.
Kanata Irei / Daniel Irei (1982) Chilean / Ryukyuan - actor, singer, and model.
Chinoy  / Mauricio Castillo Moya (1982) Chilean - singer-songwriter.
Mathias Alvarez (1982) Chilean, Italian, Scottish, Irish - actor.
Héctor Morales (1982) Chilean - actor and director.
Raul Peralta (1982) Chilean - dancer.
Gabriel Peralta (1982) Chilean - dancer.
Eduardo Paxeco (1982) Chilean - actor.
Stefan Kramer / Stefan Kramer Solis (1982) Chilean [Swiss, German] - actor, comedian, impressionist, and announcer.
Pali (1982) Chilean - musician.
Fernando Godoy (1983) Chilean - actor.
Andrés Reyes (1984) Chilean - actor.
Santiago Tupper (1984) Chilean - actor and model.
Ariel Levy (1984) Chilean Jewish - actor and singer.
Emilio Edwards (1984) Chilean - actor and dancer.
Ariel Levy (1984) Chilean Jewish - actor.
Fernando Mena (1984) Chilean - actor, dramatist, director and writer.
Sergio Járlaz (1985) Chilean - singer.
Nano Stern (1985) Chilean Jewish - singer, multi-instrumentalist and composer.
Jean Philippe Cretton (1985) Chilean [French, Swiss] - tv presenter and musician.
Nicolas Linan De Ariza (1985) Chilean - youtuber.
Eyal Meyer (1985) Chilean [Kalaripayatu, German] - actor, model and dancer.
Gastón Salgado (1985) Chilean - actor.
Julio César Serrano (1986) Chilean - actor.
Martín Castillo (1986) Chilean - actor.
Justin Page (1986) Chilean - actor.
Luz Violeta / Sebastián Aguirre (1987) Chilean - drag performer.
Diego Ruiz (1987) Chilean - actor.
Karol Lucero (1987) Chilean - radio personality and televisión host.
Alejandro Fuentes (1987) Chilean - singer.
Samuel González (1987) Chilean - actor.
Michael Silva (1987) Chilean - actor.
Pablo Holman (1988) Chilean [Cornish] - musician.
Pedro Campos di Girolamo (1988) Chilean - actor.
Sebastián Ayala (1988) Chilean - actor and director.
Matías Assler (1989) Chilean - actor and model.
Ignacio Susperreguy (1989) Chilean - actor.
Fabrizio Copano (1989) Chilean - actor, comedian, tv presenter, and writer.
Alex Pino (1989) Chilean - rapper.
Omegaevolution (1989) Chilean - youtuber and Twitch star.
Nicolas Jaar (1990) Chilean [Palestinian / French] - composer and recording artist.
HolaSoyGermán / Germán Alejandro Garmendia Aranis (1990) Chilean [Spanish, possibly other] - youtuber, comedian, and writer.
Cristian Moreno (1990) Chilean - youtuber.
Sebastián Badilla (1991) Chilean - film director , screenwriter , producer and actor .
Paolo Ramírez (1992) Chilean - singer.
Nicolas Yunge (1992) Chilean - reality tv personality.
Hernan Arcil (1992) Chilean - dancer.
Fabricio Vasconcelos (1992) Brazilian [Chilean] - dancer.
Kevin Vasquez (1993) Chilean - actor, singer, producer, and composer.
Juan Francisco Matamala Reyes (1993) Chilean - dancer.
Pollo Castillo (1994) Chilean - facebook star.
ZeRo / Gonzalo Barrios (1995) Chilean - youtuber.
Sebastian Gomez (1995) Chilean - youtuber.
David Montoya (1995) Chilean - youtuber.
Keean Johnson (1996) 3/8 mix of Chilean, Mexican, 5/8 English - actor.
DeGoBooM (1996) Chilean - youtuber.
Matu Fuschloches (1996) Chilean - Tik.Tok star.
Dylantero Sin Imaginacion (1998) Chilean - youtuber.
Alfred.Okay (1998) Chilean - Tik.Tok star.
Camilo Elzo (1999) Chilean - youtuber.
Benjamin Mora (1999) Chilean - Tik.Tok star.
Cristobal González (2000) Chilean - youtuber.
Victor Klugg (2000) Chilean - Tik.Tok star.
Dani Ride (2001) Chilean - musician and youtuber.
Toshiro Murata (?) Chilean [Japanese] - singer.
Kiuge Hayashida (?) Chilean [Japanese] - bassist.
Alexander Nunez (?) Jamaican / Chilean - actor.
Sebastián Gálvez (?) Chilean [Spanish, Italian] - actor.
Leonardo Fuica (?) Chilean - actor.
Cesar Erba (?) Chilean - actor.
Iván Cabrera / Manuel Iván Cabrera Salinas (?) Chilean - dancer and actor.
Daniel Kemna (?) Chilean / Dutch - actor.
Sean Morales (?) Chilean, Unspecified - actor.
Oscar Morales Sánchez (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: moralessinmoral).
Aki / Aleksi Swallow (?) Chilean / Finnish - rapper-songwriter.
Paulo Felipe Casanova (?) Chilean - model, Candidato Mr Chile 2018 top 12, Mr Chile World Pacific and Mr gala viña 2017 (Instagram: paulocasanovaoficial).
Carlos Sanz (?) Chilean - actor.
Felipe Pereira (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: felipepereirarojas).
Roberto Díaz (?) Chilean - violinist.
Cristobal Jesus Lopez (?) Chilean - model (Instagram: tobal.lopez).
Lucio Prado (?) Chilean  - model (Instagram: lucio_prado).
Daniel Andres Parraguez (?) Chilean  - model (Instagram: iamdaniv).
Pablo Salvador (?) Chilean - model, gay activist and blogger.
Memo Aguirre (?) Chilean [Basque] - singer and musician.
Rodolfo Parada (?) Chilean - musician, composer, engineer and anthropologist.
Daniel Puente Encina (?) Chilean - singer-songwriter, guitarist, film composer, producer and actor.
RodStarz / Rodrigo Venegas (?) Chilean - rapper (Rebel Diaz).
G1 / Gonzalo Venegas (?) Chilean - rapper (Rebel Diaz).
Aldo Parodi (?) Chilean - actor.
Eduardo Cumar (?) Chilean - actor and theater director.
Juan Carlos Bistoto (?) Chilean [Argentinian] - actor.
Roberto Prieto (?) Chilean - actor.
Problematic:
Don Francisco / Mario Luis Kreutzberger Blumenfeld (1940) Chilean [German Jewish] - tv host - Sued for sexual harassment.
Tito Beltrán / Ernesto Beltrán Aguilar (1965) Chilean - singer. - Charged with the rape of an underage child as well as the rape of an additional 18-year-old woman.
Jorge Garcia (1973) Chilean, Cuban - actor and comedian - played a Native Hawaiian in Hawaii Five-0.
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myrecordcollections · 6 years ago
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Carrasco was born on January 23, 1952 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. She is the daughter of Blas de Jesús Carrasco Gómez, a guitarist who had formed a music academy, and Ángela Rodríguez, a singer who was never able to exercise because of her family responsibilities. It is the fourth of seven brothers. 3
At the age of seven he made his first foray into the world of advertising , interpreting the theme of an ad for a drink. He appeared with his father in an audience of his country playing a song by the Dominican composer Salvador Sturla . At the age of thirteen, along with his sisters, he began teaching guitar at the Salvador Sturla Music School, of which his father was artistic director and owner. At age 15, she became a presenter on a television program called Órbita and was featured in the Cascada de Éxitos program. In this period he had an active participation in the Dominican artistic world and later managed to obtain a scholarship in Spain.
In 1972 he traveled to Madrid, Spain, to study decoration and design. His first opportunity arose in 1973 in the program of TVE-1 Ladies and Gentlemen! , in the version directed by Valerio Lazarov . In that program, Carrasco began as one of the three hostesses, along with Norma Duval and Carmen Platero, and then, months later, promoted to official presenter, first with Blanca Estrada , and later with María José Cantudo, for just over a year. This experience, in which he already had the opportunity to sing and dance in each program before the Spanish television viewers when all the presentations of the invited artists were performed, served as a springboard to cinema and television. In 1975, the golden opportunity came through the opera-rock Jesus Christ Superstar where he played María Magdalena with Camilo Sesto after he obtained the rights to make the assembly and production of the work in Castilian. The work was featured on various magazine covers, won prizes and awards, reaching the top spots in the popularity charts with the disc of Camilo Jesucristo Superstar, both in Spain and in Central and South America. In August 1976, Carrasco left the work to be the mother of her first child, and the song “No, there is no one else” began to be heard, resulting in a success that achieved sales marks equal to any male singer of the moment.
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adanlupercio · 1 year ago
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Adan Lupercio: Champion of Education and Community Advocacy
In the realm of government affairs and public relations, few individuals stand out quite like Adan Lupercio. With a career spanning over 18 years, Adan's dedication, expertise, and unwavering commitment to making a positive impact on his community have left an indelible mark. Let's delve into the life and achievements of this remarkable individual, highlighting the qualities that make him such an extraordinary figure.
A Passionate Advocate for Positive Change
Adan Lupercio is known for his unwavering commitment to making the world a better place. Hailing from Guadalajara, Mexico, Adan's personal journey has given him a unique perspective on social justice and equity. Growing up in San Jose, California, he witnessed the challenges faced by immigrant families and communities of color. As a DREAMer, he became acutely aware of systemic oppression and developed a profound passion for community, public policy and advocacy.
Early Beginnings and Civic Engagement
Adan's journey in community advocacy began during his high school years when he actively contributed to the Washington United Youth Center. His dedication was quickly recognized, and he was appointed as the District 3 Youth Commissioner, a position he held for many years. This early experience laid the foundation for his lifelong commitment to uplifting the lives of youth and families in his neighborhood.
A Trailblazer in Political Campaigns
Adan's dedication to politics and advocacy extended into his college years at Evergreen Valley College, where he served as the Associate Student President. It was here that he kick-started his political career by running campaigns. With over two decades of experience in running and winning campaigns for local politicians, Adan is a master at building winning coalitions and advancing progressive agendas.
Educational Advocacy
In addition to his achievements in the political realm, Adan is a champion for education. With over 18 years of experience in public education, he has tirelessly worked to provide high-quality educational opportunities for all students. Overseeing 37 counties, Adan has been a powerful advocate for equity in education and has stood up for those who are often marginalized and underserved.
A Symbol of Hope
Adan's journey has not only been one of personal achievement but also a symbol of hope for DREAMers and immigrants across the nation. His appointment as Chief of Staff for San Jose City Council Member Magdalena Carrasco, as the first DACA recipient in such a prominent position, is a testament to his dedication and a milestone for the City of San Jose. Adan's story showcases the potential and contributions that DACA recipients can make to their communities and the country as a whole.
A Stellar Career in Government Affairs
Adan's professional career is nothing short of remarkable. With over 18 years of experience, he has excelled in providing strategic guidance to executives, board members, and consulting firms. His skills in cross-functional coalition building, grassroots and grasstops organizing, strategic political counsel, diplomacy, negotiation, and team leadership have been instrumental in achieving community objectives.
Notable Career Highlights
Throughout his career, Adan has made significant contributions:
As a Partner at Proyecto á, he strategically planned for political candidates and non-profit Executive Directors, developed targeted messaging for advocacy and political campaigns, and managed high-level fundraising activities.
As the Chief of Staff for Councilmember Magdalena Carrasco, he oversaw the executive's policy agenda, formulated intricate messaging and communication strategies, and established and maintained key community relationships.
At the California Charter Schools Association, he fostered strategic relationships, managed advocacy for 37 counties, and worked to influence the passage of legislation to improve children's education.
During his tenure at Rocketship Education, he built creative partnerships with public and private entities, prepared presentations for governing board meetings, and engaged in comprehensive advocacy campaigns.
Exceptional Qualifications
Adan Lupercio's qualifications extend beyond his professional experience. He is bilingual, fluent in Spanish, possesses exceptional policy analysis skills, and is an expert in community engagement and advocacy. With his innovative thinking, ability to prioritize, and strong interpersonal skills, Adan has consistently delivered results throughout his career.
Awards and Recognitions
Adan Lupercio's dedication to his community has not gone unnoticed. He has received prestigious awards, including the Catholic Charities Community Spirit Award in 2002, The Anthony Robinson Heart of Gold Award presented by the U.S. Attorney's Office in 2003 and 2006, and the United Way Project Cornerstone Positive Peer Influence Award in 2007.
Conclusion
Adan Lupercio is a force for change, a passionate advocate for education and equity, and a prominent figure in the world of government affairs and public relations. His story is one of resilience, perseverance, and unwavering commitment to positive change. Adan's unique background and career make him a powerful asset in any endeavor, whether it's championing a political campaign or advocating for a just and equitable world. With a remarkable career and an unyielding commitment to his community, Adan Lupercio stands as a shining example of what one individual can achieve through hard work, dedication, and a deep sense of purpose.
Know More: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adanlupercio/
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klubzin · 7 years ago
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klub zin #2 is the second issue of klub zin - comics and illustration magazine based in krakow, poland. the book is 150 pages in full color featuring 21 artists from all over the world. printed in offset on high quality printing paper and glued-sewn binding for best enjoyment! out on 20/09 (buy your copy here!)
klub zin #2 artists:
HYEBIN
JULI MAJER
KARL NESSER
DEVON MCFARLAND
SHEE PHON
OASIS OF HATE
MUGNY
BEN MARCUS
NADINE REDLICH
ALEKSANDRA WALISZEWSKA
FREDDY CARRASCO
ALA FLORA
JAVVIE
VICTORIA VINCENT
INJI SEO
SUJIN
XUH
LUIS YANG
JLVC
MAGDALENA RZEPECKA
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guindarebelde · 4 years ago
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Damaris Abarca: la reina del ajedrez en Chile
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Foto por cortesía de Damaris. 
Tetracampeona nacional, maestra femenina de la Federación Internacional de Ajedrez, presidenta de la Federación Chilena de Ajedrez (primera y única en ese cargo en Latinoamérica), y presidenta de la Asociación de Mujeres Ajedrecistas Chilenas, son solo algunos de los tantos logros de Damaris, considerada como una de las mejores ajedrecistas a nivel latinoamericano.
Por María Magdalena Ramírez. 
En el mundo del ajedrez, que desde su creación ha sido dominado por los hombres, ya que se consideraba demasiado intelectual para las mujeres, muy pocas de ellas han sido reconocidas y destacadas. Pero, actualmente, cada vez más mujeres han decidido dedicarse a este deporte y demostrar su talento. Entre estas está Damaris, quien como muchas otras ajedrecistas ha tenido que enfrentarse a un terreno, muchas veces, todavía hostil.
Damaris Abarca nació en Rancagua en 1990 y comenzó a jugar ajedrez a la corta edad de ocho años. Aprendió mirando cuando su papá les enseñaba a sus dos hermanos. Desde que comenzó a jugar de manera profesional ha estado en campeonatos sudamericanos, nacionales, continentales y olimpiadas mundiales. Y a los tan solo 20 años ya era campeona nacional de ajedrez.
En esta entrevista, Damaris nos relata su historia y pasión por el ajedrez, su opinión sobre la famosa serie Gambito de Dama y sobre ser candidata a constituyente.
¿Cuándo te diste cuenta de que el ajedrez era algo que querías hacer de manera profesional en tu vida? ¿Qué te motivó?
Yo creo que en el ajedrez tuve dos episodios que me marcaron. Uno cuando a los 13, 14 años me convertí en campeona nacional juvenil, porque ahí descubrí lo que era en el fondo el ajedrez. Antes yo jugaba en mi casa y todo, pero no tenía noción de la envergadura y de los campeonatos, ahí yo todavía era muy chica. Después, participé de los movimientos estudiantiles y yo seguía compitiendo, pero no era algo que veía como para dedicarme. De hecho, siempre pensé en estudiar otra cosa como tradicional, pero luego en el año 2012 yo ya había salido dos veces campeona nacional de todas las edades y ese año estudiaba Derecho en la Universidad de Chile, fue poco después de las movilizaciones estudiantiles, donde a nosotros se nos juntaron como tres meses súper intensos en la universidad. Además, tuve un tema de salud, una enfermedad autoinmune crónica degenerativa, entonces me dijeron que iba a tener que congelar (la universidad) y que no iba a poder seguir jugando ajedrez. Ahí yo pensé “tengo que solucionar esto de otra forma”. Ese año fue bien importante en mi vida porque me empecé a cuidar desde otra perspectiva y dejé de ver el ajedrez de una manera tan competitiva, y así me empezó a ir mejor, porque fui a jugar el mundial a Turquía ese año y obtuve mi título de Maestra FIDE. 
Ahí fue que decidí dedicarme al ajedrez, justamente porque después de eso la Federación Internacional de Ajedrez me dio una beca y así me pude dedicar a eso, fui a estudiar a Cuba y a Europa. En ese momento tenía 22 años.
¿Qué se siente, como mujer, haber logrado tantas cosas en el mundo del ajedrez, el cual ha sido por tanto tiempo dominado por los hombres? Por ejemplo, marcaste un gran hito al ser la primera mujer presidenta de una federación de ajedrez en Latinoamérica.
Yo creo que al final nos pasa a muchas mujeres que, de alguna manera, vamos abriendo caminos. Me pasan dos cosas, la primera es que me impresiona mucho que sea la primera, pienso que cómo puede ser que ninguna otra federación en Sudamérica haya habido una mujer presidenta. Y lo segundo es que uno al final tiene la responsabilidad también, una responsabilidad histórica de que a lo mejor si no lo hubiese hecho yo, lo hubiese hecho otra mujer, pero en el fondo aquí no se trata solamente de una persona, se trata también de una comunidad, en este caso la comunidad de mujeres ajedrecistas en Chile, que fueron las que propiciaron que yo pudiera asumir este liderazgo porque, al fin y al cabo, para mí postular a la federación tenía que ser presidenta de otra institución y, en este caso, me postulé como presidenta de la Asociación de Mujeres Ajedrecistas de Chile. Entonces yo venía con una cuota bastante importante. También hemos abierto camino para otros países. Por ejemplo, estuve en la asamblea de la Confederación de Ajedrez para América el año antepasado y éramos solo dos mujeres en una mesa de todos los representantes de América. Entonces necesitamos más mujeres en estos espacios de discusiones y de toma de decisiones.
“Desde que asumí la presidencia comencé inmediatamente con cosas con enfoque de género, como un protocolo de prevención de acoso sexual, que las federaciones no lo tienen considerado y también incorporamos una comisión de género. Es algo que tuvo bastante resistencia, porque es un mundo muy masculino, en donde ha habido una historia de menosprecio hacia las mujeres. Te empiezan a respetar cuando llegas a un nivel alto y tienes que validarte constantemente".
¿Crees que la serie “Gambito de Dama” marcó un hito para el ajedrez femenino? He escuchado que muchas mujeres se han motivado con el ajedrez al ver la serie y con el personaje de Beth Harmon.
Bueno, yo creo que ya en pandemia el ajedrez venía en un alza importante, pero cuando llega la serie esto se dispara. Creo que fue en agosto que las plataformas de ajedrez online colapsaron porque es el único deporte que se puede practicar online. De hecho, el año pasado jugamos la olimpiada mundial online con 170 países del mundo.
Gambito causa furor porque es una serie muy bien lograda y muchas mujeres ahora están acercándose a jugar, eso también me ha tocado verlo, me han escrito muchas mujeres.
“La serie si tiene hartas cosas que respecto a las mujeres ajedrecistas que no son tan reales, porque esto de que los hombres la admiraban mucho y la reconocieran, lamentablemente, en la historia del ajedrez, no ha pasado”.
Sobre el tema de los campeonatos, ¿cuál ha sido tu partida más larga?
La más larga fueron seis horas y media. Bueno, normalmente las partidas duran cuatro o cinco horas, fácil. Por ejemplo, en el Internacional de Arica, que es un torneo donde vienen jugadores mundialistas, en ese, a veces, se hace doble ronda en el día y yo puedo estar 10 horas del día jugando ajedrez, porque soy de las que lucha hasta el final.
Las dos más largas fueron una en el Mundial de Rusia 2010 y otra en un campeonato en España y ahí también fueron seis horas y media, súper agotador. De hecho, la última terminé y estaba muy adolorida, por eso uno tiene que hacer preparación física. A veces la gente dice que el ajedrez no es deporte porque no te ven moviéndote, pero resistir una partida larga tiene todo un desgaste físico potente, y también emocional y psicológico porque es un deporte muy mental.
¿Cómo te entrenas antes de un mundial o una olimpiada?
Justo ahora me están entrenando gracias al apoyo del Gobierno Regional de O'Higgins. De hecho, yo presento algunos proyectos generalmente para poder entrenarme y ahora estaba previo al mundial de Rusia, que se suspendió hasta 2022 por la pandemia. Lo que hago es prepararme con entrenadores de ajedrez, que me preparan con las aperturas, los primeros movimientos, desarrollar el cálculo, ven distintas áreas específicas del ajedrez. Luego, tengo a nutricionistas para abordar el tema de la alimentación durante el campeonato y entrenamiento. También hay psicólogos de la federación. Y yo igual hago yoga o entrenamiento mental.
¿Qué mujeres ajedrecistas admiras?
Admiro mucho a mujeres que no han sonado mucho en la historia del ajedrez, por ejemplo, la primera campeona mundial, Vera Menchik (1906-1944), que fue la primera que se atrevió y dijo “yo quiero jugar en un campeonato de ajedrez donde haya solo hombres”, porque antes a las mujeres las separaban y no podías acceder a torneos abiertos. Entonces, en 1929 ella llegó a un torneo de hombres y le dijeron que no podía jugar, y se tuvieron que levantar otros maestros varones, porque a ellos si los escuchan, pidiendo que la dejaran jugar. Pero uno de los ajedrecistas que estaba ahí dijo que la dejaran, pero el que pierda contra ella pasaría a formar parte del club de la deshonra Vera Menchik, porque no pueden perder con mujeres y, por supuesto, él fue el primero en formar parte de ese club. Esto pasó a ser una anécdota, pero da cuenta de que el acercamiento de la mujer al ajedrez fue con menosprecio y violencia.
Luego está Nona Gaprindashvili (1941), primera mujer en lograr el título de Gran Maestro FIDE, ella es de Georgia, el país con más mujeres ajedrecistas del mundo y donde se ha incentivado bastante a las mujeres en este deporte. También admiro a Phiona Mutesi (1996), porque lo que hacemos al final las mujeres ajedrecistas es luchar en el ajedrez, no solamente en la partida sino que afuera, hay mucha resistencia, entonces Fiona lo demostró también en su vida y bueno, yo insisto en mencionar que esto no debería ser así porque no deberían imponernos ser más fuertes, pero, lamentablemente, es así todavía. Y, bueno, Judit Polgár (1976) es mi ídola, ella llegó a un nivel competitivo muy arriba, top 10 mundial y rompió récords, por ejemplo con Bobby Fischer, el mejor del mundo en su tiempo.
También está la chilena Berna Carrasco (1914-2013), ella llegó a ser vice-campeona femenina del mundo y en Chile no ha tenido ningún reconocimiento. Nosotras en AJEFEM queremos impulsar el memorial Berna Carrasco, un campeonato al año que reconozca a esta gran mujer que tuvimos en Chile.
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Foto por cortesía de Damaris
El día sábado 23 de enero el Servel ratificó la candidatura de Damaris de la lista Apruebo Dignidad por el Distrito 15, para ser una de los 155 constituyentes en el Plebiscito.
Cambiando de tema, ¿cómo fue que decidiste postularte para constituyente?
Fue como un proceso, bueno nosotras como AJEFEM somos súper activistas, más que un club de ajedrez nos reconocemos como feministas con mucha conciencia social, y cuando empezó la revuelta social nos sumamos a las marchas y a los cabildos. También soy parte del Club de Deportivo Colo Colo, donde también se discuten cosas políticas porque han sufrido esta problemática de privatizar el deporte en Chile. Entonces siempre estoy muy activa en la política desde el deporte o desde el feminismo, pero no activamente en la política partidista.
Como AJEFEM nos dimos cuenta que nosotros, los ciudadanos y ciudadanas, somos quienes tenemos que ir e involucrarnos con ciertas cosas. Entonces participamos de la franja del Apruebo, y en esa oportunidad alguien que era de la zona de la VI Región se me acercó y me dijo si yo estaba pensando en ser parte del proceso constituyente, pero la verdad es que yo todavía no me lo planteaba. Luego, empecé a tener llamadas y reuniones, porque yo también tenía muy claro de que teníamos que ir como unidad contra la Oposición. Me refiero que, aquí en Chile, claramente, hay gente que quiere cambios, que somos la gran mayoría, y hay gente que no quiere y que, quizás, incluso, si quieren pero para seguir profundizando este sistema neoliberal. El problema es que esos pocos siempre van juntos y los otros nos dispersamos en mil y eso me daba mucho temor. Entonces decidí ponerme en disposición al final de este proceso y estoy súper motivada y, bueno, en el camino igual me fui desmotivando, como que habían muchas cosas del mundo de la política que yo decía “no la verdad yo no estoy para esto”, pero yo también me volvía a motivar a mí misma a salir adelante.
¿Cuáles son los puntos que te parecen más importantes de cambiar en la Constitución?
Yo tengo hecho un programa. Bueno, primero es importante que la Constitución sea hecha de manera colectiva y fruto de una reflexión crítica en que todos y todas nos sentemos a conversar y donde prime, obviamente, el interés general. Ahí, por ejemplo, hay algunos principios que para mí son importantes, como el principio de igualdad, la no discriminación, el principio de paridad, la dignidad humana y la solidaridad, que no están en la Constitución. Y los ejes de propuestas que tengo los agrupo en tres, que son “los derechos fundamentales y el buen vivir”, entre estos están los DDHH, derechos sociales, la perspectiva de género, la protección de la infancia, la cultura y el deporte. El segundo eje es “la esfera pública, la política y la ciudadanía” donde está la organización del Estado, los organismos autónomos, la democracia plena y el estado plurinacional. El tercer eje es el “desarrollo sostenible y sustentable”, donde abarco desde el agua, la agricultura familiar campesina y la estrategia de un desarrollo económico rural integral. Eso es a grandes rasgos.
Por último, ¿qué le recomiendas a todas las mujeres y niñas que quieren aprender ajedrez y a las que se quieren dedicar a eso, pero les da miedo atreverse?
Yo creo que hay muchas cosas que durante nuestra vida nos han dicho que no son para nosotras. Estamos en una época de romper todo eso, ya no hay cosas que sean o no para nosotras y el ajedrez que por mucho tiempo se dijo que era para hombres o para las personas mayores, ya está claro que no es así.
Este es un mundo maravilloso y que te abre otros mundos maravillosos. Entonces realmente yo creo que las mujeres tenemos que volcarnos a todos estos espacios que nos han sido negados y no solo en el deporte, sino que también en la ciencia y la política. Hoy en día vemos que, lamentablemente, la representación de las mujeres es mucho menor que la masculina y es por eso mismo que no avanzamos en derechos para nosotras. Cada vez que hemos avanzado en algunos derechos ha sido porque otra mujer levantó la voz y defendió esos derechos, entonces acercarse a jugar ajedrez para mí también tiene ese mensaje de que no hay cosas para un género específico.
Para las que se han alejado y quieren volver o las que no se atreven a seguir más allá con el ajedrez decirles que hoy en día tenemos la Asociación de Mujeres Ajedrecistas de Chile y la Federación donde hay perspectiva de género, somos dos mujeres en el directorio de cinco personas y hay una comisión de género, o sea, es un espacio bastante protegido y donde nos preocupamos de que haya más árbitras y más entrenadoras. De hecho, en la última mesa de examen de árbitros había mitad hombres y mitad mujeres. Eso es algo histórico y quiere decir que estamos haciendo las cosas bien.
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myrecordcollections · 6 years ago
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Angela Carrasco
Angela Carrasco
@ 1976 Chile Pressing
******
Carrasco was born on January 23, 1952 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. She is the daughter of Blas de Jesús Carrasco Gómez, a guitarist who had formed a music academy, and Ángela Rodríguez, a singer who was never able to exercise because of her family responsibilities. It is the fourth of seven brothers. 3
At the age of seven he made his first foray into the world of advertising , interpreting the theme of an ad for a drink. He appeared with his father in an audience of his country playing a song by the Dominican composer Salvador Sturla . At the age of thirteen, along with his sisters, he began teaching guitar at the Salvador Sturla Music School, of which his father was artistic director and owner. At age 15, she became a presenter on a television program called Órbita and was featured in the Cascada de Éxitos program. In this period he had an active participation in the Dominican artistic world and later managed to obtain a scholarship in Spain.
In 1972 he traveled to Madrid, Spain, to study decoration and design. His first opportunity arose in 1973 in the program of TVE-1 Ladies and Gentlemen! , in the version directed by Valerio Lazarov . In that program, Carrasco began as one of the three hostesses, along with Norma Duval and Carmen Platero, and then, months later, promoted to official presenter, first with Blanca Estrada , and later with María José Cantudo, for just over a year. This experience, in which he already had the opportunity to sing and dance in each program before the Spanish television viewers when all the presentations of the invited artists were performed, served as a springboard to cinema and television. In 1975, the golden opportunity came through the opera-rock Jesus Christ Superstar where he played María Magdalena with Camilo Sesto after he obtained the rights to make the assembly and production of the work in Castilian. The work was featured on various magazine covers, won prizes and awards, reaching the top spots in the popularity charts with the disc of Camilo Jesucristo Superstar, both in Spain and in Central and South America. In August 1976, Carrasco left the work to be the mother of her first child, and the song "No, there is no one else" began to be heard, resulting in a success that achieved sales marks equal to any male singer of the moment.
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