#marcelo alonso
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
zanephillips · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Marcelo Alonso and Ricardo Fernández Baby Bandito 1.07 "Only the Good Die Young"
4K notes · View notes
letterboxd-loggd · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Settlers (Los colonos) (2023) Felipe Gálvez
May 4th 2024
10 notes · View notes
addictivecontradiction · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
El club, 2015
12 notes · View notes
movienized-com · 10 months ago
Text
Los colonos (2023)
Los colonos (2023) #FelipeGalvez #AlfredoCastro #MarceloAlonso #MarkStanley #BenjaminWestfall #CamiloArancibia Mehr auf:
The Settlers / Les colons Jahr: 2023 (Oktober) Genre: Krimi / Drama / History Regie: Felipe Gálvez Hauptrollen: Alfredo Castro, Marcelo Alonso, Mark Stanley, Benjamín Westfall, Camilo Arancibia, Mishelle Guaña … Filmbeschreibung: Feuerland, Republik Chile, 1901: ein riesiges fruchtbares Gebiet, das die weiße Aristokratie zu „zivilisieren” versucht. Drei Reiter werden dafür von dem reichen…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
randomrichards · 10 months ago
Text
THE SETTLERS:
A mixed race worker
Rides with two horseman to clear path
To slaughter his own
youtube
0 notes
genevieveetguy · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
The Settlers (Los colonos), Felipe Gálvez Haberle (2023)
1 note · View note
mourinhomerchant · 5 months ago
Text
ok guys so my high school au fic featuring a bunch of old footballers is officially live and ready for reading! i hope you guys enjoy <3
11 notes · View notes
khadijamalyk · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
grazie mille, gente mia
Tumblr media
32 notes · View notes
graphicpolicy · 2 years ago
Text
AWA Studios announces a new thriller from J. Michael Stracynski, The Madness
AWA Studios announces a new thriller from J. Michael Stracynski, The Madness #comics #comicbooks
What happens when a young woman gifted with great powers breaks bad after her family is wiped out on orders from the government because she has become too “inconvenient?” Artists, Writers, and Artisans (AWA) answers that question with The Madness, an original, complex, psychological revenge thriller, launching on Wednesday, August 9. Teaming up with superstar artist, ACO, legendary comics creator…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
miracleintheandes · 1 year ago
Text
(Part of) The cast of Society of the Snow and their real life counterparts
Credits to 'Grupo Re-Viven! La Tragedia de Los Andes - El Milagro de Los Andes' on Facebook
Tumblr media
Marcelo Perez del Castillo (actor: Diego Vegezzi)
Tumblr media
Gustavo Nicolich (actor: Blas Polidori)
Tumblr media
Roy Harley (actor: Andy Pruss)
Tumblr media
Daniel Maspons (actor: Santiago Vaca Narvaja)
Tumblr media
José Luis "Coche" Inciarte (actor: Simón Hempe)
Tumblr media
Pedro Algorta (actor: Luciano Chatton)
Tumblr media
Rafael Echavarren (actor: Benjamín Segura)
Tumblr media
Alvaro Mangino (actor: Juan Caruso)
Tumblr media
Daniel Fernandez (actor: Francisco Romero)
Tumblr media
Numa Turcatti (actor: Enzo Vogrincic)
Tumblr media
Pancho Delgado (actor: Valentino Alonso)
Tumblr media
Enrique Platero (actor: Federico Aznarez)
Tumblr media
Antonio Vizintin (actor: Agustín Della Corte)
119 notes · View notes
gifmeakiss · 8 months ago
Text
Gifs of Actors K-Z
. . . for A-J click HERE
K
Karen Gillan
Katherine Kelly
Keanu Reeves
Kiana Madeira
Kiernan Shipka
Krysten Ritter
Ksenia Solo
L
Lázaro Ramos
Lisa Vicari
Louis Hofmann
Lucas Gregorowicz
M
Mackenyu Arata
Marcelo Serrado
Maria Dinulescu
Marisol Nichols
Marjorie Estiano
Matt Czuchry
Matt Smith
Matthias Schweighöfer
Max Minghella
Max Riemelt
Melissa Barrera
Michael Fassbender
Miguel Herran
Miranda Otto
Morena Baccarin
N
Nathalie Emmanuel
Ncuti Gatwa
Nina Dobrev
O
Omar Sy
P
Paapa Essiedu
Paolla Oliveira
Paul Wesley
Pauley Perrette
Paulo Lessa
Pedro Alonso
Pedro Pascal
R
Ritu Arya
Riz Ahmed
Rodolfo Valente
Ruby O. Fee
Ruth Wilson
S
Sacha Dhawan
Sadie Soverall
Samuel L. Jackson
Saoirse Ronan
Savannah Lee Smith
Selton Mello
Sofia Carson
Summer Bishil
Summer Glau
T
Taís Araújo
Tamara Taylor
Teyonah Parris
Todd Lasance
Tom Hiddleston
Tom Sturridge
U
Úrsula Corberó
V
Vaneza Oliveira
Varada Sethu
Viviane Porto
W
Wagner Moura
Wunmi Mosaku
4 notes · View notes
goalhofer · 4 months ago
Text
2024 olympics Argentina roster
Archery
Mario Jajarabilla (Buenos Aires)
Athletics
Elián Larregina (Suipacha)
Nazareno Sasia (Cerrito)
Joaquín Gómez (Avallaneda)
Belén Casetta (Mar Del Plata)
Florencia Borelli (Mar Del Plata)
Daiana Ocampo (Buenos Aires)
Canoeing
Agustín Vernice (Bahia Blanca)
Brenda Rojas (San Martín De Los Andes)
Cycling
José Torres (Córdoba)
Eduardo Sepúlveda; Jr. (Rawson)
Gonzalo Molina (San Juan)
Equestrian
José Larocca; Jr. (Buenos Aires)
Fencing
Pascual Di Tella (Brooklyn, New York)
Field Hockey
Tomás Santiago (Córdoba)
Juan Catán (Buenos Aires)
Maico Casella (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Toscani (Buenos Aires)
Nicolás Della Torre (Buenos Aires)
Santiago Tarazona (Buenos Aires)
Federico Monja (Vicente López)
Tomas Domene (Córdoba)
Matías Rey (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Martínez (Buenos Aires)
Agustín Mazzilli (Lanús)
Tadeo Marcucci (Buenos Aires)
Thomas Habif (Buenos Aires)
Agustín Bugallo (San Juan)
Bautista Capurro (Buenos Aires)
Iñaki Minadeo (Buenos Aires)
Sofía Toccalino (Buenos Aires)
Agustina Gorzelany (Buenos Aires)
Valentina Raposo (Salta)
Agostino Alonso (Buenos Aires)
Agustina Albertarrio (Adrogué)
María Granatto (La Plata)
Cristina Cosentino (Buenos Aires)
Rocío Sánchez-Moccia (Buenos Aires)
Victoria Sauze (Buenos Aires)
Sofía Cairo (Buenos Aires)
María Trinchinetti (Victoria)
Lara Casas (Buenos Aires)
Juana Castellaro (Buenos Aires)
Pilar Campoy (Vicente López)
Julieta Jankunas (Córdoba)
Zoe Díaz (Buenos Aires)
Soccer
Fabricio Iacovich (La Plata)
Leandro Brey (Lomas De Zamora)
Rocco Ríos-Novo (Los Angeles, California)
Marco Di Cesare (Mendoza)
Valentín Barco (Veinticinco De Mayo)
Roberto García (Liniers)
Nicolás Valentini (Junín)
Aaron Quirós (Monte Grande)
Gonzalo Luján (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Esquivel (Santa Fe De La Vera Cruz)
Federico Redondo (Adrogué)
Cristian Medina (Moreno)
Thiago Almada (Ciudadela)
Claudio Echeverri (Resistencia)
Juan Sforza (Rosario)
Juan Nardoni (Nelson)
Ignacio Fernández (Buenos Aires)
Pablo Solari (Arizona)
Luciano Gondou (Rufino)
Abiel Osorio (Buenos Aires)
Francisco González (Ordóñez)
Santiago Castro (Ciudad Del Liberator General Don José De San Martín)
Golf
Emiliano Grillo (San Diego, California)
Alejandro Tosti (Gainesville, Florida)
Handball
Andrés Moyano (Mendoza)
Nicolás Bono (Buenos Aires)
Federico Fernández (Buenos Aires)
Federico Pizarro (Buenos Aires)
Pablo Vainstein (Buenos Aires)
Diego Simonet (Vicente López)
Pablo Simonet (Vicente López)
Ignacio Pizarro (Lanús)
Santiago Baronetto (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Moscariello (Buenos Aires)
Guillermo Fischer (Buenos Aires)
Pedro Martínez (Buenos Aires)
Gastón Mouriño (Buenos Aires)
James Parker; Jr. (Ciudad San Luis)
Leonel Maciel (Morón)
Nicolás Bonanno (Marcos Paz)
Juan Bar (Vicente López)
Judo
Sofia Fiora (Buenos Aires)
Pentathlon
Franco Serrano (Buenos Aires)
Rowing
Alejandro Colomino (Buenos Aires)
Pedro Dickson (Buenos Aires)
Sonia Baluzzo (Buenos Aires)
Evelyn Silvestro (Zárate)
Rugby
Tomás Elizalde (Buenos Aires)
Agustín Fraga (Buenos Aires)
Matteo Graziano (Buenos Aires)
Alejo Lavayén (Buenos Aires)
Joaquín Pellandini (Buenos Aires)
Tobías Wade (Buenos Aires)
Santiago Álvarez (Bahía Blanca)
Luciano González (La Rioja)
Santiago Mare (Buenos Aires)
Marcos Moneta (Buenos Aires)
Matías Osadczuk (Buenos Aires)
Germán Schulz (Córdoba)
Gastón Revol (Córdoba)
Sailing
Francisco Saubidet (Buenos Aires)
Mateo Majdalani (Buenos Aires)
Francisco Guaragna (Rufino)
Chiara Ferretti (Buenos Aires)
Catalina Turienzo (Buenos Aires)
Eugenia Bosco (Buenos Aires)
Lucía Falasca (Buenos Aires)
Shooting
Marcelo Gutiérrez (Buenos Aires)
Federico Gil (Buenos Aires)
Fernanda Russo (Córdoba)
Skateboarding
Matias Dell Olio (Mar Del Plata)
Mauro Iglesias (Buenos Aires)
Swimming
Ulises Saravia (Buenos Aires)
Agostina Hein (Buenos Aires)
Macarena Ceballos (Río Cuarto)
Table tennis
Santiago Lorenzo (Buenos Aires)
Taekwondo
Lucas Guzmán (Merlo)
Tennis
Sebastián Báez (Buenos Aires)
Francisco Cerúndolo (Buenos Aires)
Tomás Etcheverry (La Plata)
Mariano Navone (Nueve De Julio)
Máximo González (Tandil)
Andrés Malteni (Buenos Aires)
María Carlé (Tandil)
Nadia Podoroska (Alicante, Spain)
Triathlon
Romina Biagioli (Córdoba)
Volleyball
Pablo Kukartsev (Buenos Aires)
Matías Sánchez (San Juan)
Jan Martínez-Franchi (Vicente López)
Facundo Conte (Vicente López)
Agustín Loser (General Alvear)
Santiago Danani (Buenos Aires)
Bruno Lima (San Juan)
Luciano De Cecco (Santa Fe De La Vera Cruz)
Luciano Vicentín (Paraná)
Martín Ramos (Buenos Aires)
Luciano Palonsky (Buenos Aires)
Nicolás Zerba (Buenos Aires)
2 notes · View notes
elmaestrostan · 6 months ago
Text
@protect-daniel-james ahh, just remembered I meant to try and do this the other day. If you haven’t jumped the paywall already here’s that adorable Andoni interview from The Times:
Andoni Iraola: Noir novels, beach football and life in top flight
Tumblr media
An hour into our conversation, in his open manner, with his easy smile, Andoni Iraola says something I’ve never heard before. “I suffered more as a player than as a manager,” he admits. It’s startling. In my 28 years of interviewing football people, managers have only said the very opposite.
But Iraola is differently wired; a relaxed and road-less-travelled guy. He was the boy raised in a Basque hotbed of the game, whose family actually weren’t that into football; the young man who embarked on a law degree because he didn’t envisage a sporting career.
If he wasn’t a manager he reckons he would be running a bookshop. “I have read all of Murakami,” he tells me. Mike Bassett, he is not.
His wife and children aren’t football fans either; they don’t come to the stadium, watch games or talk football at home. “I open the door and sometimes they don’t even know who I’ve been playing against,” he grins. “For me, that is very valuable.”
His alternative ways are powering a revolution at Bournemouth, where he has instilled belief that a small team can play as high and intensely and boldly as any big one. Those qualities had Rayo Vallecano and Mirandés, the underdog Spanish sides he coached, reaching beyond their expected limits. His Rayo beat Barcelona and Real Madrid, his Mirandés reached the Spanish Cup semi-finals for only the second time in their near 100-year history.
Lack of fear is key to his rise. Iraola, 41, had it from his first (and successful) management posting, in Cyprus with AEK Larnaca. “You can only learn by making mistakes and I wasn’t afraid of them because I wasn’t clear coaching was my future,” he says. “My attitude was, ‘Let’s try — if it works, it works’. Things went from one adventure to another adventure, and here we are.”
His parents still work where they’ve always worked and where they met: in the offices of a company which sells marble in Usurbil, a town of 5,000 near San Sebastián. An only child who excelled at school, they encouraged his studies and he was three years into a law degree at university before giving up because he was starting every week for Athletic Bilbao in La Liga and his football schedule made it difficult enough to get to classes, let alone undertake the work placement in a legal practice his degree required.
It hadn’t dawned that he might be good enough for a playing career until he was 16 or 17. As a boy, he played on San Sebastián’s famous La Concha beach with Mikel Arteta and Xabi Alonso and then for the same youth club, Antiguoko. From kicking a ball on the sands as children, the three have grown up to be among the best young coaches in the world. How? Iraola shrugs. “I always say football-wise, when we were young, Mikel was the best, but overall none of us were great athletes and all of us had to use our understanding of the game to be successful, even as players,” he says.
We talk about what he learned from a playing career that encompassed more than 500 games for Athletic Bilbao, where he was their right back and captain, a year in midfield for New York City FC, and seven caps for Spain — hard won, in a period (2008-11) his country were world and European champions.
Even training with that squad (“nobody ever lost the ball!”) was an education in what the highest football standards look like. In New York, where the manager was Patrick Vieira, fresh from five years playing and coaching with Manchester City, he learned the concepts of positional play.
At Athletic he was exposed to some significant managers, including Marcelo Bielsa and Javier Clemente, but the biggest influence was Ernesto Valverde. “I had him at all the levels,” Iraola says. “When I went to Athletic Club at 16, he was my first coach. He was my coach in the second team and the guy who put me in the first team. Then at the end of my career, my coach when he came back from Barcelona.
“His style is the club’s style. Athletic Club is the most English team in La Liga. We like to attack fast, use the width of the pitch, overlaps, a lot of crosses, high press. And that is how I have learned to play.”
From long ago, he was drawn to England. He loved visiting for mini-breaks — London, Manchester or wherever there were good flights from Bilbao. He knew plenty about Bournemouth. “Eddie Howe visited when I was at Rayo and it was a club I had already studied for set pieces — they were pretty famous for those [under Howe], for their offensive routines,” he says. “But only after I arrived [in June] did I analyse the players, the area.”
Bournemouth made a bold decision to replace Gary O’Neil, a clearly talented upcoming manager, who performed wonders in salvaging their 2022-23 season and was popular with media and fans. The owner Bill Foley, chief executive Neill Blake and technical director Richard Hughes just believed the opportunity to hire Iraola — further along in his upward trajectory than O’Neil — was too big to pass up.
His brief? “The club was coming from a very successful two seasons,” he says. “First season, promoted. Second season, you keep your spot in the Premier League. Changing coaches wasn’t an easy decision to make. They were talking to me because of how we played in Rayo and wanted to implement the things we were doing in Bournemouth.
“I think those things are pretty clear. We like to play in a high rhythm, to be as vertical as we can whenever we recover the ball and try to play in the opposition half.
“The players, now with all the information [out there], already before I arrived knew my ideas. The culture is different [in England] and sometimes we’ve had to adapt to each other and it’s been a process. Training sessions, I take them myself. I always say I am more of a coach than a manager.”
After nine games, Bournemouth were second bottom and yet to win. With difficult opening fixtures he and the club expected a tricky start, but scrutiny was mounting. Iraola found himself topping that pernicious betting market — “next manager to be sacked”.
Did he have doubts? “A lot of times,” he says. “I always say intelligent people have doubts. Otherwise, you don’t make questions to yourself. There were moments I was watching the players and they were trying, they were doing all the things we were telling them [and still losing].
“I remember the game against Spurs [a 2-0 home defeat in August]. For me, we played really well and got them in difficult situations, but they had [James] Maddison, [Yves] Bissouma, [Destiny] Udogie, making amazing plays from very disadvantaged positions. And you say, ‘Woah, we’re doing what we want to do, we’re getting them into the places we want, and even then they’re finding ways to get out and counter’.
“It was the moment I said, ‘Oof, we have to be really clinical if we want to compete in this league’. But also, ‘This is why I am here’. Because you want to face the best coaches in the world, the best players in the world.”
Perhaps the lowest point was game 11: a 6-1 defeat away to Manchester City. Iraola changed from his standard 4-2-3-1 to 5-4-1 and learned a valuable lesson. “I didn’t like that game. Even in the first 30 minutes when we didn’t concede, we were very passive. Very low. It’s not the way we want to play.
“I talked to Pep [Guardiola] after the game and I should have played one midfielder doing the role of a defender. Because the message for the team was maybe not the correct thing. I thought we needed five in the last line to match the [attacking formation] City use, but I should have used a midfielder getting lower rather than a defender — the message would have seemed more positive to the players, even if we took the same positions.”
Bournemouth won the next match, against Howe’s Newcastle United, sparking a run that found them top of the Premier League form table, with 19 points from seven games, going into the new year. “I was lucky because the players kept pushing and believing and you could see that when it wasn’t working, it wasn’t because they weren’t giving their part,” he says. “That meant I had to improve on the tactical side. I’m thankful for the players.”
What did he do? “Fixed small details . . . sometimes at this level it’s just a question of changing a position two or three metres and things start to click.”
And the biggest difference? “I think we’ve changed not so much our style or our offensive volume, we’ve improved defensively. Especially when defending lower and defending crosses and set pieces. We’ve improved how we defend in our box, we’re better at defending one-on-one situations, at forcing the opposition onto their weaker side, blocking crosses, blocking shots, going to the second balls. It is work on the training ground on small basics that were costing us a lot.”
Two players have been crucial. Dominic Solanke and Ryan Christie — whose move from No 10 to a deeper position suddenly balanced the team. “I’m sure every coach who has had him loved Ryan because he understands not only his position, but what the team needs to do and, playing lower, he’s able to organise,” Iraola says. “He doesn’t look very strong, but wins the ball because he’s very good at reading situations.
“Dominic? He has all the qualities. He is unique as a No 9. He can play in a low block because he is fast enough for all the counters, and he can play in a very offensive team because he’s good enough in the box. And out of possession he’s the first one that gives the intensity to the press.”
Both fit Iraola’s philosophy that modern footballers have to be “complete”. “I think we demand nowadays everything from the players,” he says. “You can’t have a No 9, any more, who scores but doesn’t press, and even the keeper has to be complete.
“I have always loved gegenpressing [counterpressing] and the German coaches. The Bundesliga is where the idea players have to be complete started, because coaches were very demanding out of possession.”
Some of his principles are, indeed, very like Jürgen Klopp’s. Like an avowed preference for “chaos over organisation” and love of lightning attacking. “It’s a matter of how much do you want to risk the ball. I tell players whenever you recover it, your first look has to be not even to the No 9, but the ’keeper. Can you score?”
He seems to share Klopp’s worldview that football is the “most important of the least important things” and his ability to switch off from it belies the ferocious intellect and seriousness he brings when at work. A chat about statistics, for instance, shows how deeply and originally he thinks about things. “I like a lot of stats, but don’t show the players too much,” he says. “You should choose the three or four things that are most important to the game and remember sometimes they mislead you and that, always, every stat has a story behind it.
“xG [expected goals]? I use it but think it has to improve. Because it only takes into account the shots. Sometimes there is a big, massive chance, where you go against the ’keeper one-against-one, the ’keeper takes the ball from you and this is ‘xG zero’. So, for one game, it can be misleading. After 38 games, yes, normally it is a reflection, but you have to read more than the xG.”
In their 3-0 away defeat of Manchester United, Bournemouth covered more than 115km as a team. That’s quite a lot, I say. “Maybe too much! More important than the total distance are the expensive metres, the high-speed running,” Iraola says.
“They are expensive because not everybody is able to give you a lot and those metres are what make the difference. Sometimes you run a lot because you’re not seeing the ball and your total distance is high because you’re not playing well. Whereas normally, when you’re playing well, you’re having more high-speed metres than the opposition.”
When he came home from Old Trafford his wife, son (who is three) and daughter (who is eight) did expect a good mood. They know enough about football to know hammering United, as manager of Bournemouth, is a decent result.
“A few weeks before, we played in Manchester and lost 6-1 and the kids were thinking, ‘No, not another 6-1!’ so they were pleased,” he says. “Usually, they know our result, but not how it has gone and the question is, ‘You played well?’ and what they are really asking is, ‘Are you happy or not happy?’ ”
Their real interests are school, toys, games, Disney stuff. They’re normal kids. On days off, he likes nothing better than family trips exploring outdoor corners of Dorset. Like any Basque, he loves scenery and the sea.
Books? “I always liked to read. When you’re a player you have a lot of time travelling, and reading is good relaxation. Now I’m a manager, I’m reading less than ever. It’s impossible. I don’t have time.
“Normally, I read novels, noir novels. Detectives. I loved The Alienist by Caleb Carr when I was younger and the Kurt Wallander books are among my favourites. Many I read are Spanish, but the American writer, Don Winslow, is very good. Also, James Ellroy and Jo Nesbo.
“Noir novels are easy to read. They’re fast and you finish them quickly. I try to mix them with something more difficult. [Haruki] Murakami is not easy, but I love him — 700 pages and he’s talking about dreams . . . but I’ve been to Japan on holiday and I could understand him better.”
The return match with Spurs on Sunday is a good opportunity to gauge how far Bournemouth have come. Perhaps Ange Postecoglou is another of Iraola’s kinsmen. Like the Australian, he takes jobs without bringing assistants with him (they can’t protect you; you live and die by results anyway, is his take) and “as a football fan I love Tottenham’s style”.
Like Postecoglou he leads without ego and without that sense, which many managers project, of the job being burdensome. I ask about career plans and Iraola just smiles. “I don’t really know. I don’t like to do plans because it doesn’t make sense as a coach. You have a bad run, your situation changes so quickly.
“I think . . . I want to prove myself. ‘Let’s see if I’m able to do this’. But it’s more about challenging yourself than anything else. There might be a moment when I find I’m not good enough for this level. It can happen. And for sure it will happen one day. But until then, I want to see how far I can arrive.”
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
addictivecontradiction · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
El club, 2015
1 note · View note
ninja-troll-lover · 1 year ago
Text
Note: This Trolls Human (ish?) AU is still in progress, and of course it's not properly fleshed out. When I say "ish,, I'm still thinking if I should also make it fantasy.
Their moms
Mama: "Gabby" "Gabriella (Filipino)
Mama: "Julie" Alejandra Julieta Alonso Blanco Sr. (Mexican)
Willow Bloom (OC; She/Her): Bernadette Ramona
Transwoman Omnisexual
Married
Oldest
Filipino & Mexican
Her name is a female variant of her grandfather's, Gabby's father
Mortician
Fern( OC; She/Her): Fiona
Transwoman Pansexual
Married
2nd Oldest
Adopted
Clara/Clover's older twin sister
4 weeks older than JD
Mexican
Pre-School Teacher
Clover (OC; She/Her): Clara
Transwoman Unlabeled Sapphic
Engaged
3rd Oldest
Adopted
Fern/Fiona's younger twin sister
4 weeks older than JD
Mexican
Hockey and in-line hockey player
Also a PE Teacher or coach, where her twin sister works
John Dory: Juan Dominic
Bisexual
4th Oldest
Filipino & Mexican
Spruce: Joaquin Bruce
Bisexual
5th oldest
Filipino & Mexican
Known as "Lover Boy" in his family
Named after one of his uncles, one of Julie's brothers
Clay: Basilio Carlos
5th youngest
Filipino & Mexican
Named after one of his uncles, one of Julie's brothers
Floyd: Fernando
4th youngest
Filipino & Mexican
Named after his grandfather, Julie's father
Branch: Bernardo Ramon Nimuel Rodrigo Jose Marcelo Gabriel Angelo Lorenzo Alvaro Flores Del Rosario the V (The 5th)
Transman Bisexual
3rd Youngest
Filipino & Mexican
Named himself after his grandfather, Gabby's father
Hazel's older twin brother
Hazel (OC; She/He): Bianca Hazel
Agender Sapphic
2nd Youngest
Filipino & Mexican
Branch/Ramon's younger twin sister/brother
Tattoo Artist & Body Piercer & Nurse
AJ (OC;They/Them): Alejandra Julieta Alonso Blanco Jr.
Nonbinary Questioning Sapphic
Youngest
Filipino & Mexican
Bartender
5 notes · View notes
swaggypsyduck · 2 years ago
Note
One more round but it's RM pre 2016 edition (which I just thought of and am now really curious): Casillas, Marcelo, Alonso, Kaka, Bale, Casemiro, and Kroos
casillas: smash. w the old keeper kit. it looked good on him.
marcelo: double smash. I MISS HIM SO MUCH😭😭
xabi alonso: smash. will not elaborate.
kaka: smash. pretty boy.
bale: smash. u should've seen the state i was in when he left retired.
casemiro: if i say smash will he come back to us🥹🤧
kroos: smash but like just to see what humbling direct statement he'd tell me afterwards. itd cripple my ego for years.
4 notes · View notes