Itacaré, Bahia - Brazil (A Day in Life)
Itacaré, Bahia - Brazil (A Day in Life)
If Itacaré was a song, it would carry the bass line of the hottest funk rhythm, the melody of a beautiful love ballad and the lyrical prose of your favorite Bob Marley's tune.
Located on the Cocoa coast of the Brazilian state of Bahia, Itacaré is a charming village surrounded by white sand beaches and protected by a wide belt of the Atlantic rainforest. Unlike the coast north of here, where long beaches lined with groves of palm trees form the landscape, Itacaré is set in lush Atlantic rainforest and its small beaches are tucked away in bays protected by rocks and hills. Best of all, most beaches can only be reached on foot, on scenic trails through the forest, keeping most development at bay.
Underground Lake - Poço Azul
Poço Azul is one of the most incredible things we’ve seen in Brazil yet. We have lived here for 4 months and this tops the cake so far. Poço Azul (blue well/sink) is in the Chapada Diamantina National Park and is actually an underground lake with slow flowing crystalline waters. Not only could we see down to the very bottom but the surrounding bugs and wildlife blow our minds as well. We loved it!! Vidoe 26
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Gordon Ramsay on Cocaine | First Look | ITV
As part of Crime & Punishment season, Gordon Ramsay goes behind the lines of the Colombian cartel to discover how cocaine is produced deep in the jungle. Gordon Ramsay on Cocaine, coming to ITV this autumn.
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Family fun in the Brazilian Capital | Brasilia Family Travel Inspiration
Family party for 128 year old woman
++AUDIO AS INCOMING++
1. Wide of entrance to town of San Agust�n, cows walking down the road
2. 128-year old Cruz Hernandez and granddaughter
3. Close of Cruz Hernandez
4. Top shot of Cruz Hernandez sitting in chair outside her home, with granddaughter, and birthday cake decorated with numbers ''128''
5. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Cruz Hernandez ,128 year old woman:
When we arrived in this place that was to become San Agustin, it was still very wild. Then there was the war. Boom, boom, boom. Many left and never returned.
6. Close up of certificate saying Honorary Citizen of the town of San Agust�n
7. Birthday cake - pan to Cruz Hernandez
8. Old woman laughing
9. Various of daughter stroking old woman''s head
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Cruz Hernandez, 128 year old woman:
I was a midwife and sometimes there were nights when I would help with two births and come morning I would have everything washed and cleaned for the women. The women did not want to be seen as having had their child at home.
11. Various of woman sitting in chair outside her home.
12. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Maria Hernandez, granddaughter:
My grandmother would never let them go to a hospital. If there was a child by her side she would take care of him, if the child was sitting she would take care of him, if the child was ill she would help him out. She would never let them go to the hospital. My grandmother raised children very well and she was the best midwife of San Agust�n and the founder of San Agust�n.
13. Close of Cruz Hernandez
14. Various of Cruz Hernandez cutting birthday cake
STORYLINE:
A family in El Salvador believes their oldest family member may be the oldest living woman in the world - at one hundred and twenty eight years of age.
According to national records Cruz Hernandez was born on May 3, 1878. On Thursday her family celebrated with a birthday party at her home in San Agustin.
Hernandez has one hundred and seventy eight direct descendants.
She gave birth to thirteen children, all of whom attended her birthday party along with sixty grandchildren, eighty great-grandchildren and twenty-five great-great grandchildren.
Cruz Hernandez has lead a simple life in San Agustin since the 1870''s.
Her family arrived in the region when it was still jungle.
El Salvador''s violent civil war was underway when she was nearly 100.
When we arrived in this place that was to become San Agustin, it was still very wild. Then there was the war. Boom, boom, boom. Many left and never returned, Hernandez said.
Cruz was a midwife in her village, helping the delivery children to poor mothers.
I was midwife and sometimes there were nights when I would help with two births.
Her granddaughter says she was the perfect motherly figure.
My mom (grandmother) raised children very well and she was the best midwife of San Agustin, Hernandez''s granddaughter Maria enthused.
Authorities in El Salvador too believe Hernandez could be the world''s oldest living woman.
They are awaiting experts from the Guinness Book of World Records to confirm her age.
The Guinness Book of Records recognised Maria Esther de Capovilla, of Ecuador as being the oldest living woman at one hundred and sixteen years, eighty five days as at December 8, 2005. She was born on the September 14, 1889.
The oldest living man is Emiliano Mercado Del Toro, of Puerto Rico, aged 113, 149 days, as on 17 January, 2005.
He was born in Cabo Rojo on August 21, 1891.
keyword-oldest person world record
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Snake Island (Full Length Documentary)
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The highest concentration of one of the most venomous snakes in the world is located about 90 miles off the coast of Santos, Brazil, on a small, craggy chunk of otherwise uninhabitable land. It's known as Ilha da Queimada Grande, or Snake Island, and it's the only place you will find 2,000 or so of the wholly unique golden lancehead viper, or Bothrops insularis.
When you step ashore, with a keen eye you spot one of these snakes roughly every 10 to 15 minutes after clearing the base of the island, and as many as one every six square yards in other parts of the island. This means, as you are walking through the waist-high brush, even with some good boots on, it's like walking through a minefield that moves and, instead of blowing you into chunks, slowly paralyzes you and liquefies your insides, as the golden lancehead does to the migrating birds it feeds on in the treetops.
Well, liquefying your insides may be a stretch, but no one knows for sure because no one bitten has lived long enough even to be admitted to a hospital, or at least none of the researchers who accompanied VICE on their journey to Snake Island owned up to that fact. Nor did the Brazilian Navy, who allowed VICE exclusive access to document their annual maintenance inspection of Snake Island's lighthouse—which has been automated ever since the 1920s, after the old lighthouse keeper ran out of food and disappeared while picking wild bananas in a small grove near the shore. According to legend, he and the members of his rescue party died one by one, all alone and in search of one another after each had been missing for some time.
The golden lancehead is so unique and its venom so potent that specimens procured by snake-smuggling biopirates can fetch up to $30,000 apiece on the black market (with prices going much higher depending on the location of the rich weirdo snake collector or, some have speculated, the black-market biopharmaceutical chemists attempting to beat Brazil on a patent).
Is that the craziest fucking description of a documentary you've ever heard? The answer is yes. So of course VICE's editor-in-chief, Rocco Castoro, and senior producer, Jackson Fager, had to go there and nose around for themselves. On their return they said things like:
It was like a David Lynch movie through the prism of Satan's asshole. The anti-Galápagos. Darwin in reverse.
[It's] cut off from the mainland and perhaps the land of a long-buried pirate treasure, according to the stories from local fishermen. But they also told us there were aliens on the island, so pretty much anything goes. It's scorched earth. It's where I would send my worst enemies to live, and I look forward to setting up a business with the Brazilian government to do just that. After the World Cup, of course.
What I can tell you is that there are stone fucking steps hand-carved into the face of one of the prominent cliffs, all the way up. But you can't dock anywhere near there. There's also the possibility that [the venom] could be used for an anti-cancer drug, or perhaps anti-aging. Maybe it could save mankind. Whatever. They wouldn't have saved my ass.
There are blue locusts and so many of these weird, prehistoric-looking cockroaches on the ground at night that it crunches when you walk. Place is fucked. No one is allowed there for a reason. Don't ever go.
All that said, great shoot. Great diving, too.
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Beer Review #1711: Lervig Aktiebryggeri & Way Beer - 3 Bean Stout (Norway & Brazil)
Review of the 3 Bean Stout, an Imperial Stout with Vanilla, Cocoa and Tonka beans, from the Lervig Aktiebryggeri in Stavanger, Norway. Brewed in collaboration with Way Beer from Curitiba, Brazil.
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VOYAGE of Discovery part 3: Venezuala Around the World Semester at Sea
Our first port of call and Dr Goldstein wows em with his ukelele playing. After the founding of Caracas by Spanish in 1567, toward the turn of the 16th century, the Port of La Guaira emerged on the coast and, since that time, has been the gateway to Caracas. This coastal city, almost without land to develop and bathed by the Caribbean Sea, became an important harbour during the 18th century. Attacked by buccaneers and by the English, Dutch, and French armadas, La Guaira was transformed into a fortified, walled city. During the War of Jenkins' Ear (1739--1748), the Battle of La Guaira took place off the coast of La Guaira. This period also saw the trading monopoly of the Royal Gipuzkoan Company of Caracas, which controlled the major ports of La Guaira and Puerto Cabello and was instrumental in the development of large-scale cocoa production along the valleys of the coast. Another small naval battle was fought off La Guaira in 1812, between privateers of the United States and the United Kingdom
World's Top Hotels: Hotel Santa Teresa, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Tropical, design, ethnic, chic... The Hotel Santa Teresa is Rio de Janeiro's newest 'Design Concept Hotel', considered one of the most beautiful hotels in South America. Home to ambassadors and the elite, this charming and sophisticated district offers visitors a glimpse of an authentic and unique Rio.
Santa Teresa, the Montmartre of Rio de Janeiro, is the city's most well-preserved and artistic district with many mansions dating back to the late 19th and early 20th century. Architecture in Santa Teresa is predominantly colonial and neo-classical, edging towards Art Deco, enriched with history, art museums, artist ateliers and many cultural activities.
A historical coffee plantation mansion, located in the most noble area of Santa Teresa -- cultural and historical heart of Rio de Janeiro -- the boutique hotel was restored with charm and sophistication as an exclusive reference of Brazilian Tropical Design. More than an extraordinary hotel, the Hotel Santa Teresa offers peace-of-mind and safety to all guests with tropical gardens, panoramic pools, complete Natura SPA, a lounge bar classified as the most romantic in Rio de Janeiro and Térèze Restaurant with Franco-Brazilian gastronomy by Chef Damien Montecer.
The decoration and architecture design of the hotel was inspired by the golden ages of coffee and cocoa, in the search for sophistication and elegance through the use of noble and ecological material from the land and culture of Brazil. Burnt cement, bordeaux or golden slate, red and dark tropical woods, banana tree fiber and other tropical adorning blend with contemporary design by Sergio Rodrigues, Rock Lane, Studio Vitty, Zemog and Oficina de Agosto. A thematic journey to the lands and roots of ethnic Brazil, the Xingu and Tupi Guarani Indians, Afro-Brazilian traditions and culture, offerings of Maranhão, St. Jorge Ogum, art work from Pernambuco and handicrafts from Piauí, sacred and mystical art from Bahia and the origins of Rio de Janeiro. From all rooms and the gardens, panoramic views of the city, the harbor and bay of Rio.
Cacao, a future for the Nicaraguan farmers
Cacao has been cultivated in America before Christ. And today, it is an alternative way to diversify the income of the small-scale farmers. Oxfam, with the support of DFID, is helping the Nicaraguan farmers to develop their capacities with this sweet product.
chris brown does hiz thang
chris brown breaks its down nd den gets da gurls goin
The Wailers and Andrew Tosh Destroy Rebel Salute 2019 'Johnny Too Goode'
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Enjoy a mesmerizing performance by Andrew Tosh who joined the Wailers to perform'Johnny B Goode' during their recent performance at Rebel Salute 2019. Andrew Tosh was backed by legendary musicians Tyrone Downie and Donald Kinsey during this captivating performance.
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Top 10 Coolest Elevators In The World | विश्व में 10 सबसे अच्छे लिफ्ट
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List Of 10 Coolest Elevators In The World
1. The Hammetschwand Lift, Switzerland
2. The Bailong Elevator, China
3. Sky Tower, New Zealand
4. The Falkirk Wheel, Scotland
5. AquaDom, Germany
6. SkyView, Ericsson Globe, Sweden
7. The Gateway Arch, United States
8. Eiffel Tower, France
9. Lacerda Elevator, Brazil
10. Taipei 101, Taiwan
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Globalization and Sacred Plants | Plantas Sagradas en las Américas
Speakers and presentations (This panel took place on February 24, 2018):
Esteban Yepes Montoya - El Cacao y los Theobroma: plantas medicinales y enteogenicas que transcienden fronteras.
Rodrigo Plascencia - “Tepezcohuite/Jurema” el árbol medicinal sagrado de América.
Danesh Oleshko - Ceremonia de Yagé y psicoterapia integral en el campo del tratamiento de adicciones.
Patricia Ahumada Lira - Transformación de la conciencia a partir del uso Ayahuasca en Santiago, Chile.
Ibrahim Gabriell &Valeria Salas - La Changa como complemento ante la escasez ecológica de ayahuasca en el siglo XXI.
The Sacred Plants in the Americas conference was held on February 23, 24, and 25, 2018 in Ajijic, Jalisco, Mexico. The conference had the purpose of building a bridge between indigenous and traditional psychoactive practices, psychedelic science, and drug policy through multidisciplinary and intercultural dialogue. In a context in which drug policy reforms are temporary, we consider it relevant to build spaces for discussion about psychoactive species and their growing multiplicity of uses. Moreover, it also sought to give voice to the indigenous people, who have been knowledgeable about psychoactive plants since ancient times, and they presented several lectures at the conference.
El congreso Plantas Sagradas en las Américas se realizó los días 23, 24 y 25 de febrero del 2018 en Ajijic, Jalisco, México. Tuvo la finalidad de construir un puente entre las prácticas indígenas y tradicionales de psicoactivos, la ciencia psicodélica y las políticas de drogas; mediante el diálogo multidisciplinario e intercultural. En un contexto en que las reformas a las políticas de drogas son coyunturales, consideramos relevante construir espacios de discusión sobre las especies psicoactivas y su creciente multiplicidad de usos. Además se buscó dar voz a los indígenas, que han sido conocedores de las plantas psicoactivas desde tiempos ancestrales, por lo que ellos impartirán las conferencias magistrales durante el congreso.
Info
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Drogas, Política y Cultura:
Chacruna:
Clearwater Beach A.D.Orlando
Passeio na praia de Clearwater Beach com os irmãos de fé da Assembléia de Deus Orlando.
Costa Rica Chito The Crocodile Man and the famous Crocodile Poncho
Rather than trying to tame wild stallions, fearless Costa Rican fisherman Chito prefers a playful wrestle in the water with his best pal Pocho - a deadly 17ft crocodile. The 52-year-old daredevil draws gasps of amazement from onlookers by wading chest-deep into the water, then whistling for his 980lb buddy - and giving him an affectionate hug. Crazy Chito says: Poncho is my best friend. This is a very dangerous routine but we have a good relationship. He will look me in the eye and not attack me. It is too dangerous for anyone else to come in the water. It is only ever the two of us.
Chito made friends with the croc after finding him with a gunshot wound on the banks of the Central American state's Parismina river 20 years ago. He had been shot in the left eye by a cattle farmer and was close to death. But Chito enlisted the help of several pals to load the massive reptile into his boat. He says: When I found Poncho in the river he was dying, so I brought him into my house. He was very skinny, weighing only around 150lb I gave him chicken and fish and medicine for six months to help him recover. I stayed by Poncho's side while he was ill, sleeping next to him at night. I just wanted him to feel that somebody loved him, that not all humans are bad. It meant a lot of sacrifice. I had to be there every day. I love all animals - especially ones that have suffered.
It took years before Chito felt that Poncho had bonded with him enough to get closer to the animal. He says: After a decade I started to work with him. At first it was slow, slow. I played with him a bit, slowly doing more. Then I found out that when I called his name he would come over to me.
At one point during his recovery, Chito left the croc in a lake near his house. But as he turned to walk away, to his amazement Poncho got out of the water and began to follow him home. Chito recalls: That convinced me the crocodile could be tame. But when he first fearlessly waded into the water with the giant reptile his family was so horrified they couldn't bear to watch. So instead, he took to splashing around with Poncho when they were asleep. Four years ago Chito showed some of his tricks to friends, including getting the animal to close his eyes on command, and they convinced him to go public with a show. Now he swims and plays with Poncho as well as feeding him at the lake near his home in the lowland tropical town of Sarapiqui. The odd couple have now become a major tourist attraction, with several tour operators, including Crocodile Adventures, taking visitors on touring cruises to see the pair.
On the Crocodile Adventures website it describes the spectacle as: One of the most amazing things that no cruise ship passenger will want to miss, the adventure show between the man and the crocodile.
American crocodiles, which inhabit North, Central and South America, can live to around 70 years old. It is estimated that Poncho is around 50 - almost the same age as his owner. They are also said to be less aggressive than their Nile or Australian counterparts. Chito, whose real name is Gilberto Shedden, was given his nickname by friends, who also call him Tarzan Tico - Tico being a familiar word for a Costa Rican.
And he certainly plays up to the name, wearing a tattered pair of leopard-print shorts for his half-hour performances with Poncho.
A keen conservationist, he also offers boat tours, where he eagerly points out a variety of wildlife. But he only charges a few dollars to watch the breathtaking crocodile show, claiming he does not want to cash in on Poncho. He says: He's my friend, I don't want to treat him like a slave or exploit him. I am happy because I rescued him and he is happy with me because he has everything he needs.
Learn some facts about Guatemala
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In this brief video you can find seven little known facts about Guatemala.
More information about the video content bellow:
1. Quetzal is the currency of Guatemala and also the national bird, it is a fragile and rare animal. The bird´s tail feather was used as a form of currency back in the Maya Empire.
2. Atitlán means ‘at the water’ in Aztec language and is a lake in the nothern Guatemala highlands. It is the deepest lake in Central America and is considered as “the most beautiful lake in the world” by several explorers like Aldous Huxley. Atitlán is also surrounded by 3 conical volcanoes, making it a must to visit place.
3. Chichi or Chichicastenango is the no.1 shopping destination of whole Guatemala, it is located between 2 and 3 hours southwest of Guatemala City. Chichicastenango (also called Chichi) is considered to be home to the brightest probably most vibrant native market in Central America. You can find there a lot of things like local fabrics, clothing, pottery, wood crafted items or even fireworks, there is something for everyone. This City also hosts many festivals.
4. On May 30, 2010, an enormous hole, 60 feet wide and 30 stories deep, opened up in the middle of Guatemala City, swallowing a three-story building and a home. It also caused the death of a man. The reason for the formation of the sinkhole is thought to be the weak material the city is built on – volcano pumice. This was only 3 years after another sinkhole formed in Guatemala City, in 2007.
5. Much of Guatemala’s history has been marked by violence. For 36 years, the country was embattled in a civil war that took the lives of more than 200,000 people. The war brought about mass murders and resulted in millions of people being run off of their land. Guatemala’s civil war ended in December 1996, but the war scars still remain. Violence and intimidation are major problems in private life and in politics too.
6. 21 varieties of Mayan languages are spoken in Guatemala by mainly the rural population. Indigenous languages of Guatemala include Xinca and Garifuna, spoken by populations restricted to the coast. It is usual for native language speakers to have knowledge of either Spanish or other national languages beside their mother tongue. Efforts to preserve ancient Mayan literature and scripts are undertaken to know more about the history of the country.
7. The first chocolate bar was discovered during the Mayan civilization in Guatemala (Thank Mayan gods for that!). Mayans used to worship the cacao tree as they believed it to be sacred. The aphrodisiac properties of cocoa were well known and it was often consumed in the form of a drink. The Mayans used to pray to a deity called Ek Chuah, who symbolized the cacao tree. However, chocolate was usually consumed in its bitter form with the occasional use of chilli. Chocolate is widely consumed in Guatemala even today with a chocolate museum in the city of Antigua. And cocoa is still sacred in Guatemala with cocoa shops, confectioneries and breweries present in almost all the developed cities.
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History and Anthropology: Drugs and Sacred Medicines | Plantas Sagradas en las Américas
Speakers and presentations (This panel took place on February 23, 2018):
Agustín Guzmán - La Wachuma, medicina de los sueños y del autoconocimiento.
Marco Antonio Arce & José Manuel Rodríguez - Consumo de plantas y hongos psicoactivos en las culturas precolombinas de Costa Rica.
José Ignacio Giraldo - El Yoco, planta de conocimiento, protagonista del primer Santuario de Plantas Medicinales en Colombia.
Alí Cortina - Una mirada histórica sobre los usos del peyote y del Bufo alvarius en la Ciudad de México.
The Sacred Plants in the Americas conference was held on February 23, 24, and 25, 2018 in Ajijic, Jalisco, Mexico. The conference had the purpose of building a bridge between indigenous and traditional psychoactive practices, psychedelic science, and drug policy through multidisciplinary and intercultural dialogue. In a context in which drug policy reforms are temporary, we consider it relevant to build spaces for discussion about psychoactive species and their growing multiplicity of uses. Moreover, it also sought to give voice to the indigenous people, who have been knowledgeable about psychoactive plants since ancient times, and they will be providing lectures at the conference.
El congreso Plantas Sagradas en las Américas se realizó los días 23, 24 y 25 de febrero del 2018 en Ajijic, Jalisco, México. Tuvo la finalidad de construir un puente entre las prácticas indígenas y tradicionales de psicoactivos, la ciencia psicodélica y las políticas de drogas; mediante el diálogo multidisciplinario e intercultural. En un contexto en que las reformas a las políticas de drogas son coyunturales, consideramos relevante construir espacios de discusión sobre las especies psicoactivas y su creciente multiplicidad de usos. Además se buscó dar voz a los indígenas, que han sido conocedores de las plantas psicoactivas desde tiempos ancestrales, por lo que ellos impartirán las conferencias magistrales durante el congreso.
Info
Plantas Sagradas en las Américas:
Drogas, Política y Cultura:
Chacruna:
Documentário AMescla na Bahia
Documentário AMescla na Bahia
AMescla na Bahia acompanha a viagem dos músicos Rodrigo Lorio e Zinga Lucas pelo litoral da Bahia ao longo de 30 dias, registrando os desafios, conquistas, descobertas e a imprevisibilidade na rotina dos dois em uma aventura cultural, pessoal e profissional.
Com cenários de tirar o fôlego e encontros inesperados, acompanhe a performance dos músicos em uma viagem que parte do Rio de Janeiro em direção à Caraíva, Trancoso, Arraial D’Ajuda, Itacaré, Barra Grande, Cruz das Almas, Cachoeira, Salvador e, por fim, Praia do Forte e descubra como os músicos vivem, pensam, sentem, se comportam e “performam” nas ruas, praças e praias baianas.
Classificação Indicativa: 12 anos
Ano: 2018
Incentivo: Lei Rouanet (Lei de Incentivo à Cultura)
Produção: Agência Indy
Realização: Secretaria do Audiovisual, Ministério da Cultura e Governo Federal
PRONAC 177274
Equipe: Diretor Cinematográfico (Bernardo Jardim), Diretor de Fotografia (Lucas Cardoso), Produção, Produção Executiva e Coordenação Geral (Agência Indy, Pedro Emilio e Mariana Cordeiro), Roteirista (Maria Clara Pessoa), Cinegrafista (Felipe Ilg), Personagens/Músicos (Rodrigo Lorio e Zinga Lucas), Assistente de Produção (Daniel Lorio), Técnico de Som (Eduardo Binato), Edição (Bernardo Jardim, João Ricardo Mazzoni e Eduardo Binato), Assistente de Edição (Fellipe Rocha), Finalização (Bernardo Jardim, João Ricardo Mazzoni e Lucca Pougy), Masterização de Áudio e Mixagem de Áudio (Diogo Panico), Design de Produção (B.WMV Audiovisual), Supervisão de Arte (B.WMV Audiovisual e Bruno Lorensato), Ilustração Principal (B.WMV Audiovisual e Rafaella Domingues), Ilustração (B.WMV Audiovisual e Gabriela Kiyuna), Supervisão de Animação (B.WMV Audiovisual e Mateus Ferreira), Animação (B.WMV Audiovisual e Lucas Cavalcante), Conteúdos de Acessibilidade (Etc Filmes), Comunicação/Mídias Sociais (Rodrigo Rocha) e Trilha Sonora (Rodrigo Lorio).
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Facebook: /amesclanabahia /agenciaindy
Introducing CHRONIXX!
CHRONIXX's west coast debut (1st time in San Diego).