Not Raining, just making observations
I'm never one to rain on any one's happiness; becuase in the end, that's all the really matter: are you happy? I think we were just trying to give another explanation in order that he is not disappointed.
Jamicaeico was happy with the girl and the time they spent together, and believe me, I am happy for him.
As for seeing girls in other parts of Rio: I've been to Centro, Niteroi, went to Via Show, when to Samda school, went to Macarana, went to Castlo das Predas (sp); I've rode the Metro, and the Onibus all over Rio and have seen thousand of girls and watched their behaivor. What "I" noticed is that most girls usually only socialize with others they know, or people that know the people they know.
People like Bravo and Sperto have wayyy more expericned in Brasil ( all over the counttry, not just Rio) and can say if I'm seeing things.
The Girl From Monte Carlo
Hi lads,
Not sure if this is correct protocol but I wanted to mention that I had the best ever Christmas and New Year due to this site. I stumbled across it when looking for a place to rent. ISG popped up in the Google search. Thank God for meta links is all I say.
I read the reports of distinction and even printed some of them out. I decided to take the plunge and become a monger. I tried L'Uomo on my second day in Copa and didn't look back – three weeks of sun, booze and women. Although I ventured to 4x4 (shagged the biggest bunda I've ever seen and loved it!) and some of the cheaper places around Centro I found myself drifting back to L'Uomo and then I discovered Monte Carlo, too. I felt the prices (around £100/£160) for a good night out that included drinks and a shag to be a worthwhile price to pay on holiday.
I'd wake up in the morning, grab a coffee and some food, have a walk along the beach, read my book, have some lunch and then a siesta then go out around 8pm. I met some nice blokes who had grins on their faces as big as mine as we sat looking at the wares on show. It was like an adult Christmas grotto.
On my second to last night I visited Monte Carlo and saw what can only be described as a piece of heaven. I think her name was Fernanda, or Nanda. She stood out from the rest of the girls because she just kind of leaned against the wall looking vulnerable and innocent. She was slim but with curves (smallish fake boobs) about 5'7" and with really long brown hair with a bit of wave in it that she constantly twirled around her fingers coquettishly. Her features reminded me of a southern Italian. She could talk no English and my Portuguese wasn't great but she agreed to come upstairs. Immediately she got on all fours and grabbed my cock to plunge it straight into her sweet puckered arse. How could a man resist? I shot my wad pretty swiftly but she was so hot I managed to get it up again.
I spent 40 minutes with this babe and I don't think I'll ever forget her. She wasn't the friendliest, or had the most outrageous body, she was just, different. The moment made my holiday. I don't know if anyone else has experienced her (I didn't take pics and haven't seen any on this site) but if you get the chance you won't regret it.
I think I'll be back in Rio for Christmas this year and will take as much from these reports as I can, such is their usefulness.
All the best!
[size=-2][b][u]EDITOR'S NOTE[/u]:[/b] [blue]I would suggest that the author or another Forum Member consider posting a link to this report in the Reports of Distinction thread. Please [url=http://www.internationalsexguide.info/forum/announcement-reportsofdistinction.php?]Click Here[/url] for more information.[/blue][/size]
No Wonder I Was So Disappointed When I Went to Rio...
From [u]Time Magazine[/u]: [url]http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1890260,00.html?loomia_si=t0:a16:g2:r2:c0.0696486:b23801814&xid=Loomia[/url]
[b]Brazilian Obesity: The Big Girl From Ipanema[/b]
By Andrew Downie / Sao Paulo / Friday, Apr. 10, 2009
When most people think of Brazilians, they think of Gisele Bundchen...
With thousands of miles of sun-kissed coastline, Brazil is a beach nation, one where people like nothing better than to spend weekends and holidays with a cold one on the sand. But the chances of spotting sun-tanned beauties in tiny bikinis are getting smaller and smaller, according to a government study released this week. Research shows the number of Brazilians suffering from obesity is growing. And the trend towards the fuller figure is most prevalent among women. "Obesity among women had stabilized in previous studies and now there is an expressive increase," says Deborah Malta, the study's coordinator. "That is very worrying."
Some 13% of adults are obese, according to the study, which was carried out last year among 54,000 people for Brazil's Health Ministry. The percentage is 13.6 for women and 12.4 for men. Meanwhile, almost half of all adult males, 47.3%, are considered simply overweight, while 39.5% of females are in the same bracket. Those figures are still low compared to industrialised nations such as the U.S., where more than a third of all adults are considered obese (a condition defined by weight and height). But Malta said the trend was clear and that Brazil is slowly on the same path. In 1975, similar studies showed that only 2.8% of men and 7.8% of women were obese. Just seven years ago, the numbers were 8.8% and 12.7% respectively.
The study, carried out for World Health Day (April 8), covered many health-related topics and threw out some contradictory figures as well. Although Brazilians are getting fatter, they are eating less red meat and more fruit and vegetables, Malta reported. They are smoking less and taking more preventive tests such as mammograms and pap smears. But they are using less sunscreen and drinking more, especially to excess and often when driving.
Nevertheless, in body-conscious Brazil, the nation of Gisele Bundchen, plastic surgery and miniscule bikinis, it was the obesity figures that caused the most anxiety. Any suggestion that [b]the girl from Ipanema is not tall and tan and young and lovely, but could possibly be short and pale and fat and ugly,[/b][i]{emphasis added}[/i] can cause a scandal here. When The New York Times reported in 2005 that Brazilians were getting fatter, the correspondent came under attack in the media as a gay, Brazilian-hating heretic.
Indeed, Malta called that earlier report "disrespectful" and preferred to emphasize that Brazilians are relatively slim compared to their counterparts in the West. "I think Brazilians are still worried about their bodies; when we compare ourselves to the rest of the world we are still much thinner," she told TIME. "And remember, this is not just Brazilians that are getting fatter, this is a worldwide phenomenon."
Independent experts, however, cautioned against such nationalistic one-upmanship. Already one in four hospital beds are taken up by people suffering from weight-related ailments such as heart attacks, back surgeries and hip and joint replacements, says Luiz Vicente Berti, president of the Brazilian Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. Unless preventive action is taken to educate people, he warns, Brazil faces a sick and expensive future. "If we don't teach people how to eat properly and exercise, then in 10 years no one will have the money to pay the hospital bills that will arise," Berti says, adding that the number of stomach reduction surgeries carried out in Brazil had risen by 500%. "The U.S. can't solve its problem and it is the biggest economy in the world."