Susana gonzales

Entre el Amor y el Odio

2023.03.17 14:53 Steven-Henshaw Entre el Amor y el Odio

I just saw the first episode and wow does this telenovela look super mega trashy. I saw another post on here from 2 years ago that said it’s extremely off the wall and now I see what they mean but not in the way I was hoping. The Telenovela seems to embody what I most don’t like to see in one, characters that are extremely one dimensional and idiotic. Amazing actors are wasted on a script over saturated with cliches that will make you eye roll non stop. The two main characters lock eyes for the first time in slow motion with tacky music playing and don’t say a single word to each other and it feels too long before the scene actually ends, EYEROLL. The female lead, Susanna Gonzales, has this guy who’s in love with her and is supposedly this good honest hardworking man without a single flaw, who is asking her to marry him while she’s mourning the death of this man who was like a father figure to her, EYEROLL. Even the dumbest person on the planet would know that’s not okay, oh but he’s supposedly a super good caring guy, you can’t forget that because the telenovela just loves to spoon feed you info on the characters. The episode ends with Cesar Evora kissing Susana González forcefully, because he hates her and what’s to show her what he “is capable of”, okay, EYEROLL. Everything is just so ugh! Even the camera directing seems tacky, I guess this is where Salvador Mejía went complete corny with his telenovelas. Esmeralda, La Usurpadora & Abrázame muy Fuerte were his three big productions before making Entre el Amor y el Odio, and most of the problems I described here can be found in those stories as well but by this point the problem seems to have reached peak disaster. What do y’all think?
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2023.01.12 05:34 Sweaty-Garden814 $50 12 Team Dynasty Baseball League

Two orphans in a dynasty baseball points league 300+ Specs owned On fantrax Must have Discord for drafts and league chat $50 buy in using fantrax treasurer No start limit 120 move limit season for MLB moves 30 man rosters Constitution: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15C1ksVL92E5gaD9_CjQocQhD5ot_2uC6c4WkMlNV5M8/edit?usp=sharing
Team 1: MLB Hitters Keibert Ruiz Jose Abreu Max Muncy Matt Chapman Thairo Estrada Dylan Carlson Luis Robert Alek Thomas Anthony Santander Spencer Torkelson Luis Garcia Jeff McNeil David Fletcher Wander Franco Randal Grichuk Gavin Sheets Anthony Rendon Michael Brantley Nick Castellanos Lourdes Gurriel Jr. MILB Hitters: Bo Naylor Justin Foscue Brett Baty Gunnar Henderson Elehuris Montero Yasel Antuna Matt McLain Brice Turang JJ Bleday Austin Hendrick George Valera Drew Waters MLB Pitchers: Chris Bassitt Jacob DeGrom Freddy Peralta Brady Singer Eli Morgan Brooks Raley Jordan Romano Trevor Bauer Luis Ortiz Brock Burke Kendall Graveman James Karinchak Rafael Montero Paul Blackburn Tyler Mahle John Means Casey Mize Stephen Strasburg J.P. Feyereisen MILB Pitchers: Joan Adon Will Bednar Tanner Burns Cade Cavalli Kyle Harrison Asa Lacy Brailyn Marquez Ryne Nelson Ryan Pepiot Jackson Rutledge Jarlin Susana Ryan Weathers J.T. Ginn
Team 2: MLB Hitters: Cal Raleigh Pete Alonso Jonathan India Brendan Donovan Carlos Correa Mark Canha Tyler O'Neil Christian Yelich Danby Swanson Travis d'Arnaud Elias Diaz Rowdy Tellez Kolten Wong Young Moncada Luis Urias Cedric Mullins Bryce Harper Jonathan Schoop Harrison Bader Aledyms Diaz Alex Kirilloff MILB Hitters: Blaze Jordan Lazaro Montes Nolan Gorman Felix Valerio Josh Jung Roderick Arias Cristian Hernandez Brady House Kyren Paris Oswald Peraza Arol Vera Tyler Freeman Jonatan Clase Colton Cowser Jeferson Espinal Sal Frelick Riley Greene Benny Montgomery Jose Ramos Kristian Robinson Travis Swaggerty Lonnie White MLB Pitchers: Marco Gonzales Marcus Stroman Jose Urquidy Edwin Diaz Evan Phillips Taylor Rogers Devin Williams Gerrit Cole Erick Fedde Dean Kremer Frankie Montas Jordan Montgomery Adrian Sampson Anthony Desclafini Tyler Wells MILB Pitchers: Clayton Beeter Jack Leiter Slade Cecconi
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2022.12.09 12:37 rodrigl Deixem de proibir

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2019.02.26 12:20 peterboykin Voters to narrow wide-open field of Chicago mayoralty candidates

FILE PHOTO: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during an interview at City Hall in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File PhotoFebruary 26, 2019
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Chicago voters head to the polls on Tuesday to choose a new mayor in an election expected to lead to an April runoff to determine who will lead the third-largest U.S. city, which has struggled with crime and racial divisions.
Rahm Emanuel, the mayor since 2011 and previously White House chief of staff to former U.S. President Barack Obama, threw the race wide open in September with a surprise announcement that he would not seek a third term.
That led political newcomers as well as well-known names like William Daley, 70, the son and brother of two previous Chicago mayors and former U.S. commerce secretary who succeeded Emanuel as Obama’s chief of staff, to enter the race.
The racially diverse field of 14 is the largest of any Chicago mayoral election, said Jim Allen, Chicago Election Board spokesman. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two vote-getters will face off in a runoff on April 2, he said.
Emanuel faced calls to resign after a video of the fatal police shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald was released more than a year after the 2014 incident. Ongoing police reform efforts loom large over the vote, with national implications.
President Donald Trump has criticized reforms like mandatory federal oversight of the Chicago Police Department, warning of a “crime spree” in what was historically one of the most violent cities in the United States. Chicago saw its murder rate fall in 2017 and 2018.
White former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke was sentenced in January to nearly seven years in prison for murdering McDonald in a landmark case that highlighted the city’s racial tensions.
Lori Lightfoot, 56, a former federal prosecutor who has been prominent in the reform debate as Chicago Police Board president, is running. So is Garry McCarthy, 59, former Chicago police superintendent whom Emanuel fired after the video was released.
Other candidates include Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, 46, and Toni Preckwinkle, 71, Cook County board president. Amara Enyia, 35, was little known until musician Chance the Rapper endorsed her.
“We’re all predicting there’s going to be a runoff,” Northwestern University political science professor Jaime Dominguez said in a phone interview.
Dominguez expects a second round with Daley and Preckwinkle, the two candidates he said had the most money. “From there, it could be a toss-up,” he said.
The next Chicago mayor will also inherit a $28 billion unfunded pension liability and escalating contributions to the city’s four retirement systems that will top $2 billion starting in 2023. The debt-dependent and junk-rated Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s third-largest system, is also a mayoral responsibility.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Peter Cooney)
Source: OANN
from MAGA First News https://magafirstnews.com/oan-newsroom/voters-to-narrow-wide-open-field-of-chicago-mayoralty-candidates/
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2019.02.26 12:17 peterboykin Voters to narrow wide-open field of Chicago mayoralty candidates

FILE PHOTO: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during an interview at City Hall in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File PhotoFebruary 26, 2019
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Chicago voters head to the polls on Tuesday to choose a new mayor in an election expected to lead to an April runoff to determine who will lead the third-largest U.S. city, which has struggled with crime and racial divisions.
Rahm Emanuel, the mayor since 2011 and previously White House chief of staff to former U.S. President Barack Obama, threw the race wide open in September with a surprise announcement that he would not seek a third term.
That led political newcomers as well as well-known names like William Daley, 70, the son and brother of two previous Chicago mayors and former U.S. commerce secretary who succeeded Emanuel as Obama’s chief of staff, to enter the race.
The racially diverse field of 14 is the largest of any Chicago mayoral election, said Jim Allen, Chicago Election Board spokesman. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two vote-getters will face off in a runoff on April 2, he said.
Emanuel faced calls to resign after a video of the fatal police shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald was released more than a year after the 2014 incident. Ongoing police reform efforts loom large over the vote, with national implications.
President Donald Trump has criticized reforms like mandatory federal oversight of the Chicago Police Department, warning of a “crime spree” in what was historically one of the most violent cities in the United States. Chicago saw its murder rate fall in 2017 and 2018.
White former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke was sentenced in January to nearly seven years in prison for murdering McDonald in a landmark case that highlighted the city’s racial tensions.
Lori Lightfoot, 56, a former federal prosecutor who has been prominent in the reform debate as Chicago Police Board president, is running. So is Garry McCarthy, 59, former Chicago police superintendent whom Emanuel fired after the video was released.
Other candidates include Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, 46, and Toni Preckwinkle, 71, Cook County board president. Amara Enyia, 35, was little known until musician Chance the Rapper endorsed her.
“We’re all predicting there’s going to be a runoff,” Northwestern University political science professor Jaime Dominguez said in a phone interview.
Dominguez expects a second round with Daley and Preckwinkle, the two candidates he said had the most money. “From there, it could be a toss-up,” he said.
The next Chicago mayor will also inherit a $28 billion unfunded pension liability and escalating contributions to the city’s four retirement systems that will top $2 billion starting in 2023. The debt-dependent and junk-rated Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s third-largest system, is also a mayoral responsibility.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Peter Cooney)
Source: OANN
from MAGA First News https://magafirstnews.com/oan-newsroom/voters-to-narrow-wide-open-field-of-chicago-mayoralty-candidates/
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2019.02.26 12:17 peterboykin Voters to narrow wide-open field of Chicago mayoralty candidates

FILE PHOTO: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during an interview at City Hall in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File PhotoFebruary 26, 2019
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Chicago voters head to the polls on Tuesday to choose a new mayor in an election expected to lead to an April runoff to determine who will lead the third-largest U.S. city, which has struggled with crime and racial divisions.
Rahm Emanuel, the mayor since 2011 and previously White House chief of staff to former U.S. President Barack Obama, threw the race wide open in September with a surprise announcement that he would not seek a third term.
That led political newcomers as well as well-known names like William Daley, 70, the son and brother of two previous Chicago mayors and former U.S. commerce secretary who succeeded Emanuel as Obama’s chief of staff, to enter the race.
The racially diverse field of 14 is the largest of any Chicago mayoral election, said Jim Allen, Chicago Election Board spokesman. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two vote-getters will face off in a runoff on April 2, he said.
Emanuel faced calls to resign after a video of the fatal police shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald was released more than a year after the 2014 incident. Ongoing police reform efforts loom large over the vote, with national implications.
President Donald Trump has criticized reforms like mandatory federal oversight of the Chicago Police Department, warning of a “crime spree” in what was historically one of the most violent cities in the United States. Chicago saw its murder rate fall in 2017 and 2018.
White former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke was sentenced in January to nearly seven years in prison for murdering McDonald in a landmark case that highlighted the city’s racial tensions.
Lori Lightfoot, 56, a former federal prosecutor who has been prominent in the reform debate as Chicago Police Board president, is running. So is Garry McCarthy, 59, former Chicago police superintendent whom Emanuel fired after the video was released.
Other candidates include Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, 46, and Toni Preckwinkle, 71, Cook County board president. Amara Enyia, 35, was little known until musician Chance the Rapper endorsed her.
“We’re all predicting there’s going to be a runoff,” Northwestern University political science professor Jaime Dominguez said in a phone interview.
Dominguez expects a second round with Daley and Preckwinkle, the two candidates he said had the most money. “From there, it could be a toss-up,” he said.
The next Chicago mayor will also inherit a $28 billion unfunded pension liability and escalating contributions to the city’s four retirement systems that will top $2 billion starting in 2023. The debt-dependent and junk-rated Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s third-largest system, is also a mayoral responsibility.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Peter Cooney)
Source: OANN
from MAGA First News https://magafirstnews.com/oan-newsroom/voters-to-narrow-wide-open-field-of-chicago-mayoralty-candidates/
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2019.02.26 12:16 peterboykin Voters to narrow wide-open field of Chicago mayoralty candidates

FILE PHOTO: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during an interview at City Hall in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File PhotoFebruary 26, 2019
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Chicago voters head to the polls on Tuesday to choose a new mayor in an election expected to lead to an April runoff to determine who will lead the third-largest U.S. city, which has struggled with crime and racial divisions.
Rahm Emanuel, the mayor since 2011 and previously White House chief of staff to former U.S. President Barack Obama, threw the race wide open in September with a surprise announcement that he would not seek a third term.
That led political newcomers as well as well-known names like William Daley, 70, the son and brother of two previous Chicago mayors and former U.S. commerce secretary who succeeded Emanuel as Obama’s chief of staff, to enter the race.
The racially diverse field of 14 is the largest of any Chicago mayoral election, said Jim Allen, Chicago Election Board spokesman. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two vote-getters will face off in a runoff on April 2, he said.
Emanuel faced calls to resign after a video of the fatal police shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald was released more than a year after the 2014 incident. Ongoing police reform efforts loom large over the vote, with national implications.
President Donald Trump has criticized reforms like mandatory federal oversight of the Chicago Police Department, warning of a “crime spree” in what was historically one of the most violent cities in the United States. Chicago saw its murder rate fall in 2017 and 2018.
White former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke was sentenced in January to nearly seven years in prison for murdering McDonald in a landmark case that highlighted the city’s racial tensions.
Lori Lightfoot, 56, a former federal prosecutor who has been prominent in the reform debate as Chicago Police Board president, is running. So is Garry McCarthy, 59, former Chicago police superintendent whom Emanuel fired after the video was released.
Other candidates include Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, 46, and Toni Preckwinkle, 71, Cook County board president. Amara Enyia, 35, was little known until musician Chance the Rapper endorsed her.
“We’re all predicting there’s going to be a runoff,” Northwestern University political science professor Jaime Dominguez said in a phone interview.
Dominguez expects a second round with Daley and Preckwinkle, the two candidates he said had the most money. “From there, it could be a toss-up,” he said.
The next Chicago mayor will also inherit a $28 billion unfunded pension liability and escalating contributions to the city’s four retirement systems that will top $2 billion starting in 2023. The debt-dependent and junk-rated Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s third-largest system, is also a mayoral responsibility.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Peter Cooney)
Source: OANN
from MAGA First News https://magafirstnews.com/oan-newsroom/voters-to-narrow-wide-open-field-of-chicago-mayoralty-candidates/
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2019.02.26 12:15 peterboykin Voters to narrow wide-open field of Chicago mayoralty candidates

FILE PHOTO: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during an interview at City Hall in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File PhotoFebruary 26, 2019
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Chicago voters head to the polls on Tuesday to choose a new mayor in an election expected to lead to an April runoff to determine who will lead the third-largest U.S. city, which has struggled with crime and racial divisions.
Rahm Emanuel, the mayor since 2011 and previously White House chief of staff to former U.S. President Barack Obama, threw the race wide open in September with a surprise announcement that he would not seek a third term.
That led political newcomers as well as well-known names like William Daley, 70, the son and brother of two previous Chicago mayors and former U.S. commerce secretary who succeeded Emanuel as Obama’s chief of staff, to enter the race.
The racially diverse field of 14 is the largest of any Chicago mayoral election, said Jim Allen, Chicago Election Board spokesman. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two vote-getters will face off in a runoff on April 2, he said.
Emanuel faced calls to resign after a video of the fatal police shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald was released more than a year after the 2014 incident. Ongoing police reform efforts loom large over the vote, with national implications.
President Donald Trump has criticized reforms like mandatory federal oversight of the Chicago Police Department, warning of a “crime spree” in what was historically one of the most violent cities in the United States. Chicago saw its murder rate fall in 2017 and 2018.
White former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke was sentenced in January to nearly seven years in prison for murdering McDonald in a landmark case that highlighted the city’s racial tensions.
Lori Lightfoot, 56, a former federal prosecutor who has been prominent in the reform debate as Chicago Police Board president, is running. So is Garry McCarthy, 59, former Chicago police superintendent whom Emanuel fired after the video was released.
Other candidates include Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, 46, and Toni Preckwinkle, 71, Cook County board president. Amara Enyia, 35, was little known until musician Chance the Rapper endorsed her.
“We’re all predicting there’s going to be a runoff,” Northwestern University political science professor Jaime Dominguez said in a phone interview.
Dominguez expects a second round with Daley and Preckwinkle, the two candidates he said had the most money. “From there, it could be a toss-up,” he said.
The next Chicago mayor will also inherit a $28 billion unfunded pension liability and escalating contributions to the city’s four retirement systems that will top $2 billion starting in 2023. The debt-dependent and junk-rated Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s third-largest system, is also a mayoral responsibility.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Peter Cooney)
Source: OANN
from MAGA First News https://magafirstnews.com/oan-newsroom/voters-to-narrow-wide-open-field-of-chicago-mayoralty-candidates/
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2016.11.01 00:12 itaca2014 El mejor saludo no es "señorías"...

...sino: "Sr. candidato Rajoy. Maese Cuñado Rivera. Sra. Susana Díaz Richelieu. Sr.Felipe GonzaleX. Un saludo allá donde estén. Srs. del PSOE Iscariote"
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2015.07.12 21:39 RenegadoKautsky TENEMOS QUE ACABAR CON EL VIEJO DILEMA IZQUIERDA-DERECHA PORQUE YA NO ES UTIL AL PUEBLO LLANO SINO UN CONCEPTO VACIO Y SE HA CONVERTIDO EN LA HERRAMIENTA DE MANIPULACION EMOCIONAL DE LAS BUROCRACIAS DE PSOE E IU .

Durante las pasadas elecciones andaluzas sentia rabia, bochorno e indignacion al oir a la funcionaria de partido Susana Diaz acusar a PODEMOS de ser ambiguos y que ella reivindicaba ser de izquierdas. Sobran las palabras, el termino "populismo" parece haber sido diseñado expresamente para esta persona, aunque ella piense que lo son los demas. Parecida indignacion siento cuando escucho a los arrogantes y eternos dirigentes de IU llamar a un "frente de izquierdas", cuando sus politicas en todos los años de existencia de esta coalicion manejada por el PCE no han dejado de ser o bien inutiles o bien comparsa complice del PSOE en sus "gobiernos de progreso". ¿Que significa entonces ¡HOY dia! ser de izquierdas? Considero que nada. Que lo que un dia fue un concepto amplio pero valido para defender a la clase obrera, a los desfavorecidos, las libertades y un sistema que superase el capitalismo salvaje, hoy en dia, tras los gobiernos de Felipe Gonzales, gerhard Shroeder o Papandreus, no significa nada de lo anterior. Y es que los conceptos y los terminos, al igual que las rocas del desierto, sufren erosion. A veces tal que resultan irreconocibles o incluso pasan a ser lo contrario de lo que empezaron significando. Y si no ahi esta la historia de la Union Sovietica para ejemplificar este fenomeno. De la revolucion liberadora y triunfante que hizo temblar al barbaro capitalismo colonial de hace un siglo paso a ser el gran campo de concentracion de trabajadores, jovenes y minorias etnicas esclavizadas. ¡Que van a entender los demas si hoy en dia hablamos de COMUNISMO! ¿La inicial idea de un grupo de revolucionarios y patriotas abnegados que organizaron a los obreros de Paris en 1848 o justo lo contrario, un estado totalitario con una economia incoherentemente planificada por burocratas? Pues tengamos muy en cuenta esto porque a nuevos retos nuevas ideas (¡que si, que surgen de lo viejo pero ya no son lo mismo!), y nuevos simbolos con los que emocionalmente se identifiquen los pueblos, y nuevos conceptos y terminos que no quieran asimilarse al pasado. Cuando esto no sucede se instala la decepcion y el hastio, la idea generalizada de que nada es posible cambiar ni siquiera en nuestras filas (las filas del pueblo llano cualquiera que sea su ocupacion) . Pero eso si, la persistencia de tales remoras parasitarias sirven de asidero a los que se resisten a dejar la politica porque toda su vida la han hecho alrededor de esos conceptos que ya hoy no dicen nada a la gente. Si os preocupa saber cual es la referencia geografica sobre el plano tridimensional de los que sin ser parte organica de PODEMOS estamos apoyando desde fuera, y a titulo personal como es mi caso, os dire que no estamos ni a derecha ni a izquierda, ni adelante ni atras, estamos donde siempre hemos estado: ABAJO. Una vez que esto lo tengamos claro se acabara la confuion cartesiana y metafisica de que demonios significa ser de izquierdas hoy en dia. Salud y saludos a todos.
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