Added: 3 years ago
From: mariliap
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  • wow...we got to watch this in world geography one day, and it was awesome. i fell in love with brazil. i wanna go there one day and celebrate their carnival! now weve just watched india, which is also cool!!!

  • @joikeas I know people usually think about the bad things in Brazil whenever I tell them I want to visit. Its unfortunate some people don't see the beauty of this country.

  • @ralvarez15

    "Its unfortunate some people don't see the beauty of this country."

    Yes, and even our own people (the Brazilians) don't see it, specially the politicians! Since birth, this country has been exploited, and exploited. It is very sad.

  • BRAZIL, THE BEST.

  • i am mexican american but I LOVE BRAZIL!!!!!!!!!!

  • Comment removed

  • People around the world can identify with Brazil over the fact that descendants of all places. Portuguese, Italians, Germans, Japanese and Africans are the key, but here also has many descendants Spanish, Polish, Russian, Korean, Ukrainian, Dutch ...

  • Blá, blá, blá

  • Lovely Sela Ward's voice..!!

  • i just like the beggining thakyou for having it!

  • i love this nice upload lol it makes u want to get up and live there 4 the rest of your life and neva look back

  • @MIXEDHUSTLA -.i agree..this make's me wanna move to brazil...

  • Brazil is more than what they are showing here. It's been proven that the nation is the most diversed nation on the planet, even more diversed than the United States.

  • @nickfl1980-i have to disagree with that...i too thought that..until i met my brazilian bf..sure brazil is diverse with it's native, european and japanese immigrants, and descendants of african slaves...but not like america where u can literally find atleast one person from all over the world.

  • have you traveled all over brazil? answer is no. You have no clue what you're talking about. The USA has more people..duh, but just like Brazil is has all immigrants from over the world.

  • matter of fact, yes..i lived in brazil for 5 years..travelled all over the place..but having lived in america when i was younger, i still find america to be more diverse...and that's the truth.

  • matter of fact, I'm an american, unbiased, and so did I lived in Brazil ( Sao Paulo) and traveled around the country for my study about Brazil. so who knows it better? me. It has been proven, Brazil is more diversed than the US, more mixed but has less people. facts.

  • ok..back up for a second..by saying mixed, do you mean inter-racial offsprings?? if so, that's not what i meant by "diverse"...i'm talking about finding every ethnicity you can think of...u'll find in america..(korean, burmese, hmong, mauritian, slovenian, bhutanese, mongolian, irish, russian......you get it? i have friends who comes from all these diff backgrounds.

  • facts, Brazil has immigrants from Asian nations, Africa, Europe, norh america (southern states) and idigenous. that includes, Korean, Chinese, vietnamese Japanese, irish, german, italian, norwegian, danish, swedish, russian, slovenian, croatian, portuguese, spanish, african countries of today and from slave ancestry...today it's even been proven by statistics by Brazilian government that they receive after so many years more immigrants than people leaving. Brazil is diversed than you think

  • sweetie..they may have variety in their white population demographics..but not like in the us where there are nigerian american, tibetan american, laotian american, senghalese american...i don't think u get what i'm saying...there's just more variety in america...and my bf and my other brazilian friends too agree on this....enough said..i have better things to do. adios!!!

  • no..you're talking about a hyphenated american..that doesn't exist in Brazil. that's something you don't understand. that has nothing to do with diversity..zero.

  • maybe saying it out loud is not the norm there...cuz ppl tend to collectively refer to themselves as BRAZILIAN when an outsider ask's them what they are...also in brazil...they call it by their skin color..white, black, and mulatto, and native population.....but i definitely know there r ppl who identify as brazilian with an italian background and german(my best friend)....ps.. where in brazil did u live???

  • lived in Manaus -AM, Sao Paulo-SP, Brasilia-DF, Florianopolis-SC and Porto Alegre-RS. for fun, study and meet the family.

  • and by the way..nigerians, tibetans and senghalese immigrants you can find in Brazil, old and new generation..but that work tibetans-brazilians doesn't exist. that's something you don't get. only in the States something like Irish-American or Tibetan american exist. that's prove they don't feel home in the so called american culture. same thing with Mexican American..

  • ..no one in America has a real sense of heritage and belonging to the land "America"...not white Irish-Americans, Italian Americans or anyone else except for the real native Americans.. everyone in America has family who've fled from something in their original homeland.....calling yourself Tibetan American or Italian American doesn't mean you don't feel at home in the U.S. maybe for some(eg..new immigrants) but not for those who were born and grew up in America..

  • yep and that's only here in the US. In Brazil they handled and still handle that totally different. Again, it's been proven by many people that their is no such a thing as a hyphenated Brazilian in Brazil. in Brazil they will tell you I'm Brazilian or I'm Brazilian from this and that..etc etc. All cultures have melted better than in the States. Why? Their government played a role and here they just allowed that nonsense of labeling and still allow it...thanks to progressives like hillary clinton

  • @nickfl1980

    But when you meet someone here, we won't use the hyphen, it isn't like

    "Oh hi...Are you American?"

    "Yes...I am A European- American."

    Over here when you meets someone, if they are truly American regardless of their skin color they will just say American.

    And in certain situations I know that some Brazilians do use the hyphen.

    But you are right, the labeling is a bit crazier in the states.

  • "Over here when you meet someone, if they are truly American regardless of their skin color they will just say American."

    Whatever truly american is, yes for most of the time you will hear that as an answer, but unfortunately there is that hyphenated american thing going on for to long in the media and in neighborhoods with many new immigrants. that's reality in the States. In Brazil, in certain situations like with the new immigrants, but still less compare here in the states where it's crazy

  • Did you know that the first place to be called America was Brazil? Yes, Amerigo Vespucci was in Brazil when he named the new piece of land discovery. So in the end, the first Americans were South Americans.

  • Based on your theory, then, Hilary Clinton must not feel at home in America and with American culture(whatever that is).Cuz in her one of her interviews, she said she was proud to be "IRISH AMERICAN"..that's exactly what she said...face it...we humans are so used to labeling ourselves and everyone else to feel like we're in control and that we understand.

  • you sure you're american? or maybe u didn't pay attention in skl?this is the second or maybe third time you're spelling diverse and diversed...considering u'r american, u'r English is pretty sad.

  • yep i'm an american, i do not call my self a Scottish American or Dutch American. The majority of americans does. In Brazil, immigrants are more integrated and the words Hyphenated Brazilians doesn't exist. My dad is a Brazilian from German and Norwegian descended, but never called himself Norwegian or German Brazilian. It's only in the USA, Where you have Hyphenated Americans..why? Most of them never felt really home here and got stuck in the society..we love labeling here for no reason.

  • THat's not true..about immigrants not feeling at home...that could apply to new immigrants but not to ppl born and bred in America. ..it's the media and mainstream white america(not all but some) who are responsible for the non-white minority  referring to their ancestral ethnicity..for e.g. my american friend who is of chinese ancestry is often asked by other americans what she is.

  • They are not satisfied with her saying "American". They probe further until she has to drop the "I'm Chinese American" answer...Another Asian friend of mine who is american by birth keeps getting the "But where are you REALLY FROM"? question a lot...BUt they would never ask that to a first generation American who's from Ukraine(another friend of mine) cuz she looks like the white majority.

  • Yes I'm an American, (US citizen), born and raised in Miami. and You? Looks like you're a curry eater with US passport, who calles herself indian-american, or whatever, now that's lame. Yes diverse, what about it? spelling it what? finish your sentence. You don't know what it means? seems to me you don't. As if your English is perfect, think and read how you type, it ain't and you prove that also with not understanding the word diverse~culturally diverse and Brazil, is more diverse vs the USA

  • u go on about Americans and their obsession with labeling people and next thing i know you call me a "curry eater with Us passport"...hypocritical, much? Well, you're WRONG. I'm not an american citizen. I studied in America when my dad moved to NY for work reasons. He's a diplomat.I'm Indian from India....you need to stop labeling people first before you go accusing others of doing exactly that.

  • @heomak Never. Brazil has the most diversified population on Earth. That's a fact. You travel through the regions and you'll see that. In the US i noticed that there are a lot of people from everywhere, but it doesn't feel the same like in Brazil. In US it's like the different people don't want to be different, because they are afraid of that. In Brazil it's okay to be different.

  • Same in Brazil. You find people from all around the world. Russians, Indians, Mongolians, etc. ;)

  • p.s. being an american doesn't automatically make you "unbiased".

    And what evidence do you have that backs up your "unbiased" statement that brazil is more diverse than the US. Please cite your source.

  • my sources i have from the Brazilian government through the consulate here in Miami and the US embassy in Brasilia. You typed "i find stil america more diversed"..you find it is totally different than knowing. the US is diversed and with globalization it's changing rapidly..but Brazil, it's been proven they are in front with it..for years.

  • In the north east today and in Sao Paulo you have even more immigrants from the Guyanas who are from Hindu or Muslim Indian descent, people from Indonesian descent. They make the north east even more diversed than what it was and I bet you didn't even know that. Cultures you don't have in the US or find but on a smaller scale.

  • "Cultures you don't have in the US or find but on a smaller scale."

    The point is we have every single people and culture in the U.S.

  • Nonsense and that's been proven by our own government.

  • @heomak Nickfl is right, you haven't travelled around Brazil. Your statement clearly shows that. Each region is completely different.

  • Nah, United States has every single person, from everywhere. Brazil doesn't have every single person from everywhere.

  • That proves how ignorant you are. Go to a private school and not to your government school.

  • Studying a bit more about Brazil is a good advice on here.

  • I meant truly American as in, not second generation. Like I am American, but in school when people ask me what I am, I say that I am Haitian, although I was born and raised here in the states and I have never been to Haiti.

  • You're born here, so that makes you an American aka an US citizen. At least you don't behave like the idiot 2nd or third generation kids here who call themself Cuban-Americans or Haitian Americans or African American. That is just so ridiculous, specially the last one, because they have absolutely nothing in common with Africa or African cultures (except their skin color)

  • I know that... but that doesn't make me an African- American and it does make sense because their ancestors were African slaves brought to America. We put African in front of everything to describe someone of African descent, like Afro- Brazilian or Afro-Cuban, and the same goes for people of European descent.

    And I am a Haitian-American because I am an American of Haitian descent, so it makes plenty of sense.

  • @Zisin2day i understande...if you want to be super-specific. funny, before you pointed it out id never thot of calling myself a Nigerian-American. but if ppl ask me i'll tell them my race is african, but my nationalty is american. and then ill just accept african-american as a description, and black too. but i dont mind being called af-am.

  • eu amo esse video morro de saudades quando vejo !

  • Brasil, the ultimate melting pot!!

  • VIVA BRASIL!!!!!

  • hot brazilians

  • Thats all you know about brazil? the hot brazilians?

  • Where is the Rest???!!!!!!!!!!!!

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