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Francisco

Francisco Reyes


Dernière mise à jour : 5/09/2009

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Sexe : Male
Statut : Divorcé(e)
Age : 19
Zodiaque: Lion

Ville : Skokie
Région : Illinois
Pays: US
Date d’inscription :: 8/10/2005

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vendredi, décembre 07, 2007 

Humeur actuelle :  calme

Spree of musician killings shocks Mexico

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AP Photo: Sergio Gomez, center, lead singer of the Mexican norteno band K-Paz de la Sierra pauses...
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By MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press Writer Wed Dec 5, 7:48 AM ET

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MEXICO CITY - A wave of organized crime violence terrorizing many parts of Mexico is driving fear into the heart of the entertainment business with the murders of several popular musicians, suggesting no one is immune to the rampant brutality. .. language=javascript> if(window.yzq_d==null)window.yzq_d=new Object(); window.yzq_d['PE7kp0LEYrE-']='&U=13bvr6ahr%2fN%3dPE7kp0LEYrE-%2fC%3d614456.11419908.12064525.1414694%2fD%3dLREC%2fB%3d4945741'; ..> ....

Most disquieting were the weekend slayings of two singers who had crooned only about love and loss, not drugs and guns like some "narcocorrido" celebrities killed in the past.

The murders of Sergio Gomez, lead performer for the top-selling group K-Paz de la Sierra, and Zayda Pena of the group Zayda and the Guilty Ones has mainstream singers worrying they may become targets by becoming identified with one or another of Mexico's warring drug gangs.

"What can I say? We are dismayed about this. I mean, we are all in the same boat," said Javier Diaz, representative of Los Tucanes del Norte, a popular group that often poses with assault rifles to promote its songs and violence-filled videos.

Although not known for songs glamorizing the drug business, Gomez had reportedly received death threats urging him not to appear in the capital of the western state of Michoacan, a hot bed of the drug trade where he was tortured before being strangled Sunday.

Pena was killed with similar brutality the previous day. Gunman fired an execution-style gunshot into her at the hospital where she was recovering from surgery for a bullet wound in her neck suffered Friday at a motel in the border city of Matamoros, across from Brownsville, Texas.

Some fear that singers, whether they have any links to drug cartels or not, are routinely "adopted" by drug gangs, which post Internet videos showing their members torturing and executing rivals to soundtracks of popular tunes.

"It really has people worried, because you never know if you go to a concert, what will happen, whether somebody might get shot," said Pablo Zuack, press coordinator for Bandamax, a cable TV channel specializing in northern Mexican music. "When you interview a performer, you never know if it's the last story you'll write about him."

Elijah Wald, author of the book "Narcocorrido," said the musicians' fears may be justified.

"They've just kidnapped and murdered a major international star traveling with bodyguards," he said, referring to Gomez. "That is a very clear message: `We can get anybody.'"

Carolina Jaramillo, a publicist who represented Gomez and other acts, said the singer had no ties to the drug trade that she knew of and she had no reason to believe he would be a target.

"This year, and last year, we have seen a lot of violence," she said. "We don't know where the next one could come from."

Gomez's manager, who is also named Sergio Gomez, told the television network Televisa that the singer had no ties to drug gangs, but had received threats earlier in the day warning him against performing in Morelia, which has been the site of bloody turf battles between Mexico's two main cartels.

The group had canceled an appearance in Morelia last year after similar threats, according to band representative Mario Olvera, and Gomez refused to cancel again.

"In Morelia he told me: 'I'm not afraid to die — I feel happy because I've gotten where I wanted to go, and we've done so much with this group,'" band member Humberto Duran said at a news conference Tuesday.

After the concert, Gomez left with two business associates but was intercepted by 10 Chevrolet Suburbans. His body turned up on a rural roadside with signs of strangulation and severe bruising on the thorax and abdomen as well as burns on the legs. The business associates reportedly were released unharmed.

Hundreds of people mourned Gomez Tuesday in his native Ciudad Hidalgo. About 200 more also gathered in Mexico City, where Gomez's body was transported Tuesday night. People sang the group's best-known songs and some cried holding flowers and photographs.

The scene became chaotic as people pushed each other aside to touch the passing casket.

The slaying of Pena inside a hospital was a tactic redolent of Mexico's drug world, in which gangs have been known to storm hospitals to rescue wounded comrades or finish off injured rivals.

Like Gomez, Pena had no known drug associations. While Gomez was famous for his up-tempo "Pasito Duranguense" rhythm and Pena wrote more in the ballad-like "grupero" style, both essentially sang songs whose themes went little beyond love.

Earlier slayings of entertainers involved musicians who sang about the criminal underworld. Valentin Elizalde, who was killed last year after performing across the border from McAllen, Texas, became popular with "To My Enemies," a song frequently seen as a drug lord's anthem.

Many musicians are now worried that becoming associated with a drug gang may be as easy as waiting for someone to use their song as the soundtrack to a homemade video.

"More than anything else, the point is that musicians make music, they don't belong to any group," said Diaz, the representatives of Los Tucanes. "Nobody has the right to take anybody else's life."

jeudi, septembre 14, 2006 

Today in Mexico we honor 6 teenage kids. Also known as Los Niños Heroes for what they did during the Mexican-American War, September 13, 1847.

ninos_heroes_2.gif

yea thats them heres a little history if you want to know:

Los Niños Héroes (the "Boy Heroes" or "Heroic Cadets") were six teenage military cadets who died defending Mexico City's Chapultepec Castle (then serving as the Mexican army's military academy) from invading U.S. forces in the 13 September 1847 Battle of Chapultepec.

Their commanders, General Nicolás Bravo and General José Mariano Monterde, had ordered them to fall back from Chapultepec but the cadets did not; instead, they resisted the invaders until they were killed, with popular legend maintaining that the last survivor leapt from Chapultepec Castle wrapped in the Mexican flag to prevent it from being taken by the enemy.

The cadets are honoured by an imposing monument at the entrance to Chapultepec Park; and the name Niños Héroes, along with the cadets' individual names, are commonly given to streets, squares and schools across the country.

The Niños Héroes were:

  • Juan de la Barrera
  • Juan Escutia
  • Francisco Márquez
  • Agustín Melgar
  • Fernando Montes de Oca
  • Vicente Suárez

Heres the monument they have of them:

mexiconinosheroes.jpg 

samedi, janvier 21, 2006 

1. Go Bungee Jumping

2. Milk a cow/goat

3. Go sky Diving

4. Go to Antartica

5. Hit a cop

6. Finish College

7. Make my own house

8. Run in Marathon

9. Go to Olympics

10. Set a wolrd record

11. Go to every Continent

12. Jump off a 2 story building

13. Take a trip in hot air balloon

14. Start food fight

15. Go scuba diving

16. Cross ocean in boat/ship

17. Ride a bull

18. Ride race car

19. Pet a skunk

20. Explode a bomb

21. Ride an aircraft

22. Get straight A's in school

23. Invent something

24. Make a movie

25. Write a book

26. Win Fear Factor

27. Go to space

28. Drive motorcycle

29. Run for president

30. Land on moon

31. Interfere a professional game

32. Do a backflip

33. Be an Architect

34. Go to Grand Canyon

35. Cut down a tree

36. Sleep in igloo for 1 day

37. Hit a lion

37. Touch a rattle from a rattlesnake

38. Stand on top of Leaning Tower of Pisa naked

39. Eat in a restaurant and leave without paying

40. Stay awake for 48 hours

41.Shoot rocket launcher

42. Kick an animal half my size

43. Own my own Restaurant

44. Bench press my weight

45. Visit all 50 states

46. Wrestle a bear

47. Play pro soccer in Mexico

48. Walk backwards for a mile

49. Climb stairs of Eiffel Tower

50. Light a building on fire

Actuellement j'écoute:
Hellbilly Deluxe
Par Rob Zombie
Date de publication : 25 August, 1998