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Post by topdog on Apr 30, 2005 12:32:14 GMT -5
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Post by Josh on Apr 30, 2005 15:07:16 GMT -5
I don't think she looks that much different. I think she looked good before and after.
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Post by mike2 on May 1, 2005 1:24:08 GMT -5
She looked alright before. Not spectacular like she does now with her nose job and slightly slanted eyes, but still a good example of her racial type. I think the Before picture people keep showing of her is just an unflattering photo. She's not particularly ugly in it... just pudgy and homey and plain. Surgery touched that up and accentuated the features she already had without changing them completely.
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Post by eufrenio on May 1, 2005 8:53:19 GMT -5
Very representative samples of ordinary Spaniards, mmm.
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Post by Criollo on May 1, 2005 20:51:37 GMT -5
mmm I wont quote your post because of the size of your post but those examples of German/Spanish mixes those phenotypes are not impossible to find in Spain by people that are 100% Spanish it is also some what important where in Spain their Spanish ancestry is from. Those google searches could or could not be Spanish it is safe to assume most are but if you simple search for Spanish people on google they would include Gypsies and Moorocan immigrants not that im saying that the people in those pictures have this ancestry. personal.telefonica.terra.es/web/mayl-gu/Nuevo/Actualidad/Mani-17.04.05/manif.htmlThese are what Spaniards look like.... They appear European...
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Post by Crimson Guard on May 1, 2005 22:15:30 GMT -5
Daniel Brüh looks a bit like jeremy Irons
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Post by Josh on May 1, 2005 22:18:14 GMT -5
The people in your link look no different from the people in mmm's post.
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Post by Criollo on May 2, 2005 0:02:05 GMT -5
The people in your link look no different from the people in mmm's post. It had little wider spectrum of phenotypes typical to Spain the first pictures that he posted are just three people which or may not even be Spanish. It is safe to assume that most o these people are Spanish since it is unlikely for an immigrant to participate in this march. Anyways some do look a little different different color hair can be seen in Spain in the picture it is only dark which is of course what most Spaniards have when they get older.
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Post by Tautamo on May 2, 2005 5:57:52 GMT -5
The people in your link look no different from the people in mmm's post. the problem with his link is that you can not make out one face.
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Post by Tautamo on May 2, 2005 5:59:58 GMT -5
It had little wider spectrum of phenotypes typical to Spain the first pictures that he posted are just three people which or may not even be Spanish. It is safe to assume that most o these people are Spanish since it is unlikely for an immigrant to participate in this march. Anyways some do look a little different different color hair can be seen in Spain in the picture it is only dark which is of course what most Spaniards have when they get older. Most Spaniards do indeed have dark hair and it has nothing to do with getting older.
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Post by Tautamo on May 2, 2005 6:01:05 GMT -5
Very representative samples of ordinary Spaniards, mmm. its a good representation of all iberia.
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Post by Criollo on May 2, 2005 16:29:32 GMT -5
Most Spaniards do indeed have dark hair and it has nothing to do with getting older. Then why do so many Spaniards that I know are born with blonde hair and then their hair gradually darkens as they age this happened to me as well don't you think it is puberty. Hormones cuase the body to create more melanin when you age and thus you have darker hair...
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Post by mike2 on May 2, 2005 16:39:56 GMT -5
Then why do so many Spaniards that I know are born with blonde hair and then their hair gradually darkens as they age this happened to me as well don't you think it is puberty. Hormones cuase the body to create more melanin when you age and thus you have darker hair... Real blondness in Spain is not natively Iberian. The Celts are presumably the ones who brought it into the country, since the areas of Spain where blond hair and blue eyes are most common are places like Asturias and Galicia, regions where Celts have historically settled.
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Post by Criollo on May 2, 2005 17:55:46 GMT -5
Real blondness in Spain is not natively Iberian. The Celts are presumably the ones who brought it into the country, since the areas of Spain where blond hair and blue eyes are most common are places like Asturias and Galicia, regions where Celts have historically settled. Are you pulling this out of no where or is their actual evidence to suggest that the Celts "brought" blondnes to Spain wouldnt the Visigoths have contributed as well. The Celts historical setteled in almost the entire Iberian peninsula.
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Post by Crimson Guard on May 3, 2005 9:45:32 GMT -5
The so-called Celts where mostly brunettes..They limed their hair.
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