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Post by AWAR on Nov 26, 2003 4:27:37 GMT -5
I'm wondering now how many people are aware that Jennifer Aniston is actually Greek.
I think her real surname is Anistopoulos.
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Post by Sexy Italian Male on Nov 26, 2003 6:18:43 GMT -5
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Post by AWAR on Nov 26, 2003 7:55:13 GMT -5
:-XAniston is UGLY!!! Brad could do better than that... I agree that she's not a classic 'beauty', but I have a 'thing' for girls who do not look 'perfect'.
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Post by Sexy Italian Male on Nov 26, 2003 10:39:11 GMT -5
AWAR u SERBIAN ?
Whats up with you Serbian punanies are good looking, i dont want perfect model babe, just something about Aniston's face i dont like maybe her grin her expressions thats all reallY!
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Post by Artemisia on Nov 26, 2003 11:16:06 GMT -5
I don't think I looks like Jen. Aniston. She has a wide mouth and I don't. Of course, she is attractive but she just doesn't have my features.
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Arawn
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Posts: 183
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Post by Arawn on Nov 26, 2003 11:59:06 GMT -5
I too, think Aniston's beauty is over rated, but then over hyped celebreties do tend to get at me that way.
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Post by galvez on Nov 26, 2003 14:12:45 GMT -5
Alessio T writes: "Aniston is UGLY!!!" No, she is not. She may just not be your type -- there is a difference between someone not being your type and someone being ugly. For example, I acknowledge that Nicole Kidman has very symmetrical features and a beautiful body, but she is not my type -- probably because of her genetic distance from me. Her features are just too "foreign" to me, even though I am partially Nordish (Irish, French, and Guanche). This doesn't mean that I dislike all redheads and blondes, but there has to be some kind of correlation to the Med appearance -- because Meds are, after all, the most attractive people in the world. [Puts on a helmet and awaits the flames!]
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Post by alex221166 on Nov 26, 2003 21:35:55 GMT -5
I'm wondering now how many people are aware that Jennifer Aniston is actually Greek. I think her real surname is Anistopoulos. Anastassakis. There's a "Friend's" episode when Rachel and Ross barge in the marriage of the Anastassakis and get an Orthodox priest to marry Chandler and Monica. And yes, I am a "Friend's" fan ;D
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skord
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Posts: 164
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Post by skord on Nov 27, 2003 0:39:53 GMT -5
She looks hot on the tele but not in pictures for some strange reason.Her bi gonials and chin is too UP for my taste.Doable nontheless:)
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Post by AWAR on Nov 27, 2003 7:06:19 GMT -5
Anastassakis. There's a "Friend's" episode when Rachel and Ross barge in the marriage of the Anastassakis and get an Orthodox priest to marry Chandler and Monica. And yes, I am a "Friend's" fan ;D I'm not a fan, but I saw that episode....and I liked it It's weird when you see an orthodox priest on TV A lot of mediterranean women look much better 'in action' than on pictures. For example: Monica Belucci, Linda Fiorentino look even better when you see them move and speak. It's like Med women have a lot of their charm in their gestures.
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Arawn
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Post by Arawn on Nov 27, 2003 10:21:56 GMT -5
Freinds sucks. The first two episodes were fine, but after that it was shite.
Alot of women do, peroid.
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Post by rusalka on Dec 2, 2003 17:11:24 GMT -5
Yes, those are pictures of your very own Artemisia you're viewing. I'm 100% Greek with Epirote, Cypriot, and Anatolian Greek ancestry. Artemisia, your photo, especially the second one, more or less verifies my (and of course they're not just mine) theories about Anatolian ancestry. There are a lot of people that look like you in Turkey (I'm not saying you look "Turkish"), and they're almost always from the Mediterrenean and Aegean coastal areas. What makes sense to me is that the Anatolian phenotype is not so much more different that it was when Anatolia was Greek land. It would be impossible for the invading Turkish forces to relocate the whole population of Anatolia, and change it to a Central Turkish one. It's true that there was a lot of population exchange both in the Ottoman times, and also after the WWI, between Greece and Turkey, but I think the core stays the same and the autochton phenotype is dominant. Same for the "Turkish" Cypriots, I'm sure a reasonable amount of them DO have autochton Cypriot ancestry. What do you think? as for Jenniffer Aniston, no, you do not look like her.
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Post by Artemisia on Dec 2, 2003 17:21:53 GMT -5
Artemisia, your photo, especially the second one, more or less verifies my (and of course they're not just mine) theories about Anatolian ancestry. There are a lot of people that look like you in Turkey (I'm not saying you look "Turkish"), and they're almost always from the Mediterrenean and Aegean coastal areas. What makes sense to me is that the Anatolian phenotype is not so much more different that it was when Anatolia was Greek land. It would be impossible for the invading Turkish forces to relocate the whole population of Anatolia, and change it to a Central Turkish one. It's true that there was a lot of population exchange both in the Ottoman times, and also after the WWI, between Greece and Turkey, but I think the core stays the same and the autochton phenotype is dominant. Same for the "Turkish" Cypriots, I'm sure a reasonable amount of them DO have autochton Cypriot ancestry. as for Jenniffer Aniston, no, you do not look like her. Hello Rusalka, Actually, I have been told by several people that I look like an Indo-European Anatolian and I guess I could pass for Turkish. I guess that also makes me look Greek. I got my eye and eyebrow shape from my Cypriot great-grandmother. I wouldn't say that the Turks living in Cyprus today are indigenous to the island. The only two people who lived on the island since ancient times were the Greeks and Phoenicians (and a Jewish minority of course). The Turks arrived much later. I think you are right about the Anatolian theory. I bet many ancient Anatolians did look like me (I may actually have more Anatolian descent than I realize; in my area in Epirus, one large family has a weird Anatolian name that goes back to HIttite times; the name is Gasga and they seem to be named after a Caucasian people who lived in the Pontus region. We do know that some Greek Anatolians settled in Epirus after the Turkish conquest of Anatolia).
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Post by Artemidoros on Dec 2, 2003 17:23:07 GMT -5
Same for the "Turkish" Cypriots, I'm sure a reasonable amount of them DO have autochton Cypriot ancestry. You are right but don't tell the Turks. Many Turkish Cypriots seem very anxious to affirm their Turkish-ness.
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Post by AWAR on Dec 2, 2003 18:09:20 GMT -5
I'd say that there is an obvious continuity of race in the Balkan-Anatolia area.
The Balkans, south of Sofia, and Anatolia west of Ankara are one area IMO. The Balkans, north of Sofia is more central-European, while Anatolia east of Ankara is more middle-Eastern.
I think that DNA studies also support my theory ;D
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