Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Success. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Success. Mostrar todas las entradas

The emotion in the fans after the premiere of ‘Pasión de gavilanes 2’ does not stop, and it is that the launch of the new season has caused so much that the actors do not stop celebrating.

Since the production recordings began, Danna García, Natasha Klauss, Mario Cimarro, among other cast artists, began to show small previews of what this new installment would bring.

For several months, Internet users saw some behind the scenes and met a small ‘mouth opener’ of the new characters in the installment. The wait is over and this February 14 “Pasión de gavilanes 2” was broadcast through the Telemundo signal.

Hours before the expected moment arrived, the protagonists of the production, which premiered for the first time almost 20 years ago, came together to sing one of the most popular songs of the telenovela.

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Singing at the top of your lungs! The actors of ‘Pasión de gavilanes 2’ intoned ‘Who is that man?’

Through Instagram, Danna García, “Norma Elizondo”, published a video during the exclusive presentation to the media of the new season of “Pasión de gavilanes”.

The Colombian appears there along with Mario Cimarro (‘Juan’), Paola Rey (‘Jimena’), Natasha Klauss (‘Sarita’), Michel Brown (‘Franco’) and Juan Alfonso Baptista (‘Oscar’) singing and dancing the popular song ‘Who is that man?’

The single was the main theme of ‘Pasión de gavilanes’ in its first installment, it managed to be a complete success and has characterized the production for years.

“Celebrating life! Celebrating this great launch after 18 years, my hawks family, I love you, “Garcia wrote next to the video.

As expected, the recording caused great emotion and nostalgia among millions of people; who claimed to have remembered the years in which the song, and the soap opera, premiered for the first time.

“Ha ha ha I remembered my 6-year-old me singing in front of the television: ‘Who is that man? That he looks at me and dazzles’”; “What a thrill to see them together again in this beautiful project”, “Oh this took me back in time”; They comment on networks.

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Ivana Rodríguez is the name of Georgina Rodríguez’s sister who has suddenly become a small celebrity due to the success of the series ‘Yo soy Georgina’, in which she appears as one of the companions.

The young woman is married and with a newborn baby, and already has 500 thousand followers on Instagram. Since the premiere of the series, a few weeks ago, Ivana has gained 83 thousand new followers, and has achieved international fame.

“Congratulations on the success of the reality show, dear. Nothing better than being a good person, hard-working, natural, spontaneous and fun. you are charismatic Thank you for always giving your best. And for never having stopped fighting. You chose the right path in life since you were little. Always together hand in hand, ”he wrote to Georgina on Instagram, in a photo of her with her and Cristiano.

Photo: Instagram/ ivana.rodriguez

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Who is Ivana Rodriguez

It is that if it is a question of taking advantage of the honeys of the success of the family, Ivana Rodríguez has definitely been blessed. In the same show she can be seen on Cristiano’s yacht in Monaco to enjoy a Formula 1 race from there.

Ivana also travels by private plane with her sister, tastes dinners prepared by renowned chefs and wears exclusive designer pieces.

Photo: Instagram/ ivana.rodriguez

Thanks to her sister’s relationship with one of the best players in the world, Ivana has been able to access a world of extreme luxury, and now her face is recognized for having appeared on millions of screens, thanks to Netflix.

This 31-year-old woman is the older sister of Georgina, with whom she grew up in the town of Jaca, Spain. Since 2013 she has had a relationship with the sculptor Carlos García, who in turn counts Queen Letizia of Spain among his clients.

Georgina Rodriguez
Photo: Instagram/ ivana.rodriguez

Last November she gave birth to a girl named Deva, and lives discreetly in Gijón, Asturias. However, she is close to her sister and gets along wonderfully with both Cristiano and the couple’s children.

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China said Tuesday it will invite more spectators to attend the Winter Olympics because of the success of strict containment measures within the bubble that separates event personnel from the public.

China did not sell tickets to the public due to concerns over the spread of the coronavirus but chose a limited number of spectators who are required to comply with strict containment and prevention measures.

The announcement was made at a news conference at which Huang Chun, an official with the organizers’ pandemic prevention and control office, said a realistic goal for attendance at some venues before the Games are over is about 30%.

“We will bring in more spectators based on demand because the current COVID-19 situation within the ‘closed loop’ is under control,” he said.

A staff worker disinfects a hotel floor inside the Olympic “closed-loop” during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China, Feb. 8, 2022.

In the southwestern Chinese city of Baise on Tuesday, no new cases of the coronavirus were reported, one day after a strict lockdown was ordered following a spike in daily infections three days earlier.

Authorities ordered residents in the city, near the border with Vietnam, to stay at home, leaving their residences only to buy essential items or to test for COVID-19. Local officials encouraged residents of the city of about 3.6 million to use delivery services rather than travel to a store when possible.

The lockdown comes as China hosts the 2022 Winter Olympics in the capital, Beijing, within a strict bubble to prevent the spread of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

Lockdowns in Hong Kong

Hong Kong announced Tuesday its most stringent lockdown measures since the pandemic began as new daily cases of infections have topped 600. Chief Executive Carrie Lam said gatherings of more than two families in private premises will be prohibited and public gatherings will be limited to two people. Places of worship and hair salons will be closed until February 24, when vaccine passes will be required to enter public places such as markets and restaurants, Lam said.

Restrictions in North America

The busiest land crossing from the United States to Canada remained closed Tuesday, Canada’s border agency said, one day after police in the Canadian capital of Ottawa seized thousands of liters of fuel as part of a crackdown to end a protest organized by truckers opposed to COVID-19 restrictions. Mayor Jim Watson declared a state of emergency in the city on Sunday after the demonstrations entered their second week. Truck traffic has been blocking the streets of Ottawa since the demonstrations began on January 28.

Officials in the U.S. states of Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, California and Oregon have announced the lifting of indoor mask requirements for schools and other public places in coming weeks, as levels of infections fueled by the omicron variant of the coronavirus subside. The decisions, mostly announced on Monday, came as state and local governments struggle with which restrictions to cancel or maintain.

The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported Monday that there are more than 399 million global COVID-19 infections and more than 5.7 million global COVID-19 deaths. The center said more than 10 billion COVID-19 vaccines have been administered.

Some information in this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters, and Agence France-Presse.

The sweeping “zero-tolerance” strategy that China has used to keep COVID-19 case numbers low and its economy functioning may, paradoxically, make it harder for the country to exit the pandemic.

Most experts say the coronavirus around the world isn’t going away and believe it could eventually become, like the flu, a persistent but generally manageable threat if enough people gain immunity through infections and vaccines.

In countries like Britain and the U.S., which have had comparatively light restrictions against the omicron wave, there is a glimmer of hope that the process might be underway. Cases skyrocketed in recent weeks but have since dropped in Britain and may have leveled off in the U.S., perhaps because the extremely contagious variant is running out of people to infect. Some places already are talking about easing COVID-19 precautions.

China, which will be in the international spotlight when the Beijing Winter Olympics begin in two weeks, is not seeing the same dynamic.

FILE – In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a staff member disinfects parcels at a community where a locally transmitted COVID-19 case was found, in Haidian district, Beijing, China, Jan. 18, 2022.

Find and isolate

The communist government’s practice throughout the pandemic of trying to find and isolate every infected person has largely protected hospitals from becoming overwhelmed and staved off the deaths that have engulfed most of the world.

But the uncompromising approach also means most people in China have never been exposed to the virus. At the same time, the effectiveness of China’s most widely used vaccines has been called into question. New studies suggest they offer significantly less protection against infection from omicron, even after three doses, than people get after booster shots of the leading Western vaccines.

Together, those factors could complicate China’s effort to get past the pandemic. Experts say if the country of 1.4 billion people were to relax restrictions, it could face a surge similar to what Singapore or Australia experienced, despite a highly vaccinated population.

“China’s susceptibility to outbreaks is likely to be more because most people have not been exposed to the virus due to the stringent measures that were put in place, thus lacking hybrid immunity, which is supposed to prove better protection than vaccination alone,” said Dr. Vineeta Bal, an immunologist at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research.

“It is risky for China to reopen right now because omicron is spreading globally, and even if the variant doesn’t cause major illness, it’ll spread like wildfire,” she added.

Dali Yang, a professor who studies Chinese politics at the University of Chicago, said, “It’s a big challenge, for leaders, especially their rhetoric on saving lives. How do you justify opening up and then having tens of thousands of people dying in the process?”

Workers from the restaurant industry line up for their covid tests in Beijing, China, Jan. 22, 2022. Chinese authorities have called on the public not to travel during the Lunar New Year.

Workers from the restaurant industry line up for their covid tests in Beijing, China, Jan. 22, 2022. Chinese authorities have called on the public not to travel during the Lunar New Year.

Tough-minded strategy

Chinese President Xi Jinping has cited China’s approach as a “major strategic success” and evidence of the “significant advantages” of its political system over Western liberal democracies.

The world’s most populous nation was the only major economy to grow in 2020, and it accounted for a fraction of global deaths and infections.

As part of the country’s tough-minded strategy for keeping the virus at bay, residents in Chinese cities must display their infection status on a government-monitored app to enter supermarkets, offices or even the capital.

But weeks ahead of the Olympics, omicron is testing this approach with outbreaks in the southern province of Guangdong, as well as Beijing.

Organizers of the Olympics announced they will not sell tickets locally and will allow only select spectators in. Foreign fans are not allowed.

A man takes a photo at an overlook in Wuhan, in central China's Hubei Province, Jan. 22, 2022.

A man takes a photo at an overlook in Wuhan, in central China’s Hubei Province, Jan. 22, 2022.

Stay home for the new year

Authorities have also asked people to not visit their hometowns around the Lunar New Year at the start of February, a move that will dampen spending during China’s most important family holiday. And the major city of Xi’an in the west and parts of Ningbo, a busy port south of Shanghai, are under lockdown.

With the Communist Party gearing up for a major meeting this fall, at which Xi is expected to be appointed to a third term as party leader, China is unlikely to relax its policies in a major way any time soon.

“If the numbers from COVID start to skyrocket to big levels, then this will reflect badly on his leadership,” said Willy Lam, an expert on Chinese political leadership at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

China relies heavily on its own Sinovac and Sinopharm vaccines, along with several others made domestically. It has not approved the Pfizer shot, even though a Chinese company bought distribution rights in 2020.

Instead, the focus is on developing China’s own mRNA vaccines, like the Pfizer and Moderna formulas. One such vaccine is in late trials.

Another option for China may be to track how the virus is evolving and put off opening its borders until it becomes even milder. But it’s anyone’s guess when or if that might happen.

“What will the next variant be? How serious will it be? You can’t tell,” Bal said.

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