Besides being an excellent singer, Simone mendes is known for her unusual statements and the artist is not ashamed to share them with the world. The Sertaneja has this again in its program this Friday (5). Faustão in the band.
Speaking to the presenter, Simaria’s sister recalled the incident when she was locked outside with her husband Kaka Diniz. Both decided to take a parallel path through an alley, but things heated up between the two choosing to do things right there.
Simone Mendes was caught in an intimate moment by her husband (Image: Reproduction/Youtube/Faustão na Band)
However, the singer didn’t expect to get caught by her own brother. “I went out with Kaka [marido] and when we came back the front door was closed. Then I passed alleywhich is on the side of the house, and there Kaká looked at me silhouette very hot and said ‘I want it,'” he recalled.
“As I started to pull my pants down I heard a noise and this cocoa He quickly pulled up his pants, went over there to see, and it was my brother. He said: ‘the Caio it’s there but he just went upstairs…let’s go up again’ and I said ‘no not here let’s end upstairs in Jesus name’. Then he said, “Come here, it’s more fun, spice up this relationship,” and as we want, we made an agreement. When I lowered my pants to leave, my brother stuck his head out the window.”
23 years old, from Brasilia, lover of literature, entertainment, music and Beyoncé fan. He worked as an author in this segment for three years, contributing to communication vehicles in the capital.
King Charles III will be crowned in Westminster Abbey today to succeed his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. Watch our special live broadcast with Paul Larocque.
7:18 am – Queen Consort Camilla crowned
7:10 am – The Archbishop and guests take the oath of the newly crowned King
7:07 am – The choir sings the Hymn to the King
7 a.m. – “God save the King”: The King is officially crowned at the age of 74 by the Archbishop of Canterbury in Westminster Abbey
Charles III receives the crown of Saint Edward. He is the 40th monarch to be crowned at Westminster Abbey.
6:52 a.m. – The King receives sacred objects in the presence of Prince William
The cloak he wears is woven with gold thread and was originally designed for King George V.
AFP
6:50 am – The sovereign is seated on the throne
6:45 am – The royal anointing
As a sign of humility towards God, the king takes off his robe and puts on a linen tunic. The fragrant (vegan) oil is Charles III. poured on the head to sanctify it.
6:32 a.m. – The Gospel Choir sings “Hallelujah”
6:29 am – Gospel reading
6:26 am – Reading by British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak
AFP
6:20 am – The choir sings the ‘Gloria’ from the Mass written by William Byrd
The songs are sung in English, but also in other languages. The will to integrate and modernize the monarchy characterizes this ceremony.
6:15 am – The sovereign takes the oath
AFP
6:10 am – The king is introduced to his kingdom
6:05 am – The Archbishop of Canterbury begins his address
AFP
5:55 am – The King and Queen consort enters Westminster Abbey
AFP
5:30am – The couple head towards Buckingham Palace
This is the 402nd coronation at Westminster.
More than 2,000 guests are in attendance and millions of spectators around the world attend the coronation, “a tradition that dates back to the 9th century,” says Emmanuelle Latraverse.
AFP
5:30am – Justin Trudeau has arrived in London
AFP
4:30 am – King Charles III. and Queen Consort Camilla leave Buckingham Palace in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach, a carriage first used in 2014 and pulled by six horses.
“After a carriage procession in the rain from Buckingham Palace, the sovereign and his wife, in ceremonial ivory outfits and red trains, passed with great pomp through the doors of the Abbey, where they were to be crowned by the Archbishop of Canterbury during an Anglican ceremony,” reports Agence France- Press.
AFP
• Also read: Dozens of arrests before Charles III’s coronation, including six anti-monarchy activists
Before the coronation of Charles III. dozens of arrests took place, including six anti-monarchy activists.
But when we arrived in Charlevoix towards the end of the afternoon on Wednesday 3 May, heavy, almost black-grey clouds had settled at our feet over the mountains of Éboulements.
Sheltered from the cold rain, in the door of an old forge, Jacques Desgagnés, 76, cursed the wind. Damn Northeast. i hate this wind He’s a bad weather builder. It never does any good.
A helicopter circled the tortured sky. Earlier in the day we discovered the body of Régis Lavoie, 55, and when we met Mr Desgagnés, a coast captain by trade, we were still looking for Christopher Lavoie, 23. The two volunteer firefighters from Saint-Urbain-de-Charlevoix were arrested on Monday in swept away by the waters of the Gouffre river.
Jacques Desgagnés in his kitchen.
Photo: Radio Canada / Ivanoh Demers
Sheltered from the harsh cold, around his old wood stove, Mr Desgagnés commented on the latest news from his part of the country. It’s a terrible spectacle. It’s to roar. But the fury of the water, nothing can withstand it. Nobody is equipped to deal with it.
Jacques Desgagnés did not know the two firefighters.
Charlevoix is a succession of villages with their own identity. We don’t speak from one place to another in the same way. We don’t necessarily see each other. We call each other by nicknames. At Les Éboulements we are called Béliers because of the sheep that used to roam our pastures. The people who come from Ste-Irénée say they are capelin, like the little fish that wallow on the beach over there. On Isle-aux-Coudres, it’s the porpoises. Not far from here are the ranks of misery, he refuses.
It pronounces misery with an acute accent. When I was young, it was always said: he comes from the misery, he is a miserable fellow. The land with us is a land of rocks, a land of Cain. Farmers starved trying to get something out of this land.
And the inhabitants of Saint-Urbain? What is your name?
Mr Desgagnés considered the question for a moment. No, I can’t think of it. A guy from Saint-Urbain is a guy from Saint-Urbain. It’s the outback, it’s the forest, the lumberjacks, the mine and the rocky land. I can only tell you that when I was young, the girls of Saint-Urbain were thought very beautiful!
Small barn with the mountains in the background, in Saint-Urbain-de-Charlevoix.
Photo: Radio Canada / Ivanoh Demers
Saint-Urbain-de-Charlevoix is the region of Rosanna Saint-Cyr, the famous character of a brave mother from Le Temps d’une paix, a soap opera created by Pierre Gauvreau that tells the life of four Charlevoix families between the first and the Second World War.
But since Monday, the name of the village of Saint-Urbain has been engraved in Quebec’s collective memory: a bridge being swept away by a raging river, trailers rolling in the raging water, two beings whose lives have suddenly stopped in the mud water because they were trying to help their neighbors.
From Les Éboulements, take the rank Saint-Jean-Baptiste to get to Saint-Urbain-de-Charlevoix. This path, which must be walked due to circumstances, is of great beauty. A vast forest of stubbornly green spruce trees stretches beneath the imposing Laurentian Mountains with their ever-snowy peaks.
But the name of this quiet village is now synonymous with this type of tragedy that marks the spirits. Saint-Urbain-de-Charlevoix, a name uttered in television and radio news programs. A name that makes headlines.
Nicole and Rose-Aline on a bench in the village.
Photo: Radio Canada / Ivanoh Demers
Yesterday I saw my neighbor on TV. Funny, says Rose-Aline Gilbert, 87, who walked to get her mail from the small post office in the village. Régis was my neighbor. He was helpful, that man there, there are no words to describe him. I looked at him a bit like one of my sons.
The old lady’s eyes dim and, under a gloomy sky, conjures up the run of the Volunteer Fire Brigade on Earth. He was a lumberjack, then a cleaner at the Baie-Saint-Paul hospital. Finally a security guard.
Passes by Nicole Tremblay, 75, on her way to the Caisse Populaire. The two women exchange a little, share their excitement. It makes me cry what happened. It’s really hard for a beautiful community like Saint-Urbain, says Nicole. People help each other, people are charitable. It is like it is. It’s the mentality.
Rose-Aline speaks wisely of grief, of the time it takes to grasp the absurdity of a definitive departure. That won’t be the hardest part. It’s that winter when he doesn’t come and help me clear the snow. During the trout season, when he doesn’t bring me fish, I’ll understand that he’s not really around anymore, Régis.
That Thursday morning, at the foot of the hill in Matou, as we say here, where the river swallowed the lives of the two volunteer firefighters, the majority of journalists left. At the same time, Quebec Minister of Public Safety François Bonnardel told journalists at the National Assembly that we must await the results of the investigation into the deaths of volunteer firefighters to decide on their training.
Laurent Dufresne in front of his shop.
Photo: Radio Canada / Ivanoh Demers
Matou, who gave his name to the steep street, was the father of Laurent Dufresne, 83 years old.
At home we were 20 children. The older ones started working early because the father had to get money to raise the younger ones. I started working when I was 13 in the kitchen of a logging camp, says the old man, always standing bolt upright in front of his shop, a motel, a restaurant and a supermarket, all a stone’s throw from The Genévrier Bridge, which on Monday passed under the pressure of the raging masses of water gave way.
I’ve been working for 70 years and took just two weeks off in 2003 to go to Florida.
In Saint-Urbain, the people are brave and the years of misery are behind them. There is full employment here. Employees of the sépaq next door, which attracts more and more hiking enthusiasts, people working in the Massif de Charlevoix, the Charcuteries de Charlevoix or in other innovative companies in the area that have settled in this magnificent hinterland and where the properties are cheaper than on the Coast.
In the convenience store we are told that there are more and more French immigrants. It’s not the plateau yet, but… we’re told with a smile.
I ask Laurent Duchesne if he thinks his village’s name will henceforth be associated with the drama that happened this week. The man nods: It’s quite possible. It definitely hurts a lot, that’s the way it is.
The devastated road near the campsite.
Photo: Radio Canada / Ivanoh Demers
A few kilometers away, Robert Labbé surveys the remains of his campsite. Monday morning we had something to do; By Monday evening she was gone. My brothers and I watched the river destroy 55 years of work in just 5 hours.
The caravans carried away by the river on Monday, unlikely stars of these viral, spectacular images, they were at his campsite, his corner, his alma mater. We’ve been the center of attention since Monday, he said, adding that he didn’t have much of interest to add. That now that everything has been said, we shouldn’t talk about it anymore. That’s where we’re going to move on to something else, and that’s perfect. This is the message principle. One replaces the other, he says. When we think of these two men who lost their lives, he sighs, we tell ourselves that we are alive.
Robert Labbé is just beginning to take stock. I ask him if he’s been in shock since Monday. When she answers yes, her voice breaks. I wish him the best of luck. He walks away in silence. Then turns around and says: We kneel, but we stand up.
Stand but live on a torn road how long?
Two workers are examining the portion of the bridge over Highway 138 that collapsed in the flood.
Money confiscated from a conspiracy to traffic cocaine and hashish between Morocco and Europe.
The Civil Guard has dismantled a criminal organization based in Melilla, Barcelona and Granada, which transported hashish by sea from Morocco to Europe and bought cocaine in the Netherlands and Spain and brought it to the Maghreb country. The agents arrested 21 people and seized nearly 59 kilos of cocaine, 186 kilos of hashish and personal effects worth more than 3.6 million euros, according to the armed institute.
The organization had two structures. One dealt with the hash trade by sea from Morocco to Europe. Another, financed with the proceeds of the first, bought cocaine in the Netherlands and Barcelona and transported it to the North African country via Meilla.
Suspecting a vehicle in Melilla, the Civil Guard intervened and discovered 15 kilograms of high-purity cocaine in a false floor in the trunk. This discovery initiated the investigation that led to the dismantling of the property, which was directed by two brothers, one living in Morocco and the other in Granada. The latter was wanted by the Moroccan judicial authorities and charged with leading a drug trafficking organization. In the Andalusian city, he surrounded himself with people who acted as bodyguards.
The two brothers planned, organized and implemented the two structures. To transport the hash, they used fast boats that unloaded the cargoes on the peninsula and then transported them by road to their destination. With the profits they made, they traded in cocaine, a drug they bought in the Netherlands and Barcelona and sent to Morocco via Melilla.
Agents searched 14 homes in Melilla, Granada and in the towns of Martorell, Rubí, Terrasa and Gélida in Barcelona, where they located a cocaine handling and packaging laboratory.
The armed institute considers the logistical and financial structure of the property torn to pieces to hide the purchased vehicles and apartments on behalf of third parties.
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The Guardia Civil estimates the arrested person at 3,635,000 euros, including half a million euros in cash and 38 vehicles. Land and real estate worth 653,500 euros and 49 bank accounts were blocked. The detainees were tried on alleged crimes against public health, forgery and involvement in a criminal organization.
With three medals in his last four international competitions, François Gauthier-Drapeau is enjoying an important breakout that will allow him to consider a podium at the World Judo Championships which begins in Doha on Sunday.
Bored with a serious knee injury that meant he missed the 2019 season and was deprived of international tournaments during the pandemic, Gauthier-Drapeau never had the opportunity to compete for a spot at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.
Back on the international scene this year, the judoka from Alma didn’t pass up his opportunity. “My results are exceeding my expectations,” he admitted. It’s going well and I definitely won’t complain. I had quite a physical level to compete with the best, but due to my lack of tournament experience, I had gaps strategically and tactically.
Gauthier-Drapeau believed in his chances of victory. “I needed a few things to turn my favor in a lot of fights,” he said. Antoine (Valois-Fortier) is one of the best tactically and I learn a lot from him. I instinctively put his advice into action.”
Gauthier-Drapeau crosses blades with several former opponents of Valois-Fortier, who retired after the Tokyo Olympics and turned to coaching. “Antoine has had several fights against the same opponents and that’s a big advantage for me,” he said. He knows their strengths and weaknesses and can put together an effective game plan.”
Valois-Fortier agrees his experience is an asset to his protégé. “It’s a little weird training against former opponents,” said the London 2012 Olympic bronze medalist, but tactically it’s a plus.
Gauthier-Drapeau will only be playing his second career at Worlds, but he won’t show up on the tatami to gain experience. “Based on my latest results, I can afford some expectations. I’ve beaten guys who have won medals at World Championships in the past and I’m sure I have a chance against anyone.”
Valois-Fortier summarizes the situation. “He’s not one of the favourites, but when he’s having a good day he can surprise. A medal is possible.”
Valois-Fortier not surprised
Valois-Fortier assures that Gauthier-Drapeau’s success does not surprise him. “François is very strong between the ears and physically. He needed more experience on the international stage. He’s making good progress and is super consistent. It’s no surprise to me to see him succeed.”
Valois-Fortier attributes the late appearance of his protégé to very specific factors. “A series of events slowed down its development. Due to a serious knee injury, he did not take part in international tournaments. After completing his rehabilitation, he was ready to return, but COVID-19 struck.
University of Sports defeated Independiente de Santa Fe 2-0 on day three of the group stage South American Cup 2023. After this meeting the Colombian journalist Samuel Varga He highlighted the cream of the crop’s performance and was impressed by their set pieces in their favour, scoring one of the goals scored by Jorge Fossati’s side.
“The Universitario are setting the rhythm and will overwhelm Santa Fe. There’s nothing to do in Lima. The Cardenal is losing. They are kings of set pieces. Santa Fe have done better but the Universitario don’t forgive set pieces. It’s impressive,” he said the communicator during the live broadcast of the game for the coffee territory.
With this result, von Ate add seven units and are in first place in their series. Let’s remember that only one team from this group can reach the round of 16 of this competition. The runners-up need a repechage against one of the third-placed Copa Libertadores to qualify for the round.
YOU CAN SEE: Universitario sweeps his group in the Copa Sudamericana: the remaining games
When is the next varsity game in South American?
University of Sports must face Goiás in the next round South American Cup 2023. This duel is scheduled for Tuesday May 23rd from 17:00 (Peruvian time) in Brazilian territory and will be broadcast by DirecTV Sports. The Creams will be looking to salvage at least a point to stay ahead of their series.
Prince Harry shared a joke with Jack Brooksbank at Westminster Abbey today as the Duke of Sussex took his seat at his father’s coronation.
Lipreader Jacqui Press revealed what she thought the prince, who arrived in the UK from California on Friday morning, said to Princess Eugenie’s husband during the exchange.
The press said the conversation appeared light-hearted as they awaited the start of the historic occasion where Harry may have spoken about an event on Sunday.
She claimed the prince, who is not at the service with the Duchess of Sussex or their two children, smiled at Mr Brooksbank and said: “That’s funny, mmm interesting.”
In response to an unidentified question from Mr Brooksbrook, Prince Harry said: “Around a quarter to four?”
Mr Brooksbank then replied, “Oh really, when?” to which the duke replied, “I think tomorrow…”
Prince Harry was seen chatting to Jack Brooksbank as he entered the Abbey; Lip reader Jacqui Press told Web the couple had a lighthearted conversation
Upon arriving at the Abbey, the Duke of Sussex also chatted with Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, Princess Beatrice’s husband
Prince Harry flew to the UK on Friday morning and was given a warm welcome by members of the royal family outside Westminster Abbey today
Earlier, Prince Harry, who chatted with both Prince Edward and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi on his way in, addressed the well-wishers and the community, saying: “Morning, morning, how are you?”
One person in the crowd said to him: “You look smart,” says Press, as the prince walked into the abbey in a suit and boots for his father’s coronation.
The Duke of Sussex sat between Princess Eugenie’s husband, Jack Brooksbank, and Princess Alexandra, the late Queen’s cousin, who has not worked as a royal for ten years.
They were joined by Prince Andrew’s daughters Eugenie, 33, and Beatrice, 34, and her husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi.
The Duke of Sussex sat between Princess Eugenie’s husband, Jack Brooksbank, and Princess Alexandra, the late Queen’s cousin, who has not worked as a royal for ten years
Catch up time: Prince Harry and Princess Beatrice walk in front of Westminster Abbey
Prince Harry was invited to lunch at Buckingham Palace today following the historic coronation of his father King Charles III at Westminster Abbey, it has been reported.
However, it is not yet known if the Duke of Sussex, 38, will accept as he is expected to return to California to meet his wife Meghan Markle to celebrate their son Archie’s fourth birthday.
The invitation is seen by many as an olive branch from Charles after Harry’s explosive memoir Spare left several members of the royal family reeling – most notably his brother Prince William.
Only the senior working royals had a front row seat at the historic ceremony: Image: Prince William and Princess Catherine of Wales and their children Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis
Thousands gathered on the Mall this morning as the fateful day of Charles III. started. Just over 2,000 people descended on Westminster Abbey this morning for the historic first coronation of a British monarch in 70 years at Westminster Abbey.
The monarch has been an heir since he was three years old and is now ready to finally face his destiny day with the woman he loves by his side. VIP guests began queuing a mile from the abbey from 6am to snag one of the 2,300 prime seats inside.
Charles is crowned in a Christian ceremony dating back 1,000 years on a day dripping with glorious pageantry. It will also spotlight Britain’s place on the world stage.
His family, including Prince Andrew and Princess Anne, enjoyed dinner at the Mayfair Club Oswald last night. Mike and Zara Tindall were out until 2am. Prince Harry flew in from Los Angeles yesterday for his 24-hour trip. Last night it emerged he was relegated to the third tier of the Abbey with other non-working royals.
Around 100 million viewers worldwide watch on television and around two million people – from all corners of the UK, Commonwealth and the world – attend the historic event in London.
The king’s guests arrived at the abbey from 7am – four hours before the ceremony. Around 100 heads of state are in London, with representatives from 203 countries taking part.