viernes, 17 de mayo de 2013


Did you know that there are foods that give us negative calories?


yes! There are some foods that make us slim. how can it be?
All foods give us calories, but there are some ones that need more energy to make the digest. This means that our body expends more calories than you eat with certain foods. But to get the maximum benefit from them should be eaten alone, without mixed by other with more calories.
that kind of food are:

VEGETABLES










asparagus
beet
broccoli
cabbage carrot
cauliflower
celery
chicory
pepper
cucumber
Endive
garlic
lettuce
onion
spinach
pumpkin
zucchini

FRUITS









apple
grapefruit
lemon
handle
orange
pineapple
raspberry
strawberry
tangerine
blueberry

jueves, 16 de mayo de 2013

SHREK...


Real or unreal?

Did you know that Shrek is based on a real person?
Shrek is famous around the world and he's the ogre loved by all.



Can you imagine what it would be if it existed in the real world?.  There is really no need to imagine it would be like, because the real Shrek was real. The character of Shrek, though unrecognized by Dreamworks, is based on Maurice Tillet, a French fighter who, suffered a serious disease affecting normal body growth, and so, he looks like an ogre.


Maurice lived a very few years, but he mastered 14 languages​​, in addition to becoming a poet. But he also had a dream: to be an actor. He moved to the United States where he got a job, the only one who could get, was a professional wrestler and was conoción as "the ogre of quadrilateral" and then as "the French Angel".







I've found an article that say why Dreamworks will never declare that they copied the image 
of Maurice Tillet:

The likely reason Dreamworks has never owned up to using 
Maurice for Shrek.

The problem for Dreamworks is this:
Those upset by utilizing Maurice appearance and character for their film may have a valid 
argument in the following:
There is a big difference between a man choosing to utilize his own image and condition to 
market himself to make money to live, and that of a production company creating a fictional 
cartoon character for a film.  
It would be too easy for people to go after Dreamworks for using Maurice, a suffering 
human being, who died from his illness, for an Ogre.
Acromegaly is a very personal disfiguring illness.  It comes with both physical and emotional 
consequences that are extremely challenging.  Those that have to live with this condition would 
find it very distasteful that after their death their image might be used to create a cartoon Ogre.  

There is a counter argument here - Please consider the following: 
Maurice himself marketed himself as a monster. He was a performer and from all indications he 
enjoyed performing to that role.  Although we cannot know for certain, I believe Maurice would 
have been proud to have been the inspiration for such a noble character, and positive societal 
influence as Shrek has become.  

Dreamworks really should acknowledge how Maurice influenced both the physical attributes 
of Shrek, and the whole tone of the character and the film.  This seems the proper way to pay 
tribute to how one man became more than himself and became the inspiration for one of our 
most beloved cartoon characters.

miércoles, 15 de mayo de 2013

Walt Disney



Urban Legends



It is really Walt Disney freeze?


Walter Elias "Walt" Disney (December 5, 1901 – December 15, 1966) was an American animator, film producer, director, screenwriter, voice actor, entrepreneur, entertainer, international icon, and philanthropist, well known for his influence in the field of entertainment during the 20th century. 
A long-standing urban legend maintains that Disney was cryonically frozen, and his frozen corpse stored beneath the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland, but Disney's remains were cremated on December 17, 1966, and his ashes interred at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park inGlendale, California. The first known human cryonic freezing was in January 1967, more than a month after Disney's death.
According to "at least one Disney publicist", as reported in the French magazine Ici Paris in 1969, the source of the rumor was a group of Disney Studio animators with "a bizarre sense of humor" who were playing a final prank on their late boss.
His daughter Diane wrote in 1972, "There is absolutely no truth to the rumor that my father, Walt Disney, wished to be frozen. I doubt that my father had ever heard of cryonics.
Legal documents show that his ashes were laid to rest two days subsequent to his cremation in a marked tomb at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Glendale, California. Walt Disney died on the 5th of December, 1966, but the rumours have long continued that his body was cryogenically frozen.