Donald Trump: an Improbable Hit of Brazil’s Carnaval

President Donald Trump has become one of the new stars of Brazil’s Carnaval, with masks of his face on sale in the costume stores in São Paulo and appearing everywhere at the street fetes preceding the “world’s biggest party,” which starts this weekend.

Trump masks are one of the new – and very popular – attractions along March 25 Street in downtown Sao Paulo, full of costume stores and where each day hundreds, flock to purchase items for their Carnaval outfits.

With his blond hair and his orange-tinted face, a Trump mask is prominently featured in the display window of an enormous store selling all sorts of costumes, alongside those of other important politicians like his predecessor, Barack Obama, and former Brazilian President Lula da Silva.

“We’ve already done other presidents like (Bill) Clinton, Barack Obama and now we’re also including Trump because he’s one of the most controversial,” said the owner of the Festas e Fantasias store, Pierre Sfeir, a Lebanese resident.

There are also masks of late Cuban leader Fidel Castro and other even more controversial figures like former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, but the one Brazilians seem to prefer this year is that of the 45th US president.

The store ordered a mold of Trump’s face to be made in the US and using it produced about 20,000 masks of the president, which have also been selling like hotcakes at other festivals, like Halloween.

Sfeir said that it’s more economical to make the rubberized masks in his Sao Paulo store than to import them from other countries like China due to customs duties. The plastic masks are being sold in Brazil for about 7 reais (about US$2.30).

Some Brazilians used their creativity and wrote on their costumes some of the more controversial proposals of the US President, including the plan to build a wall separating Mexico and the United States.

On the streets of Rio de Janeiro, a group of young people, wearing Mexican hats, came out on the streets holding a screen with bricks, while one of them, well-dressed and with a yellow wig, imitated the American leader.

In Olinda, in Brazil’s Northeast, Trump will be on the streets of the city during Carnaval in the shape of a giant doll, alongside other politicians and familiar faces from the Carwash corruption scandal, such as the young prosecutor Deltan Dallagnol.

Condoms Galore

About 77 million condoms will be distributed throughout Brazil during Carnaval as part of a campaign to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, official sources said.

The distribution will be done by health authorities during the five days that festivities will last. Even though Brazilians have already been celebrating for weeks, Carnaval officially begins on Friday.

“We make an appeal especially to young people so that they wear a condom. There is a very large increase of HIV infection among young people, particularly between the ages 15 to 24”, said Minister Ricardo Barros.

According to several studies, Brazil recorded in recent years a decline in regular use of condoms among young people during casual sex, which went from 58.4% in 2004 to 56.6% in 2013.

MP/Bzz

Tags:

You May Also Like

Lula meets the masses - Ricardo Stuckert/Instituto Lula

Lula Goes Back to His Roots in Effort to Win Once Again Brazil’s Presidency

The former President of Brazil and founder of the Workers Party, Luiz Inácio Lula ...

Victoria Regia and other Amazonian plants species

New Inventory Lowers the Number of Amazonian Trees Species from 16,200 to 6,700

Scientists report that the Amazon region has more than 6,700 species of native trees, ...

Brazilian Sex Muse Dresses in Paint to Celebrate Rio Olympics

The Rio Olympics has their “sex muse” promoted by Playboy magazine, Mexico edition, with ...

Lake Mauá is the second lake to dry up completely in the East Zone of Manaus because of the severe outflow

Hit by Drought, the Amazon Is Desperately in Need of a Plan to Save Its Biome

The drought plaguing the Amazon is a worrying portrait of the climate challenges facing ...

Brazilian poet Leonardo Lopes da Silva and his book

A Wandering Brazilian Poet Who Sees His Cultural Upbringing as Blessing and Curse

“Name at least one way to tame the upsurges of tiresome suns, though the ...

The Alvorada Palace and its garden - Ichiro Guerra/PR

Priest Couldn’t Get Rid of Evil Spirit. So Brazil’s President Moved Out of His Palace

In an interview to weekly news magazine Veja, Brazilian President, Michel Temer, confided what ...

Military operation at favela Kelson's, in Rio de Janeiro. - Fernando Frazão/ABr

Brazil Breaks Own Record with 63,880 Murders in 2017 or 175 per Day

Brazil had a record number of murders last year, with homicides rising 3.7% from ...

Verse and Reverse

It is so rare to see Portuguese-language poems translated into English and published in ...