OK, so you want to know something really funny? I tried posting a short little video clip of some girls, somewhat scantily-clad-but-still-clothed, dancing on a float to really loud music to give you, dear readers, a small taste of what the Carnaval parade last night was like. But Blogger turned me down. Thus I have now been rejected for attempting to post porn on a website! I never thought I'd live to see the day! Wow.
So instead I'll post a couple of much-less-interesting still shots and tell you a wee little bit about Carnaval (spelled correctly, by the way, even though my fingers want to type CarnIval with an "i" every single time).
The parade started with the queens of carnaval and the queens of the llamadas riding on floats. Trucks advertising Pilsen Beer and Antel (the national phone company) followed. Marchers carried large horizontal banners featuring various sponsors and kids from the audience would lay down in the street so the banners would pass over them. Throughout the whole thing, there are vendors hawking their wares walking up and down the sides of the street; they are selling various food items, like roasted meat, potato chips, and drinks, or they are selling knick-knacks like pins and/or wands that light up or blink and Carnaval masks ranging from the traditional to Disney characters and aliens. It was fun seeing the murga groups in their elaborate costumes, but the parade wasn't really the best forum for hearing what I understand to be their excellent singing. Some rock bands played amplified music from the top of trucks, and that worked well. The candombe drum troupes were the most exciting, but they were fewer and farther between than I had hoped. I hear we're in for some candombe treats at the beginning of February, however. [The second picture shows a few members of our group, and you can best see Mike, Nobuki, Colter, and Kelsey; we paid for seating, as opposed to standing forever and ever along the sides of the streets.]
During the LOOOOOOOONNNNNG spaces between groups, kids sprayed each other with foam from aerosol cans and threw confetti. Most of the confetti, rather than glittery or papery, was little styrofoam pellets, either colorful or plain white. We all looked like we had odd dandruff before too long. The kids also sprayed foam on the floats and on the dancers. Performers later in the night fared better since the kids had depleted most of their ammunition. We were surprised to see that there were far more men in the parade than women.
[The really blurry picture is there to show you how it FELT when we were in the crowds, trying to get through to anywhere.]