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Local Ana Machado said: “I have to say I admire the strength she showed carrying on. A lot of people would have lost it out of desperation.”
Brazilian beauty Tarine Lopes bravely carried on dancing as she kept the skimpy strip of fabric pinned in place with her hand
THIS is the shocking moment a carnival queen flashed more than a smile when her tiny thong came undone as she paraded in front of thousands.
Brazilian beauty Tarine Lopes bravely carried on dancing as she kept the skimpy strip of wayward fabric pinned in place with her hand.
At one point she turned round and danced with her back to the camera in a desperate attempt to readjust the skimpy strip of green tape over her private parts.
The close shave occurred last on Saturday night as Tarine, star of the X-9 Paulistana samba school in Sao Paulo, performed with her school at the famous Sambrodromo do Anhembi.
Tarine, from the city of Porto Seguro in the north-eastern state of Bahia, admitted afterwards: “Unfortunately my thong came unstuck in the middle of the avenue but people couldn’t stop. I had to keep on dancing while I tried to keep it from falling off completely.”
In an improvised interview in which she wrapped a shirt round her wait after finishing to use as a makeshift skirt, she added: “I was really worried at first, but I carried on with my samba and did what I could so as not to stand out too much.”
Shortly before parading the carnival queen showed off her breath-taking outfit - with tape strategically wrapped round her right leg doing just enough to cover up her modesty and leaving her right spray-painted right exposed.
She boasted: “It just covers up the bare minimum” as she revealed she had prepared for her performance with lots of healthy food and exercise - and water and a rice and beans meal shortly before heading to the sambodrome.
Annual carnivals take place around the world this month, with those in Brazil and especially the one in Rio de Janeiro attracting international celebrities.
Samantha Flores, 37, the first ever British samba queen , stole the show on Friday as she paraded through Rio for the first time as the principal muse for the Imperio de Tijuca school.
The Londoner moved to Brazil in 2006 after giving up her job as a PR exec. She said afterwards: “It’s a privilege and responsibly to be leading the carnival.”
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To Brazil, carnival's nude bodies don't always spell sex

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RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL — The mere idea that U.S. soldiers on leave from Iraq see Rio's carnival as a free-floating sex party has Brazilians outraged.
A report in Britain's the Guardian newspaper that American soldiers are looking to Rio for rest and recreation — especially sex tourism — prompted many Brazilians to say that the gringos have it all wrong.
Despite all the jiggling, sweating flesh on display Saturday, Brazilians say the annual spectacle — which is expected to draw 700,000 revelers through Tuesday — isn't all about sex. It is, they say, a celebration of the body, closer in spirit to the Olympics than a strip bar.
If there were any U.S. soldiers in the crowds that mobbed downtown Rio on Saturday, dancing with the traditional Black Ball band, they were impossible to spot.
But for those looking for companionship at carnival, opportunities seemed to abound. "If they came here from Iraq they wouldn't go back!" said Brian Simon , 43, an ex-Marine from New Jersey who was surrounded by barely dressed women as he drank at an outdoor bar on Copacabana beach.
Brazilians say the nakedness at carnival is about sensuality, not just sex, and nudity carries a different connotation in Brazil than in many other countries.
"Here, nakedness doesn't only lead to sexuality, it leads you to aesthetic appreciation," said Roberto Da Matta , a retired University of Notre Dame sociology professor and author of the book Carnivals, Rogues and Heroes: An Interpretation of the Brazilian Dilemma .
"A woman is dancing, but it's not pornographic," he said. "It's a collective experience of reconsidering bodies, like at the Olympic Games ."
Da Matta says his granddaughters watch the nearly nude samba dancers in TV ads during the run-up to carnival, grading them like judges at a gymnastic competition or in the way Rio's Samba parade is judged.
The annual Samba parade, which takes place on Sunday and Monday nights, is the high point of the festival. Vegas-ready floats and glitter-covered dancers are broadcast live across the nation, and fans root for their favorite samba groups with a passion normally reserved for soccer teams.
This year, the parade features 13 samba groups, each producing 80-minute-long spectacles costing upward of a million dollars.
Total nudity is prohibited, and a less-than-perfect score from the exacting panel of judges can doom a group's chances.
There are other limits, too, in this predominantly Roman Catholic country.
Toplessness is still considered taboo on the city's beaches, although many people came out to greet Pope John Paul II in bikinis and thongs some years back. And in 2005, the Rio state government banned postcards showing bikini-clad women in photo montages or outside natural beach settings.
"Showing women in skimpy outfits, usually from the rear, is a disservice to our country," the law's sponsor, state Sen. Alice Tamborindeguy , said at the time.
Still, most Brazilians don't duck the issue of sex.
The government distributes millions of free condoms at carnival time and talks frankly about sexually transmitted diseases.
Experts credit the Brazilians' openness about their bodies and sex for helping to contain the AIDS epidemic in South America's largest country.
"I'm entirely comfortable dressed like this," said this year's Carnival Queen Jacqueline Faria, 23, wearing little more than a rhinestone-encrusted push-up bra and a sequin-spotted, see-through skirt revealing a tiny G-string.
"This is Rio de Janeiro; it's all about the beach and sun. We don't wear many clothes here at any time during the year," Faria explains. "But Rio de Janeiro isn't just about bum bum. It has lots of other culture."
On Friday, though, there was plenty of bumping, grinding and "bum bum."
Tens of thousands headed to the hilltop neighborhood of Santa Teresa to celebrate with the irreverent carnival group Carmelitas, whose members dress up as nuns. Others fell in behind impromptu blocos , as the street carnival groups are known, tying up traffic across the city.
For some, the celebrations have been overshadowed this year by rising crime, including drug-gang battles and last week's dragging death of 6-year-old Joao Helio Fernandes . The killing of the boy, who was dragged for four miles on the side of a car after it was stolen, shocked a city familiar with violence.
On Friday night, several blocos paid homage to Fernandes by distributing white flowers in his memory.
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Calabar — The costume of Brazilian women participants at the last Calabar Carnival, which reveals more than it covers, has generated controversy. Religious leaders in the state are asking whether the state was better off spiritually one month after the carnival.
Many did not believe their eyes, but truly amongst the celebrants and cultural troupes from within and outside Nigeria who took part in the just concluded Calabar Carnival, the Brazilian women were virtually naked during the carnival. Most of them marched and danced round the major routes of Calabar seductively, from the popular Millennium Park (the starting point of the Carnival) through such roads like Mary Slessor, Marian Roads and IBB Way into the UJ Esuene stadium.
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