Bolsonaro’s secretary, Mário Frias, is upset with the imitation of Adnet and swears: ‘Bobão!’



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The special secretary of Culture, Mario Frías, was irritated by an imitation made by Marcelo Adnet and used his Instagram page to attack the comedian. “A loose boy with no future (…) Bobão,” Frías wrote among other attacks and curses. Adnet made a parody of the video of the government of Jair Bolsonaro starring the secretary who proudly announces a series called “A heroic people.” The parody is available on Globoplay.

In the original recording, published by the Ministry of Communication (Secom) last Thursday (3), Mario Frías appears walking through the Senate Museum, in Brasilia, in the middle of an apotheotic soundtrack and with a nationalist speech. The actor says that he has the objective of telling the history of Brazilians and appears observing works of art and historical pieces that are not identified by the production.

In Adnet’s imitation, Frías appears lost without knowing any of the symbols of the identity of the Brazilian people that appear in the images. “We will discover together, as heroes that we are, what each of these symbols of our culture means,” says the character in the sketch.

The parody was made in the framework of “Sit at home with Marcelo Adnet” in which the comedian imitates various characters. The sketch is part of a humorous version of the “Confidential Archive” of “Domingão do Faustão”, in which the guest is President Jair Bolsonaro. The video also includes imitations of lawyers Frederick Wassef and Fabrício Queiroz.

In a video about Brazilian heroes, Mario Frías appears before a portrait of a Belgian king

Chosen as the setting for the recording of the presentation of the web series “A heroic people”, produced by the Ministry of Communication (Secom) and “starring” by Mario Frías, special secretary of Culture, the Senate Museum was created in 1991 to receive the collection of art and furniture kept between 1925 and 1960 in the Monroe Palace, where the legislative house operated, before being demolished in 1976. The institution is responsible for more than three thousand articles, which are also kept in parliamentary offices and official residences. The collection includes works by Brazilian artists of international importance, such as Di Cavalcanti (1887-1976), Djanira (1914-1979), Burle Marx (1909-1994) and Anna Bella Geiger, as well as projects signed by the architect Oscar Niemeyer (1907 -2012).

To compose the video images, the production sought more academic works, whose solemn aesthetics reinforced the superb tone of the work, which, in the words of Frías, aims to narrate “a story as beautiful and grand as it is despised and vilified by years of destruction” . of national identity. “Curiously, one of the prominent screens in the recording, with the secretary posing in front, represents a Belgian king. The” Portrait of King Albert of Belgium “was painted in 1920 by his compatriot Jacques Madyol (1871- 1950) and later donated to the Brazilian Senate.

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