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2025 Antipolo local elections | Mayoral election | Mayoral election
Mayor Jun Ynares ran for his fourth term in office. Ynares won the elections with a huge margin against his closest opponent, Red Llaga. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Vice Mayoral election | Vice Mayoral election
First District Board Member Randy Puno won in a huge landslide against his opponent, Ronaldo Jesse Leis. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Provincial board elections | Provincial board elections |
2025 Antipolo local elections | First District | First District
Reynaldo Nicholas "Nick" Puno won the elections unopposed. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Second District | Second District
Second District Board Member and former Mayor Danilo "Nilo" Leyble won in a huge landslide against his opponent, Emmanuel Yator. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Congressional elections | Congressional elections |
2025 Antipolo local elections | First District | First District
First District Representative Ronnie Puno won the elections. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Second District | Second District
Second District Representative Romeo Acop won unopposed. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | City council elections | City council elections
Italicized candidates that ran for re-election. |
2025 Antipolo local elections | First District | First District
|-
|bgcolor=black colspan=5| |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Second District | Second District
|-
|bgcolor=black colspan=5| |
2025 Antipolo local elections | References | References |
2025 Antipolo local elections | Table of Content | Draft article, Background, Mayoral election, Vice Mayoral election, Provincial board elections, First District, Second District, Congressional elections, First District, Second District, City council elections, First District, Second District, References |
Category:International water polo competitions hosted by Singapore | [[Category:International water polo competitions by host | Singapore
Category:Water polo competitions in Singapore
Water polo |
Category:International water polo competitions hosted by Singapore | Table of Content | [[Category:International water polo competitions by host |
Category:Water polo competitions in Singapore | [[Category:International water polo competitions by host | Singapore
Category:Water polo competitions in Singapore
Water polo |
Category:Water polo competitions in Singapore | Table of Content | [[Category:International water polo competitions by host |
Category:Water polo at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships | Navseasoncats |
Water polo
World Aquatics Championships
2025 |
Category:Water polo at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships | Table of Content | Navseasoncats |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Short description |
Atlantic Spine Center is a medical practice based in New Jersey and New York that specializes in minimally invasive spinal treatments. The center offers surgical and non-surgical care for various spinal conditions, focusing on reducing recovery time and improving patient outcomes. |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | History | History
Atlantic Spine Center was founded by Dr. Kaixuan Liu, a board-certified spine specialist with training in endoscopic spine surgery and molecular medicine. |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Services | Services
The center provides a range of minimally invasive treatments including:
Endoscopic spine surgery
Robotic and Endoscopic Lumbar Interbody Expanded Fusion (RELIEF Surgery℠)
Artificial disc replacement
Spinal injections
Radiofrequency nerve ablation
Spinal cord stimulator implantation
Chronic pain management
Minimally invasive spine surgery is often used to reduce hospital time and post-operative pain. |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Conditions Treated | Conditions Treated
Atlantic Spine Center treats a variety of spinal disorders, such as:
Herniated discs
Spinal stenosis
Sciatica
Spondylolisthesis
Degenerative disc disease
Foraminal stenosis
Failed back surgery syndrome
Compression fractures
Facet joint syndrome
Radiculopathy
General lifestyle habits and sleep positions may also influence chronic back pain, which the center helps educate patients on. |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Locations | Locations
As of 2025, Atlantic Spine Center operates in:
West Orange, New Jersey
Edison, New Jersey
New York City, New York |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Online Presence | Online Presence
Atlantic Spine Center also maintains a digital presence, including a YouTube channel with over 112,000 subscribers as of 2025. |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Medical Team | Medical Team
The center's team includes:
Dr. Kaixuan Liu – Founder and Endoscopic Spine Surgeon
Dr. Praveen Kadimcherla – Orthopedic Spine Surgeon and Medical Director
Dr. Fabien Bitan – Orthopedic Spine Surgeon at Atlantic Spine Center and Chief of Spine Surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. He is a recognized expert in spinal instrumentation and deformity correction, including scoliosis and kyphosis. Dr. Bitan was the lead investigator for the FDA SB Charité artificial disc replacement trial and was the only surgeon in the Northeast permitted to use the technology prior to FDA approval in 2004. He has been named one of New York Magazine’s “Best Doctors” for 15 consecutive years and a “Super Doctor” by The New York Times Magazine for 14 years.
Dr. Kaliq Chang – Interventional Pain Management Specialist
Dr. Jason Arora – Interventional Pain and Sports Medicine
Dr. Chang has contributed expert opinions in national health publications on spinal health in older adults. |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | External Links | External Links
Official Website
Discover Spinal Care – YouTube
Instagram
Atlantic Spine Center on YouTube |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | References | References |
Draft:Atlantic Spine Center | Table of Content | Short description, History, Services, Conditions Treated, Locations, Online Presence, Medical Team, External Links, References |
Muguiro (footballer) | Short description | Martín José Nicolas Mariano Muguiro Aguirrebarrena, better known as Muguiro (12 September 1905 – 3 January 1983), was a Spanish footballer who played as a forward for CA Osasuna between 1922 and 1936. |
Muguiro (footballer) | Early life | Early life
Martín José Muguiro was born in the Navarre town of Aldatz on 12 September 1905, as the second of five siblings from the marriage formed by Pedro Muguiro Huici (1872–) and Magdalena Aguirrebarrena Tapia 1872–). |
Muguiro (footballer) | Sporting career | Sporting career
Muguiro began his career at Osasuna during the 1922-1923 season, with whom he played for over a decade, until the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936. Having started as a left winger, he later played in the center forward position before settling as a defender. This versatility was also clear off the field, as he performed in other modalities, such as Basque pelota and athletics, where he particularly stood out in throwing competitions due to the strength of his arm, winning the discus and javelin throw, plus the shot put, in the 1925 Navarrese Championships. He became such a renowned javelin thrower that the local press even compared him to the national stars, and on one occasion, he participated in an throwing exhibition at San Mamés, which was held during the break of a friendly match against Athletic Bilbao.
In 1928, Muguiro was a member of the Osasuna team that participated in the inaugural edition of the Tercera División, which ended in relegation, but the club bounced back the following season. In the 1931–32 season, he worked as a player-coach, guiding his side to a promotion to the Segunda División, doing so without losing a single home match. Together with José Antonio Urreaga, the Bienzobas brothers (Anastasio and Francisco), and the Urdiroz brothers (Emilio and Martín), he helped Osasuna to a runner-up finish at the 1934–35 Segunda División, thus achieving promotion to the top flight for the first time in the club's history. In his last season at the club (1935–36), he played a total of 9 La Liga matches.
Despite sharing a dressing room with professionals, Muguiro remained faithful to his amateur spirit and was never paid, as he played football purely for the pleasure of it, unrelated to official status. During the War, both he and his fellow Osasuna teammate José Antonio Urreaga were wounded by shrapnel, being discharged from the Pamplona Hospital in January 1939. These injuries forced him to retire from football. |
Muguiro (footballer) | Death | Death
Muguiro died on 3 January 1983, at the age of 77. At the end of his life, he filed a contentious administrative appeal, which was only resolved in April 1983, a few months after he died, being described as a "Infantry Sergeant and Permanently Disqualified Knight". He married Maria Jesus Meoqui, with whom he had three children, including María Ángeles, who was a distinguished pentathlete in the 1960s, standing out also on the javelin and the shot put, setting a Navarrese record in the latter event which stood for 14 years. |
Muguiro (footballer) | Notes | Notes |
Muguiro (footballer) | References | References |
Muguiro (footballer) | External links | External links
Category:1905 births
Category:1983 deaths
Category:Spanish men's footballers
Category:Men's association football forwards
Category:Footballers from Navarre
Category:La Liga players
Category:Segunda División players
Category:Tercera División players
Category:CA Osasuna players
Category:Spanish football managers
Category:CA Osasuna managers
Category:Spanish male javelin throwers
Category:Spanish military personnel of the Spanish Civil War (Republican faction)
Category:20th-century Spanish sportsmen |
Muguiro (footballer) | Table of Content | Short description, Early life, Sporting career, Death, Notes, References, External links |
Muguiro (surname) | '''Muguiro''' | Muguiro is a Spanish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Fernando Muguiro (1897–1969), Spanish footballer who played for Real Madrid
(born 1942), Spanish footballer
(born 1786), Spanish merchant, banker, and politician
María del Pilar de Muguiro y Beruete, 1st Duchess of Villafranca de los Caballeros, an Spanish noblewoman
Martín José Muguiro (1905–1983), Spanish footballer and manager
(1880–1954), Spanish diplomat |
Muguiro (surname) | See also | See also
, a town in Navarre sometimes written as Muguiro
Category:Surnames of Spanish origin |
Muguiro (surname) | Table of Content | '''Muguiro''', See also |
Category:21st-century New Zealand philosophers | philosophers by nationality and century category header | |
Category:21st-century New Zealand philosophers | Table of Content | philosophers by nationality and century category header |
Maestro (surname) | '''Maestro''' | Maestro is a Spanish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bassi Maestro (born 1973), Italian rapper, deejay, beatmaker, and producer
Fernando Maestro (born 1974), Spanish retired footballer
Ignacio Maestro Puch (born 2003), Argentine professional footballer
Iván Maestro (born 1988), Spanish motorcycle racer
Johnny Maestro (1939–2010), American pop singer
Mía Maestro (born 1978), Argentine actress and singer
Nestor El Maestro (born 1983), Serbian football manager
Rolando Del Maestro (born 1949), Italian-born Canadian neurosurgeon
Roser Maestro (born 1988), Spanish communist politician
Virginia Maestro (born 1982), Spanish singer-songwriter |
Maestro (surname) | See also | See also
Maestro (disambiguation)
Maestro Curtis (born 1956), American musician, composer, author, producer, arranger, and music executive
Maestro Harrell (born 1991), American DJ, singer, rapper, actor, and record producer
Category:Surnames of Spanish origin |
Maestro (surname) | Table of Content | '''Maestro''', See also |
Category:2025 World Aquatics Championships | Cat main | Category:World Aquatics Championships
World Aquatics Championships
Aquatics Championships
Category:International aquatics competitions hosted by Singapore
Aquatics |
Category:2025 World Aquatics Championships | Table of Content | Cat main |
Category:July 2025 sports events in Singapore | [[Category:International sports competitions hosted by Singapore | Aquatics
Singapore |
Category:July 2025 sports events in Singapore | Table of Content | [[Category:International sports competitions hosted by Singapore |
Draft:Zelda Claje | AFC submission |
Zelda Claje
Zelda Claje (born 1993) is a speculative fiction writer known for her psychologically probing and socially reflective short stories. She is best known for her dystopian short story The Robots Bleed, which explores the human cost of technological advancement and the emotional void created by artificial perfection. Claje's work often centers on themes of memory, identity, and the erosion of humanity in the face of progress.
Early Life and Education
Very little is publicly known about Claje’s early life, and she is known to be intensely private. She has mentioned in a rare interview with Analog Futures Review that she “grew up in a town where silence was the loudest sound,” alluding to a childhood spent in a highly surveilled or emotionally restrained environment.
Claje attended a liberal arts college in the Pacific Northwest, where she studied literature and cognitive science. Her academic background in human psychology and neural technologies later informed the thematic underpinnings of her fiction.
Career
Zelda Claje began her literary career in the early 2020s publishing short fiction in online literary magazines and experimental zines. Her breakout piece, The Robots Bleed, was lauded for its nuanced treatment of post-humanism, memory manipulation, and emotional estrangement caused by ubiquitous neural chip implants.
The Robots Bleed follows the character Finnick, a young man struggling with the effects of a malfunctioning brain chip in a society where memory and identity are fully digitized. As his connection to the centralized system fails, he begins to feel the raw, painful edges of human emotion and longs for a life outside the synthetic norms imposed by technological refinement.
Claje’s writing style has been described as "emotionally immersive, philosophically inquisitive, and lyrically bleak." Critics have compared her to writers such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Ray Bradbury, and Ted Chiang.
Themes and Style
Claje is recognized for combining speculative elements with deep psychological introspection. Her stories frequently question what it means to be human in an age of artificial enhancement, and she often uses recurring motifs like broken machines, hollow smiles, and ritualized domesticity to underscore the alienation of her characters.
In The Robots Bleed, breakfast becomes a powerful metaphor for authenticity and memory. Claje’s use of intimate domestic scenes to explore systemic dehumanization has been widely praised.
Reception
While Claje has not published a full-length novel, The Robots Bleed has been included in several anthologies of contemporary science fiction and is studied in undergraduate literature and ethics courses. The story’s final line—“These robots still bleed”—has been cited in think pieces and academic articles as a modern restatement of the classic philosophical question: Can a machine possess a soul?
Personal Life
Zelda Claje maintains a low public profile and rarely participates in interviews or literary festivals. She is believed to reside in Oregon, though she has also reportedly lived in Montreal and Edinburgh. She has stated that writing is her “way of bleeding out without harm.”
Selected Works
The Robots Bleed (2024) – Short story, originally published in Neon Syntax
Home Is Where the Error Is (2025) – Unconfirmed forthcoming novella
Echo Terms (2023) – Short story in Circuit Dwellers Quarterly
Legacy
Claje has been credited with reinvigorating speculative short fiction through an intensely emotional and poetic lens. The Robots Bleed is often cited in discussions about digital ethics, the role of memory in identity, and the social consequences of technological determinism. |
Draft:Zelda Claje | References | References |
Draft:Zelda Claje | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
Amphissa reticulata | Short description | Amphissa reticulata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Columbellidae, the dove snails. |
Amphissa reticulata | Description | Description
The length of the shell attains 17 mm.
(original description) The shell is of a uniform whitish color. It has a very acute spire, and shows fine regular corded spiral sculpture crossed by about 17 nearly straight axial narrow ribs. |
Amphissa reticulata | Distribution | Distribution
This species is occurs from Kodiak Island, Alaska, to Islas San Benito, Baja California at depths between 15 m and 300 m. |
Amphissa reticulata | References | References |
Amphissa reticulata | External links | External links
Florida Museum of Natural History: images
reticulata
Category:Gastropods described in 1916 |
Amphissa reticulata | Table of Content | Short description, Description, Distribution, References, External links |
Template:2022 Ontario general election/Dufferin-Caledon | # | redirect Template:2022 Ontario general election/Dufferin—Caledon |
Template:2022 Ontario general election/Dufferin-Caledon | Table of Content | # |
Draft:1808 the Nuncio in Germany began | AfC submission | In 1808, Germany began the war between Torino and Milan. In 1808 Alexnder Hamilton was named the Federalist to England. Meanwhile, Thomas Jefferson was re-elected President. In 1809, Beethoven composed Symphony #7. In 1809, Gustav Mahler's grandfather was born. In 1809 Napoleon won the Battle of Austerlitz. |
Draft:1808 the Nuncio in Germany began | References | References
Paul Mark, Battle of Austerlitz
Steven Ambrose, the Louisiana Purchase
Vienna Classics, Mahler's grandfather
Horn overture, Ludwig, Von, Beethoven
Fur Elise, and Symphony #7 |
Draft:1808 the Nuncio in Germany began | Table of Content | AfC submission, References |
Category:Viscounts Hood | Articles related to people who held the title of | Articles related to people who held the title of Viscount Hood.
Category:Viscounts in the Peerage of Great Britain
Viscount |
Category:Viscounts Hood | Table of Content | Articles related to people who held the title of |
File:Romería Teaser.jpeg | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:Romería Teaser.jpeg | Summary | Summary |
File:Romería Teaser.jpeg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Romería Teaser.jpeg | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing |
Draft:Yussuf Naim Kly | AFC submission |
Yussuf Naim Kly (Columbia, South Carolina, United States of America, 26 October 1936 - Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada, 6 January 2011https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/G797-LQM/dr-yussuf-naim-kly-1936-2011) is the founder and chair of the International Human Rights Association of American Minorities (IHRAAM) and author of several books on human rights and social injustice. https://www.amazon.ca/stores/Yussuf-Naim-Kly/author/B001JS1HBI?ref=ap_rdr&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true. He retired from the University of Regina as a professor emeritus specializing in international minority rights |
Draft:Yussuf Naim Kly | Biography | Biography
Born on 26 October 1936 in Columbus, South Carolina, Yussuf Naim Kly's birth name was George Washington. His father and mother were Edward Nelson (1889-1988) Washington, and Anne Green (1902-1993) Washingtonhttps://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/G797-LQM/dr-yussuf-naim-kly-1936-2011. George never took kindly to his inherited slave surname of "Washington" and took measures to remove it by adopting a Muslim name -- Yussuf Naim Kly. Kly also had a sister, Shirley Ann Nelson Washington (1939-2018), an accomplished African American poet. He completed his elementary, high school, and college education in the United States. In 1966, Kly emigrated to Canadahttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/113628/phebert_1.pdf?sequence=1page 139, to serve as chairman of the Canadian branch of the Organization for African American Unity (O.A.A.U.) in Quebechttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/113628/phebert_1.pdf?sequence=1page 139. In Montreal, he worked for the John Howard Society of Quebec, attended McGill's School of Islamic Studies, and the University of Laval. He joined Dr. Clarence Bayne (1932-2024)cite web | url=https://www.concordia.ca/cunews/main/stories/2024/09/25/clarence-bayne-1932-2024-it-is-by-our-actions-that-we-define-ourselves-and-by-our-inaction-that-we-allow-others-to-define-us.html | title=Clarence Bayne (1932–2024): 'It is by our actions that we define ourselves and by our inaction that we allow others to define us' - Concordia University, founder and executive director of the Montreal based Research Institute of the National Black Coalitiion of Canada (1971) and befriended many Montreal ethnic activists, among them Serbs, Greeks and Roma. In 1974, he returned to the U.S., where he taught at the private African American Howard University in Washington, D.C..
Later, he returned to Canada as an associate professor of international law at the University of Regina. |
Draft:Yussuf Naim Kly | IHRAAM | IHRAAM
The International Human Rights Association of American Minorities (IHRAAM) was founded in 1985 at The Hague Academy of International Law in the Netherlands by three African American Ph.D. students Yvonne King, Charles Knox and Yussuf Naim Kly. Dr. Kly and IHRAAM brought the Rodney King case to world attention and justice. Through the international court, IHRAAM played a pivotal role in bringing the U.S. federal government to prosecute a separate civil rights trial against the four officers for police brutality .
Dr. Kly received a diploma in international law from the International Bar Association (IBA) in conjunction with the College of Law of London and Wales. Before retiring in Kelowna, he was a professor emeritus at the University of Regina. In 2000 and 2004, he attended UN-sponsored conferences in Geneva and met with Hans Köchler, Alfred-Maurice de Zayas, Majid Tramboo, and other civil rights activists from around the globe.
He was married to Diana Collier Klycite web | url=https://ihraam.org/about-ihraam/directorate/diana-collier-kly/ | title=Diana Collier Kly – IHRAAM, one of the current directors of the International Human Rights Association for American Minorities (IHRAAM).
Yussuf Naim Kly died on 6 January 2011 from congestive heart failure. |
Draft:Yussuf Naim Kly | Works | Works
The Invisible War: The African American Anti-Slavery Resistance from the Stono Rebellion through the Seminole Warshttps://www.amazon.ca/Dr-Y-N-Kly-ebook/dp/B08LKNY2RZ?ref_=ast_author_dp
The Black Book (1990)
Anti-Social Contract (1990)
A Popular Guide to Minority Rights (1995)
In Pursuit of an International Civil Tribunal on the Right to Self-Determination (2006)
The Regina Seminar on the Elimination of Weapons of Mass Destruction (2007)https://www.amazon.in/Regina-Seminar-Elimination-Weapons-Destruction/dp/0932863531
The U.S. Human Rights Foreign Policy, the Black Minority in the US, and International Law (1978)
International Law and the Black Minority in the U.S. (1985)
Revolution: Tragic Necessity (1984)
International Law and the Dalits in India |
Draft:Yussuf Naim Kly | References | References |
Draft:Yussuf Naim Kly | Table of Content | AFC submission, Biography, IHRAAM, Works, References |
Category:Recipients of the Order of Establishment | [[Category:Recipients of orders, decorations, and medals of Oman]] | Category:Recipients of orders, decorations, and medals of Oman |
Category:Recipients of the Order of Establishment | Table of Content | [[Category:Recipients of orders, decorations, and medals of Oman]] |
Draft:Chalia La Tour | AfC submission | Chalia La Tour is an American actress. |
Draft:Chalia La Tour | Life | Life
La Tour grew up in Stockton, California performing in churches and community theaters. Inspired by her mother’s career as a dancer and her siblings’ natural inclination towards music, La Tour felt it was important to forge her own artistic path. She started out participating in youth theater programs, eventually got accepted into the Yale School of Drama. |
Draft:Chalia La Tour | References | References |
Draft:Chalia La Tour | Table of Content | AfC submission, Life, References |
Draft:DeepGreenX | Draft topics | DeepGreenX Group Inc. is a South Korea-based technology and infrastructure company that operates at the intersection of green energy, artificial intelligence, and digital finance. Founded in 2020 and headquartered in Seoul, DeepGreenX uses AI and blockchain technology to convert sustainability data into certified digital financial instruments. The company operates across more than 20 cities on four continents. |
Draft:DeepGreenX | Overview | Overview
DeepGreenX’s core platform, offered as a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), enables the conversion of green data into tradable digital assets such as carbon credits, renewable energy certificates (RECs), and real-world asset (RWA) tokens. These digital financial products are designed to be transacted on global digital markets, including crypto exchanges and sustainability marketplaces.
DeepGreenX’s model relies on integrating asset digitization, AI analytics, and carbon monetization into a decentralized infrastructure network (DePIN). The company targets sectors such as green logistics, energy storage, carbon capture, and data centers. Revenue is expected from trading fees, data certification, and digital token issuance. |
Draft:DeepGreenX | Major Partnerships and Initiatives | Major Partnerships and Initiatives
In November 2024, DeepGreenX announced a strategic partnership with the Asia Development & Investment Bank (ADIB), which included a commitment of $140 billion in EPC and data infrastructure projects over six years. ADIB also acquired a 36% equity stake in DeepGreenX.
In November 2024, DeepGreenX partnered with Veea Inc. to roll out a $2.8 billion lease-financed AI-powered edge computing platform as part of a broader $10 billion investment in digital grid infrastructure. In January 2025, DeepGreenX and Sente Ventures launched a $25 billion green infrastructure investment program to support clean energy, smart grids, battery storage, and green data centers via their joint venture DXG-Hues. DeepGreenX furthermore partnered with Forest First International to launch a long-term development program in Indonesia’s Maluku region. The project involves exclusive 60-year rights to over 70 million hectares and aims to blend ecological protection with green digital finance infrastructure. |
Draft:DeepGreenX | Leadership | Leadership
The company is led by CEO Barclay Knapp, an American entrepreneur best known as the former CEO and co-founder of NTL Incorporated (now Virgin Media). |
Draft:DeepGreenX | References | References |
Draft:DeepGreenX | Table of Content | Draft topics, Overview, Major Partnerships and Initiatives, Leadership, References |
Draft:Jean-Gabriel Raynaud | AFC submission |
Jean-Gabriel Raynaud is a French video game music composer. He has worked on titles including League of Legends, Lineage W, Honor of Kings, Delta Force (2025 video game), and Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem, the latter featuring an eight-hour original soundtrackWolcen: Lords of Mayhem OST on Steam that received multiple award nominations. He co-founded the company Unique Horns Studios with his associate Cédric Baravaglio. |
Draft:Jean-Gabriel Raynaud | Nominations | Nominations
Year Award Category Project 2023 Jerry Goldsmith AwardsJerry Goldsmith Awards XV Winners Best Original Score for a Videogame Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem 2021 Game Audio Network Guild Awards2021 G.A.N.G. Awards: Nominations and Winners Best Music for an Indie Game Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem 2021 Game Audio Network Guild AwardsG.A.N.G. Awards: Full Nominee List – Variety Best Audio for an Indie Game Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem 2020 TIGA Awards2020 TIGA Awards Winners Best Audio Design Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem (nominated under the name Unique Horns Studios) 2020 Movie Music UK AwardsMovie Music UK Awards 2020 Best Original Score for a Video Game Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem 2020 NAVGTR Awards2020 NAVGTR Award Winners Outstanding Original Dramatic Score, New IP Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem |
Draft:Jean-Gabriel Raynaud | References | References |
Draft:Jean-Gabriel Raynaud | External links | External links
Official website
IMDb profile
League of Legends track on Spotify |
Draft:Jean-Gabriel Raynaud | Table of Content | AFC submission, Nominations, References, External links |
File:All Out (2025) promotional poster.jpg | Summary | Summary |
File:All Out (2025) promotional poster.jpg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:All Out (2025) promotional poster.jpg | Table of Content | Summary, Licensing |
Juca Kfouri | Short description | José Carlos Amaral Kfouri, more commonly known as Juca Kfouri, (São Paulo, 4 March 1950) is a Brazilian sports journalist. |
Juca Kfouri | Career | Career
A descendant of Lebanese immigrants, Juca Kfouri studied Social Sciences at the Faculty of Philosophy, Languages and Human Sciences of the University of São Paulo and was invited to work on the Department of Documentation (DEDOC) of Editora Abril, in 1970. There, he rose to the position of director until 1974, when he was invited to be the chief of reporting at Placar magazine. He stayed there until 1978, when he worked for three months at TV Tupi. Due to delayed salaries, he quit and on the next day he was invited by Jairo Régis to be a special project editor.Entrevista com Juca Kfouri, 28/09/2007, págs. 3 e 4, http://www.alexandre.jor.br/br/jornais_e_revistas/mat/jucakfouri.pdf
In 1982, he gained notability for exposing the a scandal related to the Sports Lottery, which generated several lawsuits against him.Jornalistas esportivos disputam partida acirrada nos tribunais - Conjur |
Juca Kfouri | Works on television | Works on television
In January 2018, he was hired by TVT to present the interview show Entre Vistas. On 14 August 2019, ESPN Brasil fired Kfouri and many others as part of a restructuring process. In 2024, he guest appeared on ESPN Brasil during a tribute to journalist Antero Greco at the program he used to present, SportsCenter Brasil. |
Juca Kfouri | Newspapers and internet | Newspapers and internet
When he worked at Lance!, he was sued by coach Vanderlei Luxemburgo and ordered to pay him a compensation.
Since May 2022, he works as a pundit at the independent channel ICL Notícias, on YouTube. |
Juca Kfouri | Controversies | Controversies
On 9 August 2021, during episode 150 of the podcast Posse de Bola at UOL, Juca Kfouri criticized the Brazilian male football players after they won the gold medal at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games because they refused to wear the jacket provided by the Brazilian Olympic Committee during the medal ceremony. He called their attitude "scoundrel" and saw it as a display of disregard for fellow athletes from other sports.
On 9 April 2022, in a post-game essay on his blog at UOL, Kfouri called Santos FC "Ninguém FC" (Nobody FC) when analyzing its match against Fluminense FC, which was poorly received by the club and its supporters; Santos announced it would cease communication with all UOL journalists until Kfouri apologized, which he refused to do. About a month later, Santos lifted the ban after concluding that the opinion was exclusive to Kfouri. |
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