Just because she’s bullshitter doesn’t mean he should get out of paying for his children. Besides, looking at the evidence I’m beginning to think he was pushing the Spanish thing more than she was. The Ellen interview is quite telling, I think it’s obvious Ellen knew they were bullshitting the Spanish angle, and Alec knows that she knows - iyswim.I wonder what would happen and she did completely lie to Alec and he divorces her, would he have to pay her big amounts like Hollywood dads seem to do as he could argue that their marriage was built on a massive lie
*He knows she knows he knows.Just because she’s bullshitter doesn’t mean he should get out of paying for his children. Besides, looking at the evidence I’m beginning to think he was pushing the Spanish thing more than she was. The Ellen interview is quite telling, I think it’s obvious Ellen knew they were bullshitting the Spanish angle, and Alec knows that she knows - iyswim.
Oh I didn’t mean getting out of payments, I mean her trying to rinse him of millions which is the usual Hollywood moveJust because she’s bullshitter doesn’t mean he should get out of paying for his children. Besides, looking at the evidence I’m beginning to think he was pushing the Spanish thing more than she was. The Ellen interview is quite telling, I think it’s obvious Ellen knew they were bullshitting the Spanish angle, and Alec knows that she knows - iyswim.
At the very start she nearly vomitted out her tongue, my God!I found this video of her speaking Spanish:
Looks to me like all accent and not much substance. If she was really pushed to talk beyond these short and practiced phrases, then I doubt her level would be much good.
I’d love to know what a native Spanish speaker thinks of thisI found this video of her speaking Spanish:
Looks to me like all accent and not much substance. If she was really pushed to talk beyond these short and practiced phrases, then I doubt her level would be much good.
Oooh, my time to shine! lolI read that Sicilians have an incredible mix of lots of ancestry so I do find it a shame that the US have decided that to align the heritage with being a bloody gangster, it is so annoying
I co-sign all of this! As an American who is keenly interested in her heritage (I also speak Italian and Sicilian fluently and actually live in Italy, however), I always roll my eyes at the way people talk about us when it comes to this. We are a nation of immigrants. Of course we're interested in learning about where we come from! We do not have the history here in the U.S. that most people in Europe do. For example, my SO is Dutch and his family has been in the same small town since probably the 1200s, whereas my family is in the U.S. only since the 1940s! And being that I am from NYC, my story is not unique.It's an authentic part of US culture that has developed that they want to honour their ancestries, and identify strongly with small parts of their heritages. It's a natural response to living in a country that is truly made up of immigrants, and with very little recorded history from before a few hundred years ago. People in Britain have over 2000 years recorded history, and 9000-11000 years of blood ties to the island and our close neighbours who came from the continent.
It's not wrong that Americans like to honour their distant family history, even if it seems obsessive and fake to us.
I also disagree with the notion that Spanish people are definitely white and Americans are stupid. First of all, there are very few people from Spain who live in America. So the assumption for Americans when hearing the term "Spanish" is a Spanish language speaker from the former colonies, where many of them have partial non-Euro ancestry. There will have been many people who didn't look at Hilaria's interviews where she describes herself as from actual Spain, and just vaguely know of her as some kind of Latina. There is also the delibarate confusion on Hilaria's part and trying to attach herself to Hispanic narratives, such as people thinking she's her kids' nanny.
I am born and raised in here the UK with ancestry from the UK, Ireland and Germany. I have only recently started to hear of Mediterranean people referred to as white, and assumed the opposite to above posters, who think Americans only tolerate Hitler's wet dreams as whites. I thought that this recent including of Mediterraneans as white was due to the American influence of calling everyone vaguely Caucasian white, due to less than half of US whites having more than 95% white ancestry. Legally, in the USA they even consider Arabs to be white. I certainly never thought of Spanish people as white or instinctively as "like me", unlike north or east European people from other countries. However we choose to label them with words, there is a visible difference between north and south Europeans.
They had a long history of being colonised and raided by Moors, as did other south west European countries, while the south-eastern countries of Europe where colonised for several centuries by Turks during the Ottoman empire. It is plainly obvious from looking at them that they have Arab/Turk ancestry. You only have to look at artworks from south European countries from before Islamic colonisation to see that the people there used to look the same as North Europeans. There is also the genetic differences between southern Europeans, and the fact they have more African DNA, which is almost non-existent in northern europe. Meanwhile in some northern parts of Spain that the Moors didn't manage to colonise, such as the Basque country, the people there still look like north Europeans. Its the same with north vs south Italy.
That is a very long way to say that I disagree with calling those who think that Spanish people are not white are stupid. It's a valid opinion based on the above facts. Most racial categories have subjective definitions and cut-off points, so who's to say one definition is more correct than the other? It's like the how many grains of sand does it take to become a "pile" philosophical question. We all know what a "pile of sand" looks like but at what point does it objectively become one? No one can say yet we all know what one is when we look at it.
Wooooow That’s so cool!!!!! I love that breakdown!!! I went back around 5 generations on ancestory and my heritage is just U.K., literally England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. I couldn’t be anymore British... it’s so boring!!!Oooh, my time to shine! lol
I am Sicilian-American (grandparents from Italy). I did a DNA test and these were my results, which were what I expected given the history of the island.
I can confirm they have SO MANY nannies!! I lived a couple blocks from them for 4+ years and it was so strange passing all the nannies on the way to and from the park with their kids all the time. It was a wall of nannies approaching on the sidewalk. There were only 3 kids then and they each had their own nanny pushing their stroller. I only saw Alec and Hilaria with the oldest one once and the nannies with the kids constantly basically everywhere I went.The pics of them out with 2 of the kids and the baby they had 2 nannies, some comments saying they have 4 nannies altogether! She's hardly a hands on mum by the sound of it!
My husband is a native speaker, but of Mexican Spanish. To him it sounds totally like a Spaniard, but I doubt someone from Spain would think the same.I’d love to know what a native Spanish speaker thinks of this
I noticed the halting pattern to her speech like she had to think about it a bit. Very interesting!My husband is a native speaker, but of Mexican Spanish. To him it sounds totally like a Spaniard, but I doubt someone from Spain would think the same.
I’m a fluent speaker and what gives it away to me is the short sentences and limited vocabulary. She seems to want to say somethings but stops herself and says it the easier way.
Love this insider knowledge so much, thank you for posting it!I can confirm they have SO MANY nannies!! I lived a couple blocks from them for 4+ years and it was so strange passing all the nannies on the way to and from the park with their kids all the time. It was a wall of nannies approaching on the sidewalk. There were only 3 kids then and they each had their own nanny pushing their stroller. I only saw Alec and Hilaria with the oldest one once and the nannies with the kids constantly basically everywhere I went.
Sorry, I don’t understand the first part that you wrote?Love this insider knowledge so much, thank you for posting it!
Out of interest when you did see I like and Henry reset oldest, what were they doing where are they going? to the park ? Or did it look like or something else?
Thought the woe-is-me pap walk was very odd yesterday that they did. Especially as she was actually with the kids , The nannies were shown for the first time, possibly in an effort to seem ‘more normal’, even though 5 nannies is clearly not in any way normal
I found this video of her speaking Spanish:
Looks to me like all accent and not much substance. If she was really pushed to talk beyond these short and practiced phrases, then I doubt her level would be much good.
I actually thought she was good!! I myself have lived in Spain and to the untrained person she sounds like a true Spaniard!! The intonation and the accent, let’s say she doesn’t sound a foreigner speaking Spanish!! I was expecting her to be worseI find it very basic and text book
There are 2 massive threads on MN about this and the Spanish people who have contributed haven pretty much uniformly said her Spanish is amazing, and that she must be one of those natural linguistics.My husband is a native speaker, but of Mexican Spanish. To him it sounds totally like a Spaniard, but I doubt someone from Spain would think the same.
I’m a fluent speaker and what gives it away to me is the short sentences and limited vocabulary. She seems to want to say somethings but stops herself and says it the easier way.
It’s not surprising people from the US want to know their history and ancestry at all, more that British don’t do this as as much because like you say, Europeans have a long history.Oooh, my time to shine! lol
I am Sicilian-American (grandparents from Italy). I did a DNA test and these were my results, which were what I expected given the history of the island.
I co-sign all of this! As an American who is keenly interested in her heritage (I also speak Italian and Sicilian fluently and actually live in Italy, however), I always roll my eyes at the way people talk about us when it comes to this. We are a nation of immigrants. Of course we're interested in learning about where we come from! We do not have the history here in the U.S. that most people in Europe do. For example, my SO is Dutch and his family has been in the same small town since probably the 1200s, whereas my family is in the U.S. only since the 1940s! And being that I am from NYC, my story is not unique.
Europeans just love to shit on everything we do, lol.
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