🌟 “Salí a buscar el amor de mi vida… y regresé con un cartón de chelas”: la confesión más humana de Rafael Amaya 🍻

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  Durante años, el rostro de Rafael Amaya ha estado asociado con poder, peligro y seducción. Como Aurelio Casillas, el protagonista de El Señor de los Cielos , fue el símbolo de una masculinidad feroz: el hombre que lo tenía todo y que no temía a nada. Pero detrás del personaje, hay un ser humano que aprendió —con golpes, risas y lágrimas— que la vida no siempre se conquista a balazos ni con glamour… sino con humildad, humor y una cerveza en la mano. La frase “Salí a buscar el amor de mi vida y regresé con un cartón de chelas” no es solo una broma viral. Es un reflejo del nuevo Rafael Amaya. Un hombre que, después de haberlo tenido todo y perder casi todo, ha decidido reírse de sí mismo, abrazar la imperfección y celebrar los pequeños placeres que antes pasaban desapercibidos. Hubo un tiempo en que Rafael vivía en modo Aurelio : siempre acelerado, rodeado de fama, luces y ruido. El éxito de la serie lo lanzó a la cima, pero también lo sumergió en una soledad silenciosa. En 2019...

It's the Hyacinth Bucket effect! A third of people change their voice when they speak on the phone... and almost half of them are 'trying to sound more posh'

 

More than a third of people change their voice when they are on the phone, a survey suggests.

And nearly half of those admit they are trying to sound more well-spoken – like Hyacinth Bucket in 1990s BBC sitcom Keeping Up Appearances, who pronounced her surname Bouquet.

Three in ten change their voice because they want to sound more intelligent, and 10 per cent want to sound more fun, according to the nationwide survey of 2,000 people.

Nearly one in ten said they change their voice without realising it, but are made aware by others.

Clients, work colleagues and strangers are among the people that those surveyed often change the way they speak for.

About a fifth said they automatically alter their voice when answering a number that they do not recognise, while just under a fifth said their regional accent comes through more strongly on the phone.

People in Scotland are particularly likely to change their voice, the research suggests. 

Nearly half of people surveyed in Aberdeen said they do so when they are on the phone. 

Sheffield residents, meanwhile, were the least likely to change their voice, with six in ten saying they do not do this – although a fifth said that when they do, it is to sound more local.

Norwich residents feel the most pressure to sound intelligent, the survey suggests, with 52 per cent who change their voice admitting that is their intention.

About a fifth of people in London who change their voice do this to sound more fun, and a quarter of people in the North East and North West of England said they do not realise they change their voice when on the phone but they are told this by other people.

When it comes to voices people aspire to sound like, Sir David Attenborough was voted the favourite celebrity voice, closely followed by Absolutely Fabulous star Joanna Lumley and then Luther actor Idris Elba.

The survey was conducted by the bank Santander UK.

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