NameLuis
Area CoveredSao Paulo
InterestsLocal traditions, Music, Guided walks & tours

Introducing Luis - your Friend at the other End!

About Me

My name is Luis and I live at São Paulo, Brasil.

I come from an italian family which is very common in a city like São Paulo where we find different kinds of nationalities everywhere.

I am passionate about travelling and I really enjoy to get in touch with people who have different ideas and opinions. I think this is the best way of learning and getting a sense on what the world is truly like!

I´ve been working as a professional tour guide in São Paulo and it´s surrondings for the last four years. I studied Tourism at the Catholic University and I have a history specialization for the city of São Paulo.

I take individual people or groups around the city and it´s surrondings trying to show them a different perspective of São Paulo, visiting the nice attractions and explaning the issues we still have. Most people I receive arrive here quite scared and thinking that we don´t have anything special to visit. At the end of my tours nearly everyone is surprised on how interesting can this place be and how cosmopolitan is São Paulo.

As a Tripbod, I am able to help travellers because I am constantly researching new cool places and interesting areas to be visited in São Paulo. I am also very interested on music and I play the saxophone on a band for fun. Therefore I will be also able to reccomend you good places where you could go and listen to really good music.

5 Tips for experiencing some fantastic music in Sao Paolo:

Benedito Calixto Square on saturdays - There is an open market every saturday on these square where you can listen to a band that plays a very nice variation of samba called "chorinho".

Bar do Cidão: A real special bar, very casual, where professional samba musicians have been meeting to play and have a cold beer for more than 20 years.

Grazie a Dio: a nice nightclub located at Vila Madalena, the bohemian hood of São Paulo, with a programmation of promising brasilian bands .

Jazz nos Fundos: located behind a parking field, this very hidden place has the best jazz bands you can find in town.

Geni Club: a nice old house that was totally restaured and now hosts really good bands and artists within a cool atmosphere.


Rough Guides Introduction to Brazil

View of Rio de Janeiro
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Brazilians often say they live in a continent rather than a country, and that's an excusable exaggeration. The landmass is bigger than the United States if you exclude Alaska; the journey from Recife in the east to the western border with Peru is longer than that from London to Moscow, and the distance between the northern and southern borders is about the same as that between New York and Los Angeles. Brazil has no mountains to compare with its Andean neighbours, but in every other respect it has all the scenic - and cultural - variety you would expect from so vast a country.
Despite the immense expanses of the interior, roughly two-thirds of Brazil's population live on or near the coast and well over half live in cities - even in the Amazon. In Rio and São Paulo, Brazil has two of the world's great metropolises, and nine other cities have over a million inhabitants. Yet Brazil still thinks of itself as a frontier country, and certainly the deeper into the interior you go, the thinner the population becomes. That said, the frontier communities have expanded relentlessly during the last fifty years, usually hand in hand with the planned expansion of the road network into remote regions.
Other South Americans regard Brazilians as a race apart, and language has a lot to do with it - Brazilians understand Spanish, just about, but Spanish-speakers won't understand Portuguese. And Brazilians look different. They're one of the most ethnically diverse peoples in the world: in the extreme south, German and Italian immigration has left distinctive European features; São Paulo has the world's largest Japanese community outside Japan; there's a large black population concentrated in Rio, Salvador and São Luís; while the Indian influence is most visible in the people of Amazônia and the Northeastern interior.
Brazil is a land of profound economic contradictions. Rapid post-war industrialization made Brazil one of the world's ten largest economies and put it among the most developed of Third World countries. But this has not improved the lot of the vast majority of Brazilians. The cities are dotted with favelas, shantytowns that crowd around the skyscrapers, and the contrast between rich and poor is one of the most glaring anywhere. There are wide regional differences, too: Brazilians talk of a "Switzerland" in the Southeast, centred along the Rio- São Paulo axis, and an "India" above it; and although this is a simplification, it's true that the level of economic development tends to fall the further north you go. This throws up facts that are hard to swallow: Brazil is the industrial powerhouse of South America, but cannot feed and educate its people. In a country almost the size of a continent, the extreme inequalities in land distribution have led to land shortages but not to agrarian reform. Brazil has enormous natural resources but their exploitation so far has benefited just a few. The IMF and the greed of First World banks must bear some of the blame for this situation, but institutionalized corruption and the reluctance of the country's large middle class to do anything that might jeopardize its comfortable lifestyle are also part of the problem.
These difficulties, however, rarely seem to overshadow everyday life in Brazil. It's fair to say that nowhere in the world do people know how to enjoy themselves more - most famously in the annual orgiastic celebrations of Carnaval, but reflected, too, in the lively year-round nightlife that you'll find in any decent-sized town. This national hedonism also manifests itself in Brazil's highly developed beach culture; the country's superb music and dancing; rich regional cuisines; and in the most relaxed and tolerant attitude to sexuality - gay and straight - that you'll find anywhere in South America. And if you needed more reason to visit, there's a strength and variety of popular culture, and a genuine friendliness and humour in the people that is tremendously welcoming and infectious.

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