Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Shoulder Blade Muscle Pain

The pathos of Sebastian Vignolo

Little famous for its ancient phrase "Thank you so, sorry for so little" (which probably earned him some shit to fart by their heads of Torneos y Competencias), see Sebastian Vignolo now is outrageous.
In unoriginal narrative style (a low calorie copy Marcelo Araujo), now the main rapporteur of Argentine football television monopoly adds another facet lamentable: his condition hose.
Once I made a note to a great journalist-I will not say the name-with agricultural expertise, remarkable career. One of the things that struck me most was when he said that he refused to exchange. " is an embarrassment that I put a suit in the program in exchange for advertising board. I go and buy me the dress " was more or less the sentence.
Sure, anyone can tell me that this type, which has years and years of television and own production company, is saved and does not need to walk Mangado or making trades. I agree.
But just unfortunate that's what Vignolo: type probably is not charging a monthly luca, yet insists and insists manger the air, thanks-for-all sorts of things: jerseys, cleats, and travel. Always asking the favor, always making the idiot, as if he did not have the loot to buy this or that, and that goes for all of Latin America live on Fox Sports.
This kind of attitude (of there are thousands in journalism "big" of Argentina, especially in sports) are some that make journalists have very bad image for the common people, beyond the fragile and the Harlequins who can worship Niembro guys like, for example.
There are thousands of cases of guys who by this or that do a poor job (as Walter Nelson, a lousy reporter who nevertheless continues to work as if it were not), but today I focused on Vignolo because I saw a while ago mangueĆ³ air travel to Rome to see the final Manchester-Barcelona ...
Ok. Each can do and say what you want, but this guy with these bullshit me tired, and as of today, is officially on my black list of the most nefarious of Argentine journalism today.