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Final de betty la fea
Final de betty la fea













final de betty la fea

Re-watching the show was meaningful to me because it stirred my complex relationship with his country – there are many things I admire and many I don’t – but it also made me feel in touch with my younger self and my roots. Little did I know that, years later, I’d find them equally fascinating in my Colombian husband. One of the things that stood out to me then was the characters’ catchy accents, words, and sayings. Yo Soy Betty, La Feawas my first conscious contact with Colombia. Betty’s laugh made her unique, and so did her intelligence, humility, and occasional talent for concocting plots of her own. My best friend, a fellow Betty fan, laughs the same way (her mom once told her off in front of me for laughing like Betty, but when I found that funny and started laughing the same way, she had to drop it). I looked forward to seeing it with my sister who, like me, happens to laugh just like Betty in what I can only describe as a peculiar mix between a choking spell and a creaking door. I was 13 years old when I first saw Yo Soy Betty, La Fea. Luckily, Betty has a loving family and supportive friends, including her work clique – also known as “el cuartel de las feas” – and an eccentric best friend, Nicolás. In her time working for Ecomoda, a renowned textile company based in Bogotá, she is manipulated by her boss Armando and his friend Mario is emotionally abused by her boss’ fiancée, Marcela Valencia, and her friend Patricia and is bullied non-stop for her appearance. She has facial hair, glasses, and braces, and wears loose-fitting clothing that wouldn’t typically be seen as fashionable. The story centers around Betty, a kind, smart, and funny woman who is not considered attractive per her society’s standards. Betty) and Jorge Enrique Abello as Armando Mendoza. It stars Ana María Orozco as Beatriz Pinzón Solano (a.k.a. Yo Soy Betty, La Fea– or “ Ugly Betty” as it’s known in English –premiered in Colombia in 1999. Feeling too weak and foggy for anything else, I binge-watched a ridiculous number of episodes in a single day and embarked on a nostalgic journey where I reconnected with the story’s humor and quirkiness, but also with the issues it knowingly and unknowingly spotlights. A few weeks ago, while convalescing from Covid in my mother-in-law’s home in Colombia, I re-watched Yo Soy Betty, La Fea, the famed Colombian soap opera that I’d originally come across two decades ago in Costa Rica, my home country.















Final de betty la fea