The Cuban comedianJardiel González, with his usual sarcasm and wit, criticized the dire state of a street in the municipality of Marianao, in Havana, which makes anyone think that they are in the Zapata Swamp or the Landfill.
“39th Avenue, now it's Averigua... Someone passed by asking for an address... 'Come here, this is 39th Avenue?'...No, no, no. "This was Avenida 39, now it's Averigua... Look how it is!" Jardiel exclaimed, while showing with the camera the holes and breaks in the street, flooded with sewage and mud.
“Look at this little corner here, 3986,” he pointed out, between astonishment and disbelief, showing a huge garbage can in front of him.
“This was where I made the video of Messi at Inter Miami… No, Messi inside Marianao, and this bounced out again,” he said in a recentpost uploaded to their social networks.
“This is the Zapata Swamp linked to the Landfill (…),” said the comedian when seeing the magnitude of the disaster on a street in the Havana neighborhood, near the Maternidad Obrera hospital.
“Here this is pure mud… right now a crocodile is coming out,” he said ironically, in view of the craters full of muddy and contaminated water, where there will be no reptiles lurking, but there will be thousands of germs that put the health of the animals at risk. residents in the place. And he noted: “Next door there is a winery and a butcher shop.”
“39th Avenue, no. Find out! “Ave de averigua!”, ended by exclaiming the popular comedian, who uses his art to denounce the harsh Cuban reality and the apathy of the authorities, not only in Marianao, where he resides, but in other parts of the Cuban capital.
Between joke and joke, the former member of the comedy groupSemicolon He questions the state of abandonment and misery in which the city finds itself and lambasts those responsible for this desolate situation.
Potholes in the streets, rubble and garbage everywhere,unclogged drains…have been the target of their scathing videos, which unleash laughter, but also make us reflect on the critical Cuban reality.
Jardiel does not miss any current topic or topic of social interest and, with acuity, he questions the sameinconsistencies of the monetary system imposed by the regime and its impact on the pockets of ordinary citizens, which recreates, with a humor mixed with sadness,how Cuban children experience Three Kings Day.
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