anthony: salvador is one of the host cities for the 2014 world cup. a huge stadium has recently been completed but a lot of people are worried, concerned, if brazil is ready. i ve been told thousands of prostitutes are studying tourist appropriate languages in preparation. so probably, a lot of people are gonna get laid, a lot of people are gonna get robbed, a lot of people are gonna get laid and robbed. bel: have you ever been here in carnival? anthony: uh, no. but that s that s bel: it s the world cup inside carnival. anthony: and that works out right? that s not a slaughter fest. bel: it s a break. it s a breakfast. anthony: right. bel: and thing happens, but it works. anthony: i think that salvador in particular is a place where no matter, thank you. no matter what, people should come. even people who are afraid to travel, who said, oh well but i hear no! you know what? this is live your life, man. come you should not miss a place like this. cause it
so everybody here is fisherman? anthony: meet maloca. a very special guy. he s been working as our head of security. and, as for reasons that are immediately obvious, he enjoys respect and reputation on the streets. but he also comes out of this neighborhood, and these guys are his friends. anthony: how s business now? i mean, lot of fish out there? fishing business good? anthony: lunch wouldn t be complete without a delicious spicy salsa of garlic, tomato, onions, and peppers. on the side, some deep fried little smelts. don t forget the beer. and the cachaça, and enjoy!
anthony: very good. yeah that ll work. it looks like a big grouper. maloca: big. translator: it s a big red fish today. translator: i have to advise you that. it s spicy. anthony: it s spicy. what s everybody dr beer? or a cachaça? anthony: both. translator: the oldest fisherman from bahia. anthony: still working? translator: he works more than all of them. anthony: they use a line or net? anthony: hand line. translator: just the hand, around the the piece of wood,
like that, and then take the like that. anthony: they don t cut the hands? translator: always cut their hands. anthony: fishing anywhere is hard and the way these guys do it, particularly hard. mostly hand lines from small boats. just look at these hands. you re a hard man. literally. anthony: yeah, that s what i want right here. oh yeah. jackpot. boy that s you ll pardon the expression, some good head. translator: the fisherman loves the head. anthony: oh it s awesome. translator: it s the the best part for them.
beautiful! wow look at that. woman: it looks very good. [ speaking in portuguese ] anthony: how has being a master of capoeira how has that changed the rest of your life? woman: think it changed a lot. women in general, they don t learn to fight. learning how to be involved in real fights, game and fight at the same time, we became more prepared to be involved with the symbolic fight. and, in our society, the women, they are not so well prepared like men. anthony: it was purely african in the beginning, and now it s afro-brazilian form? is that correct? woman: all the instruments are african instruments. anthony: right.