Benjamin Rausseo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 This article or section needs to be updated.
Parts of this article or section have been identified as no longer being up to date.

Please update the article to reflect recent events, and remove this template when finished.

Benjamin Rausseo
Benjamin Rausseo
Born January 26, 1961
Musipán, Monagas State

Benjamín Rausseo (born 1961), also known as El Conde del Guácharo (translation: "The Count of Guacharo"), is a Venezuelan artist and career humorist.

Contents

[edit] Biographical Information

Benjamín Rausseo was born into poverty in the rural community of Musipán in the state of Monagas. His infancy saw many hardships as his father, a miner, left home and Rausseo became responsible for his five younger brothers. He ceased attending school at the age of eleven to go into the labor force.

He became a shoeshiner and sold food at a pit stop on the main highway near his home. He was orphaned at fourteen and moved his brothers with him to Caracas. In the nation's capital he finished his schooling at a parochial Roman Catholic diocese and became a taxi driver and waiter. He began taking acting classes at night.

He pursued university studies as an actor and, in 1981, presented as his graduation thesis a comedic monologue "el Conde del Guácharo." The "Conde" or Count became a TV personality and made Rausseo one of Venezuela's most successful stand-up comedians. Beyond comedy he was also a dare-devil and stunt performer in the television variety show Sabado Sensacional.

Rausseo is currently a law student one semester from graduating with a JD from the Universidad Santa María de Caracas. He has joked that he always wanted to become a lawyer because he "wanted to know how it felt to be such a cold-hearted bastard". Rausseo speaks Portuguese and English.

Rausseo owns a theme park in Isla Margarita called Musipán, which makes fun of larger initiatives like Disney World or Jurassic Park with sarcasm and irreverence, which are common traits of Venezuelan humor.

[edit] Presidential Aspirations

In July 2006, he publicly announced on the Globovisión television network that he is running for president under his newly-formed "Piedra Party". His campaign slogan is "Vota Piedra" (literally "Vote Stone") and is a play on words. In Venezuelan Spanish the verbs 'votar' (to vote) and 'botar' (to throw) sound very similar, so the same phrase can also be understood as "Bota Piedra" (literally "Throw Stone"). "Bota Piedra" is a common expression to indicates one's state of frustration or anger. The sentence (slang) "Está que bota piedra" translates as "he's (or she's) really pissed off".

Thus, in the current political context the catchphrase "Bota Piedra" plays on words that relate directly to the feelings of frustration and disappointment felt by Venezuelans who oppose controversial president Hugo Chávez and his style of government.

Rausseo's political dialogue has stunned analysts and media pundits in that he has a detailed platform, a polished stump speech, and a sophisticated political vocabulary. He believes he can challenge the Chavez candidacy in that Rausseo has broad popular appeal and instant name recognition. He frequently underlines his humble origins and his understanding of poverty.

Rausseo speaks frequently of the need to repair relationships within Latin America that have suffered under the strain of the foreign policy of Hugo Chávez which Rausseo has described as "aggressive" and "unproductive."

Three weeks before the election, in accordance with a campaign pledge he had made earlier (to stand down if not placed first or second in the opinion polls), he withdrew his candidacy without endorsing either Chávez or Rosales, telling his supporters to vote for either.[1]

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

In other languages