Narcos ' opening-credits sequence draws you in with galloping zebras and plenty of slo-mo cocaine clouds. But its most compelling aspect is "Tuyo," the smooth tango that plays over the montage. If only you could decipher the song's lyrics! What is it saying?

Zafira. Age: 32. The ultimate adult XXX star usually available only for traveling meetings. Services: Sex In Different Positions, Oral, Oral With Condom, Kissing, Kissing With Tounge, Cum On Body, Deep French Kiss, 69 Position, Extra Ball, Erotic Massage, Striptease, Couples, Light S/M, Toys.

Who sings it?


Watch Next
If Narcos were filmed in the style of a Bollywood movie or Mamma Mia , then the show's various drug lords would gather at the end of the season, exhaust all their pent-up tension, and have a dance party to the show's theme song, "Tuyo" by Rodrigo Amarante. Unfortunately, Narcos: Mexico offers no such relief from its unrelenting scenes of ruthless gun violence. At least "Tuyo," playing over each episode's opening credits, acts as a brief two-minute reprieve. And what a spectacular reprieve it is. Brazilian singer-songwriter Rodrigo Amarante wrote "Tuyo" keeping in mind Pablo Escobar, the notorious cocaine trafficker who was the focus of Narcos 's first two seasons. She narrates the process of raising the "boy that would become a monster," as NPR put it.
Navigation menu
This lack of inclusion within the general society makes them socially awkward, especially around men. It really has been helpful. What you are potentially choosing is certainly not the easiest path. I'm a Mormon girl in love with an amazing non-Mormon man.
I don't think it's going overboard, though, to state one very possible and very likely scenario, and that is that this girl may likely be completely indoctrinated and believing. Flirting Questions to Ask a Guy. It requires a special kind of patience, and I think that the phrase "absence makes the heart grow fonder" has to be something you can relate to.