If it costs less than $10 and not find it in the street 8, is that there

The Street 8 of Miami, between Douglas Road to Brickell Avenue, is probably, after the lights of Lincoln Road and Ocean Drive, one of the best known of Miami.
It is Little Havana, a working class neighborhood, the Cuba exile, of Mariel and the second generation of Cuban refugees who were not fortunate. Casting is taken here, While black coffee really sweet, Castro always speak of evil, loudly discussed and played dominoes in the street.
But also, is also a cosmopolitan area of ​​Salvadorans, Guatemalans, Nicaraguans and Central Americans in general. And along with them or through them, Street 8 has become a place where you can find all kinds of trinkets or Latino restaurants whose accounts rarely involve an expenditure exceeding 10 U.S. dollars. The best tacos in town are here, in the restaurant Taqueria El Mexicano, owned, curiously, is Colombian.
On the Street 8 find costumes, dollar stores, the Spanish Churros, music-hall, the only theater where European film premiere (curious paradox) and the only movie where they put Spanish subtitles to movies, also have hundreds of hairdressers, disreputable repair shops with all kinds of used parts and retreaded, liquor stores with customers from early in the morning and pharmacies where you can get if you smile Clamoxil type antibiotics without a prescription.
All in all a bath of people of Miami less glamorous but more real whose annual festival, the Street 8, on March, turns into an event where you do not need to see anyone dressed to see all kinds of characters. Otherwise, come and see.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v = r7QK3MNZt3o&feature=related

  • Share

Write a comment