When Maximilien Joseph, who was born and raised in New Jersey, first came to El Salvador, he found himself mesmerized by the people. The Newark-born and bred son of Haitian immigrants, Max has visited places like the Republic of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, but El Salvador was a whole new ball game. The people were lively, free-spirited and insouciant in a way that folks in Max's hometown of Newark, New Jersey, could never be. Folks in the United States of America, whether black, white or brown, merely exist. People in South America are truly alive, and it's a beautiful thing.
In the nation of El Salvador, people didn't need to be rich or famous to carry themselves with a raw confidence and dignity that celebrities in the U.S. would envy. The man who rode a donkey from his country far to the city to sell coal to city people carried himself like a bad-ass, and demanded respect. The ladies of El Salvador were beautiful and lively, and they carried themselves with grace and power, but still showed love and affection to their men. In America, it's politically acceptable for women to show hatred and disdain for men. Small wonder a lot of American men desperately seek foreign women.
As a big and tall, dark-skinned young black man, Max attracted a lot of stares everywhere he went in El Salvador. The Haitian-American brother hadn't gotten this many stares since his first year at Rutgers University. He was one of perhaps a hundred black men among the eight-hundred-person freshman class. Brothers get stared at everywhere they go in this world. Max took it all in stride, though. The ladies of El Salvador seemed drawn to his height, kindly smile and chocolate good looks. Nothing like being a rare fish on the open sea, as it were. One special lady caught Max's attention.
Marianna Hernandez is a short, curvy, bronze-skinned and dark-haired, big-bottomed Latin gal living in the rural Sonsonate region of El Salvador. This lovely dame posts a ton of videos about her life, and celebrates her sensuality, and the unique culture of her region. Marianna is proud of her origins and wants to share the awesome beauty of Salvadorean culture and rural life with the wider world. Max was drawn to Marianna and what she represented. The brother has fallen in love with the small Latin American nation and her unique people. During the summer, Max travels the countryside, and that's how he first met Senora Hernandez...