These Brazilian caramel-colored stray dogs were long overlooked. Now,
they're having a major moment
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[December 18, 2024]
By DAVID BILLER
SAO PAULO (AP) — For decades, they have scrounged for food on streets
across the country — undesired, abandoned and overlooked.
But today, the caramel-colored mutts of Brazil are having a major
moment. The “vira-lata caramelo” (literally: caramel trashcan-tipper) is
being exalted in memes, videos, petitions, an upcoming Netflix film, a
Carnival parade and draft legislation to honor it as part of Brazilian
culture. Caramelos' newfound cachet speaks to the value of resilience in
Brazil — a melting pot of 213 million people known for weathering hard
knocks with a smile — and inverts its supposed “mongrel complex.”
A scene from Netflix's “Caramelo” shot in October featured a beige puppy
sitting beside a river in Sao Paulo watching picture-perfect families
pass with their impeccable purebreds — a golden retriever, a miniature
collie and a Doberman. At the director of photography’s signal, a
delivery boy cycled past and the plucky mutt gave chase, following the
scent of pizza and seeking a way to get by.
“The caramelo ended up becoming the great symbol of Brazil, a symbol for
the people,” Diego Freitas, the film's director and co-writer, said
after the day's shooting. “Netflix was sensitive to what’s happening
with the zeitgeist. The caramelo is the spirit of our time.”
Caramelos escape from the internet
The caramelo craze started online around 2019. People posted the
tongue-in-cheek phrase, “This represents Brazil more than soccer or
samba,” along with photos of distinctively Brazilian phenomena,
including caramelos galore. Social media accounts paid tribute to the
caramelos' antics: One invaded a dance show and relieved itself on
stage; another played dead while receiving chest compressions for a CPR
training video. Online retailers started hawking caramelo-shaped throw
pillows.
A petition to replace the macaw on Brazil’s 10-reais ($1.65) bill
garnered 50,000 signatures in 2019.
“The caramelo has established itself as a landmark of the Brazilian
people, being well loved and received in all states of the country,
being an excellent representative of our culture,” it proclaimed.
“Therefore it deserves mention on our currency.”
The next year, another petition to emblazon the medium-sized dog on the
200-reais note received triple the support.
Many cite kindness as the caramelos' secret charm, but more often say
it's that they're savvy survivors.
Case in point is a caramelo in the northeastern city Joao Pessoa. Last
year, Khelson Silva, 59, left the gym with a friend and found the stray
waiting. It took Silva's friend’s finger gingerly between its teeth and
led them for three blocks.
“He got to my building, walked straight into the garage, went up the
elevator and right into the house,” said Silva, who learned this
caramelo, now named Persistent José, had attempted similar gambits
before. “It was him who chose us. He knew where we lived.”
The ‘crazy mixture’ of Brazil
Writer Nelson Rodrigues coined the now-infamous term “mongrel complex”
after the national soccer team’s humiliating World Cup defeat in 1950,
aiming to encapsulate what he perceived as Brazil’s sense of inferiority
compared to other nations. Today, many see Brazil’s diverse roots —
immigrants, enslaved Africans and Indigenous people — as a source of
pride.
Tina Castro, an English teacher in Rio de Janeiro, equates owning a
caramelo with loving the “crazy mixture" of Brazil and its people.
“It comes from a marginal place, like Brazil. It has a history of
survival and marginalization," said Castro, 32. "We value the caramelo
in the way we value our country, as it is.”
“Caramelos will dominate the world!” has become a jokey rallying cry
online, and foreign allies are lending a hand. After touring Brazil in
November, singer Bruno Mars posed with a caramelo in his viral farewell
video. Staff of the British mission to Brazil overwhelmingly voted in
July to christen their new digital mascot, a Welsh Corgi, “Lord Caramelo.”
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Lina the caramelo dog lies on a table at Indefesos dog rescue
shelter in Rio de Janeiro, Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Bruna
Prado)
'The caramelo, a national icon'
The budget for Netflix's “Caramelo” is part of 1 billion reais ($164
million) spent from 2023-24 on Brazilian productions to capture eyeballs
in one of the world’s biggest video streaming markets. Netflix hasn’t
set a release date.
"The movie is a big bet for Netflix, a superproduction,” Netflix
Brasil's press office told The Associated Press. “It’s the first
Brazilian film with a dog as a protagonist, and it couldn’t be any other
than the caramelo, a national icon.”
Others catapulting the caramelo into the spotlight include Rio's Sao
Clemente samba school. At its three-story workshop downtown on Nov. 28,
seamstresses churned out strips of sheer yellow fabric for dozens of
towering caramelo costumes. Each will feature a giant foam head in the
school’s 2025 Carnival parade, whose theme is animal abandonment and
abuse.
“It’s our starlet,” gushed workshop director Roberto Gomes. “The
caramelo is the beautiful, likeable little dog — not the purebred. It’s
the cutie, that dog that’s always funny, always in our hearts.”
A few blocks away, Lt. Col. Sidnei Robson Pazini says Brazilians are
merely rediscovering long-lost devotion. He directs the Rio military
police's museum and archive, and says the “most iconic, most emblematic”
piece — more than the muskets, cannon or painting worth almost $1
million — is a taxidermied caramelo that's about 150 years old.
The dog often visited a Rio police battalion for food — earning the name
Bruto — then joined officers shipping off to war in Paraguay, despite
efforts to stop him boarding. Bruto alerted troops to approaching
enemies, signaled where soldiers needed rescue and, after surviving a
gunshot, returned to Rio a hero. When he died, police took up a
collection to have him stuffed, with a silver collar bearing the words
“Constancy, Love and Fidelity.”
Street dogs still find succor inside police battalions. One in Rio
adopted a caramelo in 2018 and gave him the rank of corporal. At a
ceremony in July, he was promoted to sergeant.
Famous but homeless, caramelos still need help
Amid this caramelo hype, one might think Brazilians would be jostling to
adopt their own. But volunteers at two shelters told the AP they still
get passed over for smaller, fluffier or whiter dogs.
The Indefesos shelter in Rio had 217 dogs on Dec. 12 — about half
caramelos. One clambers over a 6-foot wall to welcome visitors, his
favorite ball in his mouth.
Whenever Indefesos receives a litter with caramelos, volunteers scramble
to post Instagram photos. Caramelo puppies are inevitably picked last.
“It's absurd. We rush because we know that animal, when it grows up,
will never have the chance for a home,” said Rosana Guerra, the
nonprofit’s president. “They end up staying, waiting for adoption that
never comes.”
In the Netflix film, the stray scampers into the hectic life of a
career-driven chef and helps him find meaning in the present. Freitas,
the director, said he aims for it to touch Brazilians’ hearts and
transform caramelo affinity into action.
The puppy that pursued the delivery boy that gray October day had been
found in a box beside a highway with its nine siblings. Four play the
young version of the film's 1-year-old star that was also a stray. Since
filming wrapped Nov. 26, six of the film's once-homeless canines were
adopted by crew members and others.
“It’s a story that I hope is worthy of the dogs, because they are
incredible,” Freitas said, with his own caramelo — the film’s
inspiration — at his feet. “They change our lives.”
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