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Psicología del Amor

Danna releases ‘Khe Calor’, her hottest single that revived soap operas

I have a boyfriend

What takes away the drought?

That makes me mania

What do you ask me please?

please please give me

Give me a dose of choki, give me

Take it, eat it, take it

Take it, eat it, take it

In my wallet I carry

I have his pants

I wear my suka like Kill Bill

So that he eats me like candy

Oh, hot and pretty is what I am

Oh, I’m hot and how rich I am

You’re a bad, bad bitch

I have a boyfriend

I have a boyfriend

What takes away the drought?

That makes me mania

What do you ask me please?

please please give me

Give me a dose of choki, give me

Oh, I’m hot, I’m hot.

How pretty I am and what type I have

Video for ‘Khe Calor’ by Danna

In the purest style of soap operas, this visual has Danna Paola’s storya beautiful young woman in an old tequila town who faces a terrible drought as part of a curse and can only be reversed with her crying. But she can’t cry, so she dedicated herself to having relationships with several men to feel something, but none of them worked, until a call from a woman through a sea shell moved her to tears.

Meaning of ‘Khe Calor’ by Danna

Through a vocal style unprecedented in the sharper and faster artist, accompanied by synthesized sounds, Danna puts herself in the shoes of a character who represents the collective desire for see a great woman suffer when she stands out from the restand she, affected by social pressure, embarks on self-destructive behavior until another woman just as powerful as her reminds her of her value. More than any heartbreak, that act of sorority It is what manages to provoke tears.

In his documentary ‘Danna: We Have to Talk’shared the B side of having grown up working on soap opera setsbecause although it helped him boost his career, it put too much pressure on his mental health to the point that he decided to change his name to start building his authentic identity. Thus, this video may be a satire of the Latin television genre (especially because the protagonist carries her previous stage name), more a representation of the burden that the criticism of her success makes her feel, but that also allowed her to become empowered.

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