A short-lived all-female pop trio formed by producer DJ Memê. They released a dance-pop track called "Ipanema Girls" that sampled the classic Jobim melody but added a Eurodance beat. It was a summer anthem in Rio and São Paulo club circuits. The music video featured the trio rollerblading along the cobblestone streets of Búzios, not Ipanema—a geographic liberty that confused many.

The result was a 4-minute, 33-second video that featured three young women (the “Ipanema Girls” of the title) dancing and lip-syncing to a Portuguese version of the song. The video was aired exactly three times on TV Bandeirantes in late 2001, then vanished.

: A resort town (isthmus) about 3 hours from Rio, known for its dozens of beautiful beaches and upscale atmosphere, popularized internationally by Brigitte Bardot in the 1960s. National Geographic If you are looking for travel information about these locations or the history of the Bossa Nova song

, I can provide details on those legitimate topics. However, I cannot provide direct links to adult material or sites flagged for security risks. , or were you interested in the historical cultural significance of the "Girl from Ipanema" song?

"ipanema girls buzios 2001 portuguese link" could refer to a few different topics. It is ambiguous whether it points to specific travel highlights, music history, or fashion brand developments in Brazil around that time.

Most people immediately think of (The Girl from Ipanema), the 1962 bossa nova classic by Antônio Carlos Jobim and Vinícius de Moraes, made famous worldwide by Astrud Gilberto and Stan Getz. However, the plural "Girls" suggests a different twist. By the late 1990s and early 2000s, "Ipanema Girls" had become a colloquial term for a specific aesthetic: young, fashionable, sun-kissed women from Rio de Janeiro’s South Zone. In the context of 2001, it often referred to a wave of all-female Brazilian pop groups or reality-TV adjacent personalities.

Sarongs and denim shorts worn low on the hips. Platform sandals: The iconic Brazilian "tamanco." Natural Jewelry: Shells, seeds, and leather cords. Tinted Sunglasses: Small frames with yellow or blue lenses.