Alexandra Larsson

Alexandra Charlotte Larsson, (Spillersboda, Norrtälje Municipality, Stockholm County, Sweden; born August 16, 1986) is a model, based in Argentina, where she is commonly referred to as "La Sueca" (The Swede).[1]

Alexandra Larsson
Born (1986-08-16) August 16, 1986
Modeling information
Height5 ft 7 in (1.72 m)
Hair colorBlonde
Eye colorGreen

She has appeared on fashion runways, commercials, TV programs, and magazine covers.

Biography

Larsson (who also has a twin brother) was born in a small town in Sweden, and moved to Argentina in approximately 2008 to study Spanish.[2] She first worked in a call center, and after some auditions she landed her first television appearance in 2011, on Sábado Bus hosted by Nicolás Repetto.[3][4]

On January 2012, the participated the TV program Conexiones interviewing show business people and athletes in Canal 13.

Starting in April 2012, she appeared on Bailando 2012 from Showmatch (the Argentine version of Dancing with the Stars), a television program high ratings in Argentina, which greatly increased her popularity.[5] She has also appeared on Periodismo para todos.

On October 2012, she participated in charity event M5K Las Mujeres Corremos organized by McDonald's along with other mainstream Argentine artists. She credits her slim figure in part to her restricted diet, caused by having celiac disease.[6]

TV Appearances

  • Sábado Bus (2011)
  • Bailando por un Sueño 2012 (replacing Karina Jelinek. - 2012)[7]
  • Toda Pasión, hosted by Sergio Gendler and Juan Manuel "Rifle" Varela (2012)
  • Showmatch (appeared on beach soccer - 2012)
  • 70 20 13 (Interview by journalist Samuel "Chiche" Gelblung - 2012)
  • Este es el Show (2012)
  • Sábado Show (2012)[8]
  • Periodismo para todos, hosted by Jorge Lanata (2012-2013)
gollark: This is hard to distinguish. You can "make things" on a personal computer and such nowadays.
gollark: Interesting! I'm glad that's been resolved.
gollark: Which is possibly true in a lot of cases because of general-purpose computing abilities being slowly eroded, and interesting online platforms lacking (good) APIs, but still.
gollark: An issue with the Raspberry Pi and stuff for computing education is that they separate "programmable computers" and "normal computers" and might make people think they can't do interesting stuff with what they already have.
gollark: I guess so.

References

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