YANIS MARSHALL CHOREOGRAPHY. “SKIN” RIHANNA. FEAT MARIE NINJA. HEEL’S CLASS. STUDIO HARMONIC PARIS.

YANIS MARSHALL CHOREOGRAPHY. "SKIN" RIHANNA. FEAT MARIE NINJA. HEEL'S CLASS. STUDIO HARMONIC PARIS.

www.yanismarshall.com Yanis Marshall, a Britain's Got Talent 2014 finalist, is currently touring the world teaching and performing in countries such as Mexic…

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10 Responses to “YANIS MARSHALL CHOREOGRAPHY. “SKIN” RIHANNA. FEAT MARIE NINJA. HEEL’S CLASS. STUDIO HARMONIC PARIS.”

  1. I love and hate it at the same time due over the fact that a guy can walk,
    dance and look better than me on heels.

  2. Girl on the right was giving me LIFE.

  3. i appreciate his talent and everything, i understand he is doing what he
    loves and what his passion in life is but as a gay person i will tell all
    he is doing is falling to the stereotypes of what everyone thinks of the
    gay community, feminine, EXTRA sassy and attention seeker, I’m gay and i
    found the girls more attractive, for Christ sake, this is the reason why
    something i wonder if its worth fighting for my rights, when i tell people
    I’M GAY they immediately compare me to people like MARSHALL, and even tho i
    don’t care how he acts or what he does, hes seen upon a bad way, so they
    relate me to him and im treated a bad way.

  4. parabéns me delicia de dança!força,desejo,sensualidade a flor da pele!show

  5. Mika Ty says:

    Yanis know damn well lil mama in with the bun in the back SHOULD’VE been in
    the front! I say INJUSTICE lol I mean his boys are good but when the girls
    do it better we deserve our credit!

  6. Md. Alam says:

    Yanis , you are the best dancer ever. You gave a live every song and
    proper justice do the song. I wish you all the best.
    

  7. What kind of dance is this? Jazz or whatever?

  8. Rita Peralta says:

    this is amazing, also the guy on the middle looks a lot like Andrew Scott

  9. Kassy Flores says:

    I want his legs. Is that weird? probably.

  10. By David Lawder DETROIT, May 27 (Reuters) – Trade ministers of 14 countries in the U.S.-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) talks
    “substantially completed” a deal to make supply chains more resilient and secure, the Commerce Department
    said on Saturday, marking the first tangible results of the year-long negotiations. U.S.

    Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told a press conference
    in Detroit that the “first of its kind” agreement calls for
    countries to form a council to coordinate supply chain activities
    and a “Crisis Response Network” to give early warnings to IPEF countries of potential supply disruptions. The deal provides an emergency communications channel for IPEF countries
    to seek support during supply chain disruptions, coordinate more closely during a crisis and recover more quickly.
    Raimondo cited shortages of semiconductors during the COVID-19 pandemic that shut down American auto production, idling thousands of workers. “I can tell you I would have loved to have had that Crisis Response Network during COVID. It absolutely would have helped us secure American jobs and keep supply chains moving,” she said. The supply chains agreement, also includes a new labor rights advisory board aimed
    at raising labor standards in supply chains, consisting of government, worker, and employer representatives. Commerce led the supply chains negotiations, one of four “pillars” in the IPEF talks,
    which represents the Biden administration’s main economic initiative in Asia, aimed in part at providing countries in the region with an alternative to closer ties with China. China is not part
    of the IPEF discussions, but participated in Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) trade talks in Detroit, which wrapped up on Friday with a pledge for more inclusive
    trade but no joint statement. The other three IPEF pillars — trade, climate transition, and labor and inclusiveness — are more complex and expected to take longer
    to negotiate but U.S.

    officials are aiming for more results by the time of the APEC leaders summit in San Francisco in November. TRADE PROGRESS,
    PUSHBACK U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai told reporters that the ministers “checked in on our progress and identified the areas where we need additional attention.” The trade pillar does not include negotiations over tariff reductions
    or other market-access aspects of traditional free trade
    deals, but aims for common rules on agriculture, labor, environmental standards and trade facilitation. “We have more work to do but I am confident that we will start seeing results under Pillar 1 in the months ahead,” Tai said. Tai and Raimondo pushed back against complaints from U.S.

    farm and industry groups that IPEF lacks market access improvements,
    putting it at a disadvantage to other trade deals
    in the region, including one led by China. Raimondo said that view reflects a “misunderstanding”
    of IPEF’s goals.
    Tai added that IPEF “from the very beginning, is not a traditional trade deal. We’re not just trying to maximize efficiencies and liberalization. We’re trying to promote sustainability, resilience and inclusiveness.” (Reporting
    by David Lawder; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, David Gregorio and Alistair Bell)

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