A Quote by Daniel Espinosa

I come from the working-class area of Stockholm, and I grew up with Serbian and Chilean people. — © Daniel Espinosa
I come from the working-class area of Stockholm, and I grew up with Serbian and Chilean people.
I grew up in a working-class area, and I stood out - for my voice, my appearance, I did dance and things like that. But I always had faith in my charm.
I grew up in a very working-class area with a high crime rate and when I first started to break away from my social conditioning, I fell into a life of crime.
I grew up in the suburbs, a calm suburb, without tension, with working-class and middle-class people mixed together.
My parents grew up working class, but in that way that working class families do, they spent a fortune on education to better me.
I don't like to play the macho card, but I grew up in a working-class family and a working-class culture.
I think the working-class part of me comes out. Sometimes the people who have the loudest mouths are upper-class, upper-middle-class. The quietest are often working-class people, people who are broke. There is a fear of losing whatever it is that you have. I come from that background.
'Sons' was about working class white guys. And even though I didn't grow up in a motorcycle club, I grew up in a working-class, white-guy neighborhood.
It's - the working class of San Francisco and the Bay Area is being pushed out of its old neighborhoods because of the skyrocketing cost of housing, and there's no real working class left because these are jobs for engineers and managers and designers - very smart people.
I grew up in a rural area called Vega Baja and I'm the first of so many talented people in this area to make it out. I take great pride to represent where I come from and I am able to show my fans, and everyone who listens and watches me, that anything is possible.
I grew up in a working class neighborhood in Sweden, which, during my teens, gentrified and is now completely middle class and even upper middle class.
I'm not part of a middle-class establishment. I'm working class, and I grew up in a council house.
I grew up on the south side of Chicago in a working class community. There were no miracles in my life, there's nothing miraculous about how I grew up, and I want people to know when they look at me, to be clear that they see what an investment in public education can look like.
I grew up in Mount Airy, a middle-class enclave in the Northwestern area of Philadelphia.
I grew up in an all-black neighbourhood in Decatur, Georgia - a kinda lower-middle-class area.
People like me who grew up in a working-class town, who don't have a college education, you don't usually hear from us.
I was born in Oakland and grew up, probably about five miles from Oakland, in Hayward. And Hayward was OK. Like, Hayward wasn't - very much a working-class area and had definitely went through a decline and is now, seemingly, coming back around, which is nice to see.
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