The man known globally as “The Human Satan” was not born with horns, ink-blackened skin, or surgically altered features. Before the transformation that would make him internationally recognizable, Michel Faro do Prado—often referred to as Diabão—looked like an ordinary man from Santos, Brazil. Early photographs show a clean-cut individual with natural features, short hair, and no visible signs of the dramatic physical metamorphosis that would later define his identity. That contrast is precisely what leaves many people speechless when they see “before” images. The transformation was not gradual in the way a new haircut or fashion shift might be; it was a deliberate, escalating commitment to radical body modification as a form of self-expression.
Born and raised in a coastal city known more for its beaches than for extreme aesthetic movements, Michel’s early life did not outwardly predict his eventual path. Friends and acquaintances from his youth have described him as introspective, creative, and drawn to alternative forms of art, but not necessarily someone who would become one of the most visually altered individuals in the world. The stark difference between his past appearance and his current form fuels fascination because it confronts a deeply ingrained assumption: that identity should remain visually consistent over time.