5:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Features|Word en la calle · Comments Off
21 Oct 2005A new Friday feature on VL, Word en la Calle lets everyday Latinos voice their thoughts and opinions on topics of interest to the community.
Name:
Monica Chavez
Age:
28
Location:
San Francisco, CA
Profession:
Student Services
Roots:
Mexican-American born in San Francisco. Mom and Dad
from Mexico (Jalisco and Guanajuato, respectively)
Languages:
English and Spanish.
What does it mean to you to be Latino?
Being Latino means being proud and knowledgable of the
fact that you are part of something greater than you.
It means being connected to millions of people inside
and outside the US. It’s a duality, the American me
and the Latino me.
Will there ever be a Latino president? Is that important? Why?
Eventually, but not in my lifetime. I think we’ll have to wait for a
women to become president first and I don’t mean on TV. It took
until the 1920′s for women to be able to even vote so we’ve got a
ways to go. I thinks it’s important to get someone who can do the
job well. If that person were Latino then it would be that much
better.
This Sunday, Chef Aaron Sanchez, author of La Comida del Barrio – Latin American Cooking in the USA, will challenge Iron Chef Morimoto in the Food Network’s latest episode of Iron Chef America.
If you’ve never heard of this show, basically it’s two chefs pitted against each other. At the beginning of the show, the chairman will unveil the secret ingredient, which must be used in all dishes prepared by the chefs. They have 1 hour to prepare about 5 courses, and then the food is judged. The Food Network has 3 Iron Chefs which represent “the best of the best” and each new episode, a challenger chef comes to try and take the glory. This week the challenger is Latino chef Aaron Sanchez.
Sanchez is the son of “Mexican cooking authority” Zarela Martinez. He has two restaurants, one in Manhattan’s Lower East Side, Paladar, and Mixx in Atlantic City’s Borgata Hotel.
You can catch Sanchez & Martinez in Tucson on November 6 at the Tuscon Culinary Festival.
The Morimoto/Sanchez episode of Iron Chef America airs for the first time Sunday, October 23, 9:00 PM on the Food Network.
Psychic Mystic Rebecca predicts: The secret ingredient will be a type of chile or some sort of seafood. Morimoto will take the win.
Aaron Sanchez website (decent info, but hasn’t been updated in probably at least 6 months)
Iron Chef America episode info
In a speech to the Hispanic National Bar Association, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales told Latinos to get over it about him, or any other Latino for that matter, not being nominated to fill the vacant seat on the Supreme Court and to throw their support behind Harriet Miers. According to AP, Gonzales asked that:
you and others reserve judgment and give her an opportunity to show why she would be good for the Court, for the country, and for the Hispanic community.
Gonzales was passed over not once but twice for a spot on the nation’s highest court, first to John Roberts and now to Ms. Miers.
Latino Pundit probably hit it right on the nose when he says that Gonzales’s request is probably based more on loyalty to the Republican hands that feed him than on a real belief that Miers is going to do right by the community. The little we do know about Miers is cause enough for concern. She’s anti-choice and thinks President Bush is the smartest person she’s met, ever (really mujer needs to get out more). According to ImmigrationProf Blog when Miers worked as President of the State Bar of Texas she did some pro-bono work handling an immigration and naturalization case for Catholic Charities of Dallas. Hopefully she didn’t help deport people and hopefully Latinos won’t just go the way of sheep and follow what Gonzales says just because he is “one of us”.
Via / Latino Pundit and Los Angeles Times
1:06 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bilingualism|Marketing|TV · Comments Off
21 Oct 2005
Who knew when we were growing up and cable first burst onto the scene that twenty years later not only would we have a over ten news channels on “basic” cable, but we would also have a Spanish-language version of almost every channel available for purchase? CNN en español. ESPN en español. Discovery en español. The list goes on and on, but these bigger name channels are only the beginning. Now, not only are big names like MTV and HBO looking to replicate their mainstream market channel models in the Latino market, but there are more and more original programming concepts being thrown into the mix. According to the Miami Herald:
General-interest Spanish-language broadcasters will continue to dominate ratings and advertising sales well into the future, said Leland Westerfield, managing director of Harris Nesbitt, but the growth of niche channels such as SiTV, CasaClubTV, ESPN Deportes and others is poised to take off.
“The vast majority of Hispanic households will be receiving television through cable by the end of the decade,” Westerfield told the audience at the Hispanic Television Summit…”This reminds me of where the [general] market was in the late ’80s, early ’90s.”
And the prediction is that this trend will only grow:
During the past year, some two dozen cable channels aimed at Hispanics, in both English and Spanish, have sprung up with special-interest programming ranging from travel and home to youth and automotive.
Westerfield said more Hispanics will sign up for cable and satellite simply because “there’s a hunger for culturally-relevant programming. There is ample demand among viewers for choice of programming.”
One thing to keep in mind is that this growth cannot be attributed solely to high demand on the part of Latino television viewers. It’s also because advertisers are falling over themselves to market to Latinos and are forever clammering for new outlets by which to do this. Money being pumped into these networks by advertisers is what has truly made this shift possible. Want to market to Latino tweens? We got a channel for you. What about Latino automotive aficionados? Ford, step right up.
In this day in age, if Latinos are going to consume it, marketers are ready to fling their dollars at it. The question used to be, “how many channels do we really need?” Now, it’s how many channels in Spanish do we really need? At some point burnout will be reached. I’ve gotten to that point with cable TV, and I’m sure it will happen to viewers of Spanish-language programming in the future as well.
Via / The Miami Herald and Hispanic Business
Since Noah Wyle left I haven’t been able to bring myself into the ER on Thursday nights. However with the dramatic entrance of John Leguizamo playing Dr. Victor Clemente, I am feeling a little faint. The Colombian actor began a 12 episode guest run aimed to boost sagging ratings of the hospital drama, now in its 12th season.
Leguizamo, best known for his hilarious and often self-deprecating stage show improvised monologues, plays Victor Clemente as egotistical, loud and jarring. According to the story line the doctor arrives at County General Hospital via Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx and an unnamed hospital in Newark, where apparently something has gone down that audiences will surely find out about in coming episodes.
Last night as soon as Leguizamo showed up on the television screen I was laughing. He brings such a unique vibe, his character calling patients “mami” and even speaking in Russian. What is interesting upon further analyzing his character is that in some ways the role borders on stereotype. El doctor is an in your face, domineering, and muy macho. Parminder Nagra’s character reminds us of the sexual stereotypes surrounding Latino men by commenting upon Dr. Clemente’s arrival that “he’s kinda hot”.
It is nice to see a Latino playing a professional and not the usual drug dealer thug role. It will be interesting to see how Leguizamo’s character is developed. Give me more Doctor Clemente, stat!
ER can be seen on Thursday Nights on NBC at 10 p.m. Eastern, 9 p.m. Central Time.
Via / USA Today
A new feature of VivirLatino, “Lo Que Hay” will feature events from across the country that we think will interest our VL readers.
To submit an event, please use our contact form.
Atlanta
Kia Rio Carnaval Event
When: Friday, October 21, 12:30pm – 2pm
Where: Centennial Olympic Park
Cost: Free
Boston
Latin Expo
When: Saturday/Sunday, October 22 & 23, 12pm – 5pm
Where: Shriners Hall
Cost: Free
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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