4:02 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Entertainment|Internet · 1 Comment
30 Jan 2006
Spanish media is reporting today on a survey (“The 99 Most Desirable Women”) featured on Askmen.com which asked the question: who would you most want for a long-term girlfriend? American men answered: Jessica Alba.
Según “El Nuevo Herald”, que analiza la encuesta, Jessica, protagonista femenina de “Los Cuatro Fantásticos”, ocupa el número uno en la categoría de las mujeres más deseadas para una relación a largo plazo.
Sienna Miller y a Angelina Jolie, ocupan un honroso segundo y tercer puesto. Les siguen de cerca, entre otras, la brasileña Adriana Lima, Charlize Teron, Natalie Portman y Eva Longoria.
The full list of “desirable women” will be released tomorrow on Askmen.com.
Via / 20minutos.es
4:00 pm By Maegan La Mala · Celebrities|Entertainment|Los Angeles|TV · Comments Off
30 Jan 2006
Well there were few of us anyway getting awards at last night Screen Actors Guild Awards ceremony. Seems that when Latinos act, we are noticed more when we act as part of a team. Michelle Rodriguez and Jorge Garcia are part of the cast of the television hit Lost that won Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. Eva Longoria and her television husband Ricardo Antonio Chavira are part of the Desperate Housewives cast that won Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series.
Via / SAG
12:52 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Culture|Entertainment|Marketing|TV · Comments Off
30 Jan 2006
It depends on how “authentic” they are. Will they be as melodramatic as Spanish-language novelas? Will they follow the typical cliché plotlines — repeated time after time for decades — the ones we love so much?
If they do, I think they’ll be a flop with a mainstream audience. TV executives are also pondering these questions as they move into the telenovela realm. Call it “reverse TV crossover” if you will:
“They will be adapted for American sensibilities, perhaps with fewer “heaving bosoms,” she said.
“I’m part Latin, so everything in the Latin culture is — there’s a lot of hyperbole and there’s a lot of melodrama,” Tassler said. “I think we’re going to modify it for our audiences.”
Take away the heaving bosoms and you’ve lost half the appeal.
Via / Washington Post
8:52 am By Maegan La Mala · California|Culture|Events|Los Angeles|mexico|Religion · Comments Off
30 Jan 2006
During the 1500′s many Jews fled Spain into Mexico City, adding to the Mestisaje culture. This and the intersection of Jewish Latinidad in parts of Los Angeles was the focus of a conference held last week at UC Irvine. The conference titled Latinos and Jews: A Conference on Historical and Contemporary Connections discussed the history of Jewish Latino identity as it pertains to those with Mexican background and how anti-Semitism among Catholic Latinos manifests itself. Recently more and more Latinos have been doing some soul and DNA searching in order to identify Jewish roots. But there is still a gap to be bridged. For example:
When Arturo Vargas, executive director of the National Assn. of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, asked those in the audience to raise their hands if they identified as Jewish, most of the room responded. When he asked for the Latinos to raise their hands, only a few did.
The event was sponsored by the American Jewish Committee and the UC Irvine Center for Research on Latinos in a Global Society.
Via / LA Times
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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