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Archive for November 26th, 2008

download.jpgI wasn’t able to see the last Amigos Invisibles show in NYC, and I’m still kind of angry about it. Pero tonite, los Venezolanos say adios to 2008 in their last show of the year while celebrating the release of their new live DVD, En Una Noche Tan Linda Como Ésta, showcasing Los Amigos’ 15th Anniversary concert at the venerable venue Aula Magna in their hometown of Caracas, Venezuela.

Thanksgiving is for suckers anyway. Celebrate tonite con los Amigos (and maybe me??).

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300px-Entrada_lanzamiento_Telet%C3%B3n_2006.jpgHere in the United States no one stampedes for tickets to a telethon. Hell does anyone even watch the telethon? In Chile, however, the annual Teletón for disabled children is a cultural phenomenon. Stores all over the capital transform into collection spots for donations. Families make homemade banners to hang in their front window to tell everyone that they are supporting the Teletón and they mean it. Families sit in front of the television, not that there is anything else to watch if your don’t have cable or satellite tv. There is even a nationwide tour, featuring everyone’s favorite dirty old man, Don Francisco and if you think that people don’t pack the streets and the seats, you are very wrong.

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Food Stamp Use Reaches Record Numbers

11:05 am By Maegan La Mala · economy|Food|Money · Comments Off

26 Nov 2008

EBTCard300x191.pngOnce upon a time when I was a teen, food stamps were actually like stamps, well actually more like coupons on Monopoly money colored paper and I remember being ashamed when my then boyfriend’s mom sent me to the corner bodega to buy something with them. While sadly the stigma still exists with using food stamp benefits, even if they no are accessed via an atm like card but for more and more familias, food stamps are a need not a want if they want to keep their family fed.

“We soon will have the most food stamps recipients in the history of our country,” said Jim Weill, president of the Food Research and Action Center, a D.C.-based anti-hunger policy organization. “If the economic forecasts come true, we’re likely to see the most hunger that we’ve seen since the 1981 recession and maybe since the 1960s, when these programs were established.”

The Agriculture Department is set to release the new numbers as early as this week. Agency officials declined to confirm the figures but outlined them in a briefing last month for advocates and administrators of state food stamp programs. Breaking the symbolically important 30 million mark comes on the heels of government data showing that 11.9 million people went hungry in the United States at some point last year. That included nearly 700,000 children, up more than 50 percent from the year before.

Via / The Washington Post

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Bush Drinks Some Peruvian Cultura

9:05 am By Maegan La Mala · Food|Peru · 1 Comment

26 Nov 2008

s-ANDINA-large.jpgApparently dressing like a Peruvian isn’t enough for President Bush. While at the APEC Summit in Lima, Bush was spotted drinking in some local culture as well, in the form of a Pisco Sour.

Wait, isn’t Bush supposed to be a recovering alcoholic or something? Last time I had a Pisco Sour (a lo Chileno – go ahead Peruanos and Chilenos- argue about it) it had alcohol and Pisco is no joke.

I’m not as convinced as the HufPo:

Of course, the president often drinks non-alcoholic beer; he could easily be drinking a non-alcoholic Pisco Sour in this shot.

What the hell is a Pisco Sour without the Pisco?!

Via / The Huffington Post

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041808_vieques2_story.JPGWhile many families in the U.S. are stocking their kitchens for the perverse Thanksgiving holiday, families in Vieques, Puerto Rico are still dealing with the aftermath of years of U.S. military training on their land and through their food.

A new study has found dangerous levels of toxic metals in produce grown on a Puerto Rican island formerly used as a Navy bombing range, despite U.S. government claims that the soil there is safe.

Some products from a research farm on Vieques Island had as much as 20 times the acceptable amount of lead and cadmium, according to the study released last week by the University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez.”

Via / The Intelligent Aboriginal News Service

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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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