11:10 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Music|Spain|TV|Venezuela · Comments Off
30 Mar 2009Remember how Venezuelan singer Carlos Baute swore he’d never leave Venezuela with his hit song “Yo Me Quedo en Venezuela” (above)? Well the lyrics now ring with irony, as Baute has apparently given up on his homeland and is forging a new career in España. After recording a hit duet with Spanish singer Marta Sanchez, Baute is also hosting a crappy-looking dating show which looks like a refrito of The Dating Game. Preview after the jump. Read more…
As somebody who lives in the Midwest, it’s been pretty upsetting and horrifying (yes, horrifying) to see what is going on with the auto industry and the economy. While banks can feel free to suck money from taxpayers so that they can then *loan* taxpayers that same money back to us–the auto industry (which provides actual jobs by which taxpayers can feed our kids and pay banks money so banks can loan it back to us), is being whipped like a dead horse.
Obama just pressured the GM CEO to resign–a sign of stregnth, yes, except that the person replacing the CEO is another GM guy.
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
Obama’s going to be speaking about his plans for the auto industry in minutes. Tune in here.
9:49 am By la Macha · Media|media justice|Women|youth · 2 Comments
30 Mar 2009I’m sure you’ve heard the stories of Josef Fritzl, the father who locked his daughter in a dungeon for decades and continuously raped and impregnated her. Well, from Colombia we get the story of Arcedio Alvarez Quintero–another man who has raped and impregnated his daughter for decades. < --more-->
Alvarez’s lawyer, Ricardo Correa, told CNN affiliate Caracol that his client appeared Saturday before a judge, who read the three charges. The judge ruled that the case against Alvarez was strong enough for him to be jailed with special protection as he awaits trial. No trial date has been scheduled.
Caracol reported that Alvarez entered “innocent” pleas to the charges.
Correa did not respond to CNN requests for an interview.
According to Caracol, the 59-year old Alavarez told the court he is innocent. Correa told Caracol that his client’s defense “will be that Alba Nidia is not his biological daughter,” but his adopted child.
Nidia insists that she is his daughter.
Authorities plan to conduct blood tests to determine the two’s genetic relationship, local officials said.
Because, you know, “having sex” with a five-year-old is totally an every day natural occurrence as long as she’s not related to you!
Gilma Jimenez, an official in Colombia, got it right when she said:
Gilma Jimenez, a local councilwoman who has had close contact with Nidia, has offered her financial assistance and has been speaking out against child abuse.
“One of the tragedies of this whole story, is that it seems that many different people in the community knew about this situation, but no one said anything,” Jimenez told CNN. “This is the indifference, the silence that encourages more child abuse.”
…
“This is not enough. … We have failed our children in Colombia,” she said.
Although I am the first to cry outrage at men/fathers/people in general raping little kids, much less grown adults, I have to wonder at why stories of abuse are suddenly flooding our media outlets. Is it really that the media cares so much–or is there something titillating about reporting these stories?
What are the ethical standards the media holds itself to when reporting about cases of abuse? As far as I can tell, the media agrees to withhold the name of the survivor. Other than that, there is no overall agreement on what will be reported (as in do all the disgusting details need to be revealed?), what words will be used to report on the case (Is it rape? Incest? “Sex”?), or even what role the media has in reporting on these cases (Unbiased “just the facts” sort of reporting? Supporters of the survivor? Community advocate against rape?)?
Intense media scrutiny of rape cases can be a good and a bad thing. It can give rape survivors courage to come forward and report their own abuse–but more often than not, it’s extremely destructive. It terrifies rape survivors from coming forward, it often biases juries so that accused don’t get fair trails, and triggers survivors into suicidal depressions that they often don’t come out of (see rates of suicide of indigenous peoples of Canada when news about boarding school violence began to surface).
I think that all these stories need to be exposed and reported on. But I think that there should be certain standards to reporting that center the health an safety of survivors and protects the accused, at least until there is a guilty verdict.
I don’t see the day coming when media adopts any standards like that, however. Which to me, is a tragedy in itself.
8:34 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Puerto Rico · 25 Comments
30 Mar 2009
Today you can have a pedacito de Puerto Rico in your pocket via a quarter featuring the U.S. colony. I first learned about this um honor via Bianca Laureano.
As you can see from the image, the back of the new quarter features an historic sentry box and a hibiscus flower with the inscriptions, PUERTO RICO and Isla del Encanto. The sentry box and walls that are depicted on the quarter are probably one of the most recognized symbols of Puerto Rico and highlight the islands strength and rich heritage . The design was originally commissioned by the past Govenor Aníbal Acevedo-Vilá.
Apparently Ricans are expected to be excited by this token especially because originally only U.S. States were to be featured on the new U.S. quarters pero now U.S. Territories including P.R., Guam and Washington D.C. will also have their own coins.
Yeah so spend U.S. money Ricans. Just don’t expect the vote.
Ain’t democracy grand?
Via / Visit the Coqui
6:13 am By Maegan La Mala · GLBT|Movies · 3 Comments
30 Mar 2009Cuz Mala is a single mami, I never get to see movies when they come out in the theaters. I have to wait for them to come out on DVD and then wait for the kids to go to sleep. This past weekend, my Netflix finally sent me the next Oscar winning film on my queue, Gus Van Sant’s, Milk starring Sean Penn.
Now there will be some spoilers so please if you haven’t seen the movie or don’t know anything about Harvey Milk then you may want to stop reading now.
That said, I knew about Harvey Milk before I saw the film. So the story wasn’t a surprise. What was a surprise was in this story about the GLBT movement or at least Milk’s role in it, was how white it was. I don’t know San Fran or The Castro District pero there had to be more people of color involved in the struggle. Claro this assumption comes from my own knowledge and experience in dealing with the GLBT movement here on the east coast, a la Sylvia Rivera.
I was also surprised that Diego Luna was in the film. Then I was disappointed. Luna plays Jack Lira, Milk’s lover aka the tragic gay Latino. Don’t get me wrong. Some of my favorite lines in the film are related to Jack like, “The Latino has locked himself in the closet” when well Luna’s character during what can only be described as a temper tantrum , locks himself in a closet. Another line that made me giggle was when a drunk Dan White, played by Josh Brolin, says ” I don’t even know who you are, you just showed up out of nowhere, Latino man.”
The fact is that we, the viewers never really know who Jack Lira is. Now I know the movie is Milk not Lira, pero I felt that Lira’s character was a caricature, a childish alcoholic who was seen as a problem to Milk’s political aspirations and was prone to be jealous and mentally unstable to the point of killing himself in a dramatic fashion almost worthy of a novela. Even in interviews with Luna about playing Lira , Luna describes Lira as “simple”.
Pero all in all, Milk is an enjoyable film. Penn does a good job, I thought, especially in examining the issues of power and personal politics pero it does a poor job of looking at the bigger picture, especially in how the POC queer community played a role in the struggles of the 70′s beyond cooking, dancing, drinking and offing themselves.
What do others who have seen the film think?
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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