12:56 pm By Maegan La Mala · Lifestyle| Spain| Tech| children| society · Comments Off
17 Jun 2008
Two Spanish children, aged 12 and 13, have been sent to a mental hospital because of their addiction to cell phones. BBC Mundo reports that the two boys were sent to the institution because they were “unable to do normal activities without their cell phones.” According to the parents, the children’s grades were affected by the excessive cell phone use and their conduct was also severely impacted.
The children will be receiving treatment in the Children’s Mental Health Clinic in Lleida (Catalunya) for three months in an attempt to get them off the cell phone habit.
The BBC reports that the boys had been showing signs of addiction to their cells for 18 months prior, but the parents had not intervened.
Maybe I’m old school, but do we really need a treatment program for this? How about just taking the cell phones away?
By the way, it’s not just kids who are addicted to cell phones in Spain. In a country of 44 million people, there are 50 million cell phones — more phones than people.
Via / BBC Mundo
11:18 am By Maegan La Mala · Food| Lifestyle| Money| mexico| society · Comments Off
20 May 2008
The massive price increases that have been affecting Mexico since last year are changing the way some Mexicans — particularly those in the capital city — eat. La Jornada reports that inflation is up 60% on staple products, forcing many to have to change their diet for the worse.
The rise in prices is affecting at least 2 million people in Mexico City who barely scrape by economically, and forcing them to give up meat, chicken and fish, replacing them with tortillas and bread because half of their income is spent on food. It just isn’t enough to afford these items.
The Mexican Secretary of Development is worried that this will eventually take its toll on health, especially that of children, and expects to see a decline in school performance, as well as failing health in the elderly.
And the situation isn’t getting better. Just when you think you can turn to bread as a cheap food option, La Jornada reports that wheat flower has gone up 100%. Other staples like rice have increased in price by 80%.
Via / La Jornada
Image via Rageforst on Flickr
2:43 pm By Maegan La Mala · Lifestyle| Politics| mexico| society · Comments Off
26 Feb 2008The Mexican Senate just passed the much talked about “Anti-tobacco Law”, which would make many parts of the country smoke free, and the consequences for breaking it are no joke:
The General Law for Tobacco Control will prohibit smoking in closed public spaces and violations will be punished with up to 36 hours of jail time.In addition, fines up to the equivalent of 100 to 10,000 minimum wage days [a common way of calculating fines in Mexico] and the temporary or permanent closing of businesses violating the law will be applied. For repeat offenders, the fine can go up to 1 million pesos.
The new law establishes “100% smoke free zones” in public spaces, workplaces both public and private and universities.
Mexico’s Milenio reports that once the official bulletin is released by the government, the law will take effect in 90 days all over the republic. No Smoking signs will be visibly placed in areas where smoking is prohibited, and the government will provide a phone number where citizens can report violations of the law. In addition, business owners who wish to allow smoking in their establishments will have 180 days to modify their property to close off an area for that.
The law also establishes new regulations for tobacco-related advertising, which from now on may only appear in publications geared toward adults or in places where only adults are allowed to enter, such as bars and nightclubs.
Via / Milenio
12:48 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| Lifestyle| mexico · Comments Off
19 Feb 2008
Over 600 undocumented immigrant couples — some of the planning to enter the U.S. and others returning from the U.S. — were married in a mass ceremony at the border between Tijuana, Baja California and San Diego on Valentine’s Day.
As a live band blasted out sugary Mexican love songs in the border city of Tijuana, a short walk from the busy San Ysidro crossing into California, a judge simultaneously married a crowd of couples whose ages ranged from 16 to 65.More than three-quarters were migrants returning from, or trying to get into, the United States.
“Isn’t she gorgeous? I love her!” said Inocencio Felix of his new wife Angelica Perez, 36, dressed in a flouncy white wedding gown. Perez was deported by U.S. immigration officials two weeks ago from the state of Oregon, where the couple met.
Reuters reports that some couples made the dangerous decision of returning to Mexico just to participate in the ceremony.
Via / Reuters
Image via Yahoo News-AP Photos
4:10 pm By Maegan La Mala · Internet| Lifestyle · 2 Comments
15 Feb 2008
It’s February 15th…do you know where your Valentine is? Did you spend the holiday alone, cursing it as a Hallmark consumerist excuse to spend money, or were you instead pining away because (say in whiny voice) “everybody’s got somebody except me…”?
A new all-Latino dating site called QuieroLatino might be the solution to your singledom. The site officially launched yesterday, on el dia de los enamorados and we’ve heard there’s a lot of buzz on QuieroLatino already.
2:05 pm By Maegan La Mala · Entertainment| Lifestyle| mexico · 1 Comment
3 Dec 2007
I don’t live in Mexico City anymore so I can’t say whether Mayor Marcelo Ebrard is really good for the city, but what does seem evident is that he’s made the most visible changes in the metropolis than any other recent mayor. Case in point: turning the country’s “kilómetro cero” — the iconic Zocalo main plaza in the city’s historic downtown — into a massive ice skating rink.
While in another time this would sound crazy to the average Mexico City citizen, it doesn’t sound that strange coming from a mayor who installed a series of artificial beaches throughout the city over the summer, and, in the months of lead-up to his latest project — the ice rink — permanently ridded Mexico City’s Centro Histórico of the street peddlers who have worked in that area for hundreds of years (I have very mixed feelings about that one).
Shocking or not, La Jornada reports that over 50,000 people turned out this weekend to check out the urban ice spectacle, with a few minor injuries already reported.
Via / La Jornada
Image via Rodolfochka’s Flickr page
12:29 pm By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| GLBT| Lifestyle| society · Comments Off
20 Nov 2007
Putting its economic crisis of a few years ago behind it, Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires, is donning a new chic face: the luxury gay destination in South America. While Brazil topped the list for gay travelers to el sur for many years, Argentina’s push toward attracting pink dollars (which go far in Buenos Aires) and the country’s progressive politics have gay tourists skipping Rio and flocking to San Telmo. The International Herald Tribune reports on a perfect example of gay-friendly luxury in Buenos Aires:
The first five-star gay hotel in Latin America opened Wednesday in the Argentine capital, an increasingly popular destination on the worldwide gay tourist circuit.The hotel, set near the historic San Telmo neighborhood, is the second of its kind developed by Spain’s Axel Corp., which opened a five-star, 66-room gay hotel in Barcelona in 2003.
“Like any other business, we have economic objectives,” general manager Nacho Rodriguez said. But “we’re also about fighting to help the normalization and acceptance of gays in society.”
11:35 am By Maegan La Mala · Lifestyle| Spain| World| business · Comments Off
15 Aug 2007
Starting in 2012, those with the means will be able to stay at a hotel far away from home — in space. Spanish entrepreneurs will be taking reservations next year for stays at their space hotel — Galactic Suite — which will be located 450 miles from Earth. Venezuela’s El Universal reports:
The journey will be aboard a space shuttle, a hybrid between a commercial airplane and a rocket, and will arrive at the Galactic Suite hotel, also called Spaceresort, which will remain in orbit around the Earth……In each flight six people will travel: two crewmembers and four tourists. For the three day stay in the orbital hotel, the shuttle will remain anchored to the arrival module so that passengers feel more secure.
Space travelers able to pay for the 4 million dollar ride will be able to orbit the earth several times per day in 80-minute intervals and will be treated to seeing the sun rise and set 15 times daily.
And if you have the money, you’ll also need time off. Space tourists will have to undergo 18 weeks of preparation on a tropical island before the journey.
Read more at the Galactic Suite website.
Via / El Universal
Image via CNN/Galactic Suite
5:17 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Environment| Lifestyle| mexico · Comments Off
30 May 2007
While some have criticized a boom in ethanol production might lead to deforestation in Brazil, it might have yet another ugly effect on a country a little closer to home: Mexico. Please say it ain’t so:
Mexican farmers are setting ablaze fields of blue agave, the cactus-like plant used to make the fiery spirit tequila, and resowing the land with corn as soaring U.S. ethanol demand pushes up prices.The switch to corn will contribute to an expected scarcity of agave in coming years, with officials predicting that farmers will plant between 25 percent and 35 percent less agave this year to turn the land over to corn.
According to Reuters, the abundance of Mexico’s beloved agave led to an oversupply of tequila and agave prices so low it wasn’t worth it to farmers to stick with the plant. As the demand for ethanol increases, corn prices soar, so it’s bye-bye agave. Get ready to pay $50 a bottle for some crappy Cuervo.
Via / MSNBC
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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