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Archive for the ‘Blogs’ Category

Update to the update: I’m on a plane (yay) but lightning has the plane stuck on the runway (boo). Maybe I wasn’t meant to go?

Monday morning update: I missed my original flight and was unable to get on any flights last night on standby. I’m en route to the airport again, trying my luck again, hoping I can catch a standby spot. If I don’t make this flight, I likely will not be attending the event

Mala will be in Washington DC for the next two days, as I was selected by Latinos in Social Media (#LATISM) to receive a scholarship to participate in their first Top Blogueras Retreat.

The retreat, sponsored graciously by such outstanding corporations including Johnson & Johnson, Univision, McDonald’s, Mary Kay, Southwest Airlines, Procter and Gamble, Comcast, Fleishman Hillard, Disney/Babble, Macys, Porter Novelli, and Consumer Reports, will include opportunities for bloggers like me, to be mentored. The retreat, organized in partnership with Latina Bloggers Connect, will include a visit to the White House and meeting with such influential advocacy organizations as National Council of la Raza (NCLR).

If all of this sounds like it’s the antithesis of what I’ve been about for my blogging career, it kind of is and that’s precisely why I am going. As a political mami media maker (not a mom

blogger, not even just a blogger) I have covered everything from the Latin Grammy Awards, to the presidential debates, to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. Our team coverage has included live blogs of Netroots Nation, The Allied Media Conference, and reviews of films, musical acts, congressional votes and always with big uncensored mouths, always unsponsored, unbought. I am attending this blogeura retreat because as I wrote last year on the 6th anniversary of VivirLatino, the Latino blog landscape has changed and continues to change. Many of my media making and rabble rousing friends have stopped because of shift in the accepted definition of “blogger”. Those of us who found ourselves courted in the pre-Obama era, have felt the walls of the non-profit industrial complex and corporate personhood closing in on us. It’s been a struggle for us to continue. So who are considered the top voices and who is not? What are those voices saying and what does that say about the future of truly independent media?

I and by extension, VivirLatino has had a complicated relationship with non-profits, lawmakers, and companies who want parroting instead of critical analysis. I will be the first to admit that I am a bad capitalist and my personal and business finances are essentially one and the same because blogging is more of an extension of who I am than a separate money making venture. This has led to a less than sustainable career but a career/life none the less and for that reason, with many years of experience under my belt, I claim my position on top shamelessly.

Please follow me here on VivirLatino and on twitter accounts : @vivirlatino and @mamitamala as I look at all these issues. And I want to hear what all of you think about the direction of Latin@ blogging and online media.

For more information about the First-Ever Latina Blogger Retreat, visit http://blogueras.latism.org/

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Cross-Posted with gracious permission with Breakthrough’s b-Listed site.

Breakthrough’s I AM LAND contest, now calling on people to make a video on diversity to celebrate our differences and win prizes, also wants to share the important work our partners are doing to uplift diversity.  Read our first in the I AM THIS LAND interview series with Maegan la Mala Ortiz, Managing Editor and Co-Publisher of Vivirlatino, a daily publication, featuring news, analysis and opinions about Latino politics and culture created for the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S. by Latinas.

b-listed: Why did you feel the need to start VivirLatino?

Maegan: Actually VivirLatino was started in 2005 by a company in Spain who wanted to break into the Latino market. The writers who were brought in as editors had already been writing on and off line about Latino issues. The editors became the owners a few years ago and we made a more concerted effort to represent who we represented: Latinas born and raised in the U.S. with strong ties to our home countries with a commitment to justice/love centered human rights who also participate/consume pop culture.

b-listed: How has the response been to your blog from within the Latino community?

Maegan: Pretty awesome. We have always received lots of support and love for keeping it real and honest and true. We also get props for being really independent. We aren’t funded by any organizations and our editors work from home while balancing paying jobs, kids, activism. Our growth and popularity has come from connecting the online work to on the ground work we are all involved in and supporting other such efforts. Criticisms and critiques include doing more stuff in Spanish/bilingually. Conservative Latinos aren’t likely to be fans of us as we are shamelessly progressive/radical.

b-listed: How can online media activism (through blogs, social networking sites and other forms of new media) improve relations between the different communities living in the country?

Maegan: The only way that online media activism can improve relations is if it is connected to real on the ground work. This isn’t a popular position to take, but VivirLatino has never existed to educate or organize people outside the Latino community. If non-Latinos get something out of it, beautiful and we welcome non-Latinos to read and engage but the Latino community is so huge, so diverse that we have so much work to do amongst ourselves (in terms of educating and organizing) and I think it is ok to say that. Where the interconnectivity comes in is that Latinos are more than just Latinos. We are parents, we are queer, we are women, we are workers, we are transgender, we are immigrants, we artists, we are undocumented, we are youth etc etc etc, so we need to support justice driven work for all those intersections and vice-versa. Coalitions, collaborations are beautiful and important things that must be used strategically.

b-listed: How do you think your work in the last five years has uplifted diversity?

Maegan: Just by being real. We have taken alot of heat for not following certain messaging but we have always been honest about who we are, what we experience in our communities and what people are telling us. Diversity has become such a buzzword almost to the point of meaninglessness. Diversity is not about holding hands to cover up difference. It is about acknowledging how difference works, good and bad and how we can build across not through or over difference.

b-listed: What has surprised you most since launching VivirLatino? Good or bad.

Maegan: Besides how much work it is? ja ja. I mean it is so much work. It’s not just writing blog posts or linking to other people. We try to collaborate with what activists are doing and really lend a critical perspective to the idea of “Latinidad.” Being independent is really really hard. It costs money and time and not wanting to compromise means turning away orgs, ads, and opportunities and it means we are really broke. But on the good side, there is a constant amazement of how many people read us and look to us and who we work and collaborate with. VivirLatino really is a few gatos doing this out of a huge sense of love and responsibility. In many ways it is an extension of selves and it sounds corny but when just one person sends us a letter or tells us in person how one post impacted them or made them think, that makes it all worth it.

b-listed: What do you hope for the future as we head into 2011.

Maegan: That we have enough money and time to keep doing what we love. That we see some movement towards justice for our communities including immigrants, queer people, women, mamis, parents…, that we can all find safety in our chosen communities/families and to paraphrase the Young Lords, that each generation keep moving the struggle(s) forward.

b-listed: Complete the sentence: I AM THIS LAND because…

Maegan: I AM THIS LAND because la historia me trajo aqui a traves de de genes, sangre, y lucha /history brought me here through genes, blood, and struggle.

Enter your video on diversity to win at I AM THIS LAND.

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National Sexual Freedom Day Blog Carnival

4:09 pm By BiancaLaureano · Blogs|GLBT|Health · Comments Off

22 Sep 2010

Many of us participated on the Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice and this week I received this email from my friend and activist Perez:

The blog carnival is almost here! On September 23rd, the Woodhull Freedom Foundation will be hosting the first annual National Sexual Freedom Day. Along with in-person events, we’re also hosting a blog carnival.

The theme for the blog carnival is sexual freedom and joining is easy. Just write a post on or before Sept 23 and send me a link to this email address. We’d also love it if you would consider using the attached logo and linking back to WFF’s website.

Here are two questions to consider for your post, but feel free to write about sexual freedom in any way you’d like.

What does sexual freedom as a human right mean to you?

What legislative or social changes would you like to see to promote sexual freedom?

We’ll promote the carnival and all the posts, including a round-up at the end of the day on Thursday.

In solidarity,

Miriam Zoila Perez
Consultant, Woodhull Freedom Foundation


Miriam Zoila Perez
Editor, Feministing.com
Founder, Radicaldoula.com
www.miriamzperez.com

It would be AMAZING if more Latin@s, people of Color, LGBTQI,  immigrants, and everyone else who is often not included in such opportunities to take part in the blog carnival! If you think you may write something for this event please share a link in the comments below and send Perez your link as well! I’m writing something I hope you will too or send this to someone who will!

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President Obama was credited with using online participatory tools to make some people feel like they had a role in his election campaign and now in his presidency. The White House is keeping up appearances and invites us all to submit questions post Obama’s speech on immigration this morning.

From the White House:

After the speech, we will also host a unique online engagement event – what we’re calling an “Open for Questions Roundtable” – with Cecilia Muñoz, one of the President’s closest advisors on the issue. Representatives from online media outlets examining several angles of the immigration issue will be there posing the questions on the minds of their readers — Forbes, which focuses on business and economic issues; the Examiner.com network which has citizen reporters in every state including more than 50 border state communities; CNET which focuses on the tech community; and Univision.com, which has covered the immigration debate as closely as anybody for years. And as we always do, we’ll be taking some of your questions live via Facebook as well.

Earlier this morning, as all of us Latino and other immigration bloggers mentally prepared ourselves for the task at hand, it was noticed that all of the “online” news outlets were actually fairly traditional news outlets, nothing really independent like say bloggers were represented.

But no matter there is the live White House Feed and we can all submit questions here, where apparently all the anti’s have camped out already. It’s just like being on a roundtable, right?

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Amiga de VivirLatino, Noemi de Hermana, Resist wanted me to extend this question to the VivirLatino audience:

What does being a survivor mean to you? Leave a comment with what being a survivor is to you, your definition of survival and I’ll send you a printed copy of the Voces Zine and a 1″ survivor pin. Replies will be printed in the next issue of Voces. Anonymous answers are fine. Email me your address to get the goods: noemi.mtz at gmail.

Given the recent losses of life on the Mexico frontera with the U.S., the students on hunger strike in front of the offices of senators, it seems like such a timely question. I have my own answer that I will share over at Hermana, Resist and I ask that you share yours as well.

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As an independent media maker I know how hard it is to stay afloat. We do this out of love, out of necessity. Here at VL we struggle to stay online, pay to keep our servers, and give a little some
thing to our editors. Going to events, even when on someone else’s generous dime, still require us to pay out of pocket expenses like food.

Some of our friends in the blogosphere are asking for specific help to keep doing what they do. If you can help please do.

Where would la Mala be without BrownFemiPower aka BFP. She’s always been an inspiration, a model as I was coming up in the blog mundo and continues to be. Hermana needs a computer porque well how the hell do you expect her to drop knowledge and beauty the way she does on Flip Flopping Joy without a computer?

Can you help this amazing radical Chicana mujer get a new computer and continue to spread her truth?

Another VL amigo, Nezua from the Unapologetic Mexican, is auctioning some art to help raise some funds. Nez and VL have faced some of the same challenges as we write on immigration and other issues of comunidad, so I want him to stay online and causing trouble.

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The latest episode of News with Nezua is one I had to link to because it was about a figure that unfortunately I have come into contact with in my years as an activist and blogger, the white professional anti-racist. This person may come across as being on your side and having your back pero eventually will try and create/promote divisions and create conflict to support his/her own career growth. Not to mention the tokenization. While Nez’s video is male-centric, there are plenty of women who play the role as well. Additionally, as a women who has sat in conferences and been brought to events, the way that tokenizing and divide and conquer politics plays out against women of color is especially problematic.

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I’m really honored that Guanabee named yours truly one of their favorite Latinas on the web.

Some deal explicitly with Latino issues, some don’t. Some are funny, some are creative, some are activists, all are uniquely amazing, inspiring women who, we think, are some of the best at what they do.

I am especially honored by some of my company on the list, including dear mami amiga, Noemi Martinez of Hermana Resist. As a single mami media maker, I appreciate what Noemi does and understand the struggle it is to express yourself in a given medium with no source of funding and with kids yelling, learning, laughing and getting sick as your background soundtrack. Which is why I am asking you to help my mami hermana.

Read more…

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Anti-Racist Movements Need White Gatekeepers?

9:05 am By la Macha · Blogs|Quicklinks|race · Comments Off

2 Nov 2009

Maia is asking all the right questions in her essay, “anti racism…what went wrong?”

the problem is that when he [tim wise] does anti racism work. he explains that he ‘opens the door’ for other poc to be considered leaders and experts in anti racism. why the fuck in the anti racism movement to we still need white gatekeepers? this is what gets me. it’s the anti racism movement! we dont have a bunch of men leading and speaking as the voice of feminism. we dont have a bunch of skinny chicas being the (body) of fat acceptance. we dont have a bunch of straight folks being the voice of lbgtqia ness. but in the anti racism movement. it is white folks who speak. so that white audiences with money are not required to listen and take seriously the voice of color.

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Cubana blogger Yoani Sánchez was awarded the oldest prize in journalism, the Maria Moors Cabot Prize. Problem is, she wasn’t allowed the leave Cuba to accept the award. The awards were announced in the middle of the summer but according to her, she somehow held out a tiny bit of hope that she would be allowed to leave. She posted a video of her visit to the Cuban immigration office where she was told she couldn’t leave the country but not why. Could it be because she has been an unapologetic critic of the Cuban government whose voice, via the internet, has global reach?

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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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