5:02 pm By Maegan La Mala · business|Media|mexico|Newspapers · Comments Off
10 Aug 2007
British newspaper The Financial Times has named Mexico City one of the its “Ten Cities of the Future”, after analyzing 108 cities in North America to create their list of cities with potential for economic competitiveness and ability to attract investments.
Mexico City ranked fourth out of the top five cities with the best economic potential and fourth among the top five most cost-effective cities.
The Editor of The Financial Times, Brian Caplen, presented Mexico City’s Mayor Marcelo Ebrard with a certificate of recognition, and said “Mexico City has done a lot and is doing a lot to increase its potential to attract direct foreign investment worldwide and that’s why it deserves a place among North America’s ‘Cities of the Future’.”
La Jornada newspaper reports that according to The Financial Times‘ ranking, Mexico City’s economy outranks those of Miami and Boston.
Via / La Jornada
10:42 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · New York City|Newspapers · 1 Comment
28 Jul 2007
With ImpreMedia’s buying of Hoy, NYC readers of Spanish language news have two newspapers (the other being el Diario/La Prensa) published by the same people. 24 Horas wants to change all that.
24 Horas promises “trendy design, relevant content and excellence in distribution” the debut edition of 24 Horas is scheduled to appear near me. Why me specifically? Well according to Tricom Media, I am their target market.
“24 Horas is catered to the New Latino. An educated and hard working individual with limited time to read the news and can afford to spend an average of 20 minutes either online or reading the paper in order to be informed or entertained” Said Eddie Cruz, Publisher and Founder of Tricom Media.
So why haven’t I seen it in print yet?
Via / Hispanic PR Wire
12:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bilingualism|Immigration|Internet|language|Newspapers|Politics|race · 1 Comment
6 Apr 2007
Maybe when former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich basically said that Spanish was a ghetto language he was referring to his own lame attempt to apologize and explain his statements in Spanish! Thankfully I’m not the only one to see the irony in both his original statements and his later attempts to justify them.
The remarks drew a barrage of comments from the Latino community, and were quickly repudiated on popular Web sites such as Latin Americanist, Latino Pundit and Vivir Latino– U.S. Latino life in blog form. A headline on Vivir Latino read “Newt — Not Ghetto Fabulous,” with Maegan Ortiz, the site’s New York-based editor, writing: “Don’t you love how politicos use Spanish when it works for them and when it doesn’t, they trash it?” Similarly, Hispanic organizations such as the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund were incredulous, calling Gingrich’s comments “hateful.”
Huge props to Washington Post staff writer Jose Antonio Vargas for calling attention to the double standard white politicians hold dear when it comes to the Latino vote (and giving VL props as well). Politicos aspiring to higher offices talk out of both sides of their mouths, bad mouthing us and pandering to us, all in poor Spanish to boot. How poor? Vargas notes:
(However: Memorando al Señor Gingrich: In Spanish, the “r” is rolled and the syl-la-bles are se-pa-ra-ted.)
See Gingrich’s try to excuse the inexcusable after the jump.
Via / The Washington Post
11:50 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT|Health|New York City|Newspapers · 2 Comments
1 Mar 2007
I don’t read the New York Post on principle, so I wouldn’t have known about their recent transphobic reporting of what actually was a victory for a young Latina if it weren’t for Jack over at Angry Brown Butch.
An important victory was recently won in the struggle for trans rights, specifically around health care. Judge Sheldon Rand of the Manhattan Family Court found, for the second time, that the City of New York is obligated to pay for the sexual reassignment surgery of Mariah Lopez, a young trans woman of color who was denied this important and necessary medical care while in the care of the NYC foster system. The City is constitutionally required to provide adequate medical coverage for all children in its care, and SRS is a medically approved procedure, one that is often necessary for trans people. In the decision, Judge Rand wrote: “Mariah L. should be treated in order that she may go on with her life and be in a body which blends with the gender with which she identifies.”*
The blatantly right wing NYC newspaper chose to cover the story using tired stereotypes and slurs.
11:38 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|mexico|Newspapers · Comments Off
15 Feb 2007
Salma Hayek and the late, great Pedro Infante were the answers to the question “like what famous person would you like your partner to be?” asked by Mexican newspaper Reforma.
22 percent of Mexican men ranked Salma as their first choice, followed by actress Ana Claudia Talancón and Angelina Jolie.
25 percent of women said the legendary Pedro Infante (which seems strange to me, since he’s been dead for 50 years…it goes to show how much his image is imbedded in the Mexican psyche) was the best model for a mate, followed by Brad Pitt, then Gael García Bernal.
The Valentine’s Day survey also revealed some age-old truths about men and women:
For 85% of women, the ideal mate must be the same age or older. Only 5% of women prefer younger men.On the contrary, only 8% of men want an older mate. 19% want a younger woman and 58% the same age.
Via / AZ Central
2:27 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · New York City|Newspapers · 1 Comment
13 Feb 2007
Media conglomeration is a problem that knows no language barrier. Having multiple sources of news media is an especially important concept. It allows information to pass through various independent filters and interpretations. This is why the purchase for an undisclosed amount of NYC’s Spanish language newspaper Hoy by ImpreMedia, publisher of its rival paper, El Diario/La Prensa, is disturbing. The newspapers have competed for Spanish language readers for 8 years, one of which was marred by a scandal involving padding Hoy’s distribution numbers.
10:49 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Newspapers|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
24 Oct 2006
An editorial in yesterday’s New York Times looks at the dire situation the colony/nation of Puerto Rico finds itself in and why. The article points to a study — “The Economy of Puerto Rico: Restoring Growth” — from the Center for the New Economy, a nonpartisan Puerto Rican research group, and the Brookings Institution. The study doesn’t point the finger for the island’s problem on the people of Puerto Rico but rather at the U.S. government and its’ policies.
Much of the blame can be put on Washington, which has been tone deaf to the island’s needs and has miscalculated where help was needed. Even a good idea, like the Section 936 program of tax incentives, was mismanaged. Before it was phased out last year, it had succeeded in bringing many pharmaceutical concerns to the island, but produced relatively few jobs and at so high a cost that a $40,000 position cost the government $70,000.
9:14 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bilingualism|language|Newspapers · 3 Comments
23 Oct 2006
I read an article off of Yahoo! mail this morning with great interest because it’s an issue I face everyday as a Latina writer writing about Latino experiences. To accent or not to accent, that is the question and according to the article I’m not the only one asking.
Newspapers have long maintained that technological problems and editorial confusion make it too difficult to add accents, officially known as diacritical marks. For Colon, now a faculty member at The Poynter Institute of journalism in St. Petersburg, Fla., it’s a question of accuracy, one of the basic tenets of journalism.The absence of accents can change the pronunciation and the meaning of a word.
The name Pena, without the tilde over the “n,” means shame. The Spanish word for year without that squiggle becomes anus.
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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