3:00 pm By Maegan La Mala · Celebrities|children|Fashion|Marketing|Shopping|TV|Women · 1 Comment
11 Aug 2008
With my older daughter’s birthday approaching, the search for the perfect gift has begun and what would Latina girls like my daughter do without Al Rojo Vivo‘s María Celeste Arrarás who threw her celeb status as anchor of a news/bochinche show at Telemundo, behind Fisher Price’s Color Me Gemz (TM).
“We Latinas love to look our best all the time,” said Arrarás. “The Color Me Gemz line is great fun — and more. Girls can combine creativity, imagination and self-expression to make jewelry works of art to dress up all their outfits, just like mom!”
The Color Me Gemz collection is a brand new line that allows girls to create their very own fashion-forward jewelry with the touch of a pen. Creating dazzling Color Me Gemz pieces is quick, easy and fun. Girls simply use the included jewel-toned marker pens to color specially designed facets that create the appearance of an actual gemstone so they can sparkle and shine wherever they go.
Girls can choose from four adorable Color Me Gemz sets, including a Necklace Set, Bracelet Set, Belt Set or Decorator Set. They can even create and decorate their own fashion accessories including a purse or hat. Girls can store their Color Me Gemz masterpieces in the new Color Me Gemz Jewelry Box, which can also be gem-ified inside and out.
“Color Me Gemz is more than just a toy. It’s an ideal contemporary activity set, combining two things girls love – arts and crafts and the magic of jewelry,” said Chris Byrne, The Toy Guy(R)(R). “It’s easy and rewarding for kids to use, while inspiring focused creativity and giving girls something they can proudly display as their own creation.”
8:32 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Media|Shopping · Comments Off
9 Jul 2008
I want this! The Media Heroes trading cards were announced at the media reform conference in Minneapolis (which I couldn’t afford to go to, but that is a different post).
The Media heroes being honored include historical figures such as legendary anti-lynching reporter Ida B. Wells, Newspaper Guild founder Heywood Broun, and Elias Boudinot, founder/editor of the first Native American newspaper, the Cherokee Phoenix. Also recognized are contemporary media movers and shakers, including intrepid PBS producer Bill Moyers, Paper Tiger TV co-founder DeeDee Halleck, Puerto Rican community activist Richie Perez, and others. Organizations or collaborations singled out for hero status include news program Democracy Now!, media watch group FAIR, and the Children’s Television Workshop, creators of Sesame Street.
Yup, they include my mentor Richie Perez (who gets all credit for the Mamita Mala name and my politics). Richie, whose media work included working against the film Fort Apache, freeing Puerto Rican political prisoners, non-partisan voter registration, and training the young Latinos leaders of tomorrow. He is my hero.
Via / Boing Boing
1:37 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Controversia|Fashion|Food|Marketing|Media|Shopping · 1 Comment
30 May 2008
Rachel Ray annoys me. Her “simple”, so-called 20 minute recipes and happy happy cooking piss off my struggling to put a Latino meal on the table while blogging and chasing two kids. But I wouldn’t call Rachel Ray a terrorist or that she supports terrorists because she’s wearing an “Arab looking” scarf while selling Dunkin Donuts iced coffee drinks. But conservatives, among them Michelle “I suffer from self-hate ” Malkin, think that the scarf Ms. Ray wore during a DD’s ad:
looked too much like a keffiyeh, what Malkin describes as “the traditional scarf of Arab men that has come to symbolize murderous Palestinian jihad.
. And Dunkin Donuts said: ok we’ll pull the ad. Stupid move Dunkin Donuts.
10:45 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Entrepreneurs|Shopping · Comments Off
19 May 2008
White hipsters don’t have the edge on edgy baby clothes anymore. Enter Little Poco, started by a Nuyorican mami who was expecting twins and looking for something beyond the usual to dress her babies in. Roachele Negron, the mama beyond the label said in an email to VivirLatino:
A couple of summer ago the fashion in the streets was to rock images of Scarface. No one cared/remembered that their beloved kingpin hero dies in the end. Blazed with bullets, alone. This bothered me. Yes, I love the movie. Yes, I have seen it 15+ times, can speak along with most scenes. But to see it rocked? To see kids really celebrating, the devastating end that in reality also comes to many uncles, brothers and friends, didn’t sit right with me. I doubt the tshirts and nikes with Tony’s distraught face was inspiration to go and looked up the Mariel boat liftSeveral years back further, anything with Che was all the rage. But when asked, rarely could anyone tell me what he did and stood for. Forget about where he was from or how he died.
Walk down the streets of el barrio, ask a 13 year old who the young lords were. Most likely you’ll get a blank stare. Walk across town to Harlem and ask who the black panthers were, you’ll see some recognition but it the details will be hazy.
It bothers my soul to think about the abridged history that is being taught in our schools. Thankfully the internet is starting to shape up as salvation to combat the growing complacency of our youth. At their finger tips is the uplifting movements of people who believed in themselves and by remembering their past sought to better their future. By choosing images that are unfamiliar to most, I am helping to inspire questions. Littlepoco is not making a political statement, we are helping mi gente to seek out buried information. The images I choose are ones that have always moved me and lead me to ask my own questions. For me it is less about political beliefs and more about honoring the determination of our people to strive for better.
I like the idea that these images are worn by our children. I like to imagine that when the aw in a toddlers eyes is combined with these powerful images, anyone can be jump started to seek more knowledge.
3:46 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Arts|Controversia|Fashion|Marketing|mexico|Shopping|Women · Comments Off
21 Feb 2008
As a Latina artist, I thought that naming a tequila after legendary Mexicana artista Frida Kahlo was crossing a line. A bus trying to bring attention to women’s issues? A little closer to the spirit of Frida. A skin care line? Not so much. Yet that’s the latest thing to have the tragic artista’s name attached to it.
11:50 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bizarro|Drugs|Gifts|Shopping · Comments Off
20 Dec 2007
Ok, I’m totally kidding (I would never advocate the selling, buying, or distribution of drugs) but this picture that arrived in my inbox was way too good to pass up. Apparently there are three people licensed to sell the hallucinogenic cactus peyote in the United States and this guy is one of them.
In all seriousness, Peyote is a sacred plant, used, like many other plants, for religious ceremonies by many indigenous tribes in the Southwest region of what is now the U.S. In the U.S., the use of Peyote is protected but only as part of a religious ceremony (sorry druggies).
Via / Activate
10:41 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bizarro|Religion|Shopping · Comments Off
18 Dec 2007
I haven’t bought a Nativity set for my apartment, so this one has possibilities. The Holy Family as marshmellowy goodness? If Chocolate Jesus pissed people off, why is this representation ok?
(yeah I know it has something to do with the lack of a penis but still!).
Via / Boing- Boing
5:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Family|Shopping|Tech|Telecomm · Comments Off
20 Sep 2007
Thankfully my 10 year isn’t one of those kids, the kind that are up your ass to have what all her friends have. Most of her fifth grade friends do have cell phones, used to communicate with their parents as they walk home from school alone. But I still pick my daughter up, so the need wasn’t there. However when offered the chance to review Kajeet, a new cell phone service for kids, I jumped at the chance. I wanted to see what the hype was about and if indeed I did have control of how my daughter would use it. I was pleasantly surprised. My daughter loved the cute characters that are used as the phone’s spokespeople and promptly decorated her LG 225 camera phone with stickers of big headed alien looking creatures she knew by name. I loved the fact that I could control not only who my daughter called but how calls were payed for.
12:26 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Immigration|Money|Shopping|Virginia · 2 Comments
28 Aug 2007
Economic boycotts are an extremely difficult political tactic. They require widespread mass support in order to be effective. But the difficulty of using such a weapon isn’t stopping Latinos in Prince William County, Virginia from using it as a tool against anti-immigrant policies. The boycott, which began yesterday, is a week long campaign targeting all non-immigrant-owned businesses, including such chains as Wal-Mart and McDonald’s. At such an important time for businesses, back to school time, the impact of a boycott could be great. Although, those that back the measure aren’t so sure.
“They don’t have a prayer of reversing this resolution, which has the support of 80 percent of county residents,” said Greg Letiecq, an activist who heads Help Save Manassas. “This is an attempt to bully immigrant businesses.”
9:26 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children|Marketing|Shopping · 2 Comments
14 Aug 2007An article on Fox News.com (I know, I’m so ashamed)tells all us “minorities” to get ready for the brown doll revolution in chain stores like K-Mart.
Bolstered by the success of Nickelodeon’s popular bilingual children’s character, Dora the Explorer, and the spending power of the nation’s growing minority population, toy retailers across the country are filling their shelves with dolls whose skin colors and facial features reflect the girls and boys who play with them.
Now none of my daughters look or sound like Dora (she’s way too screamy anyway) and I don’t live near a K-Mart so maybe that’s why I haven’t seen this influx. What do I see in a darker shade of plastic? Pouty putaish Bratz dolls that my daughter is forbidden to play with and this:
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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