7:53 am By Maegan La Mala · TV · 6 Comments
18 Oct 2005
A recent article calls attention to ABC’s 8pm-9pm Wednesday night line up. It quotes:
Let’s get one thing straight: Just because George Lopez and Freddie Prinze Jr. are Hispanic men with their own sitcoms on ABC, and their shows just happen to be scheduled consecutively on Wednesday nights, doesn’t mean there’s a new “Latin hour” on prime-time television.
Now, I have to say, I agree with part of this statement. You couldn’t come out and say “It’s Jewish Time”, or “African American Line-Up”…but many people are referring to The George Lopez Show and Freddie as the “Latino Hour”.
Here’s the only part I really don’t agree with of the quote mentioned above:
…and their shows just happen to be scheduled consecutively on Wednesday nights…
Their shows are not accidentally lined up next to each other. I’m sure the ABC had planned on marketing this either officially or unofficially as a “Latino Hour”. And, Prinze thinks so, too. In another article he states:
“I’m not so sure that the network should be creating a Latino hour,” he said. “Maybe our two shows should stand alone.”
Maybe he’s right. You don’t have to know that Freddie is a “Latino” show. You just have to know if you like it or not. If you laugh, keep watching. If not, then find something else.
[Lopez says:]“Just watch because you think the shows are funny. Don’t watch because we’re a couple of Latino guys.” To which Prinze added: “I have no patience for that. Because Latino is cool, all of a sudden, they’re like, we’ll say this and we’ll be cool. Shut your face, man. It’s TV.”
It’s no secret that corporations are finally aware of the power of the Latino/Hispanic audience. But there are still a lot of lessons to learn. Maybe today’s lesson to big business is this: If you want to focus on an audience, a target market, then do it. Research everything there is about it, and create your campaign based on those needs. But by throwing around the words Latino and Hispanic in situations that it could feel discriminating, you may be hurting yourself more than helping.
Via / Buffalo News
6:57 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · California|Politics|society · Comments Off
30 Sep 2005
At the end of this month in which we reflect on Latino history, we observe the 40th anniversary of the now legendary “huelga de las uvas” initiated by the United Farm Workers, made up of the masses of exploited Mexicano and Filipino farmers in California’s Central Valley, Cesar Chavez at the helm in, 1965. So much has changed, yet so much remains the same. From VOA News:
In August, state officials approved emergency rules to prevent heat illness. Temperatures in the Central Valley often rise above thirty-eight Celsius. The heat may have led to the deaths of several farm workers in the past year.
The new rules require employers to provide about one liter of drinking water per worker per hour. Employers must also provide an area where workers can go for at least five minutes to recover from the heat. State legislators will consider more extensive measures.
UFW recently ended another boycott of Gallo Winery.
After so many years of lucha, conditions haven’t changed all that much. There’s still a lot more to fight for so people can have una vida digna, which is the legacy of Cesar.
Non-profit organization GLAAD has had a tough time getting their heads and hands around the anti-gay presence on many television shows on Spanish-language TV in the years since it launched its People of Color Media Program. They’ve made a lot of headway, though, getting corporate giants like Pizza Hut to pull ads aired on Univision during a show known to antagonize and stereotype gay people. GLAAD’s Media Awards, a start-studded three-city event boasting stars like Robin Williams, Tippi Hedren, etc. makes a big splash each year, and now they are taking the show to Miami, to honor the “good guys” in Spanish-language media. According to a press release, Univision’s Jorge Ramos will present TV’s Cristina Saralegui with the “Premio Valentía”.
Valentía is right. I think it’s pretty valiente for Cristina to publicly support the gay community knowing that a significant number of her viewers do not.
The event is presented by GLAAD’s long-time sponsor Absolut Vodka, along with new sponsor Coors Light.
12:53 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · 3 Comments
27 Sep 2005
Interesting story out of Arizona via HispanicTips. Intriguing first because of the weird word play: the school is called “Naco” (which for non-Mexicans is a classist, racially charged insult flung from Mexican to Mexican) and it’s located in an Arizona town called “Ajo”. Is this one of those Latin American magical realism movies?
No. Apparently, there’s some tension going on in the town of Ajo, between Naco students and parents and authorities, with charges of discrimination against Mexican families:
The U.S. Department of Education received complaints of discrimination and sent a team to investigate. The complaint says Hispanic students who live within the school district were being asked to pay tuition while non-Hispanic students were not.
The allegation is that the children cross back into Mexico across the Arizona border after school, so they should be paying non-resident (probably international student) tuition.
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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