4:29 pm By BiancaLaureano · Celebrities|Movies|race · 3 Comments
25 Feb 2010The good thing about the film Cop Out is that the term “coonfest” does not completely describe this film. The bad thing is everything else. I admit when I first saw the trailers for the film I said to myself “…but I’ve seen the 48 Hours films already.” Unfortunately, Kevin Smith (Clerks, Dogma) did not have a lot to work with regarding the script brothers Robb and Mark Cullen (Heist) wrote and gave him.
The story is about two police officers in California who have been together for nine years. Jimmy Monroe performed by Bruce Willis (Die Hard) and Paul Hodges performed by Tracy Morgan (30 Rock, First Sunday) have formed a “unique” way of attempting to solve crimes. Yet, their crime-fighting capabilities lead them to a 30-day suspension. While Jimmy worries about how to pay for his daughter, Ava’s (Michelle Trachtenberg) wedding, Paul is preoccupied with the possibility that his wife, Debbie, performed by Rashida Jones (I Love You, Man) may be having an affair with the neighbor. Instead of agreeing to have Ava’s stepfather Roy, performed by Jason Lee (My Name Is Earl), pay for the wedding, Jimmy chooses to sell a baseball card he’s had since his childhood. Upon attempting to sell his card the store is held up, his card stolen, and he convinces Paul to search for the missing card with him. This search leads them to a drug cartel run by (who else?) a Mexican crew led by Poh Boy performed by a very tired looking Guillermo Díaz (Weeds).
12:57 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · history|holidays|Immigration|Marketing|Media|media justice|mexico|race|society · 7 Comments
5 May 2009
Earlier today, a gringo ex of mine sent me a text message wishing me a happy cinco de Mayo. Hmmm ok. I thanked him and then reminded him that I wasn’t really celebrating because:
A: I’m not Mexican and
B: I’m not a Mexican from Puebla.
See Cinco de Mayo is not Mexico’s Independence Day and not even all of Mexico celebrates it, because the holiday commemorates the Mexican army’s unlikely defeat of French forces at the Battle of Puebla.
Let’s make this comparison: most people in the U.S. celebrate 4th of July not the battle of Saratoga.
Pero an article making it’s way around suggests that Cinco de Mayo makes other Latinos hate Mexicans. Porque? Because it’s more proof that the Mexicans are taking over sillies! Cue the reconquista music please:
But for Dagoberto Reyes, a Salvadorian immigrant living in Los Angeles, May 5 is more a reminder of the dominance Mexican culture has in a country that is home to immigrants from many Latin American countries. His prime example: Los Angeles-area public schools.
“Our kids go to this school system, and the school system is more preoccupied with Mexico’s history, and not the rest of Latin America’s, much less El Salvador’s,” said Reyes, director of Casa de la Cultura, a Salvadorian community center. “They came back celebrating Cinco De Mayo. That holiday means nothing to us.”
11:28 am By la Macha · economy|Family|Immigration|U.S.-Mexico Border|Violence · 1 Comment
4 May 2009While I was reading this post comparing the brutal murders of men of color and town reactions to the murders from Elle PhD, I came across this older article about the murder of Luis Ramirez in Pennsylvania.
By May, Ramirez had settled in Shenandoah, working two jobs after spending six months picking berries in Georgia.
“He worked hard so his kids would have more than he had growing up,” Dillman said. “He talked a lot about how we take so much for granted here.”
His diamond-encrusted religious medal, which cost him $300, now hangs over the fireplace in the three-story home on Main Street where Dillman and the children live.
“I just don’t understand how you can beat someone so badly when you don’t even know them,” Dillman said. “People here are just ignorant. They think life begins and ends in Shenandoah.”
It made me so sad to read this section. Earlier in the article, the author mentions that Ramirez had been kicked so hard by his murderers that the cross from that necklace left a cross mark on his chest.
Even as the article let’s the reader in on a detailed understanding of the lives of the “boys” accused of murdering Ramirez (honor students, football stars, etc), the one detail it tells us about Ramirez is that he spent $300 on a diamond encrusted necklace.
Oh, and he had two children out of wedlock. With a white woman. And was last seen walking down the street with a teenage girl.
Does it surprise anyone that the men accused of killing Luis Ramirez have been found not guilty?
Is it murder when you’re just doing something that everybody imagines doing themselves?
What right do dirty Mexicans have to “ruin the lives” of good boys, clean boys, who are doing their best to live day to day in a world that rewards criminals (with $300 necklaces) and denies jobs to hardworking “real Americans?”
Is it justice to punish those poor boys? Or is it justice that the visible display of Ramirez’s arrogance was used against him to destroy him?
Elle notes in her post:
Dr. King once said something to the effect of the arc of history** is long, but it bends towards justice.
Right now, I’m just stuck on how achingly long it is.
And all I can say is me too.
From CNN comes the news of the migrant family that became the icon of a generation:
McIntosh is the girl to the left of her mother when you look at the photograph. The picture is best known as “Migrant Mother,” a black-and-white photo taken in February or March 1936 by Dorothea Lange of Florence Owens Thompson, then 32, and her children.
Lange was traveling through Nipomo, California, taking photographs of migrant farm workers for the Resettlement Administration. At the time, Thompson had seven children who worked with her in the fields.
“She asked my mother if she could take her picture — that … her name would never be published, but it was to help the people in the plight that we were all in, the hard times,” McIntosh says.
“So mother let her take the picture, because she thought it would help.”
The next morning, the photo was printed in a local paper, but by then the family had already moved on to another farm, McIntosh says.
“The picture came out in the paper to show the people what hard times was. People was starving in that camp. There was no food,” she says. “We were ashamed of it. We didn’t want no one to know who we were.”
The photograph helped define the Great Depression, yet McIntosh says her mom didn’t let it define her, although the picture “was always talked about in our family.”
“It always stayed with her. She always wanted a better life, you know.”
Her mother, she says, was a “very strong lady” who liked to have a good time and listen to music, especially the yodeler named Montana Slim. She laughs when she recalls her brothers bringing home a skinny greyhound pooch. “Mom, Montana Slim is outside,” they said.
The differences in how white folks who are in poverty are treated compared to brown skinned people is really upsetting to me. While a picture of a white family brought help and change from the government–the same picture of a brown family would get ignored if the community was lucky or an ICE raid if they weren’t. The life the woman describes here is no different than what Mexicans (among other groups) are living right now today–but nobody considers that a tragedy. And in light of what happened to the black immigrant worker whose life was made less valuable that a 69$ camera by shoppers, I have to ask all those who insist that unions are no longer necessary–are you serious?
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how Latin@s are so often stereotyped as existing within specific geographical areas. For example, Mexicans are in Texas and California, Puerto Ricans are in New York, Cubans are in Florida, etc. And while, on the whole, it’s largely true that there are huge populations of each of these groups in those areas, it’s also true that Latin@s exist outside of those geographical areas as well. I think the emphasis placed on where each population exists has the effect of shutting off, silencing, and/or marginalizing Latin@s that exist in geographical areas where they don’t “belong.”
I grew up in Michigan, and while there was/is a fairly large Mexican population here, there’s also a LOT of isolation as well. Growing up in small towns (that there are a lot of) rather than bigger cities like Detroit, leads to a lot of pressure to act as the ‘token’ Mexican (she’s a *good* one! Compared to all those evil *bad* ones!) or to completely assimilate by pretending your not Mexican at all (When every Jose suddenly prefers to be called Joe!).
All this reflecting made me wonder about VLatin@s. What geographical area are located in? I know that Mamita has a lot of followers in the New York area, but I wonder if there are any VLatin@s that are like me, sitting your lonely butt out in the middle of Hickville U.S.A. (or Canada)?
Tell us where you’re at! Are there other Latin@s there? Other Latin@s of your “type” (for example, if you’re Cuban, there are other Cubans)? If not, how do you negotiate being so isolated?
11:47 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Chismes|mexico · 64 Comments
15 Jun 2007
Via a reader tip who pointed us to a post on PerezHilton.com, Jessica Alba had a lot to say about her Mexican heritage, and none of it good. Here’s a short excerpt:
“I’ve got cousins galore. Mexicans just spread all their seeds. And the women just pop them out.”“My grandfather was the only Mexican at his college, the only Hispanic person at work and the only one at the all-white country club. He tried to forget his Mexican roots, because he never wanted his kids to be made to feel different in America. He and my grandmother didn’t speak Spanish to their children. Now, as a third-generation American, I feel as if I have finally cut loose.”
Wow, one more reason to hate her. Not sure where Perez got his info, but if this is true, I hope it alienates all of her Latino/a fans.
There are actually a couple more “enlightened” comments she makes on her cultural shame in his complete post. Check it out.
Via / PerezHilton.com
3:26 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Brazil|Guatemala|Immigration|mexico · 1 Comment
22 May 2006
Last week we told you that not everyone crossing the border from Mexico into the U.S. is necessarily a Mexican immigrant. Via The Latin Americanist, Reuters reports on the phenomenon of “OTM” (“other than Mexican”) immigrants claiming to be Mexican in order to be deported to Mexico, rather than their home countries:
Non-Mexican Hispanics entering the United States illegally are studying up on Mexican history and geography, even learning to whistle the national anthem, to beat U.S. plans to fly them home.
Stop right there. Is this working? If so, we’ve got some dumb Border Patrol officials on the beat.
…so-called Other Than Mexican, or OTM, illegal immigrants mostly from Central America, are increasingly being flown back hundreds of miles to their home countries, which can effectively end their dream of entering the United States to earn a better life.So, many pretend to be Mexicans.
6:56 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|race|society · 4 Comments
17 Jan 2006
New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin is at it again. He’s surfacing now to promote not just the rebuilding of New Orleans (I thought he had moved to Dallas?), but the rebuilding of a “Chocolate New Orleans”.
WTF?
“I don’t care what people are saying Uptown or wherever they are. This city will be chocolate at the end of the day,” Nagin said in a Martin Luther King Jr. Day speech. “This city will be a majority African-American city. It’s the way God wants it to be.”
7:02 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|mexico|TV · 23 Comments
13 Oct 2005
This country has its fair share of xenophobes and racists, some of which have made a name for themselves on cable news networks, where every non blond-haired, blue-eyed Jesus fearing individual is subject to belittlement and allegations of being responsible from everything to gas prices to terrorism.
CNN’s Lou Dobbs, however, is a different breed of bigot. Whether or not true reflections of Mr. Dobbs’ own convictions or the work of a few savvy producers with a penchant for sensationalism (remember when Bill O’Reilly was on A Current Affair and was “normal”?), Lou Dobbs is OBSESSED with Mexicans. I repeat: OBSESSED. And I actually do think the obsession is real, especially given the above photo of him with the “Minutemen”.Lou Dobbs is OBSESSED with Mexicans. I repeat: OBSESSED. And I actually do think the obsession is real, especially given the above photo of him with the “Minutemen”.
At first it was kind of a joke with my friends: “Guess what Lou Dobbs’ lead story is today…Uh, I don’t know, the outsourcing of America to MEXICO? Our unprotected borders open to evil MEXICANS?” Later I realized that the subject of illegal Mexican immigration was even more common on his show “Lou Dobbs Tonight” than I thought. I think it’s pretty safe to say that at least one of bigger stories each night is about illegal Mexican immigration to the U.S., if not more.
So, my question is: why just Mexico? Why not throw in Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador or any other country every once in a while? Was Mr. Dobbs slighted by a Mexican girlfriend at one point and expressing his ire years later via cable news, or does he not know that these other countries exist? I’m stumped.
True testament to his obsession can be found in the transcripts of his show on CNN.com. On October 10th, Dobbs had two (count ‘em, two, on a one hour news program) stories about Mexican immigration; one about Mexican illegal immigrants coming in to “take away jobs” in New Orleans post-Katrina and another about the “disturbing rise in the number of Mexican consulates” in the U.S.
You can read the transcript of this show at CNN.com.
Via / HispanicTips
12:23 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · Comments Off
5 Oct 2005
And well-deserved. It seems the founder of an anti-immigration group from Connecticut got his — yes, I’ll say it: just desserts, and it wasn’t a “Mexdonald’s” hot apple pie either (too bad)…
The co-founder of an anti-immigration group in Connecticut demanded Wednesday that government officials investigate the “disproportionate” hiring of “Hispanics” at McDonald’s restaurants after presenting what he had privately described to group members as his “MexDonald’s” study.
Paul F. Streitz, a marketing consultant and author from Darien, issued his call after recovering from being hit in the head with a cream pie thrown by an unidentified white man, who immediately ran from the room Streitz had rented in the West Hartford Public Library.
The author of the “assault” is described as “an unidentified white man”.
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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