6:19 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|GLBT|Health|TV|youth · Comments Off
2 Apr 2009I skipped my usual Wednesday night Lost so that I could watch the MTV biopic, Pedro, about Cuban HIV educator and activist Pedro Zamora, turned MTV reality star via the Real World.
I had already seen a few clips and was less than impressed with the acting on display pero I have to admit that Pedro was kind of engaging. You have to understand that I am not the audience. 30 somethings who remember the Real World San Francisco and who have grown up with a greater awareness of HIV and AIDS not to mention the struggle for gay equality may feel like the film Pedro is a little scattered, which is probably good for younger audiences who are used to their info in small pieces.
The film after all isn’t meant to be just a tribute pero also a message to young people to talk about their sexual health including using condoms and getting tested for sexually transmitted diseases.
Spoilers ahead:
No one is going to get an Emmy for their acting in the film. The scenes showing life on the San Francisco Real World set were especially painful to watch pero how do you film the filming of a reality show. The film does a better job at showing us what wasn’t seen on the Real World. Pedro’s family history, how he came from Cuba on the Mariel boatlift with his parents and some of his siblings for example. Some of the actual cultural details about Afro-Cuban religion were not done very well though.
The lines between Orishas and Santos were crossed, as they often are in real life, pero to someone not educated the whole scene of Pedro seeing a Santero on a beach with dancers could seem a little too no se, superstitious and confusing, as was Pedro’s mothers explanation of la Caridad del Cobre, her santo and patrona de Cuba, when really it seemed like she was talking about Oshun.
I did enjoy seeing how the film dealt with the struggles of a young man coming out to his family and later confronting his family and others with not just his illness pero also his choices on how he wanted to live as an HIV positive gay man. Something that struck me as I watched the film, something I had always taken for granted before, was how the wedding between Pedro and Sean back in 1994 must have been shocking or por lo menos cutting edge to some and yet seen through the lens of the current same sex marriage struggle, so sweet and innocent.
I would like to rewatch Pedro with my older daughter to see the kind of message it speaks to her porque I am clearly not the MTV generation anymore. The message the film, and numerous public service ads throughout the film, was trying to make was that anyone can get HIV if they don’t take care of themselves, meaning if they don’t use condoms and get tested. Pedro tried to paint Pedro Zamora less as an activist and more as someone who could be you or your friend and no one likes to think of themselves or their friend dying.
7:58 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · GLBT|TV · 3 Comments
31 Mar 2009Tomorrow night, MTV, mtvU, LOGO and MTV Tr3s will premiere Pedro, a movie about the life of “The Real World’s” Pedro Zamora. Here’s a sneak peek:
I remember when the Real World actually seemed real and Pedro’s season was one of them. Pero no se, just based on the clip, it does look pretty poorly acted. So why will I be watching anyway? Pedro Zamora was first-ever openly gay, HIV-positive main character on TV and he was Latino involved in an interracial relationship so his presence on TV was historic and the issues raised important. He was an activist and educator. His family fiercely loved him and I remember being impressed by those aspects of his life. And the film is being aired not just as a memorial biopic, pero in an effort to encourage young people to be tested for sexually transmitted diseases as April is STD Awareness Month.
Pedro, was written by Dustin Lance Black who wrote Milk, and I already explored some of my issues with that film.
I’ll watch and let you know my thoughts on Thursday.
Will you be watching? Why or why not?
1:13 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|GLBT|Health|San Francisco|society|TV · 9 Comments
5 Mar 2009Some of you might be a tad too young to remember, but back in 1994, MTV’s The Real World actually retained some element of real, and was actually a pretty engaging show (note: there were actually people with brains in the house). The San Francisco edition was one of its highest points, mainly due to the groundbreaking things that were going on on the show: 21 year old Cubano Pedro Zamora emerged as the first openly gay HIV-positive man to appear on American television, and in following Pedro’s life and death, U.S. TV viewers finally got to know someone living with HIV.
Alex Loynaz stars as earnest Real World cast-member Pedro Zamora in this intimate biopic tracing the HIV-positive immigrant’s rise from humble roots to becoming one of the most instantly recognizable HIV/AIDS activists in the United States as a result of his high profile role on MTV’s pioneering reality… television series. In 1992, The Real World made it’s debut on MTV, forever altering the definition of the term “celebrity,” and providing a sympathetic face to the growing AIDS crisis for the millions of Americans who had yet to meet someone suffering from the devastating autoimmune disorder.
While the show was great, what MTV has got up its sleeve now doesn’t look like it’s going to do it much justice. “Pedro: The Movie” actually looks pretty terrible if the trailers are to be believed (check them out here). MTV movies are infamously bad, so I guess you can’t expect much more, but I would have preferred Pedro’s story be told by a good filmmaker with…a budget. When you check out the trailer, you’ll know what I mean. But before that, check out the clip above of The Real World San Francisco to get a sense of who Pedro was.
Pedro: The Movie is set to air on MTV on April 1st.
Via / SF Citizen
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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