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Posts Tagged ‘telenovela

Gay telenovela in Spanish and online

12:52 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT|Internet|language|Spain · 2 Comments

27 Nov 2006

loquesurja.jpgIn this age of pick and choose content, many are saying if what you want to see on TV doesn’t exist, create it yourself. And that’s just what a group of guys from Valencia, Spain have done; they’ve created a Spanish-language online gay soap opera based on Queer as Folk (video after the jump):

One month was enough for seven Valencian communications students to reach the height of popularity on the internet with their online miniseries Lo que surja (LQS), a replica of the popular series Queer as folk.

With no budget with lots of enthusiasm, these seven young people illustrate the lives of a group of gay friends.

Read more…

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Brits get down with telenovelas

6:47 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · TV|World · Comments Off

18 Oct 2006

interior-telenovelas.jpgIn an affirmation that telenovelas are truly crossing into the mainstream (as evidenced by the recent success of ABC’s “Ugly Betty”, an adapation of the famed Colombian novela “Betty la fea”), the UK’s most important network, the BBC, is going to do some skanky soaps of their own, in an effort to bump up ratings:

…BBC is investing millions in its own telenovela, working on several ideas with famous screenwriters and has put British playwright Jonathan Harvey in charge of developing the project with the Talkback Thames independent production company.

The director of the BBC’s fiction division, Jane Tranter, says that the series will follow the structure of a telenovela.

“We will know how many epidodes it will have from the beginning; a beginning, a twist and plot points, but we will tape each episode a couple of days before broadcasting it.”

According to EFE, the advantage of the Latin American telenovela structure is that is has a definite end date, which helps boost ratings, instead of going on forever until viewers eventually disappear.

If they really want to make a good telenovela, they need to scrap the renowned playwright, take a plane to Mexico and meet with Televisa writers. They know how to write a good novela. They created the formula that doesn’t fail. Why reinvent the wheel?

Via / Terra EFE

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Colombia gripped by “Without Breasts”

1:27 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia|Entertainment|TV · 1 Comment

19 Sep 2006

150px-Caracol_TV.jpgIn the category of Best Name for a TV Show in the History of the World, the winner is: “Without Breasts There is No Paradise”.

All of Colombia is riveted to what’s being called the most popular telenovela in the country’s history: Sin tetas no hay paraíso, a story (based on a best-selling novel and airing on Colombia’s Canal Caracol) which revolves around the life of a sex worker obsessed with augmenting her breast size, and her relationship with narcotraficantes. But not everyone is happy with the soap.

Its legions of loyalists notwithstanding, many are upset with the show for the image it portrays.

In newspaper columns and radio interviews, feminists and family groups have decried the show’s portrayal of women as a sexist affront, more inclined to satisfy flesh-filled male fantasies than generate meaningful debate about Colombia’s unrivaled obsession with plastic surgery.

AP points out that Colombia leads the world in plastic surgery madness:

Colombia’s passion for implants is almost unmatched. According to the Colombian Society of Plastic Surgeons, more than half of the 450,000 operations performed last year were breast augmentations costing an average $2,000-$3,000 per procedure — more than half a year’s salary for the 58 percent of the country living below the poverty line.

Meanwhile, the mayor of the town where the novela is set is up in arms about the portrayal of the women of the locale, and activists are charging the show’s producers’ of being concerned solely with the high ratings the cleavage featured will earn them.

Via / Yahoo! Entertainment

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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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