3:09 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Politics · 1 Comment
7 Aug 2006
Thalia has got something to say about dressing for the summer heat:
“Being from Mexico, I know how to stay cool. I have mastered looking cool and still fashionable. … The camisole is the basis. I need to feel fresh, be loose and open, see the skin of my arms and cleavage to feel cool. You can wear a camisole with all different bottoms.”
- Thalia, Latin singer and designer of Kmart’s Thalia Sodi Collection
Uh…okay….Thanks, Thalia.
Via / Detroit Free Press
8:38 am By Maegan La Mala · Celebrities| Events| Fashion| Miami| Movies| Music · Comments Off
14 Jul 2006
Last night Univision aired the third annual Premios Juventud live from Miami complete with a blue carpet to welcome the estrellas and semi-estrellas. Many of the usual suspects were present including Don Omar, RBD, Alejandra Guzman, Ivy Queen, Calle 13, India, Bacilos , Thalia and Bobby Larios (sans Niurka). Notably absent were Shakira, who is on her nation-wide Oral Fixation tour and Daddy Yankee,who actually was booed when he won Artista Favorita de Musica Urbana. The fashion on the blue welcome mat was tetas and culos for the women, with the exception of Thalia, who wore a short gold dress for her entrance.
1:49 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Music · 6 Comments
13 Jul 2006
Hey, all you haters who think Thalia is talentless, you better shut your mouths because she’s sold more records than most legit performers. Thalia was just awarded a diamond record by her label, EMI, for having sold 10 million albums.
The award was presented by her label EMI Music, in Miami before record industry personalities. The singer, accompanied by her husband Tommy Mottola and blue-eyed Carlos Ponce, among others, dedicated her success to her mother and to producer Emilio Estefan.
Maybe recognizing la Thalis‘ accomplishment will win me some favor in the eyes of all of the Thalia fans who attacked me for writing this post.
Via / People en Español
7:19 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Money| PR · 12 Comments
21 Mar 2006
(File under WTF) Do my eyes deceive me or is that Thalia I see closing the trading day at NASDAQ? Why, yes, it is the star of Maria Mercedes ringing the closing bell, with some March of Dimes people and a K-Mart executive. Struggling to find the tie-in…doh, there it is:
The reason she was there wasn’t financial but humanitarian: the Mexican superstar is part of a campaign that looks to inform pregnant women on ways to avoid premature births.
Apparently Thalia is a spokesperson for both the March of Dimes and K-Mart. I also remember her hawking some Hershey’s chocolate a while back.
I always have wondered about the “closing bell” ceremony and why it’s so often used as a PR platform. I mean I can see the relevance if a company is going public, but what does Thalia ringing the bell at NASDAQ do to promote the March of Dimes? If anything, it will just have a bunch of business men thinking “who the hell is this person?” when it dawns on them “oh, that’s Tommy Mottola’s wife.”

The mean, mean person inside of me wonders if Thalia even knows what the NASDAQ is.
Check out more photos of Thalia’s field trip to NASDAQ.
Via / Univision.com
12:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · TV · 2 Comments
14 Oct 2005
You know novelas are getting bigger than everyone ever imagined when mainstream media starts writing about them. I mean, novelas? These Latin American works of art are in a class all by themselves. They are the opposite of Hollywood. They are unpretentious. They don’t pretend to have the greatest actors, the best scripts or even sets that look real. As non-Hollywood as they are, the Hollywood Reporter is reporting on them today:
Four decades ago, who would have imagined that Mexican novelas would be seen in such far-flung places as Russia, Indonesia and Slovenia? But today, more than 100 countries import Mexico’s steamy soaps, Spanish broadcasters say.
Hollywood is only just now realizing the novela’s international appeal and ability to create addiction outside of Spanish-speaking countries. The rest of us know that Veronica Castro has been HUGE in Russia for over 20 years, and Thalia is, and will always be, the honorary daughter and darling of the Philippines, where “Maria Mercedes” and the rest of her novelas are dubbed into Pilipino. International appeal, because the storylines are international. A rise to the top by someone down in the dumps, some bitch that wants to steal your boyfriend and will stop at nothing to eliminate you, a child you were forced to leave behind but are determined to get back once you finally make it big. Stories as old as storytelling itself, and drama in the true sense of the word.
We love to hate the acting, we laugh when we should cry at them, we think they are trashy but deep down or shamelessly, we love them. The novela has a strange appeal. Someone who is a self-proclaimed film snob or claims to never watch TV can be hooked in just one episode. Even people who don’t speak a word of Spanish get hooked. So predictable, I think that’s where the novela’s appeal lies: in how comfortable we feel when we are watching them. We know Thalia from the barrio is going to marry rich Fernando Colunga at the end, and that after that she’ll still have to fight for her rightful place in a society that still sees her as scum. She’ll lose little baby Nandito but don’t worry, she’ll get him back. Along the way she’ll also gain some respect. Always pulling for the underdog, we are, comforted in knowing she’ll triumph and knowing that no matter how high she rises she won’t forget her roots. Isn’t that what we all wish for ourselves?
Via / The Hollywood Reporter
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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