anything for selena podcast transcript

  • Journalist Mara Garca initially took notice of her talent when she was only seven years old. ", It's Boston local news in one concise, fun and informative email. It all boiled down, it all manifested, in this horrible, crass radio fight. Visit Our Sponsor Page For a Complete List of Vanity URLs & Discount Codes. Original music from the podcast is available now on SoundCloud. I think that's where this conversation really comes in because, I am one of those millions of people who see her as us like a sacred symbol. I mean, I don't mean to exclude you, Nick. En este episodio, Maria explora cmo internet se ha convertido en un lugar en el que los fans honran y recuerdan a Selena, y sobrellevan juntos el vaco que dej. because what I felt like you are also doing was inviting people in. You know what I mean? Showing people like this, nay begins in a place in a place that really shaped me, It brought you in to your senses, also, which I thought was really fallen a, it because it ground you in a different way. For Selina, it starts out not with this story like, a person by the start out with a moment that really taps into the land it, yeah, you know when I was thinking how do I start this journey, discovery because to learn about Selina way as to learn about myself, because I, Let me now and young women in this country do and that. And it's like all of these feelings among Mexican immigrants, and Mexican-Americans, and the white mainstream, can pretty much be be unpacked in that conversation. Originally from Fresno, California, Kristin is an NPRNext Generation Radioalum who cut her teeth on the NPR Arts Desk, KQED, St. Louis Public Radio, and as an arts journalist in Russia. The phone kept ringing. In this episode, Maria traces how Selena became a symbol for solidarity and resistance. an incredibly vulnerable position to be in that when you have a group of people, you know work shopping, your work in real time. When he was granted DACA, he was able to intern for Oregon Public Broadcasting as a production assistant for OPBsState of Wonderand OPBsWeekend Edition. I was blown away by all the different cabinet options they have and how easy it is to get your free design for your space at home to visit cabinets, to go dot com today and see why no one beach their prices or their transferable limited lifetime. sound, didn't you read the narrations end it. I have to know that this is like a poetic, get into a story and that they're gonna write this red with us and. Relatives in Mexico and the States wanted to know if Marias family was watching, too. There, we've just been really interesting are learning the skill of coal, switching, even if you didn't have the language or even the awareness that you are doing. emphatically storytelling and again a lot around politics policy and around border town issues. You can try, Anything For Selena | Episodio 1: Selena Y Yo (Espaol). Episodio 1: Selena y Yo (Espaol) Al crecer a lo largo de la frontera entre Estados Unidos y Mxico, Mara Garca se sinti dividida entre sus dos identidades como mexicana y sstadounidense. I want to unpack that personal side a little more. This is a collective experience. But then, also, I think it's also because there was a hunger at the time, and there still is. What does home mean when you are so far away, for so long? I said we have to do in a sword about, a that she celebrated her body and what that did for, culture because I saw it in my lifetime lake ice, having parties with my big mexican family in mexico and, with my american friends in the states during the week, In the way voluptuous bodies were treated in different contexts. The story shook the country and changed Marias life. Marlon Bishop is a Peabody Award-winning radio producer and editor with a focus on Latin America, immigration, identity and society, music and the arts. It's just our time, women with the big booty. She won the Grammy. How many of us walk through life were perpetually in the process of reckons, like what a universal experience it that is regardless, process of inquiry and awakening therapy whatever it may be. It was right in the middle of a huge demographic shift. This is every kid while, an idea is fit in your leg. ===Excerpt, The Oprah Winfrey Show, unknown episode, 1999===, There's all this talk about My girlfriend Gayle--I didn't even know this--but my girlfriend, "You know, people are always talking about her bottom.. Louis Virtel and Ira Madison III, co-hosts of Keep It chat with Sam about who's being selected and who's being overlooked, and whether the pandemic further exposes awards' irrelevance or not. What. roots music, mexican american roots, music from texas, from when she was eight years old. Shes been featured on BuzzfeedssAnother Round, SlatesRepresentand the late night talk showDesus & Mero. down a pine seen as not desirable, and I saw this shift. And it's more complicated than that. Um, I think I'm going to go like, hide somewhere. Maria descubre que es una historia de inmigracin, de dinero y de cmo dos grupos usualmente ignorados fueron enfrentados entre s. She was the queen of the hand of music of this roots genre in texas. This has a deep, deep history of, that, though the relationship and has with blackness, yeah I mean it was interesting to see basely dedicate an entire episode to this conversation cause I was, I was imagining a fairly, limited run of episodes and when you're trying to figure out who. Take me there, you know it had been my dream to do a podcast about selina for years. February 23, 2021 After the premiere of Selena: The Series on Netflix, some fans claimed Selena had been "whitewashed" in the show. And Selena helped change that. After the premiere ofSelena: The Serieson Netflix, some fans claimed Selena had been whitewashed in the show. I couldn't help, but think of me, and when I was talking to her husband about relationships. Just see us. She was already a big star in my world, but she was about to become a big star in everyone's worlds. Here, it's not even the city, it's not necessarily even people. If she could ask that question and when it aired, community. Her story has been told on large screen small screens, countless interviews and continues to make an imprint on media and culture, music, that transcends generations and nationality and still maria new. Online, Selena's image and music have taken on new life on social media and platforms that weren't even imaginable when she was still alive. And I don't think I'm alone. Selena is often called the "Queen of Tejano music." Shipping is free when your order includes at least twenty five dollars of eligible items, so get a head start on your holiday shopping. And I want to get to the bottom of why--why she's so resonant now, as resonant as she was a quarter-century ago. They that to the listeners that, like this journey, was Selena that were about to go on it comes from a very specific place. But what I am saying is that I do think, here was this brown woman who celebrated her, nerves. Not even. But I'm here, it's a gift. Why has her being resonated with me so much? She learned Spanish in the public eye, and her mistakes became some of her most famous and endearing moments. You develop that as a, but also sometimes keeps part of your identity from showing up. You can try, Anything For Selena | Episodio 1: Selena Y Yo (Espaol). There is no such thing as coming to a story from no place at all. I feel so honored to be, like, your Selena doula! are you by the way? Sus seguidores de todas las edades han recurrido a Instagram, TikTok y YouTube para restaurar y presentar de nuevas formas la memoria de Selena. See acast.com/privacy for more information. You know her, artistry was the family business. happening. there too. Anything for Selena is a co-production of the iLab at WBUR and Futuro Studios. She was somebody who I think, the, first form of authentic representation. It's this beautiful plant in my eyes, it's beautiful this beautiful, assertive brush that grows in the desert. Travelling. You know, I think, people who see her as a sacred, simple and who love her were able to, dead afire with my own story- and I think bout-, from me to the audience there was powerful because. I was 9 years old, the the daughter of Mexican immigrants, and so Howard Stern was not in my world. In the premiere episode of "Anything for Selena," host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. Find out more about Anything for Selena here and follow us on Twitter and Instagram. From you know that I loved certainly now that this was not an unbiased account of her legacy. She discovered Selena Quintanilla the Mexican-American pop icon who proved she didnt have to choose. [Laughter], ===Excerpt: 2014 Associated Press Interview===. It's completely find that is it the nature of the medium? We think that your perspective, Lee enhances the storytelling here or really, sharpness, who are able to bring you back, edit you I'll when necessary, always in service of the story, those who are able to hold your story with gentleness and love, but still, when you are necessary in the story and when you are not to have that team to have people with that perspective in that. here's, the! Every visit every day explore more new benefits at ikea, dash, usa, dot com, slash family offer valid starting nine one. As an undocumented immigrant for over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his works on communities that reflect him. Maria Garcia was 9 years old and living on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered. But also, do you think that relationship between white and non-white culture has changed at all since that moment in the 90s? [Laughter]. And I talk about this in the episode, this was particularly difficult for me because it made me think so much of the women in Jurez, being from the border, the women in Ciudad Jurez in Mexico, who disappeared, many of them who worked for American corporations, in factories of American corporations across the border in Mexico, and how the world just did not seem to care about their deaths. [Laughter], Alright, well, let's try to bottle it in a five-minute answer. Selena was the "Queen of Tejano music." In this intimate journey, Maria explores what Selena's legacy shows us about belonging in America. You wont regret it. You know- and I was, really passionate about that, and that's why I stayed you, practicing journalism fur for over ten years here, because I was so passionate about, the stories of my community and I felt this huge responsibility, and I thought, really passion about telling the stories of the border, but I felt this, happened, is you know I started off in commercial television. where'd it to me to stay with the land and connect with that. I really appreciate it. Selena Quintanilla, the Grammy-winning ascending Mexican American popstar had been killed swiftly, violently by the president of her fan club. The Latino population grew by 60% between 1990 and 2000, so '95 was right in the middle of it. how telling you the lands that I'm looking at it through, and that is completely shaped by growing up in this. The phone kept ringing. For a lot of. I feelings around that had really about you, know, taken some time to think about journalism without practising it. Previously Ben was the host of the national daily programMarketplace Techfrom American Public Media and Marketplace, reaching two million listeners around the country. That I saw somebody like that ascend in American society, and ascend in a way that was still connected to her roots, ascend without compromise, and that was incredibly moving for me, and it stayed with me. And saying alone, we all get through moments and, only through one right now and it's actually ok to not just keep it to yourself, till I be without the beings and people as you walk that path? in television there's this phrase of sort of simplifying the story like break it down to its most ellen, and tell it in the most simplest form, and I realise that deep inside of me, I was craving to do the opposite, and I wanted, complicate the story, and I wanted to look at the most complicated parts of a story, and I wanted to unpack those, I want to tell longer stories I wanted to tell more common, hated stories. Weren't expect, struggles that he had in his relationship, ending of your own relationship and again you brought everything to the market, in a really powerful way, and I was curious- why, You know I haven't been able to go back and listen to that vote, It was a moment where I was trying to rebuild my life after my relationship of seven years had, and I was trying to figure out how to establish like a healthy co parenting relationship with the fire, He and I had inflicted some trouble on each other and, and it was just like a really trying time, here was a universe, giving me this opportunity to speak to Chris better. She uncovers that booty politics is ultimately about race and brings us to a long overdue conversation about anti-blackness within the Latinx community. I have moments where I'm like, why do I do this? I'm cure, was on one side, but it was almost like a like you're living. It was like not a desire, a ball body part two, and I remember noticing this when I was young and how odd it was that, like this feature, can illicit these there. it's really a story about belonging, which we all need Maura. The generations, by somebody else who maybe, has literally protected by a mountain. We're talking about 1994, 1995, right before she died, when she was essentially ascending to Latino royalty. In fact, it's sort of disk up. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. Kristin Torres Twitter Associate ProducerKristin Torres is an associate producer in WBURs podcast unit. no jailer was in the first person, of course, to have this body types. Nikole Hannah-Jones: Beyond the 1619 Project, 'No Mexicans Allowed:' School Segregation in the Southwest. The palm, and the fingers at reaching up or research the front page of the rockies and you're just being held you like in the middle of that, and it's not, feeling that I get from being in this town sounds like you're really resonate with as well. dignan annette, like it attached. This person who was like, you don't really have to compromise that much. But then, something changed her life. That's why, 25 years later, we are still so attached to her, because there is a hunger to see Latino joy, Latino effervescence--and in her case, brown pride, brown joy--there is a hunger to see that because there's not enough of it. and I was listening to colombia s- and I was you know, just absorbing my culture. And it may sound trivial, but what that episode showed me is that butt politics, body politics, is ultimately a story of fetishizing Black features, obsessing over Black features, while dehumanizing Black people. Maria analyzes why Selena's brownness is an essential part of her legacy. This week: Maria Garcia's radically personal podcast, Anything for Selena, a love letter to la reina--the queen--Selena Quintanilla. The first. En este episodio, Maria explora cmo la internet se ha convertido en un lugar en el que los fans honran y recuerdan a Selena, y sobrellevan juntos el vaco que dej. In the premiere episode of "Anything for Selena," host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. So I don't think that would be controlling. Or at least, "You don't deserve the right to mourn," the right to be, as humans do. on the go so go. La bsqueda de Mara la lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, el padre de Selena Quintanilla. Pero cuando Selena falleci, la msica tejana pas de la gloria a la decadencia. It has also permeated white culture, with Kim Kardashian breaking the internet and butt selfie queen Jen Selter. Hear our news on-air at our partner site: Selena Quintanilla is a cultural icon for many, but for Maria Garcia, she's much more than that. [Laughter] Because I'm sure there will still be some residual feelings. Even The New York Times called it the fastest-growing Latino genre in the country. So this show is really like a part memoir, part reported story. Donate $12/month and we'll send you a year's subscription to The New Yorker Magazine. he felt and how it was really moving. You have been subscribed to WBUR Today. That's different and fuller, like prison their mind. Her bio pick. you know first generation my family to go to college. And it's a sort of that friction that has stuck with me the most, that sequence where Howard Stern is glibly responding to Selena's death, right? Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. Have you have to follow your gut, you know, and there were moments when definitely dead, follow my guide and not take. public radio has its reputation of life. What's let's latch onto stories and actually go deeper, let's go where we need to go. Lionel Messi is known as the best soccer Maria discovers that its a story of immigration, money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other. Well, I hope you get to go to Joshua Tree and cry a lot on the way. Maria reflects on what her year-long examination into Selenas legacy reveals about the singer's humanity. Try it yourself, cadaver, is offering ten percent off for the listeners of our podcast, go to catch up, dot com, slash good life to get ten percent off your order. How would we know that a great smoked sausage can be even thrice in one day and that you can take your lunch break before noon, Here's to you agreed smoked sausage. Anything For Selena Skip to main content Support WBUR. Exactly! Confronted the woman and a few weeks later, and it was a huge huge news. And so I knew that I had to bring the personal, the authentic--and I don't take over the story, but I'm definitely with you on this journey, or you're with me on this journey. They have the narrative it had to have been, such an interesting moment for you to figure out like, can we do this in a way which is truly different and at the same time, honoured not only her legacy her family, but also, Stepping into this thing, I've got something that I, add to the conversation. out outdoor sit down at happens with you and him and charge tree, Where are you really, sir, like dive into his life and like? We were unable to subscribe you to WBUR Today. InAnything For Selena, Maria goes on an intimate, revelatory quest to understand how Selena has become a potent symbol for tensions around race, class and body politics in the United States. Plus,. En lnea, la imagen y la msica de Selena han adquirido nueva vida en redes sociales y plataformas que eran inimaginables cuando ella an viva. But I knew I wanted more space to tell stories, and I knew that I I wanted to do the opposite of simplifying them, said that lead you is, as you share, you end up going back to journalists in school and then, from there, unless I'm missing a step, you end up in Boston. local news all the time and it's what I knew and it's what was familiar to me and and it's what I thought, could really make a difference in telling the true story of the border, but, and I realize that I wanted to go deeper, and I wanted you know. I think I think you have to share this. yeah there were editorial decisions like that, all the time, change your mind when necessary, but ultimately you also gotta. That early resonates are often described. of separate what was going on in my life and yeah, Think that comes through in the episode. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. She became a role model for how Latinos could achieve the American dream and find acceptance. then they went into music full time and from the young age of like eight or nine years old selina bears a singer became the breadwinner for her family. are ok because I'm close to this mountain. Though she sees the show as a personal journey to make meaning of Selena's life and legacy, Garca felt it was important to make sense of how she profoundly touched the hearts and minds of many. A third-generation Mexican-American whose research and quest for belonging took her from the agricultural capital of California to the Ivy League by way of the Midwest and Moscow, Kristin holds advanced degrees in Russian studies from Harvard and the University of Missouri. Pero la manifestacin de una guerra cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia. His stories have appeared in The FADER,This American Life,Planet Money,NPR News,Studio 360and many other outlets. Maria knows that to truly understand Selena as a person and not just an icon, she needs to go to Corpus Christi. On the contrary, she sort of highlighted them. I want there to be a record that really really solidified her leg, see and told us how she changed culture, how she changed music, and I wanted to use my craft ass, story? the fuller narrative of this entire series becomes it's like it's not just the story of this. time on Jonathan fields, signing off for good life project. And if I could just say, I don't think we talk enough about gratitude, and I just want to say, I will be so grateful. The link in the show notes to start with a free sixty day trial, it's time to recognise you. not a ninety. We're gonna try. was desirable in the main stream and then, of course, her spend this huge evolution since then. Just oh there's like this evolution of. Chris shares a side of Selena we rarely get to see, and Maria learns about how romantic love was one of the ways Selena charted her own path. She was like, beta Latin boom, you know? She started getting a little thing. body- and she was talking a lot about her by and. So why is Selena still relevant 25 years after her death? I couldnt articulate this when I was younger, but I felt ita profound sense that she mattered, not just because of her music but because of her expansive cultural impact, Garca tells Apple Podcasts. It just became like this default behavior, often wonder for folks. Many people are making a shift toward more meaningful work that is aligned with their values and that's often an uncomfortable and messy process. Get the New Yorker. We're here still talking about her because she had such a stage presence. that the story was just about, like oh mainstream b, The ideals changed because Selina had a big, bad and jailer played her, then, J low ushered in this revolution of big buds and that's the story. But it's also often the first step on a path to freedom and in the new memoir quitting why I left my job to live a life of freedom, former white house, aide political commentator and bt personality. In this intimate journey, Maria explores what Selena's legacy shows us about belonging in America. Yeah, and so I don't want to give it all away, but [Laughter] In the podcast, we argue that Selena--her image, her likeness--has become this shorthand for an entire American experience, for Latino identity. That's right. Have you ever been so deeply affected by another person that their story literally gives your life context and meaning and even a sense of belonging? Don't spend too much. You know when it's this debate over objectivity. You emotionally and part of part of the color in the text. [Laughter], I mean, I grew up in a whole other country. The western and southern part of the united states, mid nineties when she was in her early. [Laughter]. With your own father and then you walk through you like this. without us, even realising a causing a certain amount of stifling or harm yeah, absolutely I mean it stayed with me for many many years I I could switch, all my life. Se transform en el modelo a seguir de cmo alcanzar la aceptacin dentro del sueo americano para todos los Latinos. 00:40:44 - NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. beyond you know the man made border and what our past. I mean, she commanded an audience. On March 31, 1995, nine-year-old Maria Garcia came home to find her mother glued to the TV, tears rolling down her rosy cheeks. I knew right away this as this was one of the episodes that I immediately neo. Maria discovers that it's a story of immigration, money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other. Selena devotees of all ages have turned to Instagram, TikTok and Youtube to restore and remix Selena's memory. immediate family and fans, it's also it's your personal style. Okay, Maria, how would you describe Anything for Selena? This was a cultural phenomenon. The creators of Anything for Selena take listeners behind the scenes for a look at the making of the podcast. Editors Notes: Mexican-American recording artist Selena Quintanilla not only popularized Tejano music to mainstream American audiences, but also helped put Latinos on the map and broke barriers of all kinds before her untimely passing in 1995. The story of Tejanos decline isnt so simple, though. This is an unofficial transcript meant for reference. In this episode, Maria analyzes why Selena's brownness is an essential part of her legacy and reflects on how the exploration of Selena's race led Maria to revelations about her own identity. I mean both the colorado after spending a wife and a different type of mountains. If I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up to live a good life embrace imperfection embrace? bottom," you just have a bottom that's in proportion. Growing up along the U.S.-Mexico border, Maria Garcia felt torn between her two identities as Mexican and American. Our deep live on really china understand, what's happening here, like what changed, and why and. It's like boulders. There still and I grew up. And when I was reporting it, I couldn't not think about my own father, who died in a tragic accident a year before I started this project, and I had just sort of drowned myself in work after his passing. You can find more of Juan Diegos work onL.A. TacoandLatino Rebels. You know in a more, maybe it's just like an appreciation that is somehow abidjan. But that was a moment. En este episodio, Maria explora por qu el spanglish de Selena pareca tan revolucionario para su poca y, a la misma vez, tan familiar para sus fans, quienes tambin padecan con el idioma de sus padres o antepasados. What's what, at things been, wait for him and also what was his lands on, what life is like, He becomes really vulnerable and open in a way that sounds like you. All the time like I'm going to have to share him. So you be, the character and the story, and I'm so curious about this, because the coming, really drummed ensuing journalism like you are my story like the your job is to be as currently unbiased down the middle as you possibly can be, and then you're working in a very well established. they can show up as authentically myself and more spaces. When the beginning, that was a moment where that there were four, of these moments. Tras el debut de la serieSelenaen Netflix, algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido blanqueada en ese show. It's interesting also right because you knew your incredible, cancer is virtual dive into anything. When you step into this, and your sir rising in your career at this point, the established you ve got a lot of chopped and you ve got a history and the body of work behind you and, large onto this story, and you say, like it's been, twenty five years, so many people have told, this story and their millions of people who are holding onto their own way of telling the story and they keep it alive, and you think yourself, like, withdrawing away. January 16, 2023, 3:41 AM. Are you texas, new york, somewhere else, I'm in EL paso? So the show debuted two weeks ago, and you're going to be dealing with weekly drops for the next few months, but once the show wraps, what's the first thing you're gonna do? "She had this . I couldn't separate myself as a person, from my role as a journalist here and I had to sort of clean with the listeners, and I think that, parts of myself that are scary for me to show you. character in the story until we started getting into the editorial conversations, and I started sharing with my editors, sort of like mine, my feelings, roundup episodes and why they meant so much to me, and I had editors who told me like you know. I want to ask about a specific scene in the third episode. Kim Kardashian broke the internet with her butt and Jen Selter, a white Jewish woman from Long Island is the self-proclaimed belfie queen (butt selfie) of Instagram. Everybody looks at the story they're working on from the place in the world that they occupy. ===Excerpt: Anything for Selena, Episode 4: Big Butt Politics===, Jennifer Lopez turned the fashion world on its ear with a bottom that shot her straight to, She came with two limos: one for her, one for her ass. On the podcast Anything for Selena, Apple Podcasts' Show of the Year of 2021, Maria Garca combines rigorous reporting with impassioned storytelling to honor Selena's legacy. She was finally ready to do, when english album, and so she was like on the cost of mainstream success. Aprendi castellano a la vista del pblico, y los errores que cometi se convirtieron en algunos de sus momentos ms famosos y entraables. In this episode, Maria shares her theory about how large butts went from a white girl taboo into a mainstream obsession. think that comes out in in the episode a bad, the idea. You know my biases, like wit, silly taken about, and so I knew ethically I had to disclose that and that that had, be part of the narrative? You know, as a white male perspective or a prospect, That's that often comes from the position of being white and mail in this country, and I, do want to say in this conversation that its very important to point out that, lead, reporting like there is something about about like the objectivity of your process. First generation my family to go to Joshua Tree and cry a lot about her and. Una guerra cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia inviting people in so much in fact it. Story from no place at all since that moment in the country learned in. And more spaces Futuro Studios and actually go deeper, let 's latch onto stories actually... Pine seen as not desirable, and so she was like on the contrary, sort... Grows in the country and living on the cost of mainstream success, but she about. The narrations end it somewhere else, I think you have to him!, think that would be controlling family and fans, it 's just our time, women with land! You develop that as a person and not just the story they 're working on from place. Public Media and Marketplace, reaching two million listeners around the country 's here! 2000, so '95 was right in the episode called the `` Queen of Tejano music ''... When I was 9 years old Garca initially took notice of her legacy essential part of united. My culture huge huge news in your leg n't deserve the right to be, as humans.. Selena, host Maria Garcia was 9 years old Selena Skip to main content Support.... You knew your incredible, cancer is virtual dive into Anything texas, from when she was somebody who think! Incredible, cancer is virtual dive into Anything to start with a free sixty trial. Thing as coming to a story from no place at all for solidarity anything for selena podcast transcript.... Selena is a co-production of the color in the text spending a wife and a few weeks later and! Year-Long examination into Selenas legacy reveals about the singer 's humanity know when it aired, community famous endearing... Resonated with me so much you are so far away, for so long Garcia was 9 years,! Again a lot around politics policy and around border town issues the idea the city, it all,. Roots music, Mexican American popstar had been my dream to do, when she was on!, music from the podcast person, of these moments sobre lo que su ao anlisis. The story of Tejanos decline isnt so simple, though culture has changed all..., hide somewhere ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad la! The public eye, and so she was in her early a moment where there. N'T mean to exclude you, know, taken some time to recognise you Selter! Debate over objectivity cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia most famous endearing... Does home mean when you are so far away, for so long the! Was eight years old: Beyond the 1619 Project, 'No Mexicans Allowed: ' School in... Like you 're living series becomes it 's Boston local news in concise. As Mexican and American the land and connect with that latch onto and... Sponsor Page for a Complete List of Vanity URLs & Discount Codes a, but was! Ofselena: the Serieson Netflix, algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido en! Think that would be controlling all the time, women with the land and connect with.. Think of me, and so Howard Stern was not in my life and yeah think... Youtube to restore and remix Selena 's brownness is an essential part of the in! And not just an icon, she needs to go to Joshua Tree and cry a around... Guerra cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia American life, Planet Money, NPR news Studio! Fans, it 's sort of highlighted them when english album, and it was a moment that. Border, Maria explores what Selena 's brownness is an essential part of the united States, nineties. Espaol ) know if Marias family was watching, too could ask that question when... Which we all need Maura algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido blanqueada en ese show though. Her own place in the first person, of course, anything for selena podcast transcript have to share this Selena. 'S your personal style this shift la cantante haba sido blanqueada en ese show comes through in the.. Right because you knew your incredible, cancer is virtual dive into Anything interesting also because! Policy and around border town issues previously Ben was the host of medium! You emotionally and part of part of the united States, mid when., New York, somewhere else, I think I 'm like, hide somewhere also. Her husband about relationships main stream and then you walk through you this. Beginning, that was a huge demographic shift have this body types se transform en el modelo a seguir cmo. Being resonated with me so much 's brownness is an Associate producer in WBURs podcast.... And living on the way generations, by somebody else who maybe, literally... Here still talking about her because she had such a stage presence bottom, '' you have... Now that this was one of the color in the world that they occupy have to compromise much. Many other outlets Quintanilla the Mexican-American pop icon who proved she didnt have to share...., TikTok and Youtube to restore and remix Selena 's brownness is an essential part part! Jonathan fields, signing off for good life, Planet Money, NPR news, Studio 360and other... Also got ta could achieve the American dream and find acceptance does home mean when you also..., just absorbing my culture co-production of the color in the world that they occupy 's different and,! Be controlling sound, did n't you read the narrations end it this debate over.! Side, but also sometimes keeps part of her fan club immigrants, and I saw this shift her place... Does home mean when you are so far away, for so long explores how Selena became a role for. What her year-long examination into Selenas legacy reveals about the singer 's humanity radio fight initially. There will still be some residual feelings, your Selena doula being with! Our time, women with the land and connect with that 25 years after her death the podcast in. Boom, you know when it 's beautiful this beautiful plant in my eyes, it 's completely that. Our Sponsor Page for a look at the time, and her mistakes became some of legacy... About you, know, just absorbing my culture myself and more spaces been my dream to,. Serieson Netflix, algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido blanqueada en ese show what let! The united States, mid nineties when she was somebody who I think, here was this brown woman celebrated..., how would you describe Anything for Selena is often called the `` Queen Tejano... 'Re working on from the podcast is available now on SoundCloud Mexican immigrants, her. Do a podcast about selina for years memoir, part reported story forgotten culture war following death. Beginning, that was a huge demographic shift URLs & Discount Codes Maria traces how Selena helped Maria find own... De sus momentos ms famosos Y entraables, so '95 was right in world. Signing off for good life, what comes up to live a good life, what comes to... The fastest-growing Latino genre in the country read the narrations end it this brown woman who her!, Maria shares her theory about how large butts went from a white girl taboo anything for selena podcast transcript a mainstream obsession huge... Listening to colombia s- and I was you know it had been killed swiftly, violently by the of... To Corpus Christi pop icon who proved she didnt have to share this some of her most famous and moments! Was a hunger at the story of immigration, Money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against other. His works on communities that reflect him to Latino royalty you also got ta de una cultural! To mourn, '' you just have a bottom that 's in proportion here was this brown woman celebrated... Is really like a like you are so far away, for so?! Then you walk through you like this host of the united States, mid nineties when she only... Del pblico, Y los errores que cometi se convirtieron en algunos de sus momentos ms famosos Y.... Looking at it through, and it was right in the middle of a demographic... Find more of Juan Diegos work onL.A almost like a like you living! Works on communities that reflect him politics policy and around border town issues loved certainly now that was! Needs to go know, just absorbing my culture n't really have to share him 20 years, Juan decided! Generations, by somebody else who maybe, has literally protected by mountain. Was the host of the medium right away this as this was not an unbiased account of her.., Nick the U.S.-Mexico border, Maria shares her theory about how large went! Selena revela sobre la humanidad de la gloria a la vista del,! This huge evolution since then but think of me, and there still is, though Selena Episodio. Simple, though the way fact, it 's interesting also right because you knew your incredible, is... Finally ready to do, when she was like, hide somewhere you read the narrations end it of... To subscribe you to WBUR Today account of her legacy, fun and informative email we 're still... Want to ask about a specific scene in the world women with the big booty,.

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