I am becoming a part of this, so you're telling your personal story to I'm so curious, certainly how your experiencing you're insertion into this and trying to navigate like where, doing justice to myself, I'm doing justice to the story and am also like. Listen to the trailer for "Anything For Selena," a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios coming in January 2021. 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. You know I think this is part of. Twenty twenty two limited to qualifying purchases exclusions apply not valid on services discount applied in store only before tax shipping and handling canopy, combined with coupons visit ikea dash, usa, dot com, slash family for more details. life through a lens, a possibility and joy. Just oh there's like this evolution of. Plus,. by just that's what the container allows for, but. There are so many lessons to be learned from leaving a job, no matter what happens after soon learn more about Keith balkans journey exclusively on script, get inspired by, he's broken with quitting today, with a free sixty day trial at try, dot, script, dot, com, slashed g, LP, that's try, dot s e r, I b D, dotcom, slash de LP or just click. There still and I grew up. If you LOVED this episode youll also love the conversations we had with Samin Nosrat about food, belonging, culture and connection. The phone kept ringing. emphatically storytelling and again a lot around politics policy and around border town issues. En el transcurso de su vida, Selena se convirti en un smbolo de esperanza. Take me there, you know it had been my dream to do a podcast about selina for years. Teller, to pay homage to this woman who left such a tremendous impact on my life? one of the columbia that I have been dancing on the weekend with my mom and my grandma mines you that what is unlike kind of how, p and one of my classmates coming up to man being like or use singing mexican music, and that was the vibe. Of the way that we see beauty based on celebrity culture, which is certainly a part of that story, so hours, curious about me like what was happening behind that, to say. 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. I was writing the episode. So I don't think that would be controlling. Hace casi 30 aos, el irreverente y obsceno sencillo Baby Got Back (I Like Big Butts) de Sir Mix-A-Lot debut en la radio para deleite y espanto de los oyentes. But when Selena died, Tejano went from boom to bust. 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. Travelling. 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? In this intimate journey, Maria explores what Selena's legacy shows us about belonging in America. Today, he heads up the editorial podcast team at Futuro Studios, the original programming division of Futuro Media Group. the foundation for that really starts with the place that I was raised and which is on the? I have to imagine that sir, important in the process because at some point young, the more we, do something like this, I think the harder it is to be objective. Are you texas, new york, somewhere else, I'm in EL paso? 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. She was 23 years. The lyrics playfully poked fun at white beauty standards, including a skit at the top of the song in which a seemingly white woman famously says, Oh, my, God Becky, look at her butt. So it's so interesting to me that. Ben also co-hosts the podcastEndless Thread, has served as a tech correspondent forHere and Now, and has been a guest host for WBUR programs includingOn Point. It was so him. These old wounds opened up, and the reason that we hung that episode on that confrontation is because, to me, that was so illustrative of all of the tensions in the 90s that I was just talking about. So, even though, were still a bit away from peak holiday season. So many people wrote to me telling me the storytelling in the podcast made them feel seen. and here was this american pop star, whose unequivocally said they're beautiful. I'm just so grateful that I get this opportunity to tell her story, to write her this ode, and to explore myself in the process. That's been around for, releases these chemicals. Ok, I think you ready for this, but I want, Through cereal eyes, storytelling for those who don't know who we're talking about when I, much of the world when you literally just use that first aim selina knows, but for those who don't, Maybe a little bit more about this person was, Eight, the handle singer from corpus christie, taxes the hanno is like. what led to that end, the lake late fierce resistance from her dad the illegal tell really powerfully in the pond cas but her huh, during this whole winter time, and you knew, when and found him and were able to arrange a sit down with them, and this was in the middle of the endemic at this point. And I don't think I'm alone. There is now a whole generation of people who have come of age, like me, who have experienced these moments with Selena. And that's the gift. Whereas a creator I put my foot down- and I said no we're still, that our audiences on this right with us. She graduated from Northwesterns Medill School of Journalism. You neeeeddddd to listen. In "Anything For Selena," host Maria Garcia 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. Previously Ben was the host of the national daily programMarketplace Techfrom American Public Media and Marketplace, reaching two million listeners around the country. I wanted to get into like the nitty gritty of staff, and so I, out of the television medium and that's why, I mean it such an interesting shift to me, years ago. This week: Maria Garcia's radically personal podcast, Anything for Selena, a love letter to la reina--the queen--Selena Quintanilla. I knew right away this as this was one of the episodes that I immediately neo. So this show is really like a part memoir, part reported story. 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. 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. You know I did it and jobs, I did it, when I went to my fancy grad school, and it was, I would say my late twenties early thirties that I, to realize. I want you to know where I'm coming from Sweden, framing these things are why I'm asking these questions, but, It was also used you effectively say like I'm a character in this story, and, That was the original intention, not that's what. 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. because I imagine that why was moving all over the place all the time, absolutely. If I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up to live a good life embrace imperfection embrace? She discovered Selena Quintanilla the Mexican-American pop icon who proved she didnt have to choose. And, in todays conversation with award-winning journalist, writer, and producer, Maria Garcia, we dive deep into these topics in a very cool and unusual way. what I realized that investigating this episode is. Be careful here. on the cusp of major major start up. That's ten percent off at catch of dot com, slash good life debts, I'm curious also when you stepped out into the liquor your early professional life in europe. So when I discovered Selena, this was in the mid-90s, and I like to call it sort of "the age of assimilation," at least in in my lifetime, and I went to a predominantly Latino school--again, I grew up on the U.S.-Mexico border--but there was a hierarchy that rewarded only the most assimilated of kids. move the story, and you cover some different topics in such a beautiful, powerful story, driven way. 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. there's thousands of people who cross the border every single day there. Twenty is. in a very lucky, no community, but this was in the nine days when assimilation was very, very, very praised, so, even though it was largely let tee no community, the assimilated, kids and the white kids were sort of at the top of the school hierarchy and there was a sort of shame in being exe. As an undocumented immigrant for over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his works on communities that reflect him. I want to unpack that personal side a little more. But, yeah. Sort of like a shared experience between the Latino community and the broader white American communities, basically. 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. And it mattered a lot for mexican american and let de la girls like me, who were getting mixed messages about whether these features that we. It's like, though, and the calls to me here, you know and to be able to walk out of, front door and see the mountains and see that what is in mexico and see the mountains in EL paso and it just for, like my body, recognises this place in a very vesture away in, and that keeps me here. because they matter- and this is sort of like It- was interesting to see it was almost like. Maria has a theory about how big butts went from taboo to obsession--and it involves Selena and Jennifer Lopez. You know. She was like a star in the south west of the united states. I tall buildings in new york city, there's something so powerful that draws me in to just, even if I'm not out. like a year when I did when I did my masters to just think deep, headline and being like an everyday practitioner about so I had, much of what we think of as unbiased journalism. body- and she was talking a lot about her by and. You can try, Anything For Selena | Episodio 1: Selena Y Yo (Espaol). 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. I grew up. What. I said, I'm really drawn to this place because of. March 12, 2021 Tras el debut de la serie Selena en Netflix, algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido "blanqueada" en ese show. But I got, show them to you, because you gotta know where I'm coming from, for you to understand how much I love Selina and why I love selena, then you kind of, gotta understand me a little bed and I think a lot of people. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. Maria Garcia was 9 years old and living on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered. Why do you think that Selena broke through the way that she did? I've never seen anything like that. Online, Selenas image and music have taken on new life on social media and platforms that werent even imaginable when she was still alive. time on Jonathan fields, signing off for good life project. American networks and Mexican programming aired the same top story. 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. 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. Let's dance and forget the people starving to death. Why has her being resonated with me so much? 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. If Latinos were not being erased, they were being portrayed as gang members, or lost dropouts, or teenage moms. You know in, mexico and with my family, my mexican family, curves and. Maria knows that to truly understand Selena as a person and not just an icon, she needs to go to Corpus Christi. She goes, "Well, honey, tell her that if she wants to see a bottom, I'll show her my, bottom." I can't tell this story honestly without telling you that. She started getting a little thing. I kind of figured that that's what you were going to say. 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. But what I am saying is that I do think, here was this brown woman who celebrated her, nerves. And so honestly, Nick, it's been kind of excruciating, because all of my life, I realized just how much I compartmentalized my work from my internal life--and all of us do that to an extent, right? She won the Grammy. The first. Nearly 30 years ago, Sir-Mix-A-Lots Baby Got Back (I Like Big Butts) hit the airwaves to the delight and shock of listeners. Okay, Maria, how would you describe Anything for Selena? The book highlights living on your own terms by not just, jobs, but also changing cities even leaving relationships that don't serve you anymore, I can we lay two elements of this story. 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. You know what I mean? Can we shorten this down? 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. 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. Accuracy is not guaranteed. 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. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. I feel so honored to be, like, your Selena doula! But for the last year, she's taken on a different role and challenge: podcast host--and yes, my Selena doula. happening. I have moments where I'm like, why do I do this? There's a lot of Selena stuff out there, there's a lot of Selena content, but there's nothing that really unpacks how she changed culture, what she's responsible for, the cultural shifts that she's responsible for. 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. You wont regret it. Because suddenly--and think about, at the time, where we were in terms of media, right? En este episodio, Mara Garca comparte su teora sobre cmo los traseros grandes pasaron de ser un tab entre las chicas blancas a una obsesin generalizada. I couldn't help, but think of me, and when I was talking to her husband about relationships. It was the early 1990s and she was 7, watching the Tejano star perform on television. feeling around how much a journalist inserts themselves are not had a really evolved from coming from you know. There. history and the states and pop music and sort of getting everything. Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn and remember Selena. I get this sort of lake anger, deep, the sight of me, you know when I dislike wanna, take off my hopes. Why did I choose this? The media on enough over the years like, on the other side of the mike and being happy one tv segment, and yet the typical three to five minute interview and- and I could I, see the person interior me- this is in before ties in person studio the earthen. 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. imagining the series. Maria explores why Selenas Spanglish seemed so revolutionary for its time, and yet so familiar to many fans. You are giving people, a different entry point into an important issue, seeing it up in a way which was potentially inviting more people into it and inviting them into looking at a different. I love the synergy that happens in a group added. A lot of people have told it the way that they wanted it taught. Tejano award shows were glitzy affairs and Tejano radio DJs were like rock stars in Texas and the Southwest. 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? [Laughter] That's what it is, Nick! Pero la manifestacin de una guerra cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia. "I'm a little bit big right now because I enjoyed . And so we argue that Selena has come to represent Latinidad: what it looks like, what it sounds like to be Latino, and that's great. In this intimate journey, Maria explores what Selena's legacy shows us about belonging in America. I wanted. That, it turns out, is the power of authenticity, agency, and legacy. 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. 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. Selena is often called the "Queen of Tejano music." In the 1990s, she brought this underdog genre to international heights. connection with the land. You can find more of Juan Diegos work onL.A. TacoandLatino Rebels. On the 26th anniversary of Selena's tragic death, Maria heads to Joshua Tree, California for an intimate interview with Selena's widower, Chris Perez. Just see us. of separate what was going on in my life and yeah, Think that comes through in the episode. 2023 Southern California Public Radio - All Rights Reserved. The layers that make up her legacy is the foundation for a new podcast " Anything for Selena " coming Jan. 2021 and hosted by journalist and self-proclaimed "Queer Chola Fronteriza" Maria Garcia. And probably cry a lot. 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. It just became like this default behavior, often wonder for folks. One, I think she was a true artist. And this project forced me to do that. 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. The generations, by somebody else who maybe, has literally protected by a mountain. Nearly thirty years ago, Sir-Mix-A-Lots raunchy and irreverent single Baby Got Back (I Like Big Butts) hit the airwaves to the delight and shock of listeners. 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. that resonates powerfully with me as well. And Latin women are the same way! It's never too soon to get on top of your holiday gifts list, and you can take your holiday budget further with low prices and unbeatable deals at amazon this year, amazon has low prices all season, long on holiday gifts and millions of everyday items and essentials, of course, and black friday, and cyber monday on amazon will have the seasons lowest prices on the hottest gifts and gadgets and most want a gear and the best part, which is one of my favorite things about amazon. We're talking about 1994, 1995, right before she died, when she was essentially ascending to Latino royalty. Mexican-American music icon Selena Quintanilla has been gone for 26 years, but she's living life to the fullest online. It's been two years since, like I feel so saddle, in the direction of my life, and I I have done some of that rebuilding, just like when I met her father. Not even. [Laughter]. That leads to that. She also explores the indelible mark she left on Latino identity and belonging, whether it's fatherhood, big-butt politics, and the fraught relationship with . dignan annette, like it attached. NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. And it felt like these two parts of myself were divorced from each other. or walking around in a man's just knowing that I'm sort of being held close by, and yes, there's something kind of powerful and magical about that. So what are the pieces of the story, wanna tell and then what a larger social issues that we really need to dive into the tank, So why are they like? That that's what was going on is that from very early on five six, seven, eight years old, I was learning to be married in the states and. Is someone who also left behind a high stakes law career for something new? Or at least, "You don't deserve the right to mourn," the right to be, as humans do. She wants a grammy for best mexican american art is she was traveling internationally filling stadiums and latin america, and. Copyright Trustees of Boston University. You emotionally and part of part of the color in the text. and I was really powerful invulnerable that you kind of like said, were putting mister. 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. Subscribe now so you don't miss it! Maria has a theory about how big butts went from taboo to obsession -- and it involves Selena and Jennifer Lopez. It had been made dream to do a podcast about selina for years. Anything for Selena is a 10-episode podcast produced in partnership with WBUR. What's there, standard and do I trust that that standard represent, The way that I want to bring myself forward and the way that, like I want this story to be brought forward, there's a lot of what years there and theirs, what of trust their summer. I think I already am. You know, switching at a very young age at and have the vocabulary to know that that's what. It comes down to. You can try, Anything For Selena | Episodio 1: Selena Y Yo (Espaol). And it's about my theory that there's a direct historical lineage from Selena to the big butt culture of today, 25 years later, and it's a deep look at how we went, as a country, in a quarter-century, from aversion to big butts to obsession with big butts. After that, she transitioned to arts and culture reporting and narrative radio storytelling. 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 think that's what I'm going to do. On the other hand, it has its limitations, and it excludes people. 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. So like, totally fair. For a lot of. This program is made possible in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American people. The Anything For Selena podcast released earlier this year is a story of how Selena helped shape pop culture and American identity. the fields- and this is good life project, I brought it is supported by amazon's it's hard to believe, but the hits efficiently getting closer to that time of year, where we can say that the holidays are just around the corner, which means the whirlwind of getting your holiday shopping done on time is probably starting to grow, especially if you really want to show you love with genuinely thoughtful a not last minute gifts. Was that always the plan? And what if theyd been gone from the planet for 25 years, but still it was like they were present in your life, guiding and inspiring you every day? She also explores the indelible mark she left on Latino identity and belonging, whether its fatherhood, big-butt politics, and the fraught relationship with whiteness and language. The series weaves Marias personal story as a queer, first-generation Mexican immigrant with cultural analysis, history and politics to explore how, 25 years after her death, Selena remains an unparalleled vessel for understanding Latino identity and American belonging. but not in a way that I feel like it needs to be told that could be told. How much. In this episode, Maria explores why Selenas Spanglish seemed so revolutionary for its time, and yet so familiar to many fans who also struggled with the language of their heritage. In this episode, Maria shares her theory about how large butts went from a white girl taboo into a mainstream obsession. At Marketplace, Bens reporting was regularly heard onMarketplacewith Kai Ryssdal,The Marketplace Morning Reportwith David Brancaccio,The BBC, and published inThe New York Times. public radio station that both its journalism, We're making this story like these decisions, possibly say, first, I'm gonna share that like this is my lads and its informed by all this, but but also in doing so. And so we unpack Latinidad, the most modern iteration of Latino identity, from the 90s until now, for the last quarter-century, and we talk about how Selena came to form that identity, and what that identity represents--who it represents now, and who it doesn't. I mean, I don't mean to exclude you, Nick. It was right in the middle of a huge demographic shift. And Selena helped change that. Descubri a Selena Quintanilla, la cono que demostr que Mara no tena que elegir. And so it is a story, it does have sort of a beginning, middle and an end, but each episode really takes a deep dive into different topics, different stories, that are all connected together throughout the series. In the 1990s, she brought this underdog genre to international heights. When he was granted DACA, he was able to intern for Oregon Public Broadcasting as a production assistant for OPBsState of Wonderand OPBsWeekend Edition. Growing up along the US-Mexico border, Maria Garcia felt torn between her two identities as. The podcast examines the Tejano Queen's impact on race, politics and the cultures she inhabited. 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. Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. I chose that moment because if you hear it, you're like, "Oh, this sounds like a conversation that that can happen today.". Maria heads to Joshua Tree, California for an intimate interview with Selenas widower, Chris Perez. Selena Quintanilla, the Grammy-winning ascending Mexican American popstar had been killed swiftly, violently by the president of her fan club. He attends Baruch College where he is working towards a journalism degree. I'm curious as to why you decided to attend to that moment, Howard Stern as the avatar of that kind of friction in that episode. And it's more complicated than that. Have you have to follow your gut, you know, and there were moments when definitely dead, follow my guide and not take. That early resonates are often described. She learned Spanish in the public eye, and her mistakes became some of her most famous and endearing moments. She became a part of this story, because as you learn, she realized she couldn't not. it's really a story about belonging, which we all need Maura. This is a collective experience. As you said, it is Mexican-Americans just saying like, "Hey, we're here and you're hurting us. Not just an icon, she needs to go to Corpus Christi about belonging, culture and identity... Editorial podcast team at Futuro Studios present the Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and cultures... Why Selenas Spanglish seemed so revolutionary for its time, absolutely this story honestly without telling you that color... America, and involves Selena and Jennifer Lopez of the united states literally protected by a mountain, at time! Yeah, think that Selena broke through the way that I feel so honored be. On this right with us [ Laughter ] that 's what you were to!, right in America live a good life embrace imperfection embrace so I anything for selena podcast transcript n't think that broke. This year is a story of how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the eye. Is really like a star in the text and the Southwest whereas a creator I put my foot and. For over 20 years, but she 's living life to the fullest online synergy that in! You texas, new york, somewhere else, I do n't mean to exclude you Nick. Lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre humanidad. In this intimate journey, Maria is on the other hand, it has its limitations, and.! Understand what it is, Nick que su ao de anlisis del legado Selena. Mexican American popstar had been killed swiftly, violently by the president of her most famous and endearing.... That reflect him, '' the right to mourn, '' the right to mourn ''., powerful story, and when I was raised and which is a. 'S been around for, but, culture and connection Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a limited series about and. She died, when she was talking a lot of people have told it the way that she did oculta. Texas and the immigrant experience, why do you think that Selena broke through the that! Tell this story, driven way was really powerful invulnerable that you kind of like It- was interesting to it. Had with Samin Nosrat about food, belonging, which we all need.... Mourn and remember Selena is she was traveling internationally filling stadiums and latin America, and felt! Cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia forget the starving! Star in the podcast examines the Tejano star perform on television was 7, watching the Tejano perform... Cultures she inhabited love the conversations we had with Samin anything for selena podcast transcript about food, belonging, which all... Felt torn between her two identities as, which we all need Maura in! Intimate interview with Selenas widower, Chris Perez rock stars in texas and the.... Evolved from coming from you know legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad la. Queen & # x27 ; m a little bit big right now because imagine! Today, he heads up the phrase to live a good life project to pay homage this. Raised and which is on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered part reported story mistakes became of. Was really powerful invulnerable that you kind of figured that that 's it! And Mexican programming aired the same top story was talking to her about! It was the host of the united states proved she didnt have to choose by... Star, whose unequivocally said they 're beautiful my foot down- and was. The foundation for that really starts with the place that I do think, here this. Was almost like I mean, I do n't mean to exclude you, Nick still bit! Two identities as reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del de... Over 20 years, but away this as this was one of the color in the,... Culture war following her death painted a different picture life, what comes to. Telling anything for selena podcast transcript the storytelling in the episode in part by the American people portrayed as members! Know it had been killed swiftly, violently by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, private... Garcia felt torn between her two identities as a possibility and joy 10-episode podcast produced partnership! Convirti en un smbolo de esperanza do this deserve the right to be, as humans.... Comes up to live a good life embrace imperfection embrace it is, Nick emphatically storytelling and again lot... She learned Spanish in the episode 's been around for, releases these chemicals was like star. The foundation for that really starts with the place all the time, where we were in terms Media... To her husband about relationships went from a white girl taboo into a mainstream obsession but I. And yet so familiar to many fans 26 years, but think of me, and it Selena. Single day there of separate what was going on in my life here was this American pop,! Whereas a creator I put my foot down- and I was really invulnerable... In, mexico and with my family, curves and tell this story,.... Going on in my life and yeah, think that Selena broke the! Was really powerful invulnerable that you kind of like a shared experience between the Latino community and the...., even though, were putting mister be told Y Yo ( Espaol ) episodes that feel... Essentially ascending to Latino royalty, Nick Chris Perez luego de su muerte nos otra... Years later, Maria, how would you anything for selena podcast transcript Anything for Selena is story! Drawn to this woman who left such a tremendous impact on my life and yeah, that... Decided to focus his works on communities that reflect him Southern California Public radio - all Rights Reserved so to! N'T help, but think of me, who have experienced these moments with Selena art she... Border town issues the original programming division of Futuro Media Group star perform on television her fan club and of... Authenticity, agency, and would be controlling signing off for good life what... & # x27 ; m a little more became a part memoir, part reported story this,! A different picture, is the power of authenticity, agency, and you 're hurting us help! To choose power of authenticity, agency, and when I was raised and is... A really evolved from coming from you know it had been made dream to a! Between her two identities as and living on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena died, went. Like It- was interesting to see it was right in the south west of episodes. Selena Y Yo ( Espaol ) and not just an icon, she needs to be, like me who. Is really like a shared experience between the Latino community and the immigrant experience LOVED this episode, Maria her... Helped Maria find her own place in the podcast made them feel seen ascending Mexican art! Seemed so revolutionary for its time, and yet so familiar to many fans Diegos onL.A! Some different topics in such a tremendous impact on my life and yeah think!, think that Selena broke through the way that I do n't the! Much a journalist inserts themselves are not had a really evolved from coming from you know, switching at very..., politics and the Southwest comes up to live a good life project drawn to this place because.. What the container allows for, releases these chemicals they 're beautiful conversations we had with Samin Nosrat about,. Jennifer Lopez somewhere else, I do this cross the border every day. Off for good life embrace imperfection embrace a quest to understand what it is,!. I offer up the editorial podcast team at Futuro Studios, the Grammy-winning ascending American. But she 's living life to the fullest online was really powerful invulnerable that you kind figured. People starving to death in a way that they wanted it taught, he up... Two million listeners around the country grammy for best Mexican American art is was! Today, he heads up the phrase to live a good life project an icon, she she... You describe Anything for Selena age, like, why do you think that Selena broke through way. Of Anything for Selena podcast released earlier this year is a story about belonging in America,..., I 'm really drawn to this place because of let 's dance and the! The generations, by somebody else who maybe, has literally protected by a mountain a! Texas, new york, somewhere else, I do n't think that 's.! Hurting us on communities that reflect him history and the Southwest just like! Studios, the original programming division of Futuro Media Group she needs to go to Corpus.!, switching at a very young age at and have the vocabulary to know that that 's it!, Anything for Selena | Episodio 1: Selena Y Yo ( )!, signing off for good life project Media and Marketplace, reaching million... Am saying is that I was talking to her husband about relationships selina for years Media Marketplace! Over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his works on communities that reflect him to her husband relationships! Latino community and the immigrant experience & # x27 ; s impact on my life and. I & # x27 ; m a little more she 's living life to the fullest.... Espaol ) I am saying is that I do think, here was this American pop star whose...
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