Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Here's some good news: More and more Latinos are on line

Another key report from Pew Hispanic shows the increase in internet use grew faster amongst Latinos (10%) than it did amongst white non-Latinos (4%). Surprisingly perhaps is the fact that foreign-born Latinos increased internet use at a significantly greater rate than US-born. Read the report.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

The heat's on CNN not to have it both ways

While CNN makes nicey nice to the community with their 2-part Latino in America series, they have yet to put their ear to the ground and hear the increasing rumbling to dump Latino-abuser Lou Dobbs. Read Joe Torres' widely circulated web piece on why he boycotts the network.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Univision and Kaiser Foundation Mark National Latino AIDS Awareness Day with New Campaign Featuring People Living With HIV/AIDS

Testimonials Aim to Inspire Hope and Debunk Myths in Response to Latino AIDS Crisis

LOS ANGELES, CA -- October 15, 2009 -- Univision Communications Inc. and the Kaiser Family Foundation today unveiled the second phase of "SOY..." (I AM...), the groundbreaking Spanish-language media campaign featuring the personal stories of a diverse group of Latinos living with HIV and their loved ones. The new campaign materials will debut on the Univision Network, the Telefutura Network and Galavision in conjunction with National Latino AIDS Awareness Day (NLAAD) on October 15th and continue throughout 2010.

"SOY..." features 14 Latinos in the U.S. and Latin America living with HIV/AIDS who share both a passion for life and a desire to end the spread of the disease. They are musicians, academics, businessmen and housewives -- everyday people who share their experiences living with HIV. Shot in Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Mexico City, San Salvador, Lima, and Buenos Aires, the documentary-style public service ads (PSAs) aim to create a personal connection to HIV/AIDS among the audience and engender the feeling that HIV/AIDS could affect "people like me and those I care about."

In the first wave of the campaign, which debuts today, audiences will meet Yolanda, a devoted mother who works in a Los Angeles health clinic; Joann, a minister and church choir director from Chicago; Alejandro, a 20-year old Argentine musician; Dania, a vibrant Cuban-American poet and dancer from Miami; and, Enrique, a passionate community activist from New York City. The campaign spots will air in the United States on Univision, TeleFutura, and Galavisión networks and television and radio stations, and across more than 12 countries in Latin America as part of the Latin American Media AIDS Initiative.

Developed by Univision and the Kaiser Family Foundation, "SOY..." includes 28 original public service ads (PSAs) for television and radio and Spanish-language HIV/AIDS information and resources available online through a dedicated website (http://www.univision.com keyword: SIDA) and via a toll-free Spanish-language hotline (1-866-TU-SALUD). The campaign was developed as part of ¡Entérate de VIH y SIDA! (Get the Facts about HIV and AIDS!), a long-standing public information partnership established in 2001 between Univision and the Kaiser Family Foundation to provide culturally relevant Spanish-language information and resources about HIV/AIDS and sexual health. The latest series of campaign spots were conceptualized by Kaiser and Univision, and produced by ONYX.la and WeArePacheco, winners of 7 Lions Awards at the 2009 Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival.

"Univision has a long history of addressing issues that are important to our audience and the response to HIV and AIDS within our community is an urgent issue," said Ivelisse Estrada, Senior Vice President for Corporate and Community Relations at Univision Communications. "Our work to provide information about HIV and link our audience to AIDS-related resources has made a critical difference in breaking the silence about this disease and getting people tested."

"Latinos in the United States are disproportionately impacted by HIV and AIDS, and stigma remains a key challenge to addressing the problem within the community," said Tina Hoff, Vice President and Director of Entertainment Media Partnerships at the Kaiser Family Foundation. "By sharing their stories, the individuals profiled in this campaign are connecting very personally with audiences in the U.S. and across Latin America, helping to break the silence and fight the stigma surrounding this disease."

The campaign launch coincides with Hispanic Heritage Month and National Latino AIDS Awareness Day (NLAAD) -- a national collective movement and public health marketing effort aimed at educating and mobilizing Hispanic/Latino communities to increase their knowledge on the impact of HIV/AIDS and health related safe practices. "SOY..." is the official campaign of NLAAD, and Univision and Kaiser are working with the Latino Commission on AIDS and the National Association of State and Territorial AIDS Directors (NASTAD) to distribute HIV/AIDS information resources and "SOY..." programming materials to community organizations, health agencies and local clinics and across the country.

"The ‘SOY...’ campaign provides an unprecedented opportunity to tell the story of HIV/AIDS in our communities in a way that’s real and compelling. The campaign reinforces that each of us is equal in the face of AIDS -- ending this epidemic requires both personal responsibility and community action," said Guillermo Chacon, interim Executive Director, Latino Commission on AIDS. "Univision and Kaiser are real leaders in the Latino response to AIDS, linking Univision’s audience to critical resources and fighting the stigmas and stereotypes that persist within our families and communities."

All campaign materials can be viewed at http://www.univision.com (keyword: SIDA) or on the campaign’s YouTube page: http://www.youtube.com/soycampaign.

About HIV/AIDS and U.S. Latinos
Of the approximately 1.2 million people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States, 200,000 are Latino. The U.S. Latino community is disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS, accounting for 18 percent of total AIDS cases while comprising only 14 percent of the U.S. population. Latinos are testing positive for HIV, being diagnosed with AIDS and dying from the disease at four times the rate of Caucasian counterparts in the United States. As the largest and fastest growing ethnic minority group in the United States, addressing the impact of HIV/AIDS in the Latino community takes on increased importance in efforts to improve the nation’s health.

About Univision Communications
Univision Communications Inc. is the premier Spanish-language media company in the United States. Its operations include Univision Network, the most-watched Spanish-language broadcast television network in the U.S. reaching 95% of U.S. Hispanic Households; TeleFutura Network, a general-interest Spanish-language broadcast television network, which was launched in 2002 and now reaches 85% of U.S. Hispanic Households; Galavisión, the country’s leading Spanish-language cable network; Univision Television Group, which owns and operates 64 television stations in major U.S. Hispanic markets and Puerto Rico; Univision Radio, the leading Spanish-language radio group which owns and/or operates 68 radio stations in 16 of the top 25 U.S. Hispanic markets and 5 stations in Puerto Rico; and Univision Interactive Media, which includes http://www.univision.com, the premier Spanish-language Internet destination in the U.S., and Univision Móvil, the industry’s most comprehensive Spanish-language suite of mobile offerings. Univision Communications also has a 50% interest in TuTv, a joint venture formed to broadcast Televisa’s pay television channels in the U.S. Univision Communications has television network operations in Miami and television and radio stations and sales offices in major cities throughout the United States. For more information, please visit http://www.univision.net.

About the Kaiser Family Foundation
The Kaiser Family Foundation is a non-profit private operating foundation, based in Menlo Park, California, dedicated to producing and communicating the best possible information, research and analysis on health issues. It is not associated with Kaiser Permanente or Kaiser Industries. Information on HIV/AIDS, global health and Kaiser’s public education partnerships with entertainment media is available at http://www.kff.org.

CONTACTS

Monica Talan
(212) 455-5331
mtalan@univision.net
Univision Communications Inc.
Rakesh Singh
(650) 854-9400
rakeshs@kff.org
The Kaiser Family Foundation

Friday, October 09, 2009

Encouraging news: The Changing Pathways of Hispanic Youths

A marked increase in Latinos aged 16 to 25 attending school and/or being part of the US work force between the years 1970 and 2007 highlight the Pew Center's report on young Latinos' growing investment in the US society. Young women still lag behind their male counterparts, however. Read the summary and full report.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Pew Center report on Mexico's gaze North

Most Mexicans See Better Life in U.S. – One In Three Would Migrate

Facing a variety of national problems, Mexicans overwhelmingly are dissatisfied with the direction of their country. Large majorities describe crime (81%) and illegal drugs (73%) as very big problems. And many believe there is a better life in the U.S. and would migrate if they had the chance. Most would do so without authorization. Read more

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Military Coup Reverses Honduran Women’s Gains in Human Rights

For those of you who have been following the radar-slipping, deteriorating events surrounding the recent coup in Honduras, here's an article from the Women's Media Center that visits the situation from a women's perspective. Women, in fact, have been in the forefront of opposition to the new, uninvited, head of state, Roberto Micheletti.

Saturday, August 08, 2009

My girl Toto's back in town



It was great Friday night seeing Toto la Momposina and her merry Tambores at the Queens Theatre in the Park, and it’s been great to see the Queens Latino Cultural Festival back in the groove this year of presenting top artists from throughout the Latino world in this, my borough, which boasts the largest concentration of Latinos in the Big Apple (or Gran Manzana, as they say).
Toto forces me into the cliché: She just gets better with age. Maybe it was the venue—last time I saw her, near on 10 years ago, it was at the more imposing Town Hall in Manhattan—maybe because as I get better or worse with age, she’s become nothing if not inspirational, a role model of how to stay gorgeous, sensual, spirited and—here comes another cliché—eminently young at heart.
Gigging the world over—you’d think she was homeless rather than a proud palenquera from Colombia’s northeastern panhandle—she carries with her her message as torchbearer for the traditions of her country and her people, Afro-Indio-Colombians. Toto maintains her rusticity; she’s like a pre-urbanized Susana Baca, a less buffed icon of the unsung history and contributions of African people in South America.
Toto was born into cantadora lineage: women keeping the traditions through healing, midwifery, political savvy, farming, and of course, song and dance. And that legacy infuses all of her, including her electric smile, her sensuality-- unabashed at over 60 now--and her good natured rule over her super musicians aging from their 20s to could-be “jubilados” (retirees).
The audience, too, was seduced from the first flash of that smile and her head cocked haughtily on high, her swooping skirts and her bossy and beguiling contralto. They were waving their straw hats and arms like streamers and were dancing in the seats.
I can’t wait for her next visit, predictably not for some time, though. Toto’s scored major success in Europe, but never here outside her Colombian homies. And her next show after that, and still the next one. But, at the rate she’s going, she may be still bringing the house down after I’m long gone!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Will healthcare reform be fair to immigrants?

Women's Media Center contributor, Sharmeen Gangat, worries that immigrants, currently faced with great disparities in health coverage between themselves and the native born, will fall by the wayside once "reform" is enacted. Especially at peril are prenatal and postpartum care for women and family planning.
Read the whole article

Monday, July 20, 2009

Pew's Profile of Puerto Ricans

Now that the US, thanks to the nomination of Nuyorican, Sonia Sotomayor, to the Supreme Court, knows that Puerto Rico is a territory of the US and that Puerto Ricans are born citizens just like the Mayflower descendants, the Pew Hispanic Center has compiled a survey of our second largest Latino group.
Click to read

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

What’s Behind the Rise of Women’s Philanthropy?

Women's giving has exceeded overall philanthropy by more tha 10%

The Women's Media Center has offered up yet another article of inspiration and information for women. Women's philanthropy supports primarily programs that help women and women's organizations worldwide, putting it at the "intersection between the women's movement and philanthropy." Its author, Deborah Richardson, has been active in programming and services for children and African-American arts and is currently chief program officer for the Women's Funding Network.

Click to read

Monday, July 13, 2009

Media Justice for Sotomayor

Since the announcement of Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination to the Supreme Court, some in the media have engaged in sexist and racist attacks against her. Attacks have been overt and blatant. Some have been the repetition of extreme far right commentary, often packaged as “news” and endlessly discussed in mainstream media outlets.

The Women’s Media Center is releasing its new video, “Media Justice for Sotomayor.” It documents some of these racist and sexist comments already delivered on high profile television programs, radio, print and online outlets.
Click here for video

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Hispanic American Village Jobs Center Restored

Following IMDiversity's recent migration to a new jobs database and job tools format at http://jobsearch.imdiversity.com, the editors have begun to restore a number of previously popular jobs quicksearch features including our jobs by location and jobs by occupation quicksearches, our $100K-Plus Featured Jobs section, Bilingual Jobs quicksearch, and the Hispanic American Village Jobs Center.

As before, the section spotlights select job opportunities tagged by our staff and by employers as being of special interest to our Village readers and Latino jobseekers. However, the new database format also brings some changes in the custom search and quicksearch format, and we will be rebuilding the section throughout the summer.

Just one one new improvement to our job tools is that jobseekers can now quickly and easily schedule a Saved Search from any search results page to send them a job alert email whenever any new jobs match their custom criteria. Jobseekers can "subscribe" to a Saved Search agent without opening a full job tools account, but they will enjoy improved tools for managing multiple alerts and posting employer-searchable resume by creating a quick Job Tools account first

We've also added a much expanded network job search, greatly extending the range and variety of the job postings searchable from one site.

Stop back for updates about the new jobs center in coming weeks.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Journalist Webinar Briefing: Closing the Racial Wealth Gap

The Media Consortium, the Insight Center

MC Contact: Tracy Van Slyke
tracy@themediaconsortium.com

America's most glaring economic injustice is the racial wealth gap: families of color have only 15 cents of wealth to the white family's dollar. The racial wealth gap has been caused by government policies from the expropriation of Indian lands and slavery, to many aspects of the New Deal like the GI bill and Social Security, to current policies like the Home Mortgage Interest Deduction and unregulated housing and financial markets. The Oakland-based Insight Center's Closing the Racial Wealth Gap Initiative has over 120 experts of color across the country who are resources to journalists and elected officials on federal, state and local economic stories and policies.

On Tuesday, June 16, this call will feature story ideas and investigative journalism proposals from:

Michael E. Roberts, President, First Nations Development Institute, on Closing the Racial Wealth Gap in Indian country

Avis A. Jones-DeWeever, Ph.D., Director, National Council of Negro Women, Research, Public Policy, and Information Center, on her new report Assessing the Double Burden: Examining Racial and Gender Disparities in Mortgage Lending, co-released with the National Community Reinvestment Coalition

Janis Bowdler, Senior Housing Policy Analyst, National Council of La Raza on the housing crisis and Latinos

Short presentations will be followed by Q&A.

To access ECON, the Experts of Color Network, visit www.expertsofcolor.org. For narratives on the racial wealth gap and proposals to close it, visit www.racialweathgap.org. For more information on The Media Consortium, visit www.themediaconsortium.org.

WHAT: Journalist Webinar Briefing: Closing the Racial Wealth Gap
WHEN: 9 a.m. PST/12 p.m. EST, Tuesday, June 16 (40 minutes)
WHO: Insight Center Closing The Racial Wealth Gap Initiative and The Media Consortium

To RSVP: https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/854239593.
Please RSVP by Monday, June 15 at 3 EST.

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE:

About The Media Consortium
The Media Consortium, a network of the country’s leading, independent media outlets has formed to amplify our voices; increase our collective clout; leverage our current audience and reach out to new ones; transform our sector’s position in a rapidly changing media and political environment; and redefine ourselves and progressivism for a new century.

About NAM
New America Media is the country's first and largest national collaboration and advocate for more than 2500 ethnic news organizations. Over 51 million ethnic adults connect to each other, to home countries and to America through 3000+ ethnic media, the fastest growing sector of American journalism. Founded by the nonprofit Pacific News Service in 1996, NAM is headquartered in California with offices in New York and Washington D.C. NAM also partners with journalism schools to grow local associations of ethnic media around the nation.

Visit NAM's homepage for news and updates on our programs here.

Monday, June 01, 2009

Pew on the demographics of Latino kids

Hispanics now make up 22% of all children under the age of 18 in the United States, with only 11% foreign born and 56% the offspring of one or more foreign-born parent. And the Census Bureau suggests that by 2025, 3 children of 10 will be Latino.
Read the report.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Don't let your Spanish slip

You'll be more able to pick up yet a third, or fourth, or fifth, and so on, language. Plus, you'll find it easier to increase your vocabulary and understandings of your native tongue. So reports a study of Spanish and Mandarin Chinese speaking bilinguals. Good piece in Science Daily.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

New project by immigrants for immigrants on health

New Routes to Community Health is using immigrant-made media to improve immigrants lives. Immigrant organizations and media makers have formed partnerships in 8 US cities to improve the health of immigrants by making media to address specific health concerns. You can view the project and its blog at http://NewRoutes.org. Three of the projects include, The Domestic Worker Safety & Dignity Project, Abriendo las Caja and Salud: Healing through the Arts.
Check out New Routes' blog, too.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Latinas movin' up, slowly but surely

Our partner, New America Media, reports, thanks to HispanicBusiness, that there's been steady progress for Latina advancement since 2002, showing a rise from 20 to 23 of those with management or professional posts. Once again, though, we are reminded that, oftentimes, success equates with making concessions to the dominant culture like joining the "happy hour" afterwork crowd. Also noteworthy, and a cultural clue, is the report that Latinas are requesting assertiveness training. You know, the squeaky wheel gets oiled, or, El que no llora no mama.
Read it, and let us know what you think.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Lovely piece on Latino identity by Hector Tobar

Hector Tobar offers a sensitive overview of the Latino community's growth over the years in California, and, by extension, the country. Tobar, while guatemalteco, is forever labeled "Mexican," a misnomer that echoes the old anti-black stereotype, "they all look alike." Tobar shares some of the most unfortunate, even hateful, responses he's gotten from his LA Times readers, but he is not vindictive. He is merely trying to understand. It was an ultimately uplifting way for me to start my morning.
Readers Share thoughts on Immigration

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Ohio event: Aspiring Physicians and Research Scientists Conference

CLEVELAND CLINIC TO HOST THE SECOND ANNUAL ASPIRING PHYSICIANS AND RESEARCH SCIENTISTS CONFERENCE

Conference Focuses on African American and Hispanic College Students Interested in Science and Medicine

WHO: Cleveland Clinic is honored to host the second annual Aspiring Physicians and Research Scientists Conference for African American and Hispanic/Latino(a) junior and senior math, science and pre-med majors. These 22 students are from historically black colleges and universities as well as Hispanic-serving institutions and Ohio colleges and universities.

WHAT: This two-day conference will focus on medical and scientific innovation. Several Cleveland Clinic physician and research scientists will welcome and address the students who will, in turn, have the opportunity to present their research to these experts. Scholarships will be given to the (three?) students who win the poster research presentations.

WHEN: March 5-6.

WHERE: Cleveland Clinic HealthSpace Auditorium, 8911 Euclid Avenue

WHY: Cleveland Clinic is dedicated to attracting and teaching medical experts from all over the world. This event will be a learning experience as well as a networking opportunity for these students. Media is invited to attend the conference, interview the physicians and students. For more information and a schedule of events call Natalie Guzzo at 216.444.5703

About the Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic, located in Cleveland, Ohio, is a not-for-profit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. Cleveland Clinic was founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation. U.S. News & World Report consistently names Cleveland Clinic as one of the nation’s best hospitals in its annual “America’s Best Hospitals” survey. Approximately 1,800 full-time salaried physicians and researchers at Cleveland Clinic and Cleveland Clinic Florida represent more than 100 medical specialties and subspecialties. In 2007, there were 3.5 million outpatient visits to Cleveland Clinic and 50,455 hospital admissions. Patients came for treatment from every state and from more than 80 countries. Cleveland Clinic’s Web site address is http://www.clevelandclinic.org/.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Scholarship Deadline March 1: Chemistry Majors

African-American, Hispanic/Latino, and American Indian students who are high school seniors, or college freshmen, sophomores or juniors are among those who can now apply for a scholarship from the American Chemical Society Scholars Program. Applications will be accepted through March 1, 2009, for the 2009-2010 school year.

Students must plan to major in or already be majoring in chemistry, biochemistry, chemical engineering or a chemically-related science, and they must plan to pursue a career in the chemical sciences. Scholarships range from $1,000 to $5,000, depending on college level and economic need.

For full description, see the complete release published on our sister-site, THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Online: ACS Scholars Program Accepting Applications for Minority Students Studying Chemistry.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Bilingual? You'e got a leg up in surviving the recession

Here's an article from Hispanic Business suggesting that there's work, and good pay, if you can ply your bilingualism. Court interpreters, paralegals, nurses, social workers, etc. It's not a bonanza, they say, but there's hope.
Find it here.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Notes from Antigua, Guatemala

I’m in Guatemala for a week, visiting a friend, staying mostly in Antigua, a jewel of colonial grace and comfort. Antigua is arguably the most prosperous of Guatemala’s cities. It is top-heavy with ladinos (Guatemalans—and other Central Americans--of Spanish or mixed European and Amerindian descent) and foreigners, come either to study Spanish or to stay as pensioners or workers in the many NGOs trying to make life bearable for the country’s overflow of orphans, war-wounded, battered women, and more.
Indigenous Maya weave through the town, come down from the nearby hilltowns, most of them women in multi-hued traditional dress. The cloth for their magnificent ancestral traje--a woven cotton poncho-like huipil, sometimes elaborated with embroidery, worn over a corte, or long woven panel that gets wrapped in layers around the waist and secured under a yards-long cloth sash—is becoming harder to come by as the weaving is so labor intensive. Much of the tela found now is computer woven in Indonesia and recognizably inferior. They used to sell trajes on the streets and in the parques, but now most of their wares are smaller woven tourist items and trinkets.
Other indigenous women walk the streets or settle onto the narrow sidewalk, selling tamales or dulces to native Guatemalans from checkered cloth lined baskets.
Antigua is an anomaly, its Western face and well-being contrasting unsettlingly with the grime the pollution and grinding poverty of neighboring Guatemala City and the insularity and, again, extreme poverty of the highlands.
I’d recently posted an AP story about the growing indigenous presence in the U.S. Mexican, Guatemalan, Ecuadorian and other Latin American indigenous have been arriving to work the fields in increased numbers. For the first time, we have to recognize folks from “Latin” America who have never learned Spanish nor adopted European ways of dress, food, and social structure. Some withstood the pressure to embrace Christianity, or have done so only half-heartedly.
These new indigenous arrivals may look like our accepted image of a Latino and bear a Hispanic surname (many do not), but their ethos is not Latin. Moreover they may have almost nothing in common with Native Americans, already having a hard time with inclusionism—is an Alaska Native or a Native Hawaiian an American Indian?—yet they are being tossed in together with all of North America’s First Peoples. Some day these new indigenous will compete with Hopi and Oglala and other “card carrying” indigenous groups for the benefits (or the crumbs) they’d fought so long to win.
When I sit in the parque central or go to the market, especially when I go out of town, I can’t help but wonder how difficult the decision must be to face the perils of coming north, and I imagine, despite their clear marginalization in their own land (a civil war that was essentially one of genocide endured from 1960 to 1996), how much more poignant and scary it becomes once they exchange their traje for farmworkers’ overalls and aprons.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Pew Center study finds immigration has slipped as Hispanic priority

With the economy is such a mess and Latinos losing jobs at a faster pace than non-Hispanic whites, concerns about immigration and reform have taken a back seat for Latinos to the more burning issues of sustaining one's self and family.
Pew Hispanic has done an informative study.
Find it here.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Is there anyone out there who still doesn't want to talk to Cuba?

Rumors are rife once again that Chairman Fidel will soon no longer be with us. They are more credible now as he never regained his health after surgery about two years ago. So, now, more than ever, the opportunity should be seized to open a dialog, end the boycott, and begin communicate and cooperate on shared issues and interests. William M. LeoGrande and Peter Kornbluh present a concise history plus analysis. And plea.
In the LA Times

Friday, January 09, 2009

Hilda Solis: Liking her even more!

From the LA Times on Solis' inbred solidarity with unionism founded in her working class roots, of which she is unabashedly proud.