Television Has Been Good to the Latino Community Lately
As cinema continues to struggle with Chicano representation, let alone portray the Spanish community in a non-stereotypical fashion, television has been quietly (and sometimes, not so quietly) making headway toward better treatment of its Latino characters. With more members of the community producing and writing for television, the wealth of fully fleshed out characters has been more noticeable than ever.
Not every show needs to be about Latinos, nor have a Spanish actor forced in a show outside their comfort zone just to make a point, I just want other forms of media to realize that we're here and ready to show off.
With non-traditional services like Netflix, Amazon, and Hulu taking more of the advertising money, traditional television is learning to capitalize on the increasing Latino demographic. With under 3% of English and Spanish speaking homes watching Spanish-only television, and the population's buying power totaling somewhere around $1 trillion, TV shows that cater to the demo are rewarded with high ratings and revenue. That doesn't mean pandering will work for the audience, however, so no show can be churned out for a quick buck just because. Take ABC's recent, and far less memorable Killer Women, for example. A reboot of the Argentinan novela Mujeres Asesinas, produced with Sofia Vergara (who once noted in an interview that she started getting roles once she dyed her hair brown and chased after traditional "Latina" characters like in Modern Family) among others, the show was an American set program starring Canadian actress Tricia Helfer. It basically removed all of the origin's Argentinian identity and that was enough to cause its demise. A public assimilation turned failed experiment was obviously the wrong direction.
That's why a show like Cristela, a middling sitcom full of Latino characters, can be one of the most popular comedy debuts last fall (second only to Black-ish, which further illustrates the need for a wider cultural umbrella) and can practically take over ABC. It's one of the few shows on the big three networks that's explicitly for the Latino audience. The only reason I don't rally behind it, however, is because the whole thing rings false. It's a particularly loud cry for attention, and an obvious pull for money. But not every successful Latino program of the last season was as loud as this. One show proved we can have both a Latino influenced program, with a strong multi-cultural voice, and be intelligently subdued about it to make it digestible for those outside the audience. There's no need to alienate our community further.
The CW, a network making fine strides toward delivering multi-faceted television with capable, "nerdier" programs like Arrow and The Flash, tapped into something great with Jane the Virgin. An incredibly personal, emotional, and cultural program, Virgin demonstrates how a show can both be a positive representation of its culture, without alienating viewers outside of it. It may be a slight parody of the Spanish telenovelas that inspire it (which also lets a new audience know how great the genre can be), but has yet to feel degrading or belittling within its current run of episodes. Gina Rodriguez, earning herself a Golden Globe in the process, has developed the titular Jane with a Latina background that doesn't make up the entirety of her characterization, unlike recent efforts like Fox's Gang Related. With the Latino community's evolution, as less Latinos are bilingual and more non-Latinos become invested in the growing population's culture, television networks are slowly learning that it's okay to cast Chicano actors and not have that be their only quality. We're done playing the "gang leader" or the "prostitute" or "drug kingpin." It's okay to give us boring roles too.
It must be weird for me to argue that I love Latino characters that aren't explicitly Latino, like maybe a guy named "Jeff" who just works in an office or something, but that's the current trend we South and Central American ethnicities are heading in. Jane the Virgin is just one big example, but TV shows are casting Latino actors in other shows and don't make a big deal out of it. Take Brennan Meija in Power Rangers Dino Charge, for instance. He's a Latino character (last name's Navarro), but that's not even remotely important to the heroics at hand. Or Disney's Sofia the First, which is Disney's first Spanish princess. Her distinct European looks make Disney pass her off as a more non-ethnic Princess, but that doesn't matter since we're soon getting a second effort with Princess Elena of Avalor getting her own show in 2016.
Disney revealing their Latina princesses through TV shows rather than cinema reflects the current attitude the majority of the community has. As cinema struggles to utilize and give us multi-ethnic heroes and villains, television is currently taking a progressive stance and gives the community more of a voice. Sure I'd like more non-white showrunners and network heads, but after all of these years of struggling to find strong Latino voices on TV I'll take what I can get it. Television has been good to my community lately, but I hope we're not just the flavor of the month.
WrestleMania 31: Results and Match Reviews
As noted in our WrestleMania 31 preview, the build to this year's big event was lackluster at best. Stories weren't told well, heat and interest for most of the matches was poor, and the main event between Brock Lesnar and Roman Reigns had a potential to turn into an ugly disaster.
Yet WrestleMania 31 delivered for the most part, and had some surprisingly entertaining segments and guest appearances. The finish to the main event was a great swerve as well, and something that wrestling fans will be talking about for a while.
(The less said about the Kid Ink, Skylar Grey, and Travis Barker performance the better, though. I feel bad for them performing for an apathetic crowd of 76,976* that just wanted to watch some hypermasculine theater and stage combat.)
Let's go through WrestleMania 31 match-by-match and give the full card a rundown.
*That's the WWE's attendance count, so it's probably inflated by at least 6,000
Ten Years Of Modern Doctor Who: Revisiting 'Rose'
Doctor Who celebrated its fiftieth anniversary two years ago, and celebrates its tenth anniversary today. What else would you expect from a series which has never placed much stock in keeping its timelines in order? Just ask UNIT in the late '70s. Or should that be mid-70s? Fantastic. Anyhow, where the 50th anniversary marked the birthday of 'The Unearthly Child', the series' very first episode back in 1963, today's tenth anniversary marks a decade since Russell T. Davies revived the show following sixteen years off-air, barring one ill-fated television movie, and set the stage for what would grow from a cultish British sci-fi curiosity into a genuine transatlantic phenomenon.
Re-watching 'Rose', the first episode of the revived series (or New Who, as it's colloquially known), is fascinating not only in light of how drastically the series has evolved over time, but also how fully-formed the most important aspects of the show were right out of the gate. The most immediately striking difference is between the creative focus of the man in charge then, Russell T. Davies, and the man in charge now, Steven Moffat. The very first shot, swooping from an orbital shot of earth down to Rose Tyler's buzzing alarm clock, establishes perhaps the single definining theme of Davies' tenure: contrasting the grand majesty of space and time with the humble, messy lives of your workaday human. Where Moffat's characters function as cogs in their creator's cosmic clock, Davies rejoices in the silly essentialness of mundane existence. Rose may not find much fulfilment in her shopgirl routine, but in Davies' eyes, there's something magical in being that one amongst millions, rummaging around for a place in humanity's buzzing, living hive.
[American Idol-izer] Top 9 Perform
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Wow, American Idol. Just when I thought you couldn't be less cool, you go and prove me wrong. Proving just how out of touch you are you go and have David Hasslehoff "perform" at the open. Sure having Boy George as guest mentor for "80's Week" is damn cool, but this was just weird. It's not like the 80's are the height of nostalgia anymore. Any quick look through Buzzfeed shows you the Internet is in a 90's mindset, and for most of the kids on Idol right now, they have no idea what these songs are let along know who sang them.
But beyond the Hoff, and a surprise performance from Salt N' Pepa, tensions were high for the contestants. Now with the Save gone, two people were going home and the others were left to perform tired 80's songs. It wasn't a good place for anyone to be in. But, let's get through this together.
Let's see how the Top 9 hassled the Hoff.
WrestleMania 31: Final Card Preview and Match Predictions
WrestleMania 31 happens this Sunday at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California. Unfortunately, this might be the least exciting build to a WrestleMania in a long time. The storytelling has been pretty boring, and the main event pitting WWE Champion Brock Lesnar against the company's hand-selected challenger Roman Reigns will likely underwhelm.
But it's only $10 via the WWE Network, so you'll buy it and watch it.
Yes, the showcase of the immortals is now cheaper than a six-pack of your favorite craft brew. And it sure feels like it.
This is a real shame given the amount of talent on the roster that's being squandered or underutilized. Still, there are some solid matches on the card, including the ladder match for the Intercontinental belt, the return of The Undertaker, and the WWE in-ring debut of Sting.
Here's a full rundown of the WrestleMania 31 card as well as some of my predictions on who will win.
Girls Season 4 Recap
“I’ve seen a lot of things, I’m 25 years old.”
If you’re like me, you can be cynical, but hopeful all at the same time. As a 20-something woman, it’s hard to comprehend the vagueness of growing up. There isn’t a handbook on it and there isn’t a self-help seminar you can go to that’ll make even the smallest decision easier. It’s the boring lifestyle of being a grown-up that scares me to insanity; and it’s that connection to the women of Girls that has pulled at every heart string of mine during season 4.
In this season of Girls, an HBO show centered around a group of New York women struggling to kickstart their lives, viewers were taken on a personal journey of discovery through each character unlike the previous seasons. A small breakdown of where the characters start off this season:
- Hannah leaves New York to pursue her dreams of becoming the literary voice of her generation in Iowa, maintaining a long-distance relationship with Adam
- Jessa has thrown her filter to the wind, speaking her mind and telling those around her exactly what she’s thinking; like a cold-hearted Judge Judy of free therapy
- Shoshanna has graduated and realized the real world is absolutely terrible
- Marnie is realizing being the other woman to her bandmate, Desi, isn’t working out so well
As the season progresses we also see the men in the ladies of Girls lives take a 180 turn. Desi ends up leaving Clementine for Marnie (and proposing to her later on), Ray gets fed up with his neighborhood government officials and runs for office and Adam starts a new relationship with a woman named Mimi-Rose Howard.
[American Idol-izer] Top 10 Perform
Ah, Movie Week. It's American Idol at its corniest. While I wish the show would do away with theme weeks altogether for the sake of staying current (next week is 80's Week, so that's not happening anytime soon), sometimes we do get some startlingly great performances. This week was not one of those times. A week full of out of tune performances (I must be sounding like a broken record at this point), surprising voter turnouts, Kenny Loggins, Jennifer Lopez promoting her single for Dreamworks' Home with a laser light show dress, and two weeks in and the judges have already used their magical save.
I mean, really? Two weeks? This has happened once before with Casey Abrams back in Season 10, but that was a totally deserving choice. Here? I just can't accept it especially after seeing the hokiest, toneless performance I'd seen this season.
But first, here's everybody else.
[American Idol-izer] Top 12 (and 11) Perform
Header by Michael Becker/Fox
American Idol is going through a weird scheduling flux this season (But Empire deserves all of the schedule space it gets). With two cuts in the same week, from the Top 16 to 12 and 12 to 11, the competition was a bit tougher. And once again the strict hour run time forced a bunch of contestants on stage before they were able to compose themselves and led to a bunch of wonky vocals. Thankfully, we won't be talking about those here.
We got the Top 12 on Wednesday, and contestants who made it through only had about 24 hours to celebrate as the field was narrowed down to 11 last night (during a welcome two hour block). A super weird night of new multi camera interviews, a bunch of Empire hype (and a performance of its "No Apologies" theme), red and green light up chairs, and also my boy Quentin is in trouble you guys.
Here are the Top 12 contestants:
Boys: Daniel Seavey, Rayvon Owen, Qaasim Middleton, Nick Fradiani, Clark Beckham and (Wild Card) Quentin Alexander
Girls: Sarina-Joi Crowe, Maddie Walker, Jax, Joey Cook, Tyanna Jones, and (Wild Card) Adanna Duru.
But, only 11 contestants made it to next week.