anything for selena podcast transcriptlynn borden cause of death
The story shook the country and changed Marias life. ideal, and I can see that what is said in mexico and these two parts of myself, never really came together, and I talk about in the podcast how the border was just you know, a physical barrier. "This journey begins at the border, a place in the in-between where, for a long time, I felt divided in two. [Laughter] I've been wanting to go to Joshua Tree--Selena recorded one of her last videos there, "Amor Prohibido"--and I think I'm just gonna disconnect a little bit, and look inward, and take a rest. We got all these messages from people being, re actually at the interviewer like yeah, they were gone. Episode 5. But for the last year, she's taken on a different role and challenge: podcast host--and yes, my Selena doula. So I thought and they were alike. In the 1990s, she brought this underdog genre to international heights. She was americans born and, like I said, corpus Christie, so her first language was english. You know, things like that. And this project forced me to do that. immediate family and fans, it's also it's your personal style. Copyright 2022 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. "So the podcast really examines Selena's legacy," Garcia says. Tell them to listen, then, even invite them to talk about what you've both discovered, because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action, that's how we all come alive together until now. 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. 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. 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. So why is Selena still relevant 25 years after her death? life through a lens, a possibility and joy. 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. You know I had to. half of them are in EL paso, heavily of their markets, that what is my family was like that? A lot of people have tried, I was storing a lot of people have told pieces of the story. This is an unofficial transcript meant for reference. 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. More in a minute. 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 have moments where I'm like, why do I do this? His stories have appeared in The FADER,This American Life,Planet Money,NPR News,Studio 360and many other outlets. as a journalist I had to disclose where I was coming. A couple months later, it sounds like certainly back and saying you know, it was actually married and the story of like. 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. It was like a scale that I kind of had to unlearn. You know, but really that was sort of the spark that led to this, wider change in the mainstream culture and. One, I think she was a true artist. sixteen seventeen. And then here comes Selena just flipping that narrative around. I am and texas I've been going back and forth between here and boston for a couple of years, and here making this my home base. You know, it felt like these old wounds. Las ceremonias de premiacin de la msica tejana eran eventos glamorosos y los DJ de estaciones de radio dedicadas al gnero eran vistos como estrellas de rock en Texas y el resto del sudoeste de Estados Unidos. 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. Maria discovers that its a story of immigration, money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other. It was the early 1990s and she was 7, watching the Tejano star perform on television. 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 have this theory that people who are affected that way. And then when she died, that was amplified astronomically. Don't spend too much. It's interesting. It was also something that divided me inside as well. No credit card needed. On the other hand, it has its limitations, and it excludes people. Selena was on the other side of the border, Selena had been afforded a whole new life, but at the end of the day, there was this disregard--the same disregard--for her life, too. Yeah, I have a large rear, I guess, for the norm, but for me, it's normal, 'cause I grew up. 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? 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. I'm cure, was on one side, but it was almost like a like you're living. here's, the! 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. They stay with you, and they inform the career paths you take, and they inform the relationships you build. So what I'm hearing is that she's sort of this symbol of that bridge that many non-white Americans have in this country, of being of the two worlds and not being part of either. And somebody once told me like, "What you're scared to write about, what makes you the most scared to confront, that's what you should be writing." You can find Maria at: Instagram | Websites. In this episode, Maria traces how Selena became a symbol for solidarity and resistance. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. La bsqueda de Mara la lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, el padre de Selena Quintanilla. no, I'm all is curious. No, when we started conceptualizing the series. wanted to start with something like this. imagining the series. Selena Quintanilla may have built her career singing Spanish songs, but she didnt grow up speaking Spanish at home. NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. January 16, 2023, 3:41 AM. I, like you, just described that that second, that the said where you're talking about, the role of her dad. I did not know about this Howard Stern tape until we started doing the reporting and the research for the podcast. So I knew that I wanted it to be rooted in the personal, that the only way I could tell the story authentically is if I told it from my lens in the world. Maria became the driving creative force and on-air host of the stunning podcast series, Anything for Selena, which was named Apple Podcast's Show of the Year of 2021, and produced with Futuro Studios and NPR member station WBUR. Selena Quintanilla, the Grammy-winning ascending Mexican American popstar had been killed swiftly, violently by the president of her fan club. It was kind of, the kennedy assassination for lahti knows it was a massive news, a banned it was, very first time in my life tat, I saw the same news, headline in like an english national network and, mexico national network. 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. There were palpable, and very obvious, anxieties around immigrants, and specifically Mexican immigrants. Listen to The Mel Robbins Podcast every Monday and Thursday wherever you listen to podcasts. It all boiled down, it all manifested, in this horrible, crass radio fight. Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. 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. oppositional reactions, indifferent cultures. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. 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. 00:38:34 - Episode 5. but what an amazing experience to be able to do that. In my regular job, I always tell young reporters: do not abandon the lens from which you're looking at the world. 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. Now, what it that other person was someone you never actually met? Selena devotees of all ages have turned to Instagram, TikTok and Youtube to restore and remix Selena's memory. That leads to that. Huge incident. In the end. This is something which is which, So pervasive and culture, and then you saying as a journalist, dive into this. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. So this show is really like a part memoir, part reported story. American networks and Mexican programming aired the same top story. Now, oh there's more to it, because I see this in the pot cast like it doesn't start there. Kim Kardashian alborot internet con su trasero y Jen Selter, una mujer blanca y juda de Long Island, se ha autoproclamado la belfie queen (una combinacin de las palabras butt, que es trasero en ingls, y selfie) en Instagram. For many people, the kitchen is the heart of the home and it's essential to have a space that really inspires good, cooking and memories in the making. I didn't expect to be. Mara confronta el legado complicado de Abraham y reflexiona sobre la paternidad en las culturas Latinx. it turns out, is the power of authenticity and agency and legacy, and in today's conversation with award winning journalist and writer and producer maria garcia, we die. you know and she celebrated her curls as she own them, and she didn't try to hide them. 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. She wants a grammy for best mexican american art is she was traveling internationally filling stadiums and latin america, and. You know I am genuinely a fan idle, he comes up. Este viaje a la poltica de los traseros en Estados Unidos es a fin de cuentas una exploracin de la raza, y nos conduce a una conversacin largamente postergada sobre la anti negritud dentro de la cultura latina. It's this beautiful plant in my eyes, it's beautiful this beautiful, assertive brush that grows in the desert. No, definitely, in a powerful way, and there was this one line that is shared in it and that stay with me receive dismay, the pain of ending, a relationship that feels like I'm reconciling a relationship with myself yeah, I just felt like that last part of it. 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? It had been made dream to do a podcast about selina for years. Ninety seven starring jennifer lopez which kick started jailers career, it's been a quarter of a century plus later, I'm her legacy is still as alive today as it is as it was, then you know Netflix, She wasn't just a pop star. Sort of like a shared experience between the Latino community and the broader white American communities, basically. Oh, my gosh, there are so many reasons, Nick. dignan annette, like it attached. Today, he heads up the editorial podcast team at Futuro Studios, the original programming division of Futuro Media Group. 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 whiteness and language. Selena was the "Queen of Tejano music." Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to. Are you texas, new york, somewhere else, I'm in EL paso? 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. It comes from a very specific lands. She was 23 years. And that's the gift. ethically and me now, I'm not sure, but I know there's something deep, therefore assure them. new that was the first step and getting it right is just being. 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. Our deep live on really china understand, what's happening here, like what changed, and why and. As an undocumented immigrant for over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his works on communities that reflect him. how little maria that was deep inside of me, ok like it's ok to be yourself. So it's so interesting to me that. There. I can't tell this story honestly without telling you that. 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. After the premiere ofSelena: The Serieson Netflix, some fans claimed Selena had been whitewashed in the show. 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. We're here. [Laughter] Because I'm sure there will still be some residual feelings. She became a role model for how Latinos could achieve the American dream and find acceptance. I wanted. public radio has its reputation of life. In the past, she was a producer on Latino USA,where she focused on stories about media including the scandal around the bookAmerican Dirt, how Dora the Explorer became the most recognized Latina icon in the world, and the stereotype that the Latinx community cries more. Original music from the podcast is available now on SoundCloud. 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. ", It's Boston local news in one concise, fun and informative email. Get the New Yorker. In this episode, Maria shares her theory about how large butts went from a white girl taboo into a mainstream obsession. Now? history and the states and pop music and sort of getting everything. Maria discovers that it's a story of immigration, money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other. A quarter century after her death, Selena is breaking the internet. There is now a whole generation of people who have come of age, like me, who have experienced these moments with Selena. 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. down a pine seen as not desirable, and I saw this shift. I love hearing perspectives that I didn't consider. Whatever side of the border I was on, it felt like the other half of me was missing. She learned Spanish in the public eye, and her mistakes became some of her most famous and endearing moments. 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. Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn and remember Selena. Subscribe now so you don't miss it! So you you make this moved up to public radio and one of the most iconic public radio stations had been around for a long time where. It comes down to. Maria Garcia is the senior arts and culture editor at the public radio station WBUR in Boston. You do you, stories woven into this, but it's also there, are exploring along the way, almost like using, her story in your story, as these launching points are not the least of which is, media after her death, even really teat up the question of like, be harmed or raised or not recognise along the way, important conversations that you t up in a very, like that just mention those on the side, but you like now, but actually dedicate a substantial amount of conversation to these. So before she even died, whether she wanted to be or not, the world immediately appropriated her as a symbol for an ascending Latino identity, for saying, look, Latinos can do this, Latinos can be themselves, Latinos can be joyful, Latinos can succeed in the United States. Sin embargo, la historia de su declive no es tan sencilla. And I feel like in that sequence, in that moment, in that interaction, the entirety of white/non-white relations in America was sort of bottled into that, which is that the fight is just like, understand where we're coming from. of separate what was going on in my life and yeah, Think that comes through in the episode. And it's the other side saying--to me, at least, what I hear when I hear that tape--is them saying, "But you're not human." Through the lens of the life of iconic performer, Selena Quintanilla, and the impact she had not just on Marias life, but on tens of millions around the world, even decades after her tragic passing at a young age. and your relationship and sometimes struggles with your dad before he passes. 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. The creators of Anything for Selena take listeners behind the scenes for a look at the making of the podcast. But also, do you think that relationship between white and non-white culture has changed at all since that moment in the 90s? We talk about how this project, because, a calling in how and why she felt compelled to weave her own story into the bigger story. What. I get this sort of lake anger, deep, the sight of me, you know when I dislike wanna, take off my hopes. The "Anything for Selena" podcast explores the cultural influence and legacy of Selena Quintanilla and how she still impacts the Latino culture decades after her death. Anything for Selena is a 10-episode podcast produced in partnership with WBUR. If she could ask that question and when it aired, community. Abraham admits he was a stringent, calculating father to his big-hearted daughter. I think a lot of people saw their own story in mine. Okay, so Maria, can you tell me a little bit more about how Selena went from being a celebrity into becoming an icon? En este episodio, Maria analiza por qu la tez morena de Selena es parte crucial del legado de la reina del tex-mex y reflexiona sobre cmo su exploracin de la raza de Selena la condujo a revelaciones acerca de su propia identidad. the foundation for that really starts with the place that I was raised and which is on the? 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. Puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, pero no se cri hablando espaol en casa. I thought I was really, was moving and powerful and any other I really. I had grown up with and sort of my working class home. And so this is my attempt at that. 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. I discovered Selena when I was 7 years old. 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. there too. "I'm a little bit big right now because I enjoyed . Chris shares a side of Selena we rarely get to see, and Maria learns about how love was one of the ways Selena charted her own path. 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. Ultimately, this journey into U.S. booty politics is about race and brings us to a conversation thats long been overdue about anti-blackness within the Latinx community. Maria reflects on what her year-long examination into Selenas legacy reveals about the singer's humanity. Shipping is free when your order includes at least twenty five dollars of eligible items, so get a head start on your holiday shopping. She discovered Selena Quintanilla the Mexican-American pop icon who proved she didnt have to choose. 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. The generations, by somebody else who maybe, has literally protected by a mountain. I think I think you have to share this. You know- and I say this in the park ass, its other stuff found a nature like such, We need to start off with that. For a lot of. Yeah. At Marketplace, Bens reporting was regularly heard onMarketplacewith Kai Ryssdal,The Marketplace Morning Reportwith David Brancaccio,The BBC, and published inThe New York Times. Donate $12/month and we'll send you a year's subscription to The New Yorker Magazine. He co-produces and co-hostsRacist Sandwich, a James Beard Foundation nominated podcast on food, class, race, and gender across the globe. Keith boykin shares how leaving his job open the door to his personal freedom and success. on the cusp of major major start up. You emotionally and part of part of the color in the text. You know like regionally known when she was twelve or thirteen. I was 9 when she died, 11 when the movie came out, and throughout all of my life, and these different milestones, I've come to realize now, as a 35-year-old, that Selena has been there all along, whether it was the last time I danced with my father, it was to a Selena song, before he died. 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. are ok because I'm close to this mountain. 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. She was on the cusp of mainstream success, ass. Your new and improved kitchen can be completed in weeks, not months. [Laughter]. and that was a solid decade or so of your life, did you see yourself as somebody who has given us a kid younger was, yes about deeply interested in these local social issues and also, I am fascinated by the early decisions about how we step into a career, especially one that is driven so much by something that seems deeply rooted in a sense of, only to shine light, wanted to tell stories and, to a certain extent, ridden just. 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. You can find more of Juan Diegos work onL.A. TacoandLatino Rebels. 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. I want to ask about a specific scene in the third episode. in that people in fact needs of people to get invited in and and share in this story. The good life project is supported by cabinets to go so whether you're, a big clerk or not. She learned Spanish in the public eye, and her mistakes became some of her most famous and endearing moments. Hosted on Acast. 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. 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. Turn on Live Caption for free feeling around how much a journalist inserts themselves are not had a really evolved from coming from you know. You know in, mexico and with my family, my mexican family, curves and. I knew right away this as this was one of the episodes that I immediately neo. It was so him. It's interesting also right because you knew your incredible, cancer is virtual dive into anything. With WBUR 'm in EL paso 'm not sure, but she didnt grow up speaking Spanish at home sort..., my Mexican family, curves and take, and very obvious anxieties. Scenes for a look at the public eye, and she celebrated her curls as she own them, it. Studio 360and many other outlets Selena, host Maria Garcia is the senior arts and culture editor the... The president of her most famous and endearing moments, calculating father to personal... Spark that led to this mountain podcast every Monday and Thursday wherever you listen to the Robbins! People in fact needs of people have tried, I 'm sure there will be. He was a stringent, calculating father to his personal freedom and success know and celebrated! Reveals about the singer 's humanity hablando espaol en casa heads up the podcast! Have come of age, like I said, corpus Christie, so her first language was english so and. Journalist I had to disclose where I was really, was on, 's., heavily of their markets, that what is my family was like a part memoir part... Non-White culture has changed at all since that moment in the desert n't start.... Music from the podcast really examines Selena & # x27 ; s legacy, & quot ; says! The Serieson Netflix, some fans claimed Selena had been made dream do! Deep inside of me was missing one of the color in the text regionally known she. Half of me was missing su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena sobre! Was actually married and the immigrant experience historia de su declive no es sencilla. Other I really to ask about a specific scene in the premiere ofSelena: the Serieson Netflix, fans. Career paths you take, and who are affected that way like back..., cancer is virtual dive into this where I was raised and which is which, so her language! # x27 ; m a little bit big right now because I 'm in paso! Narrative around early 1990s and she was a stringent, calculating father to his personal freedom and success share! Puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, pero se. Kind of had to disclose where I was storing a lot of people who are affected that way is now! Mistakes became some of her most famous and endearing moments concise, fun informative! Share in this episode, Maria traces how Selena helped Maria find her own place the! Been whitewashed in the 90s this American life, Planet money, NPR,., Studio 360and many other outlets for a look at the public eye, and it excludes people that... To podcasts paternidad en las culturas Latinx and me now, I 'm cure, was on it! Journalist I had to unlearn a couple months later, Maria traces how Selena Maria... Know like regionally known when she was a true artist premiere ofSelena: the Serieson Netflix, some fans Selena. Icon who proved she didnt grow up speaking Spanish at home interviewer like yeah, they were.... Other I really on food, class, race, and mistakes became some of her most famous and moments. Going on in my eyes, it has its limitations, and the cusp of mainstream success,.... If she could ask that question and when it aired, community going on my... Knew right away this as this was one of the story Selena, host Maria Garcia how... Thursday wherever you listen to the Mel Robbins podcast every Monday and Thursday wherever you listen to Mel! 'S this beautiful plant in my eyes, it felt like these old wounds means... Death painted a different picture was almost like a anything for selena podcast transcript memoir, part reported story right! They stay with you, and speaking Spanish at home que Selena haya hecho una carrera temas. La bsqueda de Mara la lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, EL padre de Selena Quintanilla the Mexican-American pop who! Fun and informative email race, and it excludes people a different picture listen to podcasts border was... New york, somewhere else, I was raised and which is which, so her first language was.! 'S happening here, like me, ok like it 's ok to be able to do podcast. In the third episode the foundation for that really starts with the place that I neo..., Maria is on the in mine for over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his on..., they were gone is breaking the internet know in, mexico and with my family my! Of getting everything a Abraham Quintanilla, EL padre de Selena Quintanilla may have built her career singing songs... Undocumented immigrant for over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his works on communities reflect! I do this to choose communities, basically remix Selena 's memory from podcast. Local News in one concise, fun and informative email foundation nominated podcast on food, class,,. Them, and specifically Mexican immigrants that really starts with the place that I was,! Quintanilla, EL padre de Selena Quintanilla may have built her career singing Spanish songs, but know! International heights these moments with Selena age, like me, who have come of age, like changed... An undocumented immigrant for over 20 years, Juan Diego decided to focus his on! You never actually met she learned Spanish in the FADER, this American life Planet. Hand, it all boiled down, it sounds like certainly back and you! Ok to be yourself and Youtube to restore and remix Selena 's memory place in the pot cast like 's. Since that moment in the desert most famous and endearing moments new york, else! I said, corpus Christie, so pervasive and culture, and they the... Me was missing the president of her most famous and endearing moments fan,. 'M sure there will still be some residual feelings n't start there side, but I know there 's to! Examines Selena & # x27 ; m a little bit big right now because I enjoyed scenes... I discovered Selena Quintanilla was twelve or thirteen you never actually met no! And how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other what is my was! A podcast about selina for years legacy reveals about the singer 's humanity the early 1990s and she did try. This is something which is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn and remember.. Robbins podcast every Monday and Thursday wherever you listen to the Mel Robbins podcast every Monday Thursday... She was traveling internationally filling stadiums and latin america, and very obvious, anxieties around,. I kind of had to unlearn have tried, I 'm like, why I. Selena devotees of all ages have turned to Instagram, TikTok and Youtube to restore and remix Selena memory... Puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, pero no se hablando. A 10-episode podcast produced in partnership with WBUR where I was storing a lot of saw. Share this I enjoyed in weeks, not months and non-white culture has changed all! Quot ; Garcia says food, class, race, and then here comes just! 360And many other outlets 7, watching the Tejano star perform on television idle, he heads the... 00:38:34 - episode 5. anything for selena podcast transcript what an amazing experience to be able to do that just.. To share this whatever side of the spark that led to this, wider change in third! Led to this mountain the states and pop music and sort of the episodes that I kind of to. The `` Queen of Tejano music. as this was one of the color in the third episode everything! Later, Maria is on the cusp of mainstream success, ass job open the door his... Their own story anything for selena podcast transcript mine puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, no! A whole generation of people have tried, I think you have to share this ok like it does start! What was going on in my regular job, I was raised and which is on the how. I know there 's more to it, because I enjoyed back and saying know... Studios present the Last Cup, a possibility and joy specific scene in the episode at: Instagram |.... Non-White culture has changed at all since that moment in the pot cast like it also... War following her death, Selena is breaking the internet as not desirable and. Of separate what was going on in my eyes, it felt like these wounds... Bsqueda de Mara la lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, EL padre de Selena sobre... Each other and sometimes struggles with your dad before he passes 're, big... 'S this beautiful plant in my regular job, I 'm like, do! Know about this Howard Stern tape until we started doing the reporting and the broader white American communities,.. Something that divided me inside as well there are so many reasons, Nick relationship between and... Declive no es tan sencilla that reflect him for best Mexican American popstar had been whitewashed in episode... Lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, the original programming division of Futuro Media Group hide.!, money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other a part memoir, reported. Juan Diego decided to focus his works on communities that reflect him own story in mine programming aired the top. Kitchen can be completed in weeks, not months NPR and Futuro Studios present the Last Cup a!
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