anything for selena podcast transcript

body- and she was talking a lot about her by and. The new podcast Anything for Selena, from NPR member station WBUR, doesn't begin with the late singer's biography or her most popular songs. 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. He co-produces and co-hostsRacist Sandwich, a James Beard Foundation nominated podcast on food, class, race, and gender across the globe. You neeeeddddd to listen. Puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, pero no se cri hablando espaol en casa. and I was really powerful invulnerable that you kind of like said, were putting mister. U permanent residents of the snake table for without you. I said, I'm really drawn to this place because of. These two lies that he used the phrase I guess translate roughly into english, neither from here, nor there then sandwich. And I don't think her legacy has been done justice. Find out more about Anything for Selena here and follow us on Twitter and Instagram. I think I think you have to share this. How many of us walk through life were perpetually in the process of reckons, like what a universal experience it that is regardless, process of inquiry and awakening therapy whatever it may be. there's thousands of people who cross the border every single day there. You feel like you're accepted by wherever you are for you. Maria descubre que es una historia de inmigracin, de dinero y de cmo dos grupos usualmente ignorados fueron enfrentados entre s. Listen to the trailer for "Anything For Selena,"a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios coming in January 2021. I was 9 years old, the the daughter of Mexican immigrants, and so Howard Stern was not in my world. are you by the way? She has become one of the most potent symbols of belonging in this country. So the show debuted two weeks ago, and you're going to be dealing with weekly drops for the next few months, but once the show wraps, what's the first thing you're gonna do? but what an amazing experience to be able to do that. There is now a whole generation of people who have come of age, like me, who have experienced these moments with Selena. Selena is often called the "Queen of Tejano music." Anything for Selena is a co-production of the iLab at WBUR and Futuro Studios. And episode 2, for example, is about meeting Selena's father and really going deep into their relationship, and their dynamic, and, you know, he's been portrayed as a sort of exacting, controlling, demanding, short-fuse machista guy, and her as a playful, but nonetheless docile, daughter. I was blown away by all the different cabinet options they have and how easy it is to get your free design for your space at home to visit cabinets, to go dot com today and see why no one beach their prices or their transferable limited lifetime. 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. She became a role model for how Latinos could achieve the American dream and find acceptance. It's almost like here that a dear friend my always is he can't read the label from inside the jar and, at like when the deeper you get into a story, especially one that you are just deeply invested in from my heart and mind and soul level. 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. it's really a story about belonging, which we all need Maura. 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. Poverty is often disguised. American networks and Mexican programming aired the same top story. A couple months later, it sounds like certainly back and saying you know, it was actually married and the story of like. About his own marriage to Selina and relationships and love and heartbreak, You know what to. So these are really sensitive, emotional topics that you're tackling here. 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. Shipping is free when your order includes at least twenty five dollars of eligible items, so get a head start on your holiday shopping. 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. 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. It is so big shes just so, Black! Fast forward to today, the obsession with large rear ends in hip-hop culture is still strong with idols like Cardi B and Beyonce, but it has also permeated white culture. In this intimate journey, Maria explores what Selena's legacy shows us about belonging in America. are ok because I'm close to this mountain. And so suddenly, her death was a top story in English networks and in Spanish networks--incredibly anomalous for the time. Her story has been told on large screen small screens, countless interviews and continues to make an imprint on media and culture, music, that transcends generations and nationality and still maria new. Mexican-American music icon Selena Quintanilla has been gone for 26 years, but she's living life to the fullest online. April 16, 2021 Maria heads to Joshua Tree, California for an intimate interview with Selena's widower, Chris Perez. 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. Whereas a creator I put my foot down- and I said no we're still, that our audiences on this right with us. 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. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. That's been around for, releases these chemicals. down a pine seen as not desirable, and I saw this shift. It just became like this default behavior, often wonder for folks. Thank you so much for having me. I think that's where this conversation really comes in because, I am one of those millions of people who see her as us like a sacred symbol. Abraham admits he was a stringent, calculating father to his big-hearted daughter. how did he was a kid and ensure that you have a bit of a different ones like, rather than not, really feelingly. and who are we leaving behind or who are erasing or like is the harm being caused by this beyond. there too. 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. Listen to the trailer for "Anything For Selena," a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios coming in January 2021. You know, I think, so important to have this folks around you, yes, to help reflect back and, and then is also examining what is their lands like? 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. ===Excerpt: Anything for Selena, Episode 2: Selena and Abraham"===. Original music from the podcast is available now on SoundCloud. Even The New York Times called it the fastest-growing Latino genre in the country. A quarter century after her death, Selena is breaking the internet. You know, things like that. This is an unofficial transcript meant for reference. Now, oh there's more to it, because I see this in the pot cast like it doesn't start there. The Latino population grew by 60% between 1990 and 2000, so '95 was right in the middle of it. Yeah, but see, I was always correcting her, don't do that. Maria confronts his complicated legacy and reflects on fatherhood in Latinx cultures. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. Wait like I love that the core of what I'm doing, but I can't do it in the, I knew that I wanted to keep telling stories. Because again, my heart could not not be here. Antonia Cereijido is an Award-winning Senior Producer at Futuro Studios, working on developing new narrative podcasts. On the other hand, it has its limitations, and it excludes people. Today, we present episode one of Anything for Selena, a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios. by just that's what the container allows for, but. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. But I knew I wanted more space to tell stories, and I knew that I I wanted to do the opposite of simplifying them, said that lead you is, as you share, you end up going back to journalists in school and then, from there, unless I'm missing a step, you end up in Boston. U sausage, loving genius, for without you. ===Excerpt: The Howard Stern Show, April 3rd, 1995===, "Let's dance to happy Madonna-like music. 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. 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? Maria Garcia has a distinct memory of when her connection to Selena Quintanilla-Prez began. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. It all boiled down, it all manifested, in this horrible, crass radio fight. life through a lens, a possibility and joy. Thank you! I was in kind of a haze when I wrote that. Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn and remember Selena. that the story was just about, like oh mainstream b, The ideals changed because Selina had a big, bad and jailer played her, then, J low ushered in this revolution of big buds and that's the story. time on Jonathan fields, signing off for good life project. I can't tell this story honestly without telling you that. I have. Hosted on Acast. The Anything For Selena podcast released earlier this year is a story of how Selena helped shape pop culture and American identity. I thought there was a really interesting moment also at the very end you added in a couple of bonus episodes, one of them being. 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. You know who is this, he's been painted a lot different ways in a very public lion and describing it, Your ability to actually have a sit down with him when he basically said no area, body for years and years and years in and how that led to a conversation that really do so. and experiences that led her into telling stories shining lights in championing ideas and ideals that matter to her and her community maria opens up about all of the above, as well as the intimate process of the unique story telling that took place in the creation of this pot guessers and takes me through the before and aftermath of, creating and launching anything for selina assessing the ways at it really transformed her and hopefully, whoever is turning it so excited to share this conversation with you, I'm gonna. In the premiere episode of "Anything for Selena," host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. We were unable to subscribe you to WBUR Today. I smell creosote bush, which is one of the oldest living organisms on the planet. of separate what was going on in my life and yeah, Think that comes through in the episode. For Maria, who was raised in El Paso, Texas, and lived and worked on the border for years, Selena was a figure that helped her and many other young girls and women like her find a place in a world where they didn't feel like they belonged. So I thought and they were alike. Don't spend too much. NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. Oh, my goodness. 1997 Chelly thanks you from the bottom of her heart. 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. So like. I want to ask about a specific scene in the third episode. Well, let me tell you, the episode after that, after episode 4, is an even deeper dive into race, and Latinidad, and brownness, and Latinos reckoning with their own whiteness, and it's told from a very personal, personal lens. That's different and fuller, like prison their mind. She won't be shamed. Nikole Hannah-Jones: Beyond the 1619 Project, 'No Mexicans Allowed:' School Segregation in the Southwest. It's terrifying. Incluso el New York Times lo catalog el gnero latino de ms rpido crecimiento del pas. You know and you're their reading it, I remember there- were there were moments where I believe, in journalism like. They would say you know what we really. 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. At Marketplace, Bens reporting was regularly heard onMarketplacewith Kai Ryssdal,The Marketplace Morning Reportwith David Brancaccio,The BBC, and published inThe New York Times. Just see us. Esta exploracin nos lleva a un lugar inesperado. 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. I really love how I can get such a broad spectrum of nutrition all at once, and also. holding me and protecting me in some way and justice feeling that I have, and I think it has to. And that's the gift. In the premiere episode of "Anything for Selena," host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. The show is produced by Andrea Asuaje, James Trout, and John Perotti at Rococo Punch. 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. Plus,. because I imagine that why was moving all over the place all the time, absolutely. [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. That is expense. was constantly crossing the border? Tejano award I had grown up with and sort of my working class home. En el final de la serie Anything for Selena, Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. The phone kept ringing. The theory involves Selena Quintanilla but also Selena biopic starring Jennifer Lopez and the ensuing Latin Explosion. After a decade reporting on music for various outlets, he served as Senior Editor on the public radio program Latino USA. You have been subscribed to WBUR Today. 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. in that people in fact needs of people to get invited in and and share in this story. 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.

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anything for selena podcast transcript