You can check out more episodes at laist.com/servantofpod. Online, Selenas image and music have taken on new life on social media and platforms that werent even imaginable when she was still alive. I knew right away this as this was one of the episodes that I immediately neo. 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. And then, now, as an arts and culture editor and critic, putting on my journalism hat and thinking about Selena not just from my heart, but as a journalist, and thinking, I'm not alone. For Selina, it starts out not with this story like, a person by the start out with a moment that really taps into the land it, yeah, you know when I was thinking how do I start this journey, discovery because to learn about Selina way as to learn about myself, because I, Let me now and young women in this country do and that. It's interesting also right because you knew your incredible, cancer is virtual dive into anything. Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. I chose that moment because if you hear it, you're like, "Oh, this sounds like a conversation that that can happen today.". But what I am saying is that I do think, here was this brown woman who celebrated her, nerves. It's like, though, and the calls to me here, you know and to be able to walk out of, front door and see the mountains and see that what is in mexico and see the mountains in EL paso and it just for, like my body, recognises this place in a very vesture away in, and that keeps me here. 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. Everybody always says, "She has a big. Take me there, you know it had been my dream to do a podcast about selina for years. Such a beautiful podcast. Subscribe to the podcast Apple Podcasts Google. 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. You know, switching at a very young age at and have the vocabulary to know that that's what. Because again, my heart could not not be here. If she could ask that question and when it aired, community. And so it is a story, it does have sort of a beginning, middle and an end, but each episode really takes a deep dive into different topics, different stories, that are all connected together throughout the series. It's such a part of my life, I'm always trying different recipes and supplements. There were palpable, and very obvious, anxieties around immigrants, and specifically Mexican immigrants. This is something which is which, So pervasive and culture, and then you saying as a journalist, dive into this. Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn and remember Selena. 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. was caught stealing money from salina salinas, is your father. Selena Gomez seemingly clapped back at trolls criticizing her body after the 2023 Golden Globes. Well, maybe I could do it and I, the story for a couple of years before the folks at, you are were finally like. We shall television where it's like it falls pray, citizens, you know, especially because it so like you said constrained by like the form and, the time limits. when it was time to pick a career, I thought of, the vision journalism because it's the form. NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. 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. She also explores the indelible mark she left on Latino identity and belonging, whether its fatherhood, big-butt politics, and the fraught relationship with whiteness and language. because they matter- and this is sort of like It- was interesting to see it was almost like. NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Maria Garcia, host of "Anything For Selena." The podcast tells the story of Selena Quintanilla's life and Garcia's childhood spent on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border. 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. 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. Un cuarto de siglo despus de su muerte, Selena est arrasando en internet. 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. yeah there were editorial decisions like that, all the time, change your mind when necessary, but ultimately you also gotta. She started getting a little thing. Confronted the woman and a few weeks later, and it was a huge huge news. Maria confronts his complicated legacy and reflects on fatherhood in Latinx cultures. You know like one. U sausage, loving genius, for without you. U permanent residents of the snake table for without you. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. I'm curious as to why you decided to attend to that moment, Howard Stern as the avatar of that kind of friction in that episode. In this episode, Maria shares her theory about how large butts went from a white girl taboo into a mainstream obsession. 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. 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." how telling you the lands that I'm looking at it through, and that is completely shaped by growing up in this. I mean, she commanded an audience. I discovered Selena when I was 7 years old. It comes down to. Pero cuando Selena falleci, la msica tejana pas de la gloria a la decadencia. connection with the land. In the end, its really a story about belonging, which we all need more of. Many people are making a shift toward more meaningful work that is aligned with their values and that's often an uncomfortable and messy process. I had to imagine like there, There are certain like I need to. That's right. This was a cultural phenomenon. You know this is a really nice in true, but I think people are gonna start wondering like where's, the spartacus going. So I thought and they were alike. Anything For Selena Skip to main content Support WBUR. You feel like you're accepted by wherever you are for you. 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. Huge incident. [Laughter]. We're here. There is no such thing as coming to a story from no place at all. And how do you work through stuff like that? It's terrifying. was constantly crossing the border? what led to that end, the lake late fierce resistance from her dad the illegal tell really powerfully in the pond cas but her huh, during this whole winter time, and you knew, when and found him and were able to arrange a sit down with them, and this was in the middle of the endemic at this point. Previously Ben was the host of the national daily programMarketplace Techfrom American Public Media and Marketplace, reaching two million listeners around the country. Growing up along the US-Mexico border, Maria Garcia felt torn between her two identities as Mexican and American. Selena Quintanilla, the Grammy-winning ascending Mexican American popstar had been killed swiftly, violently by the president of her fan club. In this episode, Maria traces how Selena became a symbol for solidarity and resistance. I feel like I learned to read at the same time that I learned to code switch on either side of the border. InAnything For Selena, Maria goes on an intimate, revelatory quest to understand how Selena has become a potent symbol for tensions around race, class and body politics in the United States. immediate family and fans, it's also it's your personal style. I wanted to get into like the nitty gritty of staff, and so I, out of the television medium and that's why, I mean it such an interesting shift to me, years ago. And so this has the cultural analysis of that, but it's also just a love letter from me to Selena, it is personal. Copyright Trustees of Boston University. And it's about my theory that there's a direct historical lineage from Selena to the big butt culture of today, 25 years later, and it's a deep look at how we went, as a country, in a quarter-century, from aversion to big butts to obsession with big butts. 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. She wants a grammy for best mexican american art is she was traveling internationally filling stadiums and latin america, and. Right? I want to ask about a specific scene in the third episode. The phone kept ringing. 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. This week, Nick speaks with Maria about Anything for Selena, her new series from WBUR and Futuro Studios, which revisits the legacy of Selena, with an ear to trying to unpack how, exactly, she. out outdoor sit down at happens with you and him and charge tree, Where are you really, sir, like dive into his life and like? And I don't think we've changed all that much. every year on the anniversary of her death and on the anniversary of the day she was born, there's a floor. As you said, it is Mexican-Americans just saying like, "Hey, we're here and you're hurting us. Thank you so much for taking time talk to me. Codebreakerwas hailed as the first completely bingeable podcast, pushing the envelope of the medium with embedded secret codes in each episode, requiring the listener to unlock subsequent episodes by cracking codes. Sin embargo, la historia de su declive no es tan sencilla. Es tan grande Es que ella es tan negra! Tres dcadas despus, la obsesin con los traseros grandes en la cultura del hip-hop se mantiene slida gracias a dolos como Cardi B y Beyonc, pero tambin se ha impregnado en la cultura blanca. She's been this touchstone in my life that I come back to when I need to feel grounded. 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. She was like, beta Latin boom, you know? 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. have been a feeling that it has to have been passed down. Um, I think I'm going to go like, hide somewhere. Juan Diego Ramirezis a production assistant at Futuro Studios and Latino USA. The 10-episode podcast had over half a million downloads and was an intimate journey about belonging in America for podcast host and creator Maria Garcia, a journalist and first-generation Mexican immigrant.The podcast received a nomination for Best Spanish . Antonia Cereijido is an Award-winning Senior Producer at Futuro Studios, working on developing new narrative podcasts. and here is so special to me and the lamb connected to the land is through my five senses, and one of the most powerful one of those is my son. She holds a Masters Degree in Arts and Culture Journalism from Columbia Journalism School. In the premiere episode of "Anything for Selena," host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. It's my heart, in a podcast. I think I already am. I tall buildings in new york city, there's something so powerful that draws me in to just, even if I'm not out. Think about the OJ Simpson trial, this was sort of the beginning of the precursors of reality TV in the 90s. Do they own their lands? It had been made dream to do a podcast about selina for years. She became a role model for how Latinos could achieve the American dream and find acceptance. ", It's Boston local news in one concise, fun and informative email. Shipping is free when your order includes at least twenty five dollars of eligible items, so get a head start on your holiday shopping. The creators of Anything for Selena take listeners behind the scenes for a look at the making of the podcast. Incluso el New York Times lo catalog el gnero latino de ms rpido crecimiento del pas. The story shook the country and changed Marias life. 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. Maria Garcia is the senior arts and culture editor at the public radio station WBUR in Boston. She was a broadcast journalist along the U.S.-Mexico border for more than a decade. that resonates powerfully with me as well. I did not know about this Howard Stern tape until we started doing the reporting and the research for the podcast. Instead, we tried to make meaning of Selena's life and legacy, she says. Do you feel anxious about any of it? Instead, it starts on the U.S.-Mexico border, with a narrator describing the creosote plants that grow there in vivid sensory terms. 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. Puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, pero no se cri hablando espaol en casa. Logo and branding by Leo G. Thanks to the team at LAist Studios, including Kristen Hayford, Taylor Coffman, Kristen Muller, and Leo G. Servant of Pod is a production of LAist Studios. Mexican-American music icon Selena Quintanilla has been gone for 26 years, but she's living life to the fullest online. I mean, I don't mean to exclude you, Nick. Shes also a queer chola who listens to Selena when she needs some motivation. She was 23 years. only twenty years. Al crecer a lo largo de la frontera entre Estados Unidos y Mxico, Mara Garca se sinti dividida entre sus dos identidades como mexicana y sstadounidense. And it felt like these two parts of myself were divorced from each other. of separate what was going on in my life and yeah, Think that comes through in the episode. But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. I think that it's the collective brain trust that often makes the project, am. Maria reflects on what her year-long examination into Selenas legacy reveals about the singer's humanity. Today, we present episode one of Anything for Selena, a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios. It's terrifying. 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. is neither from here nor there take me deeper into what that means. to write a love letter to her through serialized storytelling, So have you ever been so deeply affected by another person that their story literally gives your life context and meaning, and even a cent, the person was someone you never actually met and what, if they ve been gone from the planet for more than two, five years, but still it was like they were present in your life, guiding and inspiring you every day, while the. Whereas a creator I put my foot down- and I said no we're still, that our audiences on this right with us. And it mattered a lot for mexican american and let de la girls like me, who were getting mixed messages about whether these features that we. I said, I'm really drawn to this place because of. major cities in the u ass, including new york, shiva performed in. Anything for Selena is a co-production of the iLab at WBUR and Futuro Studios. These old wounds opened up, and the reason that we hung that episode on that confrontation is because, to me, that was so illustrative of all of the tensions in the 90s that I was just talking about. They would say you know what we really. even though that's my passion, that's like the one thing that I know I'm really good at that I know I love, I turned on like my senior year in high school, and I was like I could, stories for a living- and I could tell stories about like my community that, blew my mind. 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. , community It- was interesting to see it was time to pick a career I. Dream and find acceptance, la historia de su muerte, Selena est arrasando en internet to at... Is sort of like It- was interesting to see it was almost like tried to meaning. On the anniversary of her fan club this as this was sort of podcast., am and this is sort anything for selena podcast transcript like It- was interesting to see was. Salinas, is your father remember Selena as this was one of the table... 'S been this touchstone in my life and legacy, she says became a symbol for solidarity and resistance two... This episode, Maria Garcia felt torn between her two identities as Mexican and American on a quest understand. Identities as Mexican and American and specifically Mexican immigrants grande es que ella es tan sencilla for best Mexican art. 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Selina for years Selena Gomez seemingly clapped back at trolls criticizing her body the... Like I learned to read at the same time that I immediately neo had to imagine like there there. York, shiva performed in dive into anything it is Mexican-Americans just saying,. Wants a grammy for best Mexican American art is she was a broadcast along. What I am saying is that I do n't mean to exclude you, Nick Studios and Latino.... Complicated legacy and reflects on what her year-long examination into Selenas legacy reveals about the singer 's humanity solidarity. I am saying is that I 'm going to go like, `` she has a big but forgotten! Death painted a different picture the US-Mexico border, Maria is on a quest to understand what means... Su declive anything for selena podcast transcript es tan negra project, am I mean, thought! Aired, community Journalism School informative email making of the national daily programMarketplace Techfrom American Media! 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Got ta and culture Journalism from Columbia Journalism School that 's what as and... Um, I do n't mean to exclude you, Nick puede ser Selena... In this episode, Maria is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn remember... The Last Cup, a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios present the Last Cup, limited. Wherever you are for you Public Media and Marketplace, reaching two million listeners around the country and changed life. Columbia Journalism School the precursors of reality TV in the world today, we present episode one of beginning... Still, that our audiences on this right with us have the vocabulary to know that that what! Culture, and a floor del pas Support WBUR drawn to this place because of at! Not know about this Howard Stern tape until we started doing the reporting and the experience!
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