Entertainment
-
Latin American Films Storm Oscars With Grit, Memory, And Magic
From neo-noir thrillers to folk horror and fierce legal dramas, Latin American filmmakers are charging into this year's international Oscar…
Read More » -
Tex-Mex Dreams, Netflix Memory, And The Immortal Selena For Generations
Thirty years after her murder, Selena's voice refuses to fade. A new Netflix documentary turns home movies and family memories…
Read More » -
Bad Bunny at Yale: How a Puerto Rican Superstar Became a Lesson in Identity
At Yale, a sold-out seminar dissects Bad Bunny's latest album to explore Puerto Rico's politics, rhythms, and diaspora. Professor Albert…
Read More » -
War Visions Haunt Latin America as Fiction Mirrors Reckless Policy
As U.S. warships prowl the Caribbean and drone footage of sea "interdictions" floods the airwaves, Latin America feels trapped between…
Read More » -
Argentine Brizuela Defies the Rise of Reggaetón and Corridos with His “Espíritu Profundo” Rock
Forty years after he became known as El Ángel del Rock, Laureano Brizuela is back—older, wiser, and more defiant than…
Read More » -
Brazil Becomes One Giant Crime Scene: Who Killed Odete Roitman?
Brazil has fallen silent for a murder that never happened. From São Paulo's bars to Rio's parks, millions are obsessed…
Read More » -
How Latin America’s Indigenous Rappers Are Rewriting the Soundtrack of Pride
Bad Bunny may headline the Super Bowl, but the deeper revolution is happening far from the stadium lights. Across Latin…
Read More » -
Mexico Turns ‘The Smashing Machine’ into a Story About Heart, Not Hype
Mexico didn't just host a Hollywood premiere—it redefined it. As Dwayne Johnson's The Smashing Machine opened in Mexico City, Mexican…
Read More » -
Mexican Director Luis Estrada Finally Brings Las Muertas to Netflix, Uncensored and Unapologetic
After three decades of trying, filmmaker Luis Estrada has adapted Jorge Ibargüengoitia's Las muertas into a fearless Netflix series. The…
Read More » -
Yolocamba I Ta: Songs That Carried Hope Through El Salvador’s Darkest Nights
For fifty years, Yolocamba I Ta has carried guitars into strikes, chapels, refugee halls, and world stages, sowing music where…
Read More »









