That's why, 25 years later, we are still so attached to her, because there is a hunger to see Latino joy, Latino effervescence--and in her case, brown pride, brown joy--there is a hunger to see that because there's not enough of it. It was like a scale that I kind of had to unlearn. are ok because I'm close to this mountain. 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. And it's a sort of that friction that has stuck with me the most, that sequence where Howard Stern is glibly responding to Selena's death, right? when it was time to pick a career, I thought of, the vision journalism because it's the form. of the conversation really walks. But as an adult, I've come to realize these traumas, or these wounds, that forced assimilation creates in you, they don't just dissipate. We were unable to subscribe you to WBUR Today. Episode 5. Pero la manifestacin de una guerra cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia. Selena was the "Queen of Tejano music." She was like, beta Latin boom, you know? And, not because Maria or, for that matter, any of those millions, knew Selena, personally, but because what she embodied profoundly affected and informed the way Maria, and those millions, saw themselves, their sense of wholeness, heritage, community, and the call to celebrate uniqueness, and embrace life through a lens of possibility and joy. March 10, 2021 Puede ser que Selena haya hecho una carrera cantando temas en espaol, pero no se cri hablando espaol en casa. Warranty right now get a full custom: three d design of your new kitchen at cabinets to go dot, com, slash, good life, that's a free custom, three d, design of your new wow kitchen at cabinets to go dot, com, slash, good life or just click. So incredibly, in the twenty seven years since salinas death, her legend, only grown. Tras el debut de la serieSelenaen Netflix, algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido blanqueada en ese show. And so Anything for Selena is a culmination of, truly, my lifelong quest to understand why Selena, why this working-class woman, has meant so much to me all of my life. Originally from Fresno, California, Kristin is an NPRNext Generation Radioalum who cut her teeth on the NPR Arts Desk, KQED, St. Louis Public Radio, and as an arts journalist in Russia. Selena Quintanilla, the Grammy-winning ascending Mexican American popstar had been killed swiftly, violently by the president of her fan club. Get the New Yorker. Society & Culture English United States TRANSCRIPT Are you the producer of this podcast? I said we have to do in a sword about, a that she celebrated her body and what that did for, culture because I saw it in my lifetime lake ice, having parties with my big mexican family in mexico and, with my american friends in the states during the week, In the way voluptuous bodies were treated in different contexts. sent one him over, but also how it brought it brings up you're really. Plus,. That's what drove me into journalism. the foundation for that really starts with the place that I was raised and which is on the? Maria heads to Joshua Tree, California for an intimate interview with Selenas widower, Chris Perez. Maria discovers that the story of Tejano's decline isn't so simple. It's terrifying. Sus seguidores de todas las edades han recurrido a Instagram, TikTok y YouTube para restaurar y presentar de nuevas formas la memoria de Selena. Instead, we tried to make meaning of Selena's life and legacy, she says. For a lot of. it's really a story about belonging, which we all need Maura. And Selena helped change that. This was a cultural phenomenon. It has also permeated white culture, with Kim Kardashian breaking the internet and butt selfie queen Jen Selter. [Laughter], I mean, I grew up in a whole other country. I had grown up with and sort of my working class home. You know like I it's real like, find by so many things, and one of them is my love for Selina and so, was learning not to separate sort of mexican maria from american maria. 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. You know in a more, maybe it's just like an appreciation that is somehow abidjan. Donate Anything For Selena. 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. 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. And then here comes Selena just flipping that narrative around. sixteen seventeen. There were palpable, and very obvious, anxieties around immigrants, and specifically Mexican immigrants. Transcript 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. Turn on Live Caption for free The phone kept ringing. You know, why am I? Hosted on Acast. On the other hand, it has its limitations, and it excludes people. it's an episode about the impact that the, way that Selina owned her voluptuous body and celebrated at the way that it-. 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. Twenty is. [Laughter] Why am I writing? That's right. 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. I spent my early life in Mexico on the weekends and in the States during the week, and so I really came into consciousness very aware--hyper-aware--of the duality within me. So why is Selena still relevant 25 years after her death? no jailer was in the first person, of course, to have this body types. You know when it's this debate over objectivity. Chris shares a side of Selena we rarely get to see, and Maria learns about how romantic love was one of the ways Selena charted her own path. as a journalist I had to disclose where I was coming. In the end. And this project forced me to do 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. Marias quest takes her to Abraham Quintanilla, Selena Quintanillas notoriously guarded father. That, it turns out, is the power of authenticity, agency, and legacy. This is something which is which, So pervasive and culture, and then you saying as a journalist, dive into this. 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. How would we know that a great smoked sausage can be even thrice in one day and that you can take your lunch break before noon, Here's to you agreed smoked sausage. It's completely find that is it the nature of the medium? lead project is supported by a case of life can feel expensive, but with a key, you can rest easy, knowing your making smart choices while creating your dream home on a budget with new benefits. So this show is really like a part memoir, part reported story. 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. The story shook the country and changed Marias life. In particular, you know I've evolved a bet, I've come to realise that it's not it's, not that I am not, along a little bit and both but growing up. You know I did it and jobs, I did it, when I went to my fancy grad school, and it was, I would say my late twenties early thirties that I, to realize. 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. So I thought and they were alike. I have cousins and ants in mexico and, of course, my parents living. You know like regionally known when she was twelve or thirteen. In fact, it's sort of disk up. I tall buildings in new york city, there's something so powerful that draws me in to just, even if I'm not out. But when Selena died, Tejano went from boom to bust. in that people in fact needs of people to get invited in and and share in this story. Do you feel anxious about any of it? Sometimes a couple times a week. The link in the show notes to start with a free sixty day trial, it's time to recognise you. And I want to get to the bottom of why--why she's so resonant now, as resonant as she was a quarter-century ago. 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. As you said, it is Mexican-Americans just saying like, "Hey, we're here and you're hurting us. 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. Our deep live on really china understand, what's happening here, like what changed, and why and. March 12, 2021 Tras el debut de la serie Selena en Netflix, algunos fans sealaron que la cantante haba sido "blanqueada" en ese show. what I realized that investigating this episode is. You know what I mean? 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. So you be, the character and the story, and I'm so curious about this, because the coming, really drummed ensuing journalism like you are my story like the your job is to be as currently unbiased down the middle as you possibly can be, and then you're working in a very well established. "And we do that by using the tools of our craft as journalists, like rigorous journalism, cultural analysis, but then also, very intimate, vulnerable storytelling. That is expense. The story of Tejano's decline isn't so simple, though. 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. Her research and reporting explores how politics, history and identity coalesce to create subcultures, folk heroes and pop culture icons. After her death, Tejano went from boom to bust. That's different and fuller, like prison their mind. I need to trust and rely on and open to, like the point of view of other people and. 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." In the premiere episode of Anything for Selena, host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. If you LOVED this episode youll also love the conversations we had with Samin Nosrat about food, belonging, culture and connection. but not in a way that I feel like it needs to be told that could be told. Add a podcast transcript Use Google Chrome? This week: Maria Garcia's radically personal podcast, Anything for Selena, a love letter to la reina--the queen--Selena Quintanilla. Mara confronta el legado complicado de Abraham y reflexiona sobre la paternidad en las culturas Latinx. You can walk the bordering and be in downtown see that what is and be in mexico in a major mexican city. Let us be human." 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. Web design by Andy Cheatwood and the digital and marketing teams at Southern California Public Radio. Let me know, women in the nineties suits about twenty two, Given in the intervening when they're like you shared, this was not somebody who was this incredible star and then, when she died, was like a couple years later, people just gonna moved on if anything, her legend has grown and groaning grown for all the reasons that you shared and there's been a, a lot of attention. is neither from here nor there take me deeper into what that means. I didn't even quite have the understanding, but I I recognise now. 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. 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. So like. The show is produced by Andrea Asuaje, James Trout, and John Perotti at Rococo Punch. 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. 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. Don't spend too much. I was growing up on the U.S.-Mexico border. After that, she transitioned to arts and culture reporting and narrative radio storytelling. Maria explores how the internet has become a place where fans celebrate and remember Selena, as well as grapple with the void she left behind. Well, I hope you get to go to Joshua Tree and cry a lot on the way. She was on the cusp of mainstream success, ass. 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. a beautiful island cap to the way that you share the entire story on that? Servant of Pod is written and hosted by me, Nick Quah. 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. I'm sure you know this with, So you know- You'Ll- have a group of people who come together and you re you'll have essentially a table read of the script where you play the. I have. No credit card needed. In this episode, Maria explores how the internet has become a place where fans celebrate and remember Selena, as well as grapple with the void she left behind. Maria analyzes why Selena's brownness is an essential part of her legacy. You know, switching at a very young age at and have the vocabulary to know that that's what. Ben Brock Johnsonis Executive Producer of podcasts for WBUR, where he directs strategic and editorial initiatives involving podcasts and on demand audio. It's like boulders. Maria knows that to truly understand Selena as a person and not just an icon, she needs to go to Corpus Christi. Huge incident. 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. 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. Maria Garcia was 9 years old and living on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered. 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 could see her, watching the teleprompter just waiting for me to stop talking ass. And so honestly, Nick, it's been kind of excruciating, because all of my life, I realized just how much I compartmentalized my work from my internal life--and all of us do that to an extent, right? I thought I was really, was moving and powerful and any other I really. I wanted. The podcast intertwines Garcia's personal story as a queer, first-generation Mexican immigrant with cultural analysis, history, and politics to explore the longterm cultural legacy of Selena's life and career. Can we shorten this down? 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? And what if theyd been gone from the planet for 25 years, but still it was like they were present in your life, guiding and inspiring you every day? no, I'm all is curious. 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. In the premiere episode of "Anything for Selena," host Maria Garcia explores how Selena helped Maria find her own place in the world. It was the early 1990s and she was 7, watching the Tejano star perform on television. connection with the land. I smell creosote bush, which is one of the oldest living organisms on the planet. And this podcast has given me the gift--the gift--of navigating my own pain, navigating these very scary questions about my own identity, and yeah, no, it's horrifying. This is every kid while, an idea is fit in your leg. Do you remember that some shore and like ninety seven, ninety eight mainstream media, every magazine, every television show every late night show was talking about jailer? then they went into music full time and from the young age of like eight or nine years old selina bears a singer became the breadwinner for her family. I get this sort of lake anger, deep, the sight of me, you know when I dislike wanna, take off my hopes. 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. Today, he heads up the editorial podcast team at Futuro Studios, the original programming division of Futuro Media Group. Is you can get the gifts quick and fast, with free shipping, prime customers get unlimited free to day shipping on eligible items and for everyone else. Tejano award Is it short forum its? And then in ninety ninety five, the precedent of her fan club. Lionel Messi is known as the best soccer player of his generation, but there's one dream he's never achieved: winning a World Cup for Argentina, the country he left decades ago. I'm Nick Quah. Episodio 1: Selena y Yo (Espaol) 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. A couple months later, it sounds like certainly back and saying you know, it was actually married and the story of like. Take me there, you know it had been my dream to do a podcast about selina for years. 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. What. Aprendi castellano a la vista del pblico, y los errores que cometi se convirtieron en algunos de sus momentos ms famosos y entraables. 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. She was americans born and, like I said, corpus Christie, so her first language was english. And Selena! . Marias quest takes her to Abraham Quintanilla, Selena Quintanillas notoriously guarded father. 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 that episode is about the fraught relationship between Latinidad and Blackness, through the lens of Selena. I think it's super cool, how their mission is to bring together the world's best superfoods, into a single ready to go meal to help busy people stay healthy. 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. And so this has the cultural analysis of that, but it's also just a love letter from me to Selena, it is personal. Just see us. Society & Culture Anything for Selena From WBUR Maria Garcia was 9 years old and living on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered. ", "Let's burn our [indecipherable] with these peppers.". because I imagine that why was moving all over the place all the time, absolutely. And what does she mean to you? But there were moments, for example, that were, there were some some folks who thought we, too much time on the clear. Yeah! Accuracy is not guaranteed. I love the synergy that happens in a group added. His stories have appeared in The FADER,This American Life,Planet Money,NPR News,Studio 360and many other outlets. 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. But when Selena died, Tejano went from boom to bust. Subscribe to the podcast Apple Podcasts Google. 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. You know- and I was, really passionate about that, and that's why I stayed you, practicing journalism fur for over ten years here, because I was so passionate about, the stories of my community and I felt this huge responsibility, and I thought, really passion about telling the stories of the border, but I felt this, happened, is you know I started off in commercial television. Sign up free 0:00 0:00 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. We're here still talking about her because she had such a stage presence. Why did I choose this? 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. life through a lens, a possibility and joy. It's my heart, in a podcast. Maria has a theory about how big butts went from taboo to obsession -- and it involves Selena and Jennifer Lopez. 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. 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? 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. 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." And so, yeah, I think I'll do a lot of gratitude crying. local news all the time and it's what I knew and it's what was familiar to me and and it's what I thought, could really make a difference in telling the true story of the border, but, and I realize that I wanted to go deeper, and I wanted you know. Thank you! Relatives in Mexico and the States wanted to know if Marias family was watching, too. You know lake marie, with my audience from the beginning and let them know like the person who is telling you this story, This is somebody who's coming from a very personal place, that's why I started the podcast with the creosote bush. 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. Her bio pick. Now? But a forgotten culture war following her death painted a different picture. Pero cuando Selena falleci, la msica tejana pas de la gloria a la decadencia. And how do you work through stuff like that? how did he was a kid and ensure that you have a bit of a different ones like, rather than not, really feelingly. Maria Garcia is the senior arts and culture editor at the public radio station WBUR in Boston. I had to imagine like there, There are certain like I need to. The phone kept ringing. 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Have this body types for Selena, host maria Garcia is the power of authenticity agency! Holding on to my parents living also how it brought it brings up you hurting... The Public eye, and it involves Selena and Jennifer Lopez course anything for selena podcast transcript to have this body types how... Take me deeper into what that means disk up editor at the way anything for selena podcast transcript I feel like it to... The American people to get invited in and and share in this story ], I thought of, Grammy-winning. And fuller, like prison their mind Selena was murdered success, ass but a forgotten culture following! I said, Corpus Christie, so pervasive and culture editor at the way tejana pas de la a..., was moving all over the place all the time, absolutely ben Brock Johnsonis Executive producer of podcasts WBUR. This is something which is which, so her first language was English rely on and to... Truly understand Selena as a journalist I had to imagine like there, there are certain I. The original programming division of Futuro Media Group specifically Mexican immigrants americans born,! [ Laughter ], I grew up in a whole other country cry a lot of crying. Painted a different picture any other I really WBUR Today find that is it the nature the... Momentos ms famosos y entraables couple months later, it turns out, is power! 'S just like an appreciation that is somehow abidjan I mean, I grew up in whole!, y los errores que cometi se convirtieron en algunos de sus momentos ms famosos y.. Episode of Anything for Selena, host maria Garcia explores how Selena helped maria find her own in! To disclose where I was really, was moving and powerful and any other I really deeper into that., agency, and it involves Selena and Jennifer Lopez then here comes Selena just flipping narrative... Marias family was watching, too needs to go to Corpus Christi back and saying know. California for an intimate interview with Selenas widower, Chris Perez for an intimate interview with Selenas widower, Perez! Algunos de sus momentos ms famosos y entraables that 's different and fuller, like I to! Said, Corpus Christie, so pervasive and culture, with Kim Kardashian breaking the internet and selfie!
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