Posts Tagged ‘audio’
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November 24, 2009
Adolph Carranza remembers an unusual holiday donation from the Salvation Army. – New StoryCorps Historia
Jose Fernandez tells his wife, Teresita, about the first Thanksgiving he spent in the United States. – New StoryCorps Historia
November 13, 2009
Gustavo Arellano and William Nericcio on Lou Dobbs Leaving CNN: Streaming Audio off KPFK.ORG
November 11, 2009
Melting Pop? Latin Music in America Is Sounding More Like Pop – (interesting – lots of audio to listen to)
November 2, 2009
Latinos Seek Control of Second Federal Savings in Chicago’s Little Village
October 15, 2009
Reforma Migratoria: “Sin movilización no ganamos esta batalla”: Congresista Gutiérrez
October 12, 2009
Park Ranger Mauricio Escobar Uses Life Story To Reach Out To Latinos – – Yosemite National Park sits on the edge of California’s rural San Joaquin Valley, a farming region that’s nearly 50% Latino. Yet few of the region’s Latino residents ever visit the park.
October 7, 2009
Latincast a part of Dallas based Dieste & Partners interviewed the winners that were honored at the 2nd Adcolors Awards during the 11th ANA Multicultural Conference in Phoenix this week.
October 2, 2009
24th Annual Hispanic Women’s Conference – Phoenix (audio story)
October 1, 2009
Mexico’s ‘Familia’ Cartel Mixes Spiritualism, Violence
September 30, 2009
The foreclosure crisis has brought a particular set of issues to Latino immigrants in the Kansas City area. Because of language barriers and the lack of a credit history, many immigrants are vulnerable to predatory lenders. They haven’t faced more foreclosures than other groups. But when they do have housing problems, there are a few places where they can turn for help.
September 28, 2009
StoryCorps Historias, New Listening Post for Compelling Latino-American Tales
StoryCorps: José Cruz tells his daughter, Grace, about living in Villa Juana, a neighborhood in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, while his mother was living in New York City.
September 14, 2009
Listen to podcast interview with Jose Carrera, owner, Ocho Placas about tattoos and his Little Havana business
September 9, 2009
“The Slave Next Door: Human Trafficking and Slavery in America Today” – interview with Kevin Bales
September 2, 2009
Health Care Woes for Latinos – talk with Pilar Marrero, Political Editor for La Opinion and Fabiola Pomareda, reporter for La Raza (audio)
August 6, 2009
The Sonoran Hotdog Crosses The Border – NPR looks at border food
July 20, 2009
A New Day For Latino Civil Rights – Host Michel Martin interviews Thomas Saenz who is the new president of one of the oldest Latino civil rights organizations, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
July 19, 2009
The Mexican Institute Of Sound Returns – (couple of free mp3 downloads)
June 25, 2009
Latino Baseball Players And The Hall Of Fame | NPR
December 8, 2008
Listen to podcast interview with Reinaldo Padua, AVP, Coca-Cola North America about effective marketing to Latinos
Guatemalans on Sunday celebrated a beloved tradition: “Burning of the Devil.” Across the country, people lit bonfires and burned images of Satan as a way to symbolically cleanse their houses. For the first time, the minister of the environment had asked Guatemalans not to burn the devil.
December 3, 2008
Lila Downs Shakes Up Folkloric Sound
Listen to podcast interview with Aldo Quevedo, president, Dieste Dallas about reinventing the Hispanic agency
NPR series :: The U.S.-Mexican Border: A Changing Frontier
November 21, 2008
Results of the latest study on Latino consumer attitudes show that the buying power of Hispanics is in the billions. The study called DATOS, the Spanish word for ‘data,’ says Arizona has the 6th largest Hispanic population in the sountry with nearly 2 million Latinos, and that could translate to a new group of influential consumers.
November 6, 2008
Election 2008 – What Role Did Latinos Play?
October 17, 2008
Latino Vote By Proxy – The government estimates that more than a million legal immigrants, mostly Latino, applied to become full citizens last year. The goal for many of them was to cast a ballot for a new President next month. But as KJZZ’s Marcos Najera reports, some Latinos who aren’t citizens are still finding ways to vote.
Arizona has one of the largest number of Hispanics eligible to vote in the nation. KJZZ’s Nadine Arroyo Rodriguez looks at what impact they may have in November’s election.