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Latinos Who Lunch

Episode 142: Annette Rodríguez

Latinos Who Lunch

Latinos Who Lunch

Visual Arts, Arts, History, Society & Culture, Personal Journals

51.2K Ratings

🗓️ 30 January 2020

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this occasion, Babelito sat with one of his favorite scholars, Annette Rodríguez from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), to discuss the importance of understanding the history of the lynching of Mexicans in the southwest and the west coast during the late 19th and early 20th century. Annette first discusses the wonders of Hawaiian food and later contextualizes the vocabulary behind “hate crimes” “lynching” and the media we consume that continues to reiterate the invisibility of Mexicans in the long history of U.S. terrorism against our communities. Do not forget to send us your emails with your questions to [email protected] #podsincolor #supportbrownpodcasts #supportlatinxpodcasts #supportlatinxbands #lwlpod

Show Notes:
Annette Rodriguez
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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, I'm Fabi Fab, and this is Babelito, and we are Latinos for lunch.

0:04.0

The podcast where we talk about important things like That's why you're going to show everybody pewest.

0:27.0

The show everybody.

0:29.0

Puese, I'll tell you meant it.

0:32.0

Not let's see that you're going to see if that you're like

0:33.1

wow like great news so let me tell you

0:36.9

the sad journey of this episode

0:39.8

you won't get to listen for a while

0:41.5

but anyway so back in November,

0:44.4

I had the idea, not the idea, but I've been thinking

0:47.4

about this episode for a while,

0:48.6

so the idea of doing the problematic faves.

0:53.0

And actually I have forgotten that Radio Mania

0:56.0

had created a similar episode, actually two episodes dedicated to music,

1:01.0

to musicians, to songs that are problematic but we always

1:04.8

sing in come up and dejos in the quincellas and the chingara so I wanted to do

1:09.6

something like that

1:15.0

I really go deep into the coloniality of the songs,

1:14.0

just how like the PEDOs that are portrayed on those songs

1:17.0

actually come from like 500 years ago, right?

1:20.0

So finally it happens I I produced this month so it was all song it was all

1:27.4

episodes about music and even though I had said that I wanted to deconstruct Ray from

...

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