In The News

Día de la Raza or Columbus Day?

Well, it depends on who you ask.  But, for some in Latin America and even in The States, Columbus Day is known as a day that reveres the indigenous and its history.

I apologize for the zombie-like state the Spanish are giving.  Or, the subservient positioning that the painter gives the original inhabitants.  Perhaps this can be an insight into how sometimes we, as Americans, view the holiday.

Nevertheless, I leave you some interesting facts from Wikipedia about Día de La Raza and Columbus Day:

  • Known as Dia de las Raza in many Latin American countries
  • Known as Dia de las Culturas in Costa Rica
  • Known as Dia de la Hispanidad in Spain
  • In 2002, under Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, the name was changed to Día de la Resistencia Indígena (Day of Indigenous Resistance) to commemorate the Indigenous people’s resistance to European settlement.
  • In the state of South Dakota, the day is officially a state holiday known as “Native American Day”, not Columbus Day.

Please leave your comments/feelings about this subject.  I’d love to hear them!

Brown is the New Green: Film & Panel

Mercury Mambo has been chosen to be on a panel with the director of PBS documentary Brown is the New Green, Phillip Rodriguez, along with other panelists from LatinWorks and GSD&M Idea City.

Brown is the New Green:  George Lopez and the American Dream
Host:  Center for Mexican American Studies & Mexican American Culture Committee
Date:  Monday, October 6, 2008
Time:  7:00pm - 9:00pm
Location:  University of Texas, Texas Union Ballroom 3.202
City:  Austin, TX
OPEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC

If you haven’t seen this documentary, it takes an interesting look at Latinos in the United States:

Brown is the New Green features interviews with a variety of influential Latinos, who weigh in, often with conflicting opinions, on the role of marketing and media in shaping Latino identity. Interviewees include Advertising Executive Hector Orcí, actor Bill Dana (”Jose Jimenez”), author Arlene Dávila, media activist Alex Nogales, and the George Lopez show producer Bruce Helford (who also produced Roseanne and The Drew Carey Show).

Hope to see you there!

Our Very Own Mad Man

Ramon Villarreal, an art director here at the Mambo best known for creating his own t-shirts and wearing Pumas como si fuera Maradona (that was a Manu Chao reference, but I’ll post about that later), has made his Austin fashion debut!

The Statesman (our local paper) came out with a piece comparing the wardrobe of 60’s-inspired tv show, Mad Men, with today’s fashion.

Take a look for yourself:

Spanish Basketball Team Ad, Blind Racism or Misunderstanding or both?

Note:  Let me preface this post by stating that I want to analyze this from an anthropological and cultural perspective.  I really want this to be a conversation discussed fully about the implications, especially during a world event.

The ad in question:

From Yahoo! News:

Spain’s Olympic basketball team posed for an advertisement prior to the Games which appears to show all its players slanting their eyes, a move that could offend its Olympic hosts in Beijing. The ads, for a Spanish courier company, appeared in the Spanish-language newspaper La Marca.

Where does one begin with this ad?

I’ve actually had many discussions about this with friends of various cultures and ethnicity, one in particular with a friend of Vietnamese descent.

We both agreed that this was offensive in our immediate context, especially because it took place during the Olympics.  Even more, there’s been a history of cultural insensitivity, with national head coach for the Spanish soccer team, Luis Aragonés, having his own controversy with words to French soccer player Thierry Henry.

Nevertheless, this got me wondering why the reactions of many members of the team were:

“We did it because we thought it was going to be something nice, something with no problem,” Calderon told Yahoo! Sports. “But somebody wants to talk about it. It is too much of a big deal with you guys (the media) and everybody talking about that.”

Could it perhaps be that this is blind racism or cultural misunderstanding or both?

From previous trips to Spain, I’ve encountered both, having some African American classmates be publicly taunted with words that would be shunned in the U.S. while walking to class.

However, I’ve also encountered that some Asian cultures and Latin cultures use physical appearance as a term of endearment.

Example:  If you’re Latino,  you probably have a family member with the nickname “Gordo” or “Flaco” (literally “fat” or “skinny”).  Trust me, every family has one.

or, you may have heard someone of Latin descent refer to Asians as “chinitos”, which is translated to “little Chinese.”

But, the friend I mentioned earlier told me that many Vietnamese use the word “” (translation:  Mexican) to describe anyone from Latin America.

So when does cultural nuance get lost in translation?  Or when does it go too far?  Or does it go far depending on the context?

There’s more to this story, and I’ll post it in a follow-up.

Mercury Mambo’s Dr Pepper Art Gallery Tour

There is a story about the Art Contest and Tour that Mercury Mambo did for our client, Dr Pepper, in the El Paso Times. The tour appeared at local Whataburger restaurants in the city.

The Sabrosura Art Tour is the first to display Dr Pepper and Hispanic art in a mobile forum.

“It’s a great honor to join Dr Pepper in celebrating Hispanic art and culture in a way that gives the artists a new audience and patrons a new appreciation for local talent,” said Todd Coerver, Whataburger’s vice president of Marketing and Innovation”