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After leaked racist audio, this L.A. band’s love song to Oaxaca lights up TikTok

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After leaked racist audio, this L.A. band’s love song to Oaxaca lights up TikTok


She known as them “darkish little folks,” including “tan feos” (“they’re ugly”) and claimed she didn’t know the place they got here from.

Former L.A. Metropolis Council President Nury Martinez’s lately leaked racist remarks about Oaxacans residing in Los Angeles sparked a significant backlash this week that led to her resignation Wednesday.

Martinez’s feedback employed stereotypes which have lengthy been used towards Oaxacans in Mexico and in the USA.

The L.A. Chicano band Las Cafeteras, which shaped in 2005 and fuses folks music with spoken phrase, was horrified by Martinez’s feedback and wished to remind followers of Oaxaca’s magnificence with its 2021 track “Oaxaca Love Music No2.”

So on Wednesday, the band shared the track in a TikTok video, which has greater than 90,000 views. “Whereas Latino politicians hate on Indigenous Oaxacans … we wrote a love track to them,” the accompanying textual content reads.

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En Oaxaca todo brilla y se come con tortilla,” singer Hector Flores proudly belts out on the finish of the video, which is a snippet of the observe’s music video. “Every little thing shines in Oaxaca and also you eat utilizing a tortilla.”

A lot of the feedback beneath the video expressed love and help for Oaxaca and its folks.

“As a Oaxaqueña, I really like this,” @yeya.25 wrote within the TikTok feedback.

@millennialtrapped wrote, “like to Oaxaca from a Zacatecan,” referring to folks from the Mexican state of Zacatecas.

“We used to go to Juquila, Oaxaca each summer season and cherished driving by means of the hills, all pure magnificence,” reminisced @heathercar_16.

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“Que viva Oaxaca!” @serengarr merely, but proudly proclaimed.

“I really feel just like the [leaked] recordings have created, for higher or for worse, a brand new day in Los Angeles,” Flores, of Las Cafeteras, instructed The Instances. “And it’s now our duty, I feel, as folks of colour, particularly Mexicans, Chicanos and Latinos to actually take this as a possibility to do higher — to be higher.”

Within the track, Flores — an East L.A. native of Mexican descent who describes himself as an organizer, activist and artist — integrated components of ‘60s psychedelic, massive band, folks music and son jarocho (regional folks music from the Mexican state of Veracruz).

The observe goes on to explain Flores’ expertise of consuming “tacos de quesito” (cheese tacos) and “tlayudas” (a regional dish of Oaxaca) and the attractive issues of Oaxaca, from its folks to its land.

Flores’ description of Oaxacan magnificence stands in direct distinction to Martinez’s insidious feedback, which the musician famous should not unusual within the Latino group.

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“You may’t discuss Nury with out speaking in regards to the elephant within the room — she’s not the one one,” he stated, including that Martinez and fellow L.A. Metropolis Councilmembers Kevin de León and Gil Cedillo are “examples of what is going to proceed to occur if we don’t do the work we have to do internally and externally.

Los Angeles Metropolis Council President and sixth district consultant Nury Martinez resigned this week after leaked audio revealed that she and several other different Latino councilmembers made racist remarks about a number of minority teams within the metropolis.

(Al Seib/Los Angeles Instances)

The 40-year-old musician acknowledged that though there are numerous nice elements of Mexican tradition, there are “poisonous” points as properly. White supremacy, he stated, has as a lot of a stronghold on Mexico because it does the USA.

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“Racism, colorism, homophobia, patriarchy are long-standing values of Mexicans and subsequently, additionally turn out to be long-standing values for Mexican People. … In Mexico, there’s racism towards Indigenous people, the caste system of colonialism remains to be so intact.”

Los Angeles is residence to one of many largest Oaxacan communities exterior of Mexico. Raúl Hinojosa-Ojeda, a professor at UCLA’s Division of Chicana and Chicano Research, estimated that there are as many as 200,000 Zapotecs — the most important Indigenous group from Oaxaca — residing in Los Angeles County. As early because the Forties, Oaxacan immigrants got here to the USA in quest of higher wages and jobs, working in agriculture by means of the bracero program. Oaxaca, situated in southern Mexico, is among the nation’s poorest states, however the folks have deeply influenced U.S. tradition and meals and helped to form Los Angeles.

Oaxacans in Mexico have lengthy confronted prejudice and wrestle to be represented. After Yalitza Aparicio turned the primary Indigenous girl of Mexico to be nominated for an Oscar for lead actress within the 2018 film “Roma,” she confronted a wave of vitriol from different Mexican celebrities, calling the actor “fea” (“ugly”) and an “india” (“Indian,” derogatorily)..

The members of Las Cafeteras aren’t the one Angelenos defending Oaxacans. There will likely be a march for Oaxacan justice this Saturday in Los Angeles. The procession, which begins at midday on the Los Angeles Commerce Technical Faculty, will likely be a celebration of Oaxacan tradition and a possibility for Angelenos to face in solidarity with the town’s sizable Oaxacan group.

“I’d be mendacity if I stated I didn’t have members of the family who haven’t stated such issues like this,” Flores stated of Martinez’s incendiary feedback. “And I really feel like for Latinos, we expect that [confronting racism] simply has to use to all white people … No, we have to perceive [our racism] as a lot as anyone else — the Mexican group, as a lot as anyone else.”

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In a Wednesday Instagram submit, Las Cafeteras expanded on the message offered in “Oaxaca Love Music No2.”

“Final 12 months we wrote a Love Music ❤️ to Oaxaca known as ‘Oaxaca Love Music #2′ — for our love of the tradition, meals and Indigenous resiliency of Oaxacan peoples…the tradition is so sturdy in Cali that folk coined the time period OaxaCalifornia ❤️ Try the music video which begins with @ponchostlayudas talking in Zapotec — one of many Indigenous languages of Oaxaca!…Que Viva #Oaxaca #ResignNow #OaxaCalifornia #tlayudas #porvida”

Flores, who was impressed to jot down the track whereas taking a visit to Oaxaca in 2018, instructed The Instances he added the “No2″ within the observe’s title as a result of he is aware of he’ll by no means be the one to jot down the very best love letter to the Mexican state.

“The rationale I name it quantity two is as a result of I’m not Oaxacan, and there’s no means a non-Oaxacan will ever write the very best Oaxacan love track. So the very best I can ever hope is to be quantity two,” he stated

“You ain’t gotta be from a spot to uplift, a spot, a folks, a tradition,” Flores stated.

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When establishing the observe’s music video, Flores and the band wished to craft one thing that felt really Oaxacan.

“So we began [the video] off with Poncho from Poncho’s Tlayudas, who sells the very best tlayudas in L.A. out of his yard in South L.A. each Friday night time. And we wished him to introduce the video in Zapotec,” he stated. “That was a means for us to provide a nod to the native languages which can be nonetheless be spoken in L.A. A nod to folks doing Oaxacan organizing and cooks in L.A., you recognize, by non-Oaxacans, similar to myself.”

“Silence is as a lot a killer than something, proper, like silence will do as a lot to erase a tradition as phrases can,” Flores stated. “And so I really feel like after we don’t hear it, then we virtually assume it don’t exist.”

“Oaxacan Love Music No2″ isn’t the band’s solely foray into activist messaging. Their 2012 track “It’s Motion Time” paperwork what Flores calls “Black and brown solidarity” in each Mexico and the USA. The group’s 2017 observe “If I Was President” imagines the USA run with much less corruption and extra empathy and solidarity.

“For this video to get some love now in a time the place Oaxacan people are being bashed, hated on, it’s like, ‘No, uh-uh, let’s present the love,’” Flores stated of the track’s spike in recognition. “As a result of I feel proper now lots of people are highlighting the divisions. But it surely takes one dangerous factor to overshadow 10 good issues. You already know, and that’s simply the truth of our world.”

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Union movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert

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Union movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert

When Amazon workers on Staten Island successfully voted to unionize in the spring of 2022, becoming the corporate retailer’s first American workplace to do so, it was hailed as one of the most important labor victories in the United States in nearly 100 years. 

For the Amazon Labor Union (ALU) to organize employees at the JFK8 warehouse to vote in favor of union representation was a David versus Goliath story for the age of globalization — and a rousing reminder that collective grassroots efforts can still succeed despite massive employer concentration, management intimidation, and other hindrances to building worker power. And that an independent, worker-led coalition led the drive at this 8,000-plus-employee facility, rather than an established union, made its victory all the more impressive, even as the vote to unionize brought organizers into uncharted territory and set up a protracted legal battle with Amazon, which has since refused to recognize the ALU or negotiate a contract. 

Telling the story of how the ALU reached this historic moment, “Union,” a new documentary co-directed by Brett Story (“The Hottest August”) and Stephen Maing (“Crime + Punishment”), takes a detail-driven, ground-level approach, following current and former Amazon employees in Staten Island as they mount a grassroots worker-to-worker campaign, standing their ground against one of the world’s powerful corporations all the while. 

No talking-head documentary but a keenly observational chronicle of the unionization push and its aftermath, “Union” often plays like a thriller by virtue of its sharp, smart editing rhythms. Early on, Story and Maing juxtapose Jeff Bezos blasting off into space on a rocket made by his Blue Origin company and Amazon workers trudging wearily into work; it captures the unimaginable scale of the company’s operations while foregrounding the human scale often concealed by breathless (yet inevitably compromised) reporting of Amazon’s designs on empire. 

Made over the course of three years, Story and Maing’s film explores the human cost of the convenience economy and illuminates oppressive working conditions in Amazon’s factories. From constant surveillance to high injury rates and a lack of breaks, the pressures of working in Amazon warehouses compound to create punishing environments for workers, ones Amazon has steadfastly refused to address or even accurately report. And the threat of retaliation against workers who organize is ever-present; in addition to pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into union-busting campaigns that include mandatory “captive audience” meetings (which have since been banned in the state of New York), Amazon issues warnings of possible termination to workers involved with the unionization drive. 

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Bookended by footage of vast cargo ships transporting goods, a reminder of the slow, perpetual motion with which the gears of modern capitalism grind on, Story and Maing’s film is smart in how systematically its narrative lays out obstacles to the union’s success. It also insightfully depicts ground-level dialogue between workers as a powerful tool with which to overcome them. Some of the most remarkable footage, inside Amazon headquarters, covertly films one of those captive audience meetings; here, the company’s anti-union propaganda (One reads: “We’re asking you to do three simple things: get the facts, ask questions and vote no to the union”) is disrupted by ALU organizers, who successfully push back on Amazon managers just long enough to make their case to workers. 

One of the ALU organizers, Chris Smalls, takes center stage in “Union,” though the documentary largely sidesteps the temptation to cast him as a conquering hero. (That’d be an easy trap, given that he became the organization’s public face across the period “Union” depicts.) Smalls, fired from Amazon after protesting inadequate PPE provision during the pandemic (and besmirched by the company’s general counsel as “not smart or articulate” in an internal meeting of executive leaders), is a father of three who was moved to activism by the flagrant injustice of the company’s abusive labor practices. As a leader, he’s at once charismatic and hard-charging, dedicated to his fellow “comrades” but ever driven to push forward even in the face of inter-union dissent.

One of the film’s great strengths is its ability to surface the multiplicity of tensions between organizers working toward a shared cause. Take the world of difference separating the experiences of two subjects: Maddie, a white college graduate using her campus activism experience to help the cause, and Natalie, an older Latina woman living out of her car for years. In one charged exchange, Natalie pushes back on the suggestion, made by white male organizers, that Chris intentionally gets himself arrested by New York police officers to draw attention to the unionization drive. Ultimately, Natalie’s dissatisfaction with the ALU—due to her disagreements with leadership as much as her desire to wait for larger union support—leads her to leave the organization. It’s a testament to the complexity of individual motivations and the absence of easy triumph in this type of effort.

“Union” documents the internal debates and disagreements over governance, organizing, and leadership strategies that divided the ALU before its successful unionization vote and were compounded by its subsequent failed attempt to unionize a second warehouse. Though Smalls’ force of personality, passion, and determination fueled the fight to unionize JFK8, the film carefully depicts this as a collective victory. It rarely gives in to the temptation to single out Smalls for praise at the expense of others, and making it clear that his leadership style also contributed to internal rifts in the ALU that at various points may have weakened its ability to further the union’s mission. 

This becomes particularly important in the film’s latter half, after the unionization vote, at which point the sobering realities of the long work ahead come more fully into view. The heroism of the ALU organizers will never be in question. But with only one battle won in the war for workers’ rights, and Amazon continuing to contest or undercut its results by every means available, “Union” concludes on a note of weary fortitude rather than declarative victory. The film captures both the pain and the power of people at the base of a global infrastructure. By not departing from the frontlines of the fight against Amazon’s labor exploitation, Story and Maing bring the true face of their struggle into focus. 

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“Union” will be self-distributed theatrically, starting on Oct. 18. This review was filed from the film’s New York premiere at the New York Film Festival. 

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Review: Kindness is the takeaway in the Holocaust-era-set 'White Bird: A Wonder Story'

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Review: Kindness is the takeaway in the Holocaust-era-set 'White Bird: A Wonder Story'

In 2017, the film “Wonder” was a surprise critical and commercial hit for Lionsgate. Adapted from a children’s novel by R.J. Palacio, the film starred Jacob Tremblay as young Auggie, a boy with the facial deformities of Treacher Collins syndrome who teaches his family and peers about the importance of kindness. (Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson co-starred as his parents.) Naturally, a sequel, adapted from one of Palacio’s “Wonder” spinoff books, was quickly green-lighted by the studio.

It’s now been seven years since “Wonder” came out, and the long-awaited sequel, “White Bird: A Wonder Story,” which has been plagued by delays both pandemic- and strike-related, is finally hitting theaters. Directed by Marc Forster and written by Mark Bomback, “White Bird” is very loosely connected to the original film, but it takes a more global, historical approach to the same message about the importance of small but high-stakes gestures of kindness.

Bryce Gheisar returns as Julian, Auggie’s bully from “Wonder,” who has been expelled from school for his cruelty. Now himself the new kid at a new school, he struggles to fit in. But Julian has the opportunity to reinvent himself, which is underscored by a surprise visit — and lesson — from his grandmother Sara (Helen Mirren) that completely changes his perspective on how to move through the world.

Thus unfolds the real story of “White Bird,” which isn’t about Julian, who serves merely as a framing device and a tenuous link to the world of “Wonder.” “White Bird” is actually Sara’s story of her childhood in Nazi-occupied France and the harrowing events she experienced as a young Jewish girl there.

If you’ve ever watched (or read) young-adult Holocaust films or fiction, “White Bird” will feel familiar. It takes a similar tack to real-life stories such as Anne Frank’s. Teen Sara (Ariella Glaser) is the adored and privileged daughter of a professor and a doctor (Ishai Golen) living an idyllic life in a small French village. Drawn to the handsome Vincent (Jem Matthews), she and her friends scoff at quiet Julien (Orlando Schwerdt), who is disabled from polio. Insulated from the harsh realities of occupation until laws limiting the freedom of Jews encroach on her town, Sara’s family makes plans to escape, though they are unable to outrun the Nazi roundups.

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Sara, though, manages to escape into the snowy woods, and Julien escorts her through the underground sewers away from the school to his family’s barn where he stows her away, and where he and his parents (Gillian Anderson and Jo Stone-Fewings) care for her. She will remain there, in hiding, until the forces of fascism that have infected her community must be reckoned with. But the story is about the connection she forges with Julien, and the circumstances that allow her to learn to evaluate character through shared humanity and bravery, not status and power.

The strength of “White Bird” lies in its performers, especially Glaser and Schwerdt, who deliver complex, nuanced takes on young people experiencing global atrocities on an intimate scale, while also trying to navigate the complications of connecting as teenagers. They are both excellent and keep the film emotionally grounded.

Forster presents a somewhat sanitized view of the Holocaust that is sobering but digestible for younger audiences. The pastoral setting remains picturesque and almost fairy-tale-like. As recounted through Sara’s memories, it has a kind of glowing haze about it, almost too beautiful at times. Computer-generated flowers bloom before our eyes. A cranberry-red coat stands out starkly against a snowy winter background. It’s an interesting stylistic choice (and one you may have seen in another much-celebrated Holocaust movie), but it speaks to the storytelling element of the film, the way our brains craft memories that might be more vivid and lovely, even after decades.

As a “Wonder Story” and a Holocaust story, the messaging of “White Bird” is unsurprising though important: Empathy matters, especially in action, and that often, caring for others can mean putting one’s own self in danger, but we should do it anyway. In the grand tapestry of human existence, we are all connected. It may be a message we’ve heard time and again, but it’s one that bears repeating.

Katie Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

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‘White Bird: A Wonder Story’

Rating: PG-13, for some strong violence, thematic material and language

Running time: 2 hours

Playing: In wide release Friday, Oct. 4

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CTRL movie audience review: Ananya Panday’s Netflix thriller is ‘terrific’; OTT film gets thumbs-up from viewers | Today News

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CTRL movie audience review: Ananya Panday’s Netflix thriller is ‘terrific’; OTT film gets thumbs-up from viewers | Today News

CTRL movie audience review: CTRL started streaming on Netflix on October 4. The thriller, directed by ace Bollywood director Vikramaditya Motwane, stars Ananya Panday and Vihaan Samat.

The story is about Nella and Joe, who seem like the ideal influencer couple. However, when Joe cheats on Nella, she uses an AI app to erase him from her life — only for it to gain control over her.

The Netflix movie has received some highly-positive reviews from viewers, who posted their comments on social media. Let’s take a look at some of those.

CTRL public reviews

“CTRL is… terrific, absorbing and made with a lot of finesse… Do watch if you have time.”

“Found Vikramaditya Motwane’s new Netflix film #CTRL utterly fascinating. So much to admire. An ambitious, timely, deeply uncomfortable screenlife thriller that’ll make you want to change your passwords, cover your webcam and move to the hills.”

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“This is quite good. Only 1 hour 40 minutes, and not gonna lie, I had underestimated Motwane a bit with this movie. Ananya did well because she nailed this genre. It starts off slow, happy, and lighthearted, but the tension builds as the story progresses. Give it a watch, it’s nice.”

“vikramdityamotwane Gives a nuanced and gripping narrative and @ananyapandayy has finally come into her own, and does a fine job.”

“As a big fan of Motwane’s films, I’ve always seen him set new standards in mainstream cinema. From Udaan to AK vs AK he has always proved his merit. However, #CTRL feels like just an okay film, despite good casting with Ananya Panday. It lacks a strong impact and becomes somewhat preachy about our relationship with technology, leaving you with little to think about afterward.”

“The movie is abt how social media, AI and corporates are controlling us and not vice versa. Ananya Panday is good. Vihaan Samat is brilliant. The movie cudve been much better. Esp the climax.Theres no closure!”

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