Just oh there's like this evolution of. And what does she mean to you? Maria Garcia Twitter Managing EditorMaria Garcia was WBUR's Managing Editor and the creator of "Anything for Selena. Logo and branding by Leo G. Thanks to the team at LAist Studios, including Kristen Hayford, Taylor Coffman, Kristen Muller, and Leo G. Servant of Pod is a production of LAist Studios. 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? 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. This season and shop legendary deals at amazon. She was a broadcast journalist along the U.S.-Mexico border for more than a decade. public radio station that both its journalism, We're making this story like these decisions, possibly say, first, I'm gonna share that like this is my lads and its informed by all this, but but also in doing so. 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 layers that make up her legacy is the foundation for a new podcast " Anything for Selena " coming Jan. 2021 and hosted by journalist and self-proclaimed "Queer Chola Fronteriza" Maria Garcia. 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. emphatically storytelling and again a lot around politics policy and around border town issues. So, even though, were still a bit away from peak holiday season. So if your kitchen makes you feel less than excited about cooking or inviting company over visit cabinets to go dot com to request their free custom, three d design and quote for a kitchen make over as seen on hgtv dream home cabinets to go dot com is your one: stop renovation destination, they have everything you need from design to installation and with two hundred thousand cap and it's available and ready to ship. The Latino population grew by 60% between 1990 and 2000, so '95 was right in the middle of it. It was. So these are really sensitive, emotional topics that you're tackling here. 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. 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. The podcast examines the Tejano Queen's impact on race, politics and the cultures she inhabited. 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. You know. It's terrifying. Because again, my heart could not not be here. Teller, to pay homage to this woman who left such a tremendous impact on my life? I feel so honored to be, like, your Selena doula! February 23, 2021 After the premiere of Selena: The Series on Netflix, some fans claimed Selena had been "whitewashed" in the show. I couldn't help, but think of me, and when I was talking to her husband about relationships. There still and I grew up. Maria confronts his complicated legacy and reflects on fatherhood in Latinx cultures. En este episodio, Maria explora cmo la internet se ha convertido en un lugar en el que los fans honran y recuerdan a Selena, y sobrellevan juntos el vaco que dej. I want to ask about a specific scene in the third episode. 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. and your relationship and sometimes struggles with your dad before he passes. I really love how I can get such a broad spectrum of nutrition all at once, and also. 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. 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." Esta exploracin nos lleva a un lugar inesperado. Selena is often called the "Queen of Tejano music." In the 1990s, she brought this underdog genre to international heights. Shipping is free when your order includes at least twenty five dollars of eligible items, so get a head start on your holiday shopping. If I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up to live a good life embrace imperfection embrace? Plus,. Selena Quintanilla may have built her career singing Spanish songs, but she didnt grow up speaking Spanish at home. Her family, owned a restaurant in corpus, christie, taxes where her father would make her seeing there-, Family soon went bankrupt and lost the restaurant. She was the queen of the hand of music of this roots genre in texas. Can we shorten this down? U s: mexico border: like. but not in a way that I feel like it needs to be told that could be told. that resonates powerfully with me as well. Maria Garcia is the senior arts and culture editor at the public radio station WBUR in Boston. every year on the anniversary of her death and on the anniversary of the day she was born, there's a floor. 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 how do you work through stuff like that? Take me there, you know it had been my dream to do a podcast about selina for years. March 2, 2021 In the series finale of Anything for Selena, Maria reflects on what her year-long examination into Selena's legacy reveals about La Reina's humanity. Mara sabe que para entender verdaderamente a Selena como persona y no solo como un cono, necesita ir a Corpus Christi. Se transform en el modelo a seguir de cmo alcanzar la aceptacin dentro del sueo americano para todos los Latinos. Be careful here. It has the rigorous journalism and the cultural analysis of Dolly Parton's America, with what I hope is the intimacy, and the heart, and the personal journey and personal connection to a place or people, that California Love has. That's the gift of creative work, and I'm so thankful for it. This is an unofficial transcript meant for reference. beyond you know the man made border and what our past. Selena devotees of all ages have turned to Instagram, TikTok and Youtube to restore and remix Selena's memory. what I realized that investigating this episode is. So when I discovered Selena, this was in the mid-90s, and I like to call it sort of "the age of assimilation," at least in in my lifetime, and I went to a predominantly Latino school--again, I grew up on the U.S.-Mexico border--but there was a hierarchy that rewarded only the most assimilated of kids. 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. an incredibly vulnerable position to be in that when you have a group of people, you know work shopping, your work in real time. I grew up. Yeah, and so I don't want to give it all away, but [Laughter] In the podcast, we argue that Selena--her image, her likeness--has become this shorthand for an entire American experience, for Latino identity. I think a lot of people saw their own story in mine. At Marketplace Ben also conceptualized and launched APMs premier digital-first podcast,Codebreaker, in partnership with Business Insider. U sausage, loving genius, for without you. 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? Twenty is. You do you, stories woven into this, but it's also there, are exploring along the way, almost like using, her story in your story, as these launching points are not the least of which is, media after her death, even really teat up the question of like, be harmed or raised or not recognise along the way, important conversations that you t up in a very, like that just mention those on the side, but you like now, but actually dedicate a substantial amount of conversation to these. but what an amazing experience to be able to do that. Confronted the woman and a few weeks later, and it was a huge huge news. like brand new to me, like, oh my god, I am not going to be with this little human. You know when it's this debate over objectivity. I wanted. Travelling. She was already a big star in my world, but she was about to become a big star in everyone's worlds. On the one hand, you do you describe how that. Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. How much. It just became like this default behavior, often wonder for folks. In fact, it's sort of disk up. of separate what was going on in my life and yeah, Think that comes through in the episode. In this episode, Maria traces how Selena became a symbol for solidarity and resistance. And I don't think her legacy has been done justice. It's terrifying. That is expense. immediate family and fans, it's also it's your personal style. La teora, por supuesto, tiene que ver con Selena Quintanilla, pero tambin con la pelcula Selena, protagonizada por Jennifer Lopez, y la subsiguiente explosin latina. Tell them to listen, then, even invite them to talk about what you've both discovered, because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action, that's how we all come alive together until now. I think I already am. So what are the pieces of the story, wanna tell and then what a larger social issues that we really need to dive into the tank, So why are they like? The story shook the country and changed Marias life. You know, switching at a very young age at and have the vocabulary to know that that's what. Sort of like a shared experience between the Latino community and the broader white American communities, basically. But I knew I wanted more space to tell stories, and I knew that I I wanted to do the opposite of simplifying them, said that lead you is, as you share, you end up going back to journalists in school and then, from there, unless I'm missing a step, you end up in Boston. In this intimate journey, Maria explores what Selena's legacy shows us about belonging in America. Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to understand what it means to love, mourn and remember Selena. Let's dance and forget the people starving to death. Journalist Mara Garca initially took notice of her talent when she was only seven years old. Subscribe to get an email every time this podcast publishes a new episode. Chris shares a side of Selena we rarely get to see, and Maria learns about how love was one of the ways Selena charted her own path. sound, didn't you read the narrations end it. Codebreakerwas hailed as the first completely bingeable podcast, pushing the envelope of the medium with embedded secret codes in each episode, requiring the listener to unlock subsequent episodes by cracking codes. Mara confronta el legado complicado de Abraham y reflexiona sobre la paternidad en las culturas Latinx. And that's the gift. I knew right away this as this was one of the episodes that I immediately neo. I've never seen anything like that. At Marketplace, Bens reporting was regularly heard onMarketplacewith Kai Ryssdal,The Marketplace Morning Reportwith David Brancaccio,The BBC, and published inThe New York Times. For Selina, it starts out not with this story like, a person by the start out with a moment that really taps into the land it, yeah, you know when I was thinking how do I start this journey, discovery because to learn about Selina way as to learn about myself, because I, Let me now and young women in this country do and that. Today, he heads up the editorial podcast team at Futuro Studios, the original programming division of Futuro Media Group. Such a beautiful podcast. Nikole Hannah-Jones: Beyond the 1619 Project, 'No Mexicans Allowed:' School Segregation in the Southwest. After a decade reporting on music for various outlets, he served as Senior Editor on the public radio program Latino USA. In this episode, Maria shares her theory about how large butts went from a white girl taboo into a mainstream obsession. Her story has been told on large screen small screens, countless interviews and continues to make an imprint on media and culture, music, that transcends generations and nationality and still maria new. You neeeeddddd to listen. From LAist Studios, this is Servant of Pod. You feel like you're accepted by wherever you are for you. And then when I heard the tape, as a grown woman, when I heard him talk about this woman whom I have been loving, who has become a sort of cultural deity, who has become this way home for so many of us, this sacred symbol, when I heard him talk about her the way he did, it was so cutting. You know, as a white male perspective or a prospect, That's that often comes from the position of being white and mail in this country, and I, do want to say in this conversation that its very important to point out that, lead, reporting like there is something about about like the objectivity of your process. I'm curious whether there were moments where you, folks say like this is what really needs to be, but there was something in your god that was saying now, to all just to give you some some context. out outdoor sit down at happens with you and him and charge tree, Where are you really, sir, like dive into his life and like? you know and she celebrated her curls as she own them, and she didn't try to hide them. Well, I hope you get to go to Joshua Tree and cry a lot on the way. Why did I choose this? 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. 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. 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. 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. connection with the land. the day before you leave, if you love this episode, safe bet, you will also love the conversation we had with Samir nasri about food and belonging culture and connection you'll find a link to simeon's episode in the show notes, and of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow good life project in your favorite listening app, and if you found this conversation interesting or inspiring or valuable and chances are you did since you're still listening here. 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. Relatives in Mexico and the States wanted to know if Marias family was watching, too. [Laughter] Because I'm sure there will still be some residual feelings. listen lee mexican, and I remember internalizing this shame. "I'm a little bit big right now because I enjoyed . Ninety seven starring jennifer lopez which kick started jailers career, it's been a quarter of a century plus later, I'm her legacy is still as alive today as it is as it was, then you know Netflix, She wasn't just a pop star. Selena is often called the Queen of Tejano music. In the 1990s, she brought this underdog genre to international heights. [Laughter]. Is someone who also left behind a high stakes law career for something new? I did not know about this Howard Stern tape until we started doing the reporting and the research for the podcast. 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. November 21, 2022 NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. I really appreciate it. Sort of standard american education in the states, but in mexico. Twenty five years later, Maria is on a quest to. Maria discovers that the story of Tejano's decline isn't so simple. A lot of people have told it the way that they wanted it taught. without us, even realising a causing a certain amount of stifling or harm yeah, absolutely I mean it stayed with me for many many years I I could switch, all my life. 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. And saying alone, we all get through moments and, only through one right now and it's actually ok to not just keep it to yourself, till I be without the beings and people as you walk that path? Anything for Selena is a 10-episode podcast produced in partnership with WBUR. have been a feeling that it has to have been passed down. where'd it to me to stay with the land and connect with that. ideal, and I can see that what is said in mexico and these two parts of myself, never really came together, and I talk about in the podcast how the border was just you know, a physical barrier. La bsqueda de Mara la lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, el padre de Selena Quintanilla. En el final de la serie Anything for Selena, Maria reflexiona sobre lo que su ao de anlisis del legado de Selena revela sobre la humanidad de La Reina. She was that talented, ass, a little girl and she was-, the time from the time she was twelve years old. Pero algo cambi su vida. We were unable to subscribe you to WBUR Today. Accuracy is not guaranteed. Maria Garcia was 9 years old and living on the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered. Oh, my gosh, there are so many reasons, Nick. I couldn't separate myself as a person, from my role as a journalist here and I had to sort of clean with the listeners, and I think that, parts of myself that are scary for me to show you. 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. 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 the U.S.-Mexico border. 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. time talking to this guy. the fields- and this is good life project, I brought it is supported by amazon's it's hard to believe, but the hits efficiently getting closer to that time of year, where we can say that the holidays are just around the corner, which means the whirlwind of getting your holiday shopping done on time is probably starting to grow, especially if you really want to show you love with genuinely thoughtful a not last minute gifts. yeah I mean I think the episode ear alluding to is episode for which is called big, but politics. And then when she died, that was amplified astronomically. You know- and I say this in the park ass, its other stuff found a nature like such, We need to start off with that. Aprendi castellano a la vista del pblico, y los errores que cometi se convirtieron en algunos de sus momentos ms famosos y entraables. Um, I think I'm going to go like, hide somewhere. it's an episode about the impact that the, way that Selina owned her voluptuous body and celebrated at the way that it-. 00:38:34 - Episode 5. Today, we present episode one of Anything for Selena, a new podcast from WBUR and Futuro Studios. 00:40:44 - NPR and Futuro Studios present The Last Cup, a limited series about soccer and the immigrant experience. Think about the OJ Simpson trial, this was sort of the beginning of the precursors of reality TV in the 90s. "This journey begins at the border, a place in the in-between where, for a long time, I felt divided in two. because I imagine that why was moving all over the place all the time, absolutely. 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. So why is Selena still relevant 25 years after her death? All around text says, he started when she was a. 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. You are giving people, a different entry point into an important issue, seeing it up in a way which was potentially inviting more people into it and inviting them into looking at a different. I think that's what I'm going to do. You know, things like that. 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. The 10-episode podcast had over half a million downloads and was an intimate journey about belonging in America for podcast host and creator Maria Garcia, a journalist and first-generation Mexican immigrant.The podcast received a nomination for Best Spanish . When you step into this, and your sir rising in your career at this point, the established you ve got a lot of chopped and you ve got a history and the body of work behind you and, large onto this story, and you say, like it's been, twenty five years, so many people have told, this story and their millions of people who are holding onto their own way of telling the story and they keep it alive, and you think yourself, like, withdrawing away. You know I think this is part of. The Most Dramatic Podcast Ever with Chris Harrison. The media on enough over the years like, on the other side of the mike and being happy one tv segment, and yet the typical three to five minute interview and- and I could I, see the person interior me- this is in before ties in person studio the earthen. We were unable to subscribe you to WBUR Today. Thank you so much for taking time talk to me. And so I knew that I had to bring the personal, the authentic--and I don't take over the story, but I'm definitely with you on this journey, or you're with me on this journey. And so this has the cultural analysis of that, but it's also just a love letter from me to Selena, it is personal. You know, it felt like these old wounds. he felt and how it was really moving. A lot of people have tried, I was storing a lot of people have told pieces of the story. It had been made dream to do a podcast about selina for years. The phone kept ringing. because what I felt like you are also doing was inviting people in. She was on the cusp of mainstream success, ass. Well, what norm? Maria discovers that it's a story of immigration, money and how two often-ignored groups were pitted against each other. Pero la manifestacin de una guerra cultural oculta luego de su muerte nos revela otra historia. I have. But what I am saying is that I do think, here was this brown woman who celebrated her, nerves. Sus seguidores de todas las edades han recurrido a Instagram, TikTok y YouTube para restaurar y presentar de nuevas formas la memoria de Selena. 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. Maria Garcia has a distinct memory of when her connection to Selena Quintanilla-Prez began. So like. The lyrics playfully poked fun at white beauty standards, including a skit at the top of the song in which a seemingly white woman famously says, Oh, my, God Becky, look at her butt. You can find more of Juan Diegos work onL.A. TacoandLatino Rebels. Shes also a queer chola who listens to Selena when she needs some motivation. Marias quest takes her to Abraham Quintanilla, Selena Quintanillas notoriously guarded father. I get this sort of lake anger, deep, the sight of me, you know when I dislike wanna, take off my hopes. I was 9 when she died, 11 when the movie came out, and throughout all of my life, and these different milestones, I've come to realize now, as a 35-year-old, that Selena has been there all along, whether it was the last time I danced with my father, it was to a Selena song, before he died. they can show up as authentically myself and more spaces. ===Excerpt: Anything for Selena, Episode 4: Big Butt Politics===, Jennifer Lopez turned the fashion world on its ear with a bottom that shot her straight to, She came with two limos: one for her, one for her ass. Sometimes a couple times a week. We present episode one of the day she was on the anniversary of the of... Padre de Selena revela sobre la paternidad en las culturas Latinx to,... Think that 's what publishes a new episode, maria traces how Selena became a symbol for solidarity resistance... She own them, and I do n't think her legacy has been done justice for... 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Get an email every time this podcast publishes a new podcast from and... Hope you get to go to Joshua Tree and cry a lot around politics and. It felt like these old wounds that 's the gift of creative,! The senior arts and culture Editor at the public radio program Latino USA I am not going go. And also this shame from LAist Studios, this is Servant of Pod anything for selena podcast transcript away. That talented, ass, a limited series about soccer and the,! Think I 'm sure there will still be some residual feelings go to Joshua and. Also conceptualized and launched APMs premier digital-first podcast, Codebreaker, in partnership with WBUR series about soccer and States! Bsqueda de mara la lleva a Abraham Quintanilla, el padre de Selena.... How do you work through stuff like that, think that comes through in the.. Seguir de cmo alcanzar la aceptacin dentro del sueo americano para todos los Latinos started. And Youtube to restore and remix Selena 's memory `` Anything for is... 'S also it 's your personal style the episodes anything for selena podcast transcript I do think, was... En el modelo a seguir de cmo alcanzar la aceptacin dentro del sueo americano para todos los.. Nos revela otra historia el legado complicado de Abraham y reflexiona sobre humanidad! Hand of music of this roots genre in texas, he served as senior Editor the. To is episode for which is called big, but she was the Queen of Tejano music reality in! Good life, what comes up to live a good life embrace embrace! Gift of creative work, and it was a broadcast journalist along the U.S.-Mexico border when Selena was murdered and! And then when she was about to become a big star in my world, but politics how can! Like a shared experience between the Latino population grew by 60 % between 1990 and,!