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Psyched Radio, El Tecolote report on RV communities in SF by Cronicas de la Raza
Today I have the honor of speaking to El Tecolote's Chilean-American photojournalist, Pablo Unzueta Pablo and I talk about the work that he has been focused on the last few months ecpecially his biweekly photo newsletter called Ojos. He also explains to us the meaning behind the word, Ojos, and the inspiration to put this series together. Then we talk in depth about his love for photojournalism and cameras.
On this episode we talk to Pablo Unzueta. Pablo, a photographer and writer here at El Tecolote, recently visited Chile and experienced the 50th anniversary of El Golpe, the military coup that nation suffered in 1973. We talked about what happened in '73, how Chile is today, and his own Chileno roots
Nestor Castillo lays out the recent racist media tropes around Honduras, and why they're especially dangerous for immigrants. Nestor's El Tecolote column, "Dear SF Chronicle: No, Hondurans aren't responsible for the City's fentanyl crisis": eltecolote.org/content/en/dear-sf-chronicle-no-hondurans-arent-responsible-for-the-citys-fentanyl-crisis/ Nestor on Twitter: twitter.com/ProfeNessC "The Contras, Cocaine, and Covert Operations" (George Washington University's National Security Archive): nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB2/index.html "Defensores exigen investigación por crimen de ambientalista del Valle de Siria" (Defensores En Linea): defensoresenlinea.com/defensores-exigen-investigacion-por-crimen-de-ambientalista-del-valle-de-siria/ | Google translation: www-defensoresenlinea-com.translate.goog/defensores-exigen-investigacion-por-crimen-de-ambientalista-del-valle-de-siria/?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=wapp "Honduras Defense Official and U.S. Drug War Ally Tied to Narco-Trafficker, Notorious Mercenary Firm" (Jared Olson and John Washington at The Intercept): theintercept.com/2023/08/25/honduras-military-elias-melgar/ "Honduran Ex-President Extradited to U.S. to Face Narcotrafficking Charges" (Democracy Now): democracynow.org/2022/4/22/headlines/honduran_ex_president_extradited_to_us_to_face_narcotrafficking_charges "Gold giant faces Honduras inquiry into alleged heavy metal pollution" (Rory Carroll, The Guardian): theguardian.com/environment/2009/dec/31/goldcorp-honduras-pollution-allegations More Sad Francisco: sadfrancis.co
Check out the comics exhibition by Acción Latina R.A.I.C.E.S. Art Fellow Yano Rivera on Saturday, October 14th at Paseo Artístico - The '90s Matter in the Mission, a special artistic activation of El Tecolote's archive and free art stroll that celebrates community history in San Francisco's Calle 24 Latino Cultural District.
With El Tecolote celebrating another year around the sun we wanted to share with you another Radio Teco rewind as we go back to our conversation from last year with El Tecolote founder Juan Gonzalez.
With El Tecolote celebrating another year around the sun we wanted to share with you another Radio Teco rewind as we go back to our conversation from last year with El Tecolote founder Juan Gonzalez.
El Tecolote, Accion Latina Anniversary and Nina Serrano discusses her time in Cuba in the 1960s by Cronicas de la Raza
On this episode of Radio Teco News we speak to El Tecolote contributor Galicia Stack Lozano about Puerto Rico and it's long history with the United States. Further reading - Story Part 1 & Story Part 2
On this episode of Radio Teco News, El Tecolote reporter Manuel Obregozo talks to Alexis Terrazas about the coup and protests in Peru.
Rubén Blades and Willie Colón album breakdown and El Tecolote founder Juan Gonzales by Cronicas de la Raza
Earlier this month, the Biden administration announced that the federal state of emergency—the thing that has been keeping COVID tests, vaccinations, and Paxlovid free— will end on May 11. But as much as we wish it would, declaring the pandemic over won't make that true. On this episode of Radio Teco News, El Tecolote reporter, Mara Cavallaro gives us an update on COVID in our community.
On this episode of Radio Teco News, we talk about the Brazilian icon, Pelé, who passed away in December of 2022. El Tecolote reporter Mara Cavallaro joins us to talk about her fellow Brazilian and what Pelé meant to her.
El Tecolote contributor Edaena Salinas spoke to the campaign manager for Mission Loteria, Luis Quiroz. Edaena and Luis talk about what the Mission Loteria is, how to play, and how this amazing tradition supports local businesses and artists. To learn more about the Mission Loteria head over to www.missionstreetsf.com/loteria To learn more about the upcoming Lovers Lane event on Balmy Alley head over to https://www.instagram.com/p/CnxYDxpy47R/
Happy New Year!! Before we get started with 2023, we wanted to do a quick recap of a few of the biggest stories from 2022 with our very own writer Mara Cavallaro. With Mara's focus being mental health, we talked about the three biggest stories she wrote for El Tecolote discussing this important topic during an action packed 2022. Sources mentioned in episode. Trans Lifeline: (877) 565-8860 (for trans, genderqueer, and gender-questioning folks). BlackLine: 1 (800) 604-5841 (according to the BlackLine website, they're a hotline “geared towards the Black, Black LGBTQI, Brown, Native and Muslim community. However, no one will be turned away from the Hotline.”) For more information about Alameda's 988 call center, visit https://988alamedacounty.org/. Body Politic Support Group For additional information or to join the RECOVER study, call 415-353-9306, send an email to FiguringOutLongCOVID@ucsf.edu, or fill out a form at: Studies.RecoverCovid.org. Marked By Covid, pandemic justice and remembrance organization
In this episode, El Tecolote reporter Lorena Garibay talks to us about her reporting domestic workers in San Francisco getting access to paid sick leave. This legislation was passed in 2022, and was celebrated and touted as the first of its kind, but questions remain as to how it will be enforced. Lorena's reporting on this ordinance is funded by the Solutions Journalism Network, an independent, non-profit organization that advocates an approach of solutions journalism guided by evidence-based reporting to the responses of social problems. El Tecolote was selected as one of the newsrooms to participate in SJN's Labor Cohort. In this episode, Lorena tells us about her reporting, the people she spoke with, and how the four pillars of solutions journalism guided her throughout.
In this next episode, we are thrilled to be joined by none other than El Tecolote founder, Juan Gonzales. In this episode, our cohost Monti Rossetti not only sits down with Juan Gonzales to discuss the founding of El Tecolote, but also takes us way back to the beginning of Juan's childhood in Stockton California, how he became interested in journalism in the first place, and shares from milestones and anecdotes of why el tecolote is el voz del pueblo.
Three historic BIPOC-focused media outlets are celebrating anniversaries this fall - India Currents turns 35, Willie Ratliff, the publisher of San Francisco Bayview National Black Newspaper turns 90, and the Mission's El Tecolote turns 52. These outlets may be small (compared to the mainstream media) but they are mighty. We'll find out how their communities sustained their local media through the pandemic, and how the outlets sustained their communities in turn. Thriving together through difficult times. Guests: Vandana Kumar, Editor-in-chief, publisher and co-founder, India Currents. Nube Brown, Editor-in-chief, San Francisco Bayview National Black Newspaper. Alexis Terrazas, Editor-in-chief, El Tecolote.
On today's show we have a very special guest, El Tecolote founder Juan Honzales. It was such a pleasure talking to the legend himself and fun to learn more about his life growing up in the Central Valley, his very early start in journalism, and what it takes to create a newspaper that has fifty plus years of experience when it comes to informing our community.
On this episode, we salute and interview Alexis Terrazas.He's the editor in chief of El Tecolote (The Owl), a bilingual Latino newspaper that has served the San Francisco Bay Area Latino community since 1970. Prior to that, he wrote for Patch and the San Francisco Examiner. Alexis shared his journalism origin story, explained the types of stories that El Tecolote covered, and detailed why he's so passionate about his job and the newspaper's mission.El Tecolote's Twitter accountAlexis's salute: Renaissance JournalismThank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback at journalismsalute@gmail.com, visit our website at thejournalismsalute.org and Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com) or tweet us at @journalismpod.
On this episode, Fatima joins Victoria to talk about what assimilation means and how it has played a role in their identities, families, and mental health journeys. Remember that scene in Selena where Abraham says the line about "not being Mexican enough" or "American enough"? Yeah we talk about that too. Listen in now! About our guest host: Fátima Ramírez is currently navigating the first gen feels of being a proud Salvadoreña, millennial mom to a toddler, wife, and a self who is learning how to be more intentional about her time, energy and sleep! She is the Executive Director of Acción Latina, an arts and media nonprofit that publishes the legacy El Tecolote bilingual newspaper, produces Radio Teco podcasts and showcases arts and culture programming in San Francisco, California. She is also a graduate of the University of San Francisco, where she double majored in Media and Latin American Studies with a minor in journalism. Most importantly, USF is the place where she met her core group of first gen friends, including podcast host Victoria Cortez. She also earned a Master's degree in Family and Community Education in Museums from Columbia University, and was a 2021 Curatorial Resident at Somarts Cultural Center, where she co-curated the art exhibition, CARAVANA: Mobilizing Central American Art from 1984 to the Present. **DISCLAIMER** THIS PODCAST REPRESENTS THE OPINIONS AND EXPERIENCES OF VICTORIA CORTEZ, LMFT AND HER GUESTS ON THE SHOW. ALL THE CONTENT IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. INFORMATION SHARED IS NOT INTENDED TO DIAGNOSE, TREAT, OR REPLACE FACE TO FACE THERAPY AND/OR MEDICAL CARE. FIRST GEN FEELER AND VICTORIA CORTEZ, LMFT ARE EXEMPT FROM ANY RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY ACTIONS OR NON-ACTIONS OF THE VIEWER. FOR A MEDICAL EMERGENCY, PLEASE DIAL 911 OR VISIT YOUR LOCAL EMERGENCY CENTER. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/firstgenfeeler/support
Part 1 of 2 of my conversations with presenters at the CatchLight Visual Storytelling Summit April 19-20, 2022 at the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco. In part 1 I speak with Mabel Jiménez and Josué Rivas about their then upcoming presentation on who gets to tell the story and how the story is made. We preview the talk and also speak about their own work and experiences in the documentary storytelling world. The summit was recorded and will be posted at https://www.catchlight.io/2022-visual-storytelling-summit This episode covers the following panel: Photojournalism's Ethical Question: Who Gets to Tell a Community's Story? With Mabel Jiménez x Felix Uribe x Yesica Prado x Josué Rivas CatchLight Local Fellows Yesica Prado and Felix Uribe alongside CatchLight Local California Visual Desk Editor Mabel Jiménez and CatchLight Global Fellow Josué Rivas dive into the nuances of how to work ethically and collaboratively in communities, particularly those that are disproportionately impacted by crisis. Jiménez will also discuss her work as an SFAC Artist in Residence at SF's COVID Command Center, which provided unique access to the city's disaster service workers, COVID-19 response/prevention efforts and mutual aid during the crisis—enabling her to document a crisis, up close. The conversation will be moderated by CatchLight Global Fellow, Josué Rivas—Founder of INDÍGENA, Standing Strong Project, and Co-Founder of Indigenous Photograph. This episode is sponsored by the Charcoal Book Club, a monthly subscription service for photobook enthusiasts. Working with the most respected names in contemporary photography, Charcoal selects and delivers essential photobooks to a worldwide community of collectors. Each month, members receive a signed, first-edition monograph and an exclusive print to add to their collections. www.charcoalbookclub.com Mabel Jiménez (pronouns she/her) is an independent photographer and reporter based in San Francisco. Being raised in Tijuana, 15 minutes from the Mexico/U.S. border, themes of biculturalism and immigration have influenced her photographic and journalistic work. She has documented San Francisco's Latino community since 2008 and is the former Photo Editor for El Tecolote bilingual newspaper, where she continues as a regular contributor. During her seven-year tenure in the position, she created, produced and curated a yearly group photography exhibition showcasing the newspaper's best photojournalism. https://www.mabeljimenez.com Josué Rivas HE (Mexica/Otomi) is a creative director, visual storyteller, and educator working at the intersection of art, journalism, and social justice. His work aims to challenge the mainstream narrative about Indigenous peoples, build awareness about issues affecting Native communities across Turtle Island, and be a visual messenger for those in the shadows of our society. He is a 2017 Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow, founder of the Standing Strong Project, co-founder of Natives Photograph and winner of the 2018 FotoEvidence Book Award with World Press Photo. https://www.josuerivasfoto.com
El Tecolote contributor, Edaena Salinas, chats to the fifth-generation San Franciscan, author Anne Evers Hitz. They discuss the books that Anne has written that cover a wide variety of San Francisco's history including The Ferry Building and the Emporium Department Store, which is now the Westfield Mall.
We talk to El Tecolote's Photo Archivist, Linda Wilson, about the legendary Latino and LGBTQ activist and artist, Juan Pablo Gutierrez.
Happy New Year! We wish everyone has an amazing 2022! We, here at El Tecolote, promise to keep you connected with the most important conversations, which is why we begin with the ever so important topic, COVID. School reopening was a hot topic in 2021, but now we ask the question, how are the teachers and students doing? We caught up with a few educators and parents to talk about the recent outbreak of COVID cases in schools and the latest news about how they are being protected..
Join organizers and advocates to imagine and discuss building a future safe for all and free of militarization and colonization. The Immigrant Defense Project, the Center for Constitutional Rights and Haymarket Books are proud to present “The Next 20 Years: Building towards a demilitarized and decolonized future of safety for all”, the final event of a 4-part series marking the 20th anniversary of 9/11. The event commemorating International Human Rights Day brings together organizers and advocates who are building towards a world we have not yet seen, and helping to pave our collective path forward. From the abolition of borders, to the complete defunding of the military industrial complex within a future of economic, racial, gender and climate justice, we will discuss both the necessity of imagination, as well as the strategies, tactics and principles we need to win the world we deserve. To mark the 20th anniversary of 9/11, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Haymarket Books and our partners are pleased to present a 4-part series, "Just Resistance: 20 years of global struggle against the post-9/11 human rights crisis." Moderator: Mizue Aizeki is the Deputy Director of the Immigrant Defense Project (IDP). Mizue's work focuses on ending the injustices—including criminalization, imprisonment, and exile—at the intersections of the criminal and immigration systems. Mizue guides IDP's local and state policy work, including the ICE Out of Courts Campaign and IDP's campaigns to end the growing entanglement between local law enforcement and ICE. . Panelists: Lara Kiswani is the executive director of the Arab Resource & Organizing Center (AROC), and a faculty member in the College of Ethnic Studies at SF State University. Lara has been active in movements against racism and war, for Palestinian self-determination, and international solidarity for the last 20 years. Arun Kundnani is the author of The Muslims are Coming! Islamophobia, extremism, and the domestic War on Terror (Verso, 2014) and The End of Tolerance: racism in 21st century Britain (Pluto, 2007). He has previously been an editor of the journal Race & Class and a scholar-in-residence at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library. Timmy Châu (he/him) is a Viet organizer, lawyer, and facilitator based in Zhigaagoong, also known as Chicago. He started organizing with an effort called We Charge Genocide doing cop-watch and know-your-rights trainings across the City. He is the Managing Director at the Prison + Neighborhood Arts / Education Project (PNAP) where he works on building inside/outside networks of mutual support and advocacy between incarcerated and freeworld activists, scholars, thinkers, and artists. He's also a co-starter of Dissenters, a new youth-led anti-war organization, where he currently sits on the Advisory Committee. Fernando Martí is a poet, printmaker, community architect, and housing activist. His work reflects his formal training in urbanism, his roots in rural Ecuador, and his current residence in the heart of Empire in an age of climate catastrophe. His poetry, prints, altar ofrendas and utopian constructions inhabit the space between ancestral traditions of place and a futurist imagination rooted in Latinx culture. For over a decade, Fernando co-directed the Council of Community Housing Organizations. His artwork can be found regularly on justseeds.org. His writing has appeared in publications as varied as El Tecolote, Street Sheet, Geez magazine, Left Turn and Shelterforce. He shares his art and writing in a zine called Amor y Lucha. This event is sponsored by the Immigrant Defense Network, the Center for Constitutional Rights and Haymarket Books. Watch the live event recording: https://youtu.be/SfXYOx3cGq4 Buy books from Haymarket: www.haymarketbooks.org Follow us on Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/haymarketbooks
Board development might be one of the driest topics of conversation when it comes to entrepreneurship. It's also one of the hardest things to do, especially in the journalism business, where many publishers want to recruit people who are in the industry and have a working knowledge about news media and the ethics that govern it. However, despite its lack of appeal, building a strong board of directors is critical to a news outlet's success and sustainability.That's why The Pivot Fund hosted an important conversation about board development with BoardSource affiliate and nonprofit consultant Glenda Hicks and Josué Rojas, an artist and former publisher of El Tecolote, the longest-running bilingual newspaper in California. Rojas also serves on the advisory board for El Tímpano.
El Tecolote contributor, Johanna Lopez Miyaki, spoke to SFMTA Director of Transportation, Jeffrey Tumlin. Director Tumlin tells us about the challenges Muni faces as they try to reopen and navigate life during and after the Covid pandemic.
Jacob Simas is the managing editor of The Oaklandside, an online news startup that launched in June 2020 and is overseen by Cityside, a nonprofit media organization whose portfolio also includes the online publication Berkeleyside. To support The Oaklandside, click here. Jacob's career started in community non-profits, where as a counselor and later a program director of Horizons Unlimited, he helped organize violence prevention and arts programs for Latino youth in San Francisco. He later went on to work at New American Media, where he led a community news network called YouthWire, which helped amplify student and youth reporting in California's news deserts. He then went on to work at Univision, where he established Rise Up: Be Heard, a journalism training program for youth and community organizers in underserved areas of California, with an emphasis on rural regions. Jacob received his bachelor's degree in sociology from UC Berkeley and later graduated from the university's journalism school. Jacob gave shoutouts to three awesome Bay Area news outlets: 1 - El Tímpano: a “local reporting lab” that serves Spanish-speaking residents in Oakland. Support them here and follow them on Twitter here. 2 - Richmond Pulse: a community-based, youth-led online and print newspaper that covers the East Bay town of Richmond. Support them here and follow them on Twitter here. 3 - El Tecolote: a bilingual newspaper in San Francisco based out of the city's Mission District. Support them here and follow them on Twitter here.
This week we have our second episode of the series, "The Women of El Tecolote". and this time Accion Latina's executive director Fatima Ramirez talks to another legend of the early days of El Tecolote and also one of the current board members of Accion Latina, Ana Montes. This episode is our last episode of season one, but we will be back the first week of August with more amazing stories and news for season two, stay tuned!
PROGRAMA TRANSMITIDO EN VIVO A TRAVÉS DE TIK TOK Y FACEBOOK VISITA: http://www.verdadestelar.com PALPAL ME: https://www.paypal.me/verdadestelar MIS LIBROS: https://www.amazon.com/ENRIQUE-ESTELAR/e/B07G4BH279?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2&qid=1613265140&sr=8-2
PROGRAMA TRANSMITIDO EN VIVO A TRAVÉS DE TIK TOK Y FACEBOOK VISITA: http://www.verdadestelar.com PALPAL ME: https://www.paypal.me/verdadestelar MIS LIBROS: https://www.amazon.com/ENRIQUE-ESTELAR/e/B07G4BH279?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2&qid=1613265140&sr=8-2
Te presentamos la primera instalación de “Las Mujeres De El Tecolote”. Hablamos con uno de los pilares de El Tecolote, la traductora y colaboradora, Hilda Ayala.
El Tecolote contributor, Ian Firstenberg, joins us today on Radio Teco to chat about what exactly is a Public Bank, why is San Francisco getting closer to agreeing to start one, and the history behind it.
This week we air Radio Teco Podcast episode #9 The Fight Against Forced Sterilization, gifted to us by Alexis Terrazas, editor of El Tecolote, Spanish/English newspaper in the mission. Eltecolote.org
Happy May Day! In the fight for workers' rights, rest is revolutionary. So take this Saturday as a day to rest with some happy news you may have missed. This week, hosts Malakai and shaylyn have updates on vaccine rollout, free museum days and a very special little robot on Mars. Plus, an interview with Xpress Magazine Photo Editor and El Tecolote reporter Emily Curiel on a food vendor in the Sunset serving up authentic Mexican and Chicanx foods and flavors. And our cocktail of the week is a first for us at the Happy Hour; it's bright and bubbly — without the booze. Rate and review if you want a cocktail made in your honor! Listen anywhere you get your podcasts, and find us on Instagram @thhpodcast and on Twitter @happyhournews. Also, the recipe for this week's tailor-made cocktail can be found on our website here. Thank you to Arman Billimoria for our theme music and to Harika Maddala for help with our social media. Pour yourself a glass of your favorite beverage and enjoy this week's episode, produced by Malakai Wade and shaylyn martos. Additional music used from Free Music Archive. Guest: Emily Curiel, Photo Editor for Xpress Magazine SF State student demands a seat at the table for Mexican, Chicano culture Reference Material and Background Info: Half of eligible Californians at least partially vaccinated, state says Over one-third of Alameda County adults have been fully vaccinated New CDC guidelines lift outdoor masking for fully-vaccinated adults Bay Area museum free admission days Who will be Oakland's Poet Laureate? The city is accepting nominations How many Tyrannosaurus Rexes ever lived on Earth? Here's a new clue. A helicopter takes flight on Mars San Francisco finally has its own font. And the inspiration was truly historic
El Tecolote contributor, Johanna Lopez Miyaki, talks to three amazing guests who give us three different perspectives on the ugly history the United States has with eugenics and forced sterilization.
Hana Baba is a longtime, award-winning radio journalist in the Bay Area. She is currently the host of “Crosscurrents,” a daily radio show on KALW Radio. In addition to her role at KALW, Hana is the co-host of another show, a podcast called The Stoop, where she and Leila Day discuss stories from across the Black diaspora. I met Hana back in 2017 when I interned with KALW during the summer. Hana later met with our student newspaper when I was editor-in-chief of the San Francisco Foghorn. I was struck by how she approached community journalism, representation in newsrooms, and how the coverage of a community can affect the larger narrative about that group. In this episode, we discuss those themes, as well as the vexing problem of diversifying journalism talent while local/regional news outlets suffer financially. To listen to KALW, click here. To donate, click here. To subscribe to The Stoop, click here. Hana's shoutout was El Tecolote, a fantastic bilingual, biweekly newspaper that covers San Francisco's Mission District. To read El Tecolote, click here. To donate, click here. To learn more about the American Dispatch Podcast, go to amdipodcast.substack.com.
Happy Women's History Month! We at The Happy Hour want to honor women — All Women — and the contributions they've made to this world as we look toward our future. This week hosts Malakai and shaylyn are here to share some happy stories you may have missed and provide some positive perspective on the biggest headlines of the week, including re-openings of businesses in the Bay, vaccinations for farm workers and the release of a new podcast from El Tecolote, the historic bilingual newspaper in SF's Mission District. And a craft cocktail that's fun to say and even more fun to drink! Rate and review if you want a cocktail made in your honor. Listen anywhere you get your podcasts, and find us on Instagram @thhpodcast and on Twitter @happyhournews. Also, the recipe for this week's tailor-made cocktail can be found on our website here. Thank you to Arman Billimoria for our theme music. Pour yourself a glass of your favorite beverage and enjoy this week's episode, produced by Malakai Wade and shaylyn martos. Additional music used: from Free Music Archive. MJ's story: 'A Beacon of Light': Unhoused Youth Move Into Oakland's New Tiny House Village https://www.kqed.org/news/11861840/a-beacon-of-light-unhoused-youth-move-into-oaklands-new-tiny-house-village
Tim Redmond is a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco who has been in the muckraking business for close to 40 years. He's currently editor of 48Hills, an online, progressive, non-profit news outlet based out of San Francisco that offers breaking news, investigative reporting and arts and culture pieces. In addition to his duties at 48Hills, Tim teaches undergraduate journalism at the University of San Francisco as well as a class for the School of Arts in Urban and Public Affairs program. In this episode, we speak about how Tim got into journalism, the basics of the local news crisis, who is to blame for the crisis, why it is important that local news outlets exist in the first place and why Tim does this kind of work. The idea was for this episode to serve as an introduction so that listeners of this podcast could start wrapping their heads around the issue at hand. Click here to support Tim and his work at 48Hills. Here are Tim's shoutouts: El Tecolote - a bilingual newspaper covering San Francisco's Mission District Mission Local - an online news outlet covering the Mission (and the rest of the city) Berkeleyside - an online news outlet covering Berkeley Joe Fitzgerald Rodriguez - a reporter and producer at KQED To learn more about the American Dispatch Podcast, go to amdipodcast.substack.com.
Aquí hay una previa de lo que está por venir! Después de 50 años increíbles y exitosos, el periódico español/inglés de San Francisco, El Tecolote, está entrando en el mundo digital. ¡Esto es Radio Teco!
Here is a preview of what's to come! After 50 amazing and successful years, San Francisco's Spanish/English newspaper, El Tecolote, is entering the digital world. This is Radio Teco!
What Ever Happened to Student Media? is a podcast series host by KTUH DJ, Program Mentor, and former General Manager Smee Wong. What Ever Happened to Student Media? will explore the University of Hawaii’s Student Media programs and their interactions with the Student Media Board, the governing organization for the media programs. In this episode, In this episode, Cassie Ordonio tells the behind the scenes stories of reporting ASUH and the Student Media Board transparency issue articles and the various responses from ASUH and the SMB. Cassie Ordonio is currently the Legislative intern at the Honolulu Star-Advertiser for a second-year in-a-row. While she was at Ka Leo O Hawai'i, she covered campus government and social issues. Her bylines are also featured in Hawai'i Business Magazine, El Tecolote, and 48hills. Cassie moved to Hawai'i from San Francisco, California in 2018. She served as Editor-in-Chief during the accreditation crisis at City College of San Francisco's newspaper, The Guardsman. As a Chamorro and Filipino writer, her passion is writing about the Pacific Islander community. Cassie will be graduating in May from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa with a bachelor's in Pacific Islands Studies and Journalism. Cassie Ordonio’s Ka Leo articles: www.manoanow.org/users/profile/cassie%20ordonio/ Cassie Ordonio’s Honolulu Star Advertiser portfolio: www.staradvertiser.com/author/cassie-ordonio/ Articles from Cassie Ordonio mentioned in the interview: http://www.manoanow.org/kaleo/news/why-asuh-isn-t-as-transparent-as-it-should-be/article_c05ebefe-fe24-11ea-be7d-eb8ec157893a.html http://www.manoanow.org/kaleo/news/student-media-organizations-file-transparency-complaint-against-the-uh-student-media-board/article_13a58da4-3782-11eb-861f-273a46f62071.html
What Ever Happened to Student Media? is a podcast series host by KTUH DJ, Program Mentor, and former General Manager Smee Wong. What Ever Happened to Student Media? will explore the University of Hawaii’s Student Media programs and their interactions with the Student Media Board, the governing organization for the media programs. In this episode, Cassie Ordonio Shares her upbringing story in California and her works as a journalist on Oahu. Cassie Ordonio's painful and tearful experience helped her grow as an independent journalist in a highly competitive news society. As a proud Pacific Islander, she hopes to inspire her fellow POC journalists to stay strong and chase their dreams. Cassie Ordonio is currently the Legislative intern at the Honolulu Star-Advertiser for a second-year in-a-row. While she was at Ka Leo O Hawai'i, she covered campus government and social issues. Her bylines are also featured in Hawai'i Business Magazine, El Tecolote, and 48hills. Cassie moved to Hawai'i from San Francisco, California in 2018. She served as Editor-in-Chief during the accreditation crisis at City College of San Francisco's newspaper, The Guardsman. As a Chamorro and Filipino writer, her passion is writing about the Pacific Islander community. Cassie will be graduating in May from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa with a bachelor's in Pacific Islands Studies and Journalism. Cassie Ordonio’s Ka Leo articles: https://www.manoanow.org/users/profile/cassie%20ordonio/ Cassie Ordonio’s Honolulu Star Advertiser portfolio: https://www.staradvertiser.com/author/cassie-ordonio/ Articles from Cassie Ordonio mentioned in the interview: http://www.manoanow.org/kaleo/opinion/reporting-on-micronesian-issues/article_230a6544-93aa-11e9-87cf-4b9f963bfb11.html http://www.manoanow.org/kaleo/news/a-new-study-reveals-bias-against-micronesians/article_3ee7162a-8646-11e9-8f54-1f906999c8ee.html https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/08/24/hawaii-news/covid-19-an-added-challenge-for-the-blind/ https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/07/06/hawaii-news/a-father-and-daughter-from-american-samoa-are-stranded-as-they-await-the-ok-to-go-home/ http://eltecolote.org/content/en/born-activist-former-frisco-5-hunger-striker-continues-her-fight-for-justice/ National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. Hours: Available 24 hours. Languages: English, Spanish. 800-273-8255
While we’re still glued to our screens waiting for a final verdict on the presidential race, we're also looking at local elections results. We hear how people in the Bay Area are feeling. Plus, we talk to El Tecolote’s editor-in-chief about local Latino communities. And, we take a break from the elections with a reading from a local poet . Today's local music features a new album from Naked Roommate from Berkeley. It’s called " Do the Duvet ."
Los búhos y lechuzas a menudo inspiran miedo en México, son aves asociadas con brujas o con el mal agüero, acompáñanos a descubrir cómo se origino este mito y por qué es tan importante evitar propagarlo.
Journalism shapes our society, and causes personal transformation—just one of many reasons why Journalism Matters, Now More than Ever. A special edition of KCSF News with Juan Gonzales and Jonathan Freedman, moderated by Victor Tence. Juan Gonzales is the head of the Journalism department at CCSF, and founder of the local El Tecolote newspaper. Jonathan Freedman won the pulitzer prize in 1987 for his editorials at The Tribune of San Diego which called for major immigration reform. He’s also the author of several nonfiction books, and one novel. They will critique media in the age of Trump, tell personal stories from their lives as journalists, and discuss the resurgence of local publications in a time when funding for print newspapers has nearly evaporated. Jonathan Freedman is hosting a free writing lab in Room 205 of the Rosenberg building on Ocean Campus. It's called "Engaging with Writing Workshop," and drop-ins are welcome. That's every Friday 11am - noon.
Cortinilla de introducción al Concierto de María Katzarava
Cortinilla de introducción al Concierto de María Katzarava
Nina Serrano and Eva Martinez discuss their editorial journey into the world of publishing El Tecolote newspaper's first anthology of bilingual poetry highlighting Mission district poets, with a foreword by the poet Laureate of the USA Juan Felipe Herrera. Julieta Kusnir interviews Juana Alicia, whose prodigious body of work includes some of the Bay Area's most iconic murals.
This week we find out how illustrator, Anthony Mata, Lives Uncontained. Anthony was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. He attended the Academy of Art University in SF and majored in Illustration. You may have seen his work in The Guardsman, El Tecolote and the SF Bay Guardian newspapers, as well as Belle SF Magazine, and Etc. Magazine, along with missionlocal.org. Recently Anthony illustrated a children’s book named “Akiti the Hunter” which is available at Amazon.com.Listen in as we discuss the difference between drawing and illustrating. Illustrators will get upset if you call their work drawings! Anthony explains that illustration is a much more involved process with many steps. He also shares some lessons he’s learned as an illustrator, and his latest challenge of writing and illustrating his own children’s book, The Fighting Nagano. You can contact Anthony at Anthonymata415@yahoo.com and check out Anthony’s work at the links below.www.Anthonymata415.comhttps://www.facebook.com/anthonymata415/Anthony’s Instagram featuring his illustrations: https://www.instagram.com/anthonymata_art/Drawings and unfinished sketches (some NSFW): https://www.instagram.com/anthony_sketches/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tonight's program features Noticias/ News from the Americas with Vylma V.; an important discussion led by Julieta Kusnir about the investigation into the sexual abuse of immigrant women in the janitorial industry: a commentary by Nina Serrano on the bilingual San Francisco Mission district newspaper, “El Tecolote” and its 45th anniversary and call for poetry; an interview by Lezak Shallat about Mapuche singer Beatriz Pichi Malén, on the music of the indigenous Mapuche people of Chile and Argentina; an interview conducted by Vylma V on “Companera,” a book by Hillary Klein about the Zapatista women in Mexico; ... And as always, the Latino music you love to hear!
Welcome to my bedroom closet. One hundred thirty-seven years ago, my Mexican great-grandfather, Emigdio Medina, composed a schottische, entitled El Tecolote. The Owl. I discovered the sheet music in an online library listing in 2010. A long-forgotten song? Might no one have heard the piece for over 100 years? I asked my dear sister-in-law, Martha, to play El Tecolote on her piano for me to record. She suffers from Alzheimer's, but has not forgotten her music. Lost music. Lost memory. Together both were found, at least for a while. Ah, the magic and harmony of two musician's talents, even if one has left this world and the other slowly slips away. For those who may be interested, the WorldCat listing for the sheet music is as follows: http://www.worldcat.org/title/tecolote-the-owl-schottische/oclc/146589970&referer=brief_results "The Overland Monthly," Vol. 15, August, 1875, No. 2, page 208, listed "El Tecolote" as new music received. Please enjoy this bit of Mexican culture from yesteryear's San Francisco. The song was played and recorded totally impromptu. Please forgive the occasional faltering and errors. Warm Wishes, Laurel Anne Hill (http://www.laurelannehill.com)