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Hundreds of migrant parents and children were separated at the US-Mexico border under a Trump administration policy. Caitlin Dickerson writing for The Atlantic won for Explanatory Reporting – she talks with Ginger Thompson of ProPublica.
Judy Reyes (Devious Maids, Claws) takes on the role of Thelma Garcia, a Texas Immigration lawyer who works tirelessly to reunite the pair, and Gloria Reuben (Mr. Robot, ER) portrays Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist ProPublica reporter, Ginger Thompson, who broke the story. The movie follows Cindy Madrid (Fátima Molina, Who Killed Sara?) and her six-year-old daughter, Ximena (Camila Nuñez), who fled violence in El Salvador for safety in the U.S., only to be separated at the border as a part of the Administration's Zero Tolerance Policy. Detained in detention centers in different states, Cindy and Ximena endured inhumane living conditions and inadequate medical care, but that was nothing compared to the emotional toll of being apart. Their story would gain national attention when a whistleblower leaked a gut-wrenching audiotape of six-year-old Ximena crying for her mother. The onslaught of media attention incited by Ginger's story alerted the nation to the cruelties being committed against undocumented immigrant families at the border. Judy Reyes is an American Actress, Model and Producer, best known for her roles as Carla Espinosa on the medical comedy series Scrubs, and as Zoila Diaz in the comedy-drama Devious Maids. She currently stars as Annalise "Quiet Ann" Zayas in the crime comedy-drama Claws.
Judy Reyes (Devious Maids, Claws) takes on the role of Thelma Garcia, a Texas Immigration lawyer who works tirelessly to reunite the pair, and Gloria Reuben (Mr. Robot, ER) portrays Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist ProPublica reporter, Ginger Thompson, who broke the story. The movie follows Cindy Madrid (Fátima Molina, Who Killed Sara?) and her six-year-old daughter, Ximena (Camila Nuñez), who fled violence in El Salvador for safety in the U.S., only to be separated at the border as a part of the Administration's Zero Tolerance Policy. Detained in detention centers in different states, Cindy and Ximena endured inhumane living conditions and inadequate medical care, but that was nothing compared to the emotional toll of being apart. Their story would gain national attention when a whistleblower leaked a gut-wrenching audiotape of six-year-old Ximena crying for her mother. The onslaught of media attention incited by Ginger's story alerted the nation to the cruelties being committed against undocumented immigrant families at the border. Judy Reyes is an American Actress, Model and Producer, best known for her roles as Carla Espinosa on the medical comedy series Scrubs, and as Zoila Diaz in the comedy-drama Devious Maids. She currently stars as Annalise "Quiet Ann" Zayas in the crime comedy-drama Claws.
La producción está basada en el reportaje de la periodista Ginger Thompson sobre la masacre que padeció la comunidad de Allende en Coahuila una década atrás, en el año 2011. En donde decenas de personas perdieron la vida en el ataque por parte del grupo armado de los Zetas. Una historia que quedó en la impunidad y que ahora esta producción de Netflix retoma de los escombros para abordar la violencia del narcotráfico desde la perspectiva de las víctimas. Sigue nuestras publicaciones todos los lunes, miércoles y sábados en punto de las 14:00Hrs desde el Facebook, YouTube, Instagram en @EscaparateRadioDigital Escucha el podcast en: Spotify, Apple podcast y en Amazon Music. #escaparatemiercoles #recomendacionesculturales #quehacerelfindesemana #programacultural #escaparateradiodigital #culturaparatodos #teatroenMéxico #entretenimiento #cultura #quehacerencuarentena #culturainfantil #espectáculos #arte #salud #Teatro #Somos
En entrevista con Ana Francisca Vega por el 102.5 de FM se habló de la Serie Somos con Monika Revilla, guionista y coproductora, explicó que este trabajo está documentado en el artículo de Ginger Thompson alrededor de lo que sucedió en Allende. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Victor Pineda conversó con el actor Martin Peralta sobre su participación en la nueva serie de Netflix, Somos, y nos contó sobre por qué es importante que este tipo de historias se cuenten en la televisión, especialmente ahora, en el que México vive una nueva etapa de educación por los medios de comunicación. También nos hablo sobre la fotografía, que es uno de sus pasatiempos favoritos.
Luis Pablo Beauregard y Trino Camacho se despiden de Nada Que Ver con “Somos”, una serie de seis episodios donde se ficciona la masacre de Allende ocurrida en el 2011, con base en la investigación “Anatomía De Una Masacre” de Ginger Thompson. Analizan la importancia de representar este tipo de realidades y el estilo narrativo necesario para ficcionar hechos reales y terribles de una forma respetuosa y compleja. Ricardo López plática con una de las guionistas, Monika Revilla, sobre su relación con el caso, con el proyecto, y sobre los procesos creativos para construir una serie de crimen organizado sin capos. Muchas gracias por escuchar Nada Que Ver durante estos dos años de producción de Así Como Suena.
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Inventor Guest Ginger Thompson: Ginger's life has taken some interesting twists and turns, from being chosen Miss South Dakota USA in 1977 to winning the title of Brookings City Councilwoman in 2005. She holds a Master of Science degree in Journalism from South Dakota State University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mass Communication from the University of South Dakota. She was a television news anchor and reporter at KELO-TV and a producer for South Dakota Public Television before co-founding a marketing and media production company, TV Productions Media. Ginger is the co-producer of the award-winning television program “On Call with the Prairie Doc,” a live medical call-in show on SDPB and Prairie Doc Media. She is the owner of Website Spice by Ginger, a web design company, and is an adjunct professor of journalism for SDSU, teaching Intro to Mass Communication to hundreds of students each year.She recorded her first voice-over at the age of three for her family's radio station, KISD. She also has decades of presentation experience, appearing in front of audiences of up to 1,300 people. She is an engaging presenter, both as a seminar speaker and professional emcee. As emcee, she has shared the stage with celebrities such as Jane Seymour, Erin Brockovich, Lisa Ling and Mary Lou Retton.Thomson is also an inventor who holds a patent on a product she developed with her husband, Jay Vanduch. The Doorhickey® is an “extra handle” that suctions to a sliding glass door for hands-free opening and closing. www.doorhickey.com About Got Invention Show:Welcome to the Got Invention Show!Listen to inventors interviews sharing their invention story to the world!Are you patent pending?Do you have a prototype to show and demonstrate?Are you looking to earn royalties from your invention?Are you looking for a manufacturer?Do you want to raise money or find an investor?Do you want to sell your invention?Learn from other inventors or let's see and hear about your big invention idea! Show & tell us about your invention, have your very own video interview to be proud of!Your video can be used to:Post to your social mediaAdd on your websiteSend to bloggers & editorsPitch to licensees or investorsListen to inventor interviews or sign up: www.gotinventionshow.comYour Host of Got Invention Show, Brian Fried. Brian is the host of Got Invention Radio, with interviews of high profile guests including the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office, Lori Greiner from ABC's Shark Tank, & over 150 individual interviews. www.gotinvention.com
Del retiro de los cargos al exsecretario de Defensa mexicano hablamos con Arturo Sarukhán y Ginger Thompson. Del proyecto de ley argentino, con Maia Jastreblansky. Y sobre lo que pasó en Berlín, con el parlamentario Konstantin Kuhle
ProPublica obtained and published a secret recording from inside a border patrol detention center that captured the sounds of children, recently separated from their families at the Mexican border, sobbing and begging for their parents. The audio clip was played on the floors of Congress, sparking widespread condemnation and having an almost immediate impact, with President Trump signing an executive order to end the family separation policy within 48 hours of its publication. ProPublica reporters then dug deeper into conditions at the detention centers, detailing abuse and assaults on immigrant children, directly countering the administration’s claims that the shelters were safe havens. Read, and listen, to their reporting here: https://www.propublica.org/series/zero-tolerance In this episode, Heidi Legg talks with reporters Ginger Thompson and Mike Grabell about getting the audio recording, and how their reporting unfolded and uncovered more and more layers from there. This episode is part of the Shorenstein Center's special series of interviews with the finalists for the 2019 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Journalism. The Goldsmith Prize winner will be announced at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government on March 12, 2019. Music provided by ExtremeMusic.com
Thank you to author Ginger Thompson and ProPublica for your incredible reporting and for allowing us to use this audio. You can read the whole story here: https://www.propublica.org/article/children-separated-from-parents-border-patrol-cbp-trump-immigration-policy
Last month, when federal officials revealed that they had lost track of nearly 1,500 unaccompanied minors who had arrived on the southern border alone without their parents, the admission caused a national outcry. On Monday, when ProPublica reporter Ginger Thompson released audio she obtained of 10 Central American children, separated from their parents by immigration authorities at the border, that outcry turned into an uproar. Yet, according to an exclusive report from Anita Kumar, White House correspondent for the news agency McClatchyDC and her colleague Franco Ordonez, the actual number of children that the US Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) has actually lost is much greater. In this week’s episode of “TrumpWatch” on WBAI New York, host Jesse Lent talks to Anita about the disturbing findings in her article “US officials likely lost track of nearly 6,000 unaccompanied migrant kids” and the wider government response to the crisis at the border.
Last month, when federal officials revealed that they had lost track of nearly 1,500 unaccompanied minors who had arrived on the southern border alone without their parents, the admission caused a national outcry. On Monday, when ProPublica reporter Ginger Thompson released audio she obtained of 10 Central American children separated from their parents by immigration authorities at the border, that outcry turned into an uproar. Yet, according to an exclusive report from Anita Kumar, White House correspondent for the news agency McClatchyDC, the actual number of children that the US Office of Refugee Resettlement has lost is actually much greater. On this week's TrumpWatch, Anita expands on the disturbing findings in her article “US officials likely lost track of nearly 6,000 unaccompanied migrant kids.”
Last month, when federal officials revealed that they had lost track of nearly 1,500 unaccompanied minors who had arrived on the southern border alone without their parents, the admission caused a national outcry. On Monday, when ProPublica reporter Ginger Thompson released audio she obtained of 10 Central American children separated from their parents by immigration authorities at the border, that outcry turned into an uproar. Yet, according to an exclusive report from Anita Kumar, White House correspondent for the news agency McClatchyDC, the actual number of children that the US Office of Refugee Resettlement has lost is actually much greater. On this week's TrumpWatch, Anita expands on the disturbing findings in her article “US officials likely lost track of nearly 6,000 unaccompanied migrant kids.”
Ginger Thompson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning senior reporter at ProPublica. Her most recent article is "How the U.S. Triggered a Massacre in Mexico." “How many times have I written the phrase ‘a town that was controlled by drug traffickers?' I had no idea what that really meant. What does it mean to live in a town that’s controlled by drug traffickers? And how does it get that way? One of the things I was hoping that we could do by having the people who actually lived through that explain it to us was that—to bring you close to that and say, ‘No, here’s what that means.’” Thanks to MailChimp, Casper, and Outside the Box for sponsoring this week's episode. @gingerthomp1 Thompson on Longform [01:30] "How the U.S. Triggered a Massacre in Mexico" (ProPublica / National Geographic • Jun 2017) [01:45] Thompson’s Archive at The New York Times [01:45] "Trafficking In Terror" (New Yorker • Dec 2015) [02:30] readthissummer.com [02:45] Patient H.M.: A Story of Memory, Madness, and Family Secrets (Luke Dittrich • Random House • 2016) [02:45] Luke Dittrich on the Longform Podcast [05:15] Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster (Svetlana Alexievich • Picador • 2006) [34:30] "A Drug Family in the Winner’s Circle" (New York Times • Jun 2012) [38:45] "Nafta to Open Foodgates, Engulfing Rural Mexico" (New York Times • Dec 2002) [38:45] Thompson’s “Fatal secretes in Honduras” series (with Gary Cohn • Baltimore Sun • 1995) [43:15] "Calderón Wins Narrow Victory in Mexico Election" (with James C. McKinley Jr. • New York Times • Jul 2006) [45:30] "Mexico City Journal; The Rich, Famous and Aghast: A Peep-Show Book" (New York Times • Sep 2002) [46:30] "Richest Mexican talks equity— Business International Herald Tribune" (New York Times • Jun 2006) [52:15] "Reaping What Was Sown On the Old Plantation; A Landowner Tells Her Family’s Truth. A Park Ranger Wants a Broader Truth." (New York Times • Jun 2000) [55:30] "‘There’s No Real Fight Against Drugs’" (Atlantic • Jul 2015)
After 9/11, the Drug Enforcement Administration reframed itsmission, warning that terrorists had gotten into the illegal drugtrade to finance their attacks. From al Qaeda and the Taliban toHezbollah and the FARC, the agency has pursued drug traffickingcharges in association with many terrorist groups. While the twomay be related in some regions, such as Colombia and Afghanistan,questions have arisen around the scope of narco-terrorism.How effective is the DEA’s work on narco-terrorism in thwartingterrorist activities? What other strategies could be used againstgroups like ISIS, whose funding comes from oil revenues and taxes,not drug trafficking? Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter GingerThompson recently investigated dozens of narco-terrorism cases,raising questions about whether the DEA is actually stoppingthreats or staging them.Speaker Ginger Thompson is Senior Reporter at ProPublica.Cynthia Gorney, Professor Emeritus, Berkeley Graduate School ofJournalism, University of California, Berkeley, moderates thediscussion.For more information about this event please visit:http://www.worldaffairs.org/event-calendar/event/1575