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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Synecdoche,
By
This review is from: Brown is the New Green (DVD)
George Lopez had a successful show on English-language TV and has a successful standup routine. His success is used as both the present and future potential of Latinos as viewers and as a market.
This documentary fleshes out facts about the Latino consumer. It emphasizes that not all Latinos solely watch Spanish-language TV. It emphasizes that many Latinos are bilingual and pursue entertainment in both Spanish and English. It also says that Latino youth are embracing the Internet just as much as young people of other races. Still, I have two main concerns with this work. First, it derides businesses for advertising to a Latino market, as if the businesses' only motive was to profit off this group. When advertisers pay attention to a market, in our capitalist country, that's a good thing. Gay and lesbian publications had to beg advertisers to pay attention to them because advertisers ignored them fearing their products would be seen as "gay products." Advertisements help fund magazines and TV shows. Those entities who want to speak to Latinos embrace marketing, not avoid it. Second, the work starts by saying so many ethnicities are just swept into this mega-term "Latino." True, but many are empowered by that. I heard Che Guevara encouraged countries to see themselves as Latino. Dr. Suzanne Oboler wrote that middle-class Latinos often embrace the term. In this very documentary, interviewees often say "Latino this and that" and don't spell out their ethnicities. As most Latinos in the US are of Mexican ancestry, like George Lopez, that group has the focus in this work and non-Chicanos may feel a bit left out. The work sometimes flashes facts and translations on the screen, very similar to the satire "A Day without a Mexican." The work tries to be diverse in terms of gender, age, and celebrity status. A Caucasian who had a show on TV decades ago in which he pretended to be Latino is interviewed. This was radical in that I've never seen Amos 'n' Andy interviewed on a Black production. I think most Caucasian actors who appeared in "blackface" or "yellowface" try to hide that fact or downplay it. If you look very carefully, almost all of the Latino media executives interviewed here are of European phenotype. I wonder if Latinos of darker complexion have access to the heights of media like that group. George Lopez states that he can't get many roles that white-skinned Latinos get. Absolutely true and on point! However, this work could dig further. It spoke of indigenous and white Latinos in this regard. But what about Black and Asian Latinos? There are many of them in real life, but you almost never seen them on TV defined as such. They interview a Latina who works for BET, but they never say BET is an African-American network. She may have some African ancestry, but I really think George Lopez's comment should have been expanded to Black-phenotyped Latinos. Plus, Spanish-language channels have been critiqued by many for focusing on the white-skinned but this documentary said nothing of that.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brown is the New Green PBS Home Video,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Brown is the New Green (DVD)
George Lopez is highly educated and shares his insight and personal experiences during an interview about his childhood and growing up in America. He talks about the struggle that Hispanics face and how minorities in America can better themselves. He highlights his own career and his struggles to the top while mentioning family and friends before and after the fame. He also goes on to describe life in the last two generations of Mexican Americans. This is truly a very insightful documentary. Not a stand-up comedy special as many may think this dvd to be but very original and refreshing as I have never seen this side of George. I have only seen him perform onstage but never interviewed in a serious manner. Also, I have never heard an interpretation of Mexican Americans as intimate and invigorating as this one. What an impact a new perspective can have. His unique perceptions really open up new horizons for the individual curious about Chicano culture. I reiterate,... very refreshing. 5 STARS!! Highly Recommended!!
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By
This review is from: Brown is the New Green (DVD)
I am very happy with this purchase, the condition was excellent and it arrived promptly. I would buy from this vendor again.
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Brown is the New Green by Jennifer Craig Kobzik (DVD - 2007)
$24.99 $13.49
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