Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
Home Celebrity

My TEDx Talk on Latine Representation in Hollywood

rmtsa by rmtsa
April 3, 2024
in Celebrity
0
My TEDx Talk on Latine Representation in Hollywood
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You might also like

Wake Forest Honors Black Couple Who Broke Barriers With Residence Hall

How Gucci Mane’s Wife Keyshia Ka’oir Manages His Schizophrenia

Yung Miami Pulls Receipts On Tyla Song Stealing Claims

Since I was a young kid, I wanted to be a writer. I spent my summers reading, lying on my bedroom floor with my glasses slipping down my nose. But despite my fascination with storytelling, pursuing a career in writing never seemed realistic. Instead, I majored in English and embarked on a somewhat related career in cause-based communications and marketing.

At those jobs, I met a lot of women who were creating art that was meaningful to them and their communities. They weren’t household names, but they showed me that I’d been wrong. They proved to me that writers who look like me or grew up with similar experiences deserve a shot at getting our stories out there.

At the same time, I decided to finally go for it and pursue a career as a professional writer. I couldn’t help but note the number of organizations that were embracing Latina storytelling. But back then there weren’t as many folks working on the criticism side and no one was focusing on encouraging Latinas like me to be critics. So I cofounded the indie publication LatinaMedia.Co, along with another Latina, Nicola Schulze, to give others the boost I needed — the explicit invitation to become a published critic.

Make no mistake, film criticism is broken. According to USC Annenberg’s Inclusion Initiative, white guys write 65.7 percent of movie reviews. Meanwhile, they make up 30 percent of the population. Way on the other side, Black, Indigenous, Asian, and Latina women combined write just 3.7 percent of movie reviews, despite making up around 20 percent of the population. I suppose they don’t break it out by group because the numbers would be so small.

And it’s not just film criticism. Journalism as a whole is too white, with Pew Research reporting that only 25 percent of reporters are people of color (and only eight percent are Hispanic, despite us being nearly 20 percent of the population). In Hollywood, the problem stretches all around the camera, with too few women-of-color executives, stars, creators, directors, and writers. Many believe that all those pledges to increase diversity and inclusion were just PR stints with not much changing in story-making fields.

Stories matter. They help us make meaning of the world. They allow us to understand ourselves and others. But the lack of representation in the books I read growing up made me feel like my stories didn’t matter. Still, it’s funny how things work out. When I was working in nonprofits and meeting all these women storytellers, I also met a lot of activists who’d given TEDx Talks (some of them were the same lady artists). I looked at their examples and thought, I want to do that. Giving a TEDx Talk became a bucket list item for me, something I promised myself I’d be ready for someday.

That day came last year, five years after cofounding LatinaMedia.Co and embarking on a career in entertainment journalism. From my activist circles, I knew Tabby Biddle, a TEDx speaker and coach who, among other things, leads classes to encourage more women to give TED Talks. Because yes, TED is another one of those institutions that is historically exclusionary. While they’ve made some progress over the years, 56.2 percent of their speakers are still white men. Biddle saw my work and thought I might know some Latinas interested in the scholarship she was offering. I did happen to know someone, and that someone was me.

As the class was winding down, Tabby warned that it could take a year or more, along with multiple applications, to get on stage. I was relieved. Giving a TEDx Talk, where you share both ideas and yourself, was scary. I still struggle with that nagging voice inside of me that says, “I’m not good enough.” Still, I started a spreadsheet of potential events, sent out some initial feelers, and applied to one event.

And they picked me. The good people at TEDx Cherry Creek, a nonprofit staffed by volunteers and founded by current Colorado State Senator Dafna Michaelson Jenet working to get more women on the TED stage (see a trend here), selected me. Based on the super-quick video I submitted (it had to be 40 seconds or less!) and a handful of short essays, the event organizers selected me and 17 other women out of the 175 people who applied. I was thrilled, shocked, and nervous.

I then had three months to work with them and my cohort of truly impressive women to put together the talk that I had dreamed of giving, the one where I tell my story and make the case for more diversity in media criticism.

I argued that TV and movies hold a special place in our culture, influencing how we see ourselves and how we see others, which in turn affects how we build our systems and institutions. If we want this world to be for everyone, everyone needs a chance to tell stories and evaluate them — that was my thesis. But I didn’t stop there. I used myself as a test case for how this influence can be damaging, telling my story of losing and finding my voice again. I went on to explain how I’m paying it forward with LatinaMedia.Co. Then I ended the talk by inviting the audience to join me, giving everyone a three-step plan on how to change the face of media criticism and, from there, the world.

To get ready, I practiced every day. I conscripted friends and family members to listen. I guest spoke at a class at a community college for practice. When the day came, I was still scared. But I wasn’t nervous about my performance. I was anxious about standing in front of the world without armor, sharing my truth. I did it anyway. I cried for a moment once I got off stage, relieved and exhausted. I hugged my parents and husband, who’d traveled to hear me speak. And then I had to wait.

The event organizers had to edit the video, the TEDx people had to approve and post it. When it finally came out, I felt relieved and nervous all over again, this time about sharing it with the world.

Now here I am, a long way from the pink carpet of my childhood bedroom. And I’m here not because I’m some fearless shero. I’m here because I had so many examples of women seeing the hard thing and still going for it. I strive to be one of them. I think with this talk, with LatinaMedia.Co, with this article and the others I tap out, I’m doing my part to show my community that we belong anywhere we want to go. Because if I’ve learned anything over my years of working with Latina writers and thinkers, it’s that we’re just getting started.

Cristina Escobar is a POPSUGAR contributor who writes at the intersection of race, gender, and pop culture. She’s the cofounder and editor in chief of LatinaMedia.Co, a digital publication uplifting Latina and gender-nonconforming Latine perspectives in media.



Source link

Tags: HollywoodLatineRepresentationTalkTEDx
Share30Tweet19
rmtsa

rmtsa

Recommended For You

Wake Forest Honors Black Couple Who Broke Barriers With Residence Hall

by rmtsa
October 26, 2025
0
Wake Forest Honors Black Couple Who Broke Barriers With Residence Hall

Courtesy of Professor Beth Hopkins When Professor Beth Hopkins walked onto Wake Forest University’s campus in 1969, she knew it would not be easy. She was attending not...

Read more

How Gucci Mane’s Wife Keyshia Ka’oir Manages His Schizophrenia

by rmtsa
October 25, 2025
0
How Gucci Mane’s Wife Keyshia Ka’oir Manages His Schizophrenia

Source: MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images / Getty Gucci Mane and his wife Keyshia Ka’oir are working together to manage his ongoing struggle with schizophrenia and bipolar...

Read more

Yung Miami Pulls Receipts On Tyla Song Stealing Claims

by rmtsa
October 25, 2025
0
Yung Miami Pulls Receipts On Tyla Song Stealing Claims

Source: Kayla Oaddams/TheStewartofNY Yung Miami isn’t letting up on her claim that Tyla stole her latest track, “Chanel” from the former City Girl, and now she’s entered the...

Read more

Inside The Boardroom Beauty Leader’s Summit Where Black Women Redefine Power – Essence

by rmtsa
October 25, 2025
0
Inside The Boardroom Beauty Leader’s Summit Where Black Women Redefine Power – Essence

Courtesy of Damora Regala Last week, the beauty industry gathered for more than just another networking event — it was a reclamation. Inspired by ESSENCE’s December 2020 digital...

Read more

Best Essay Writing Services for US College Students

by rmtsa
October 25, 2025
0

  College is crazy busy these days. Students juggle classes. They work jobs. They do internships. They try to have a social life. Georgetown University did a study...

Read more
Next Post
Jonathan Nolan Still Wants to Finish ‘Westworld’

Jonathan Nolan Still Wants to Finish ‘Westworld’

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
DramaWired

Browse the Latest Entertainment News on DramaWired.com. Celebrity News, Movies, Music, Gossip, Comics, TV and More News.

CATEGORIES

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

  • Anthony Hopkins Says He Realized He Was an Alcoholic After Driving Drunk
  • Devil in Disguise’s Chris Sullivan, Michael Angarano on Season 2 Return
  • Abbott Elementary Season 5 Episode 5 Release Date, Time, Where to Watch

Copyright © 2023 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop

Copyright © 2023 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In