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Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
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Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias

Game Of Thrones
Más allá de que ya se conoce el comienzo de la séptima temporada de la serie —16 de julio— también se supo que el cantante y compositor inglés Ed Sheeran (publicamos la reseña de su nuevo disco acá) tendrá un papel en la serie. “Durante años hemos tratado de incluir a Ed Sheeran en el programa para sorprender a Maisie, en esta ocasión finalmente lo logramos”, es el comunicado emitido en conjunto por los showrunners David Benioff y Dan Weiss. Otro dato que se confirmó es que la octava y última temporada de la serie será más corta que las que la anteceden, como ya se había rumoreado. El mismo día que se conoció el comienzo de la séptima temporada, también se publicó el primer teaser de la misma, y aunque esté muy bien realizado es en general un repaso a lo que ya ha pasado. 

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Cine uruguayo para los Platino
Uruguay presenta a sus candidatos para los Premios Platino
Siete películas nacionales fueron seleccionadas para competir en la próxima edición, la cuarta, de los Premios Platino, los equivalentes al Oscar del cine iberoamericano. Las siete películas son las siguientes: 

Clever
Los modernos
Las toninas van al Este 
Migas de pan
Columnas Quebradas
(documental)
El Mundo de Carolina (documental)
Nueva Venecia (documental)

Estas películas se presentarán a competir en distintas categorías como Ficción, Mejor Interpretación Femenina y Dirección, entre otras. La ceremonia de entrega de los Premios Platino será, luego de haberse realizado en Punta del Este el año pasado, en Madrid, en el mes de julio.

Premio para Mi Mundial
La película uruguaya Mi mundial, basada en una novela de Daniel Baldi y dirigida por Carlos Morelli ganó el premio Secuencia y Estrategia, que se entrega para rubros técnicos en el Festival de Cine de Guadalajara. La película se estrenará en Uruguay el próximo 22 de junio.

Mujer Maravilla
Salió el primer trailer de la próxima entrega de superhéroes de DC: Mujer Maravilla. La heroína ya había hecho su primera aparición en Batman v Superman: El nacimiento de la Justicia, pero acá el personaje interpretado por la morochaza Gal Gadot tiene una película entera para demostrar por qué es uno de los más poderosos de la escudería DC. Chris Pine, el lindito de tantas películas, es acá un alivio cómico. En la película se contará el origen de la amazona. 

Si no puede ver el video, haga click aquí.

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/divertite/cine/noticias-game-of-thrones-cine.html

“Todavía no sabía ni hablar y ya estaba vendiendo periódicos”, recordó orgulloso, Eduardo Serrano de 55 años, voceador de periódicos y revistas en esta ciudad.

Ser voceador es un oficio que le apasiona y en el que se ha mantenido firme al paso de los años, pese a que hoy los tiempos son otros, pues muchos prefieren leen las noticias o los espectáculos desde la comodidad de un teléfono celular y no de manera impresa.

“En aquellos años a unos se les hacía denigrante andar vendiendo periódicos, pero al paso del tiempo nosotros vemos que es un oficio agradable, es digno, es fabuloso ser voceador porque tenemos el roce con toda la gente de todos los estratos sociales”, expresó emocionado.

Dijo que la venta de periódicos es un oficio que ejerce desde muy pequeño, pues en aquellos años sólo circulaban en la ciudad dos periódicos: EL SOL DE LEÓN y El Heraldo de León.

Antes de pronunciar sus primeras palabras, Eduardo recuerda que fue acercado por su hermano mayor al puesto de periódicos y revistas, donde comenzó su historia en este gremio.

El voceador, portavoz de la noticia

Al paso de los años creció y trabajó su primer puesto que fue afuera del mercado “16 de Septiembre” en la colonia La Garita, después frente al Seguro Social y desde hace ya 39 años atiende su caseta de periódicos y revistas en el Jardín Allende en el Barrio Arriba.

“Con la llegada de las nuevas tecnologías se merma el oficio porque con un celular tienen acceso a las noticias, pero solamente tienen condensada la noticia, no como debe de ser.

“A mucha gente todavía le gusta el periódico y la revista impresa, porque para leer no hay como tenerlo físico, verlo cuando se desea, pues una tableta no es lo mismo que un libro”, señaló.

Don Eduardo dijo que es feliz en su puesto.

“Somos los portavoces de las noticias, somos el último eslabón de todos los diarios, de todas las  revistas. Pero así como somos portadores de buenas noticias, también de malas noticias que son las más, desgraciadamente”, comentó.

Reconoció que ser voceador es un oficio noble pero también enfrenta muchas carencias.

Dijo que muchos de sus compañeros se han desanimado porque la situación que enfrenta el gremio es difícil.

“Estamos en la calle, los periódicos se venden poco y las revistas más poco, hoy el voceador tiene que matarse un poquito más para tratar de llevar el alimento a sus casas y nos hace falta seguridad social, no tenemos acceso a la vivienda ni a nada”, comentó.

Compartió que entre los proyectos que hoy tiene al frente de la Unión de Voceadores de Periódicos y Revistas de León es que la “Casa del Voceador”  que tienen desde hace siete años, sea un lugar de servicio social.

Source Article from https://www.elsoldeleon.com.mx/local/voceadores-son-portavoces-de-noticias

CARSON, California.- Una vez que se reactivó la MLS con un nuevo torneo, Giovani dos Santos sufrió una mala noticia, ya que se lesionó durante el juego entre LA Galaxy y Portland Timbers.

Gío presentó una distensión de tendones en su pierna derecha, que le impidió jugar los noventa minutos. El mexicano solamente participó durante la primera parte en donde acusó molestias.

Después del silbatazo final, el técnico del equipo Curt Onalfo, explicó un posible reporte médico, mismo que será hasta hoy cuando se oficialice. “Gío dos Santos tiene una pequeña distensión de tendones o quizás solo fatiga. Sabremos con exactitud mañana (hoy), pero él no podía seguir jugando en el segundo tiempo, por eso tuve que sustituirlo.

La lesión podría poner en predicamentos a Juan Carlos Osorio, quien en breve deberá dar su lista de seleccionados del Tricolor para los juegos de eliminatoria mundialista frente a Costa Rica y Trinidad y Tobago a finales de marzo.

Source Article from https://www.elsoldezacatecas.com.mx/deportes/malas-noticias-gio-esta-lesionado

El CEO de FacebookMark Zuckerberg, brindó una charla en North Carolina A&T State University donde habló sobre la importancia de construir comunidad. Los alumnos de esta casa de estudios realizaron varias preguntas al fundador de la red social sobre este y más temas.




“Necesitamos construir diferentes cosas que haga que la gente se una para trabajar junta (…) y así resolver juntos en comunidad diferentes problemas que nos aquejan” señaló Zuckerberg en una trasmisión en vivo desde su cuenta de Facebook. Así se refirió a problemas globales como el cambio climático y otras dificultades, que a su juicio, pueden ser resueltas en colectivo.




Entre las preguntas que los alumnos de la universidad estadounidense formularon, se habló de las noticias falsas. Zuckerberg aceptó la responsabilidad de la red social frente a este contenido e incluso aceptó que la empresa, muchas veces, es engañada por este tipo de noticias. Se trata de un trabajo constante de Facebook y un problema con el que aún está lidiando.


“Estamos realmente en contra de las noticias falsas y la falta de información, hay algunas acusaciones que dicen que realmente queremos este tipo de contenidos y servicios. Pero eso no es cierto. Nadie en nuestra comunidad quiere información falsa. Lo que todo el mundo quiere es información real. Si alguien tiene una mala experiencia en Facebook, ya no confiará en este ni en sus contenidos y eso no es bueno para nosotros”, dijo.


Dentro de este debate, Zuckerberg enfatizó la importancia que tiene la veracidad de un contenido ante la posibilidad de que se trate en realidad de un desacuerdo de opiniones. “Así que antes de retirar algún contenido tenemos que estar seguros de que se trata de falsedad y no de una opinión que hiere los sentimientos de algunas personas y por ello es catalogado como tal”, señaló. Cabe mencionar que para este tipo de situaciones Facebook maneja otro tipo de mecanismos.


Zuckerberg también habló en esta reunión sobre algunas anécdotas como padre de familia y lo feliz que se encuentra de recibir a su próxima hija. Según el CEO de Facebook, la experiencia de cambiar pañales le dio una nueva perspectiva del mundo.


El fundador de la red social más grande e importante del mundo hizo un especial énfasis en la importancia que hay en tener más ingenieros y profesionales creativos que logren conectar con el mundo. “Creo que este es un tiempo único en la historia de la humanidad (…) podemos ir juntos a construir y dar herramientas suficientes para empoderar”.


A esta asamblea de 50 minutos asistieron 200 alumnos de dicha casa de estudios. Zuckerberg instó a los jóvenes a finalizar sus estudios superiores. Como se recuerda, hace algunos días anunció que volvería a Harvard. “Estoy seguro que esto se será lo que hará a mis padres los seres más orgullosos del mundo. Sé que no soy el mejor mensajero para esto, pero: sigan en la universidad”, señaló el CEO de Facebook.


LEE MÁS SOBRE FACEBOOK








 

Source Article from http://elcomercio.pe/tecnologia/facebook/mark-zuckerberg-hay-que-enfrentar-problemas-comunidad-noticia-1975594


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
Download Full Image

Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias

“Todavía no sabía ni hablar y ya estaba vendiendo periódicos”, recordó orgulloso, Eduardo Serrano de 55 años, voceador de periódicos y revistas en esta ciudad.

Ser voceador es un oficio que le apasiona y en el que se ha mantenido firme al paso de los años, pese a que hoy los tiempos son otros, pues muchos prefieren leen las noticias o los espectáculos desde la comodidad de un teléfono celular y no de manera impresa.

“En aquellos años a unos se les hacía denigrante andar vendiendo periódicos, pero al paso del tiempo nosotros vemos que es un oficio agradable, es digno, es fabuloso ser voceador porque tenemos el roce con toda la gente de todos los estratos sociales”, expresó emocionado.

Dijo que la venta de periódicos es un oficio que ejerce desde muy pequeño, pues en aquellos años sólo circulaban en la ciudad dos periódicos: EL SOL DE LEÓN y El Heraldo de León.

Antes de pronunciar sus primeras palabras, Eduardo recuerda que fue acercado por su hermano mayor al puesto de periódicos y revistas, donde comenzó su historia en este gremio.

El voceador, portavoz de la noticia

Al paso de los años creció y trabajó su primer puesto que fue afuera del mercado “16 de Septiembre” en la colonia La Garita, después frente al Seguro Social y desde hace ya 39 años atiende su caseta de periódicos y revistas en el Jardín Allende en el Barrio Arriba.

“Con la llegada de las nuevas tecnologías se merma el oficio porque con un celular tienen acceso a las noticias, pero solamente tienen condensada la noticia, no como debe de ser.

“A mucha gente todavía le gusta el periódico y la revista impresa, porque para leer no hay como tenerlo físico, verlo cuando se desea, pues una tableta no es lo mismo que un libro”, señaló.

Don Eduardo dijo que es feliz en su puesto.

“Somos los portavoces de las noticias, somos el último eslabón de todos los diarios, de todas las  revistas. Pero así como somos portadores de buenas noticias, también de malas noticias que son las más, desgraciadamente”, comentó.

Reconoció que ser voceador es un oficio noble pero también enfrenta muchas carencias.

Dijo que muchos de sus compañeros se han desanimado porque la situación que enfrenta el gremio es difícil.

“Estamos en la calle, los periódicos se venden poco y las revistas más poco, hoy el voceador tiene que matarse un poquito más para tratar de llevar el alimento a sus casas y nos hace falta seguridad social, no tenemos acceso a la vivienda ni a nada”, comentó.

Compartió que entre los proyectos que hoy tiene al frente de la Unión de Voceadores de Periódicos y Revistas de León es que la “Casa del Voceador”  que tienen desde hace siete años, sea un lugar de servicio social.

Source Article from https://www.elsoldeleon.com.mx/local/voceadores-son-portavoces-de-noticias






Eñigio Rojas.- Por órdenes de la ministra Iris Varela, los tres pranes que el año pasado lideraron el motín dentro de la Penitenciaria General de Venezuela (PGV) fueron recluidos en área de máxima seguridad del Centro Penitenciario de Formación del Hombre Nuevo “El Libertador”, ubicado en Tocuyito (Car). “Estamos ubicándolos en un solo sitio para tenerlos a la orden de las investigaciones; no habrá impunidad con estos crímenes”, dijo Varela a Últimas Noticias.

Los sujetos son Jean Manuel Montilla (El Chimaras), Nelson Barreto (El Ratón) y Franklin Hernández Quezada (Franklin Masacre), quienes estaban presos en el Centro para Procesados “26 de Julio” desde el 28 de octubre de 2016, día en que se entregaron a las autoridades para dar paso al plan de pacificación en la PGV.

Pero tras el desenterramiento de 14 cadáveres que estaban en una fosa común de la PGV, Varela ordenó sacarlos de la “26 de Julio”, que queda en San Juan de los Morros (Guá), y recluirlos en Tocuyito (Car). Sospechan que el trío de pranes son los autores de la fosa común.

Al parecer allí enterraban a los presos que morían torturados por “Franklin Masacre”, quien no toleraba que los reos se atrasaran con el pago de las causas, una especie de “impuesto por vivir” que rondaba los Bs 2.500 cada semana.

El Grupo de Respuesta Inmediata del Ministerio Penitenciario y obreros que trabajaban en la refacción de la PGV dieron con los restos humanos. El Ministerio Público envió un equipo de expertos para la investigación penal abierta, según boletín de prensa.




Source Article from http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/sucesos/reubican-pranes-la-pgv/


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
Download Full Image

Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
Download Full Image

Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias

La ciudad de Olavarría, en la provincia Buenos Aires, quedó desbordada tras el recital del Indio Solari que terminó en caos ayer por la noche. Según información de la agencia DyN recogida por La Nación, hay varios camiones circulando por las rutas que vuelven cargados de fanáticos del músico que quedaron varados. 

El gobierno de Olavarría había anunciado que iba a usar ómnibus aportados por intendencias y el Ejército para mover a cientos de los concurrentes. Sin embargo, el problema es que en medio de un clima de desorden la mayoría de las personas se quedaron sin ómnibus para regresar. Ante el desborde que esto causó se recurrió a los camiones. 

Ya hubo incidentes en los alrededores de la terminal, con personas que prendían fuego mobiliario urbano y basura, por lo que las autoridades echaron mano de los recursos disponibles para descomprimir. Se han utilizado incluso camiones de basura para trasladar a la gente. “Había personas que estaban incentivando a los demás a la violencia”, justificó el secretario de Economía municipal, Gastón Acosta. 

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/mundo/indio-solari-olavarria-evacuan-fanaticos.html

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Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/hay-alerta-amarilla-vientos-fuertes.html

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Source Article from http://noticias.caracoltv.com/camino-a-la-paz/donde-estan-y-cuantos-hombres-tienen-las-disidencias-de-las-farc

\n”},ko=function(){var a=[],b=document.getElementsByTagName(“base”);if(b)for(var c=0,d=b.length;cw;w++){if(0\x3c/script>’,im(a,c,f,c))}b.I=!0;Wl();a.j||(a.ra[M(e[0])]=window.setTimeout(z(a.sb,a),F.getInstance().get(13)));lk(vo.getInstance(),Hg.Ha)},km=function(a,b,c,d){var e=””;d&&(e=e+’

Source Article from http://noticias.caracoltv.com/deportes/sergio-henao-titulo-de-la-paris-niza


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
Download Full Image

Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
Download Full Image

Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
Download Full Image

Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias

Noticias Telemundo’s “Inmigración, Trump y los Hispanos” (Immigration, Trump and the Hispanic Community) Town Hall broadcast on Sunday, February 12 at 7PM/6 C, ranked # 1 in Spanish-language TV in primetime across all key demographics, averaging 1.57 million total viewers, 708,000 adults 18 to 49 and 325,000 adults 18 to 34, according to Nielsen. The news special moderated by Noticias Telemundo News Anchor José Díaz-Balart also positioned Telemundo as the #1 Spanish-language network during the entire primetime on Sunday, across all key demos.

“Noticias Telemundo is empowering millions of Latinos with reliable and TRANSPARENT information at a time of change,” said José Díaz-Balart. “Viewers trust us because they know our only commitment is to present the facts the way they are, with professionalism and a total commitment to our community.”

“Immigration, Trump and the Hispanic Community” also reached 1.6 million viewers on Facebook, generating 23,000 global actions on the social network.

The Town Hall answered viewers’ questions about the impact of President Trump’s immigration policy on the Hispanic community. The news special featured a panel of experts, including immigration lawyer and Telemundo contributor Alma Rosa Nieto; Telemundo conservative political analyst Ana Navarro; the Deputy Vice President of the National Council of La Raza (NCLR), Clarissa Martínez, and CHIRLA’s Executive Director, Angélica Salas. In addition, “El Poder en Ti”, Telemundo’s robust community initiative, launched an Internet site for Hispanics looking for information, tools and resources on immigration in parallel to the Town Hall.

“Inmigración, Trump y los Hispanos” is part of a series of Noticias Telemundo specials, including “Trump en la Casa Blanca,” produced the day after the elections, and “Trump y los Latinos,” which aired on Inauguration Day. All of these programs share an emphasis on allowing audiences to express their views and empower them by giving them access to trustworthy, rigorous and relevant information presented under Noticias Telemundo’s banner “Telling It Like It Is” (“Las Cosas Como Son” in Spanish).

Noticias Telemundo is the information unit of Telemundo Network and a leader provider in news serving the US Hispanics across all broadcast and digital platforms. Its award-winning television news broadcasts include the daily newscast “Noticias Telemundo,” the Sunday current affairs show “Enfoque con José Díaz-Balart” and the daily news and entertainment magazine “Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste.” The rapidly-growing “Noticias Telemundo Digital Team” provides continuous content to US Hispanics wherever they are, whenever they want it. Noticias Telemundo also produces award winning news specials, documentaries and news event such as political debates, forums and town halls.

Source: Nielsen L+SD IMP, 2/12/17. TEL #1 SLTV (vs UNI, UMA, AZA, ETV). Shareablee, 2/6/17-2/12/17.

Image courtesy of Telemundo.

Source Article from http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwtv/article/Noticias-Telemundos-IMMIGRATION-TRUMP-AND-THE-HISPANIC-COMMUNITY-Ranks-1-IN-Spanish-Language-TV-Sunday-212-20170214

Noticias Telemundo’s “Inmigración, Trump y los Hispanos” (Immigration, Trump and the Hispanic Community) Town Hall broadcast on Sunday, February 12 at 7PM/6 C, ranked # 1 in Spanish-language TV in primetime across all key demographics, averaging 1.57 million total viewers, 708,000 adults 18 to 49 and 325,000 adults 18 to 34, according to Nielsen. The news special moderated by Noticias Telemundo News Anchor José Díaz-Balart also positioned Telemundo as the #1 Spanish-language network during the entire primetime on Sunday, across all key demos.

“Noticias Telemundo is empowering millions of Latinos with reliable and TRANSPARENT information at a time of change,” said José Díaz-Balart. “Viewers trust us because they know our only commitment is to present the facts the way they are, with professionalism and a total commitment to our community.”

“Immigration, Trump and the Hispanic Community” also reached 1.6 million viewers on Facebook, generating 23,000 global actions on the social network.

The Town Hall answered viewers’ questions about the impact of President Trump’s immigration policy on the Hispanic community. The news special featured a panel of experts, including immigration lawyer and Telemundo contributor Alma Rosa Nieto; Telemundo conservative political analyst Ana Navarro; the Deputy Vice President of the National Council of La Raza (NCLR), Clarissa Martínez, and CHIRLA’s Executive Director, Angélica Salas. In addition, “El Poder en Ti”, Telemundo’s robust community initiative, launched an Internet site for Hispanics looking for information, tools and resources on immigration in parallel to the Town Hall.

“Inmigración, Trump y los Hispanos” is part of a series of Noticias Telemundo specials, including “Trump en la Casa Blanca,” produced the day after the elections, and “Trump y los Latinos,” which aired on Inauguration Day. All of these programs share an emphasis on allowing audiences to express their views and empower them by giving them access to trustworthy, rigorous and relevant information presented under Noticias Telemundo’s banner “Telling It Like It Is” (“Las Cosas Como Son” in Spanish).

Noticias Telemundo is the information unit of Telemundo Network and a leader provider in news serving the US Hispanics across all broadcast and digital platforms. Its award-winning television news broadcasts include the daily newscast “Noticias Telemundo,” the Sunday current affairs show “Enfoque con José Díaz-Balart” and the daily news and entertainment magazine “Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste.” The rapidly-growing “Noticias Telemundo Digital Team” provides continuous content to US Hispanics wherever they are, whenever they want it. Noticias Telemundo also produces award winning news specials, documentaries and news event such as political debates, forums and town halls.

Source: Nielsen L+SD IMP, 2/12/17. TEL #1 SLTV (vs UNI, UMA, AZA, ETV). Shareablee, 2/6/17-2/12/17.

Image courtesy of Telemundo.

Source Article from http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwtv/article/Noticias-Telemundos-IMMIGRATION-TRUMP-AND-THE-HISPANIC-COMMUNITY-Ranks-1-IN-Spanish-Language-TV-Sunday-212-20170214