Displaying post 1 to 2 of 2
from
mefi
¡Ask a Mexican!
is a recurring feature in the Orange County (CA) Weekly
(archives)
in which columnist
Gustavo Arellano tackles questions from
pochos and
gabachos alike, about politics, cultural differences, and stereotypes.
What started as a
one-off joke has become one of the alt weekly's
more popular columns (LA Times), complete with crude, foul-mouthed, politically incorrect ruminations on
the origins of "the dirty Sanchez" and random
slaps at Guatemalans. Why do Mexican men always wear cowboy hats? Because "[w]earing a sombrero here screams "POR FAVOR DEPORT ME."
Why won't Mexicans tip? Actually they tip better, and "leave a little extra for a job well done—which includes how caliente the chica is."
posted to MetaFilter by donpedro
at 6:34 PM on April 21, 2006
(10 comments)
"The make him into something he wasn't."
Today, on the 200th anniversary of his birth, a national holiday, Mexico both honors and reconsiders Benito Juarez (Wikipedia:
Eng/
Span): "
Mexico's
Lincoln," the nation's first indigenous president, who served two
terms in the 1860s and 1870s. The capital city's
airport, a
border city of 1.1M,
universities, and streets and monuments in just
about every town are
named after Juarez, widely considered a national hero. Politicians left and right invoke his name, especially this year as Mexico prepares to elect a new president in July. For many in the Latin American left, he's a regional icon in the vein of Simon Bolivar and Ernesto "Che" Guevara; Havana unveiled a
bust (Span) of him last year. He's held up as a defender of the poor and the indigenous and an opponent to free trade. Today, however, some historians say
he was neither. For those who read Spanish, a leading Mexican (right-of-center) newspaper,
El Universal, also touches on the topic in
"Juarez, a controversial icon."
posted to MetaFilter by donpedro
at 1:37 PM on March 21, 2006
(5 comments)