7 minute read
REPRESENTATION ON SCREEN VARIES
BY ZANIEL WALDO Staff Writer
Cinco de Mayo. The date is among America’s most popular Mexican celebrations, with celebrities, programs and organizations participating.
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At its core it is celebrating the victory against the French and declaring independence against them. We celebrate it now in various methods of celebration for the culture itself, including on the big and small screens.
Delta College Hispanics/Latino staff and students note a consensus in the positive reputation in Hollywood projects showcasing the culture. Several new and older movies were recommended to watch to get insight into the people and culture, though some offer stereotypical references.
Biographic Portrayals
“La Bamba,” “Selena,” “Stand and Deliver,” & “McFarland, USA”
These films depict the real-life stories of people and their struggles.
“La Bamba” focuses on Los Angeles teenager Ritchie Valens becoming an overnight rock ‘n’ roll success in 1958. As his fame rises, Valens has conflicts with his jealous brother and his trauma of a haunting nightmare of the plane crash that killed his best friend.
“Selena” tells the life story of performer Selena Quintanilla and how she was born into a musical Mexican-American family in Texas. She finds success in mainstream stardom and begins recording her Spanish-language albums. The life story of Quintanilla has film and series adaptations, so viewers can choose which format to watch based on their preferences.
“Stand and Deliver” focuses on Los Angeles high school teacher Jaime Escalante being hassled by challenging students. He opts to immerse his students in higher math through intensive study to ace California’s calculus test, only to learn the education system is questioning their scores.
“McFarland, USA” tells the story of struggling coach and teacher Jim White moving to the Central Valley. There he discovers buried potential in several players, and slowly turns them into championship runners.
Stereotypical Portrayals
“Blood In Blood Out,” “American Me,” “Boulevard Nights,” & “Mi Vida Loca”
These films present more stereotypically as they lean into gang violence within Chicano communities.
“Blood In Blood Out” focuses on two step-brothers and their biracial cousins and how a violent crime and the influence of narcotics alter their lives. One is incarcerated and sent to San Quentin, another becomes a heroin addict overcoming tragic results, and the other becomes a cop leading to conflicting issues with his relatives.
“American Me” depicts 30 years of Chicano gang life in Los Angeles. It focuses on three teens getting into trouble and soon arrested for a breakin. They go from reform school to prison, spending eighteen years there and becoming leaders of a powerful gang inside and outside the prison.
“Boulevard Nights” is the story of a young Mexican-American trying to resist the lure of street gangs in East Los Angeles, unlike his older brother. He struggles to take steps toward building himself a future with his girlfriend as he finds a sense of belonging in a gang.
“Mi Vida Loca” shows childhood best friends in a contemporary Los Angeles poor Hispanic neighborhood, later becoming bitter enemies. While their dispute escalates towards violence, violence around them also impacts their lives.
Exaggerated Realistic Portrayals
“End of Watch,” “Apocalypto,” “Machete,” “Mayans MC,” “Narcos: Mexico,” & “On My Block”
These projects take inspiration and influence from realistic events but take it to an extreme with action and drama to make for attention catchers.
“End of Watch” shows longtime LAPD partners and friends patrolling one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in Los Angeles. Their honor and dedication are unmatched as they always have each other’s back, but all hell breaks loose for the officers when they run afoul of a vicious Mexican cartel.
“Apocalypto” takes influence from indigenous ancestry by depicting the story of a peaceful hunter in a remote tribe captured and scheduled for a ritual sacrifice until he makes a daring escape from the Mayan Kingdom as he tries to make it back to his pregnant wife and son.
“Machete” tells the story of a former Mexican Federale hitman set up for failure at a job. After recovering, he is out for revenge on his former employers.
“Mayans M.C.” follows a motorcycle club charter on the California/ Mexico border. We see a former golden boy, fresh out of prison, as a prospect in the charter who must carve out his new outlaw identity.
“Narcos: Mexico” explores when the Mexican trafficking world was a loose, disorganized confederation in the 1980s, showing traffickers unifying to build an empire, as the DEA agent assigned to the case learns his assignment is more challenging than he imagined.
“On My Block” is a comedy show about four street-savvy friends nav-
Taylor Evans Patrick Eley
A Turlock-raised comic who began performing stand-up comedy in 2014.
“How I got started in comedy, nothing really drew me to it. You ever tell a lie then have to live a lie?” Evans asked half-jokingly which was immediately followed by laughter. Taylor Evans shares with the Collegian how he began working as a comic, as well as his greatest success and his hardest failure within his stand-up career.
Comedian and martial artist.
igating through the triumph, pain, and newness of high-school set in the rough inner city.
Realistic Portrayal
“My Family” traces three generations of an immigrant family’s trials, tribulations, tragedies, and triumphs. Each generation contends with political and social hardships, ranging from illegal deportations in the 1930s to gang fights in the 1950s to familial tensions in the 1970s.
EASY-GOING & LIGHT-HEARTED “Coco,” “The Book of Life,” “Maya and the Three,” & “George Lopez”
“Coco” is a Disney-animated film that focuses on a boy who dreams of becoming a musician like his idol despite his family’s disapproval. He finds himself on an afterlife adventure, depicted with influence from traditional Mexican beliefs.
“The Book of Life” is an animated film about three childhood friends from a small Mexican town. Their lives take different paths as they grow older, but the love triangle remains. They’re unaware two death deities have made a high-stakes wager based on the outcome of the love triangle.
“Maya and the Three” is an animated miniseries that takes influences from indigenous culture. It portrays a Mesoamerican warrior princess embarking on a quest to recruit three legendary fighters to fulfill an ancient prophecy and save humanity from the wrath of vengeful gods.
“George Lopez” is a sitcom TV show starring the Mexican stand-up comic as a husband devoted to his wife and their children while having a complicated relationship with his live-in, insensitive, difficult mother.
Eley lived in many places before calling the 209 area his home, including Florida where he was introduced to boxing during his undergraduate. “I stopped all of that and [left] to get the regular 9 to 5 education and job. And then I really hated my life,” Eley said. Patrick Eley shares how he began combat sports and how he found himself performing comedy.
Read the stories online at www.DeltaCollegian.net
BY DYLAN JAEKEL Feature Editor
May 5th kicked off the NorCal regional playoff games for Delta’s softball team.
Delta played against Fresno City College. This was their first time playing this season, as a game scheduled for March 11 was postponed.
The May 5th game was close, but Delta came out on top with eight runs to Fresno’s seven.
Delta and Fresno then played their second game May 6. Another close game, but once again Delta beat Fresno 6-5.
The Mustangs worked hard to pull two wins for Delta, and plan to keep it up.
“I’m super excited. If we play how we are known to play, then we’ll definitely come out with a win,” said pitcher Madison Nelson. “I’m just super excited. I really love all of the girls and I’m just happy to be here with this team.”
The 2022-23 season began roughly with a combination of weather, Covid outbreaks, and even a bus breaking down. Despite the challenges the team persevered, and became closer as a group.
“We started off getting a lot of our games delayed. Our bus broke down, we had a lot of technical difficulties in the beginning of the season and then at the end of the season we really came together and we started winning games. I feel like we’re all just one big happy family now,” said Nelson.
“Number one I’m proud of the group. If you look back at our season we started out with a halted game that we scheduled three or four times that we didn’t finish. Our first home game was postponed again, so we couldn’t play. Then we got going for about a week and a half and then we had a C ovid breakout where we had to sit for seven days, so it was tough for us to get on a roll,” said head coach Jim Fisher. “We knew we were a very athletic group, we just couldn’t get things going. And then as soon as the weather cleared up and we started to get on a roll,we started playing better and better.”
The team has worked hard this season, getting themselves to where they are now.
“The team’s bond and compatibility with each other has likely been a large contributor to their success. “We practice every day of the week, and we just work hard through our two hour slot,” said catcher Sydney Featherston. “We just grind everything out in hopes of bringing it out on the field the next game.”
The bonds and compatibility of the team has also contributed to their success and hopes for future games.
“We definitely have learned to trust each other more. You’ll see girls will have little smiles and stuff because I feel like we all bring out each other’s good qualities. I feel like we’re very close knit and we have a really good bond on this team,” said Nelson.
“I would definitely say our team has a stronger bond than last year, its weird to say because last year we were really good together but this year is special. There’s a different chemistry out here and I think that’s what’s going to take us the farthest,” sad Featherston.
The team has grown over the season in their athleticism and it is bound to show during their post season.
“Our goal is, at the end of every week, are we better than we were last week. If the answer is yes then we’re going the right direction and that is definitely happening here,” said Fisher. “At the end of every week we’re better than we were before. So, the team that we were at the beginning of the season is not even close to the team we are now. That’s what I’m most proud of.”