“My Divo” is an Apple Original produced by Futuro Studios. Listen to the whole season here or wherever else you listen to podcasts. Todos los episodios también están en español .
Ada Limón ended her tenure as the 24th U.S. Poet Laureate in April of this year—the first Latina in the role. Limón’s work has been described as both tender and resounding, it rejoices in the ...
On May 5, 1993, the first episode of Latino USA aired on more than 50 public radio stations across the country. Today, we are celebrating 30 Years of Latino USA with something we’ve never done before: ...
Many Latinos grew up listening to the story of La Llorona, but a lesser-known story is that of La Lechuza—the witch who, through magic, can turn herself into giant white owls. But in Texas’ Rio Grande ...
The thousands of Central American and Mexican children that have come to the US border in the past few years are not getting here on their own. Here are the 10 things you need to know about so-called ...
In this two-part investigation, we look into Los Angeles County’s Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS), the largest child welfare agency in the U.S., and what happens when the system that ...
Maria Hinojosa: Dear Latino USA Listener, before we start, you should know that if you wanna listen to this episode, add free. Just join Futuro+ and you can join for as little as $7 a month. Joining ...
The 2024 presidential election has seen a rise in Spanish-language misinformation and in the content creators making a living by pushing out this false content. From conspiracies about the FBI raid at ...
After months of working closely with the archivists and librarians of the Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection at the University of Texas in Austin, the Latino USA team wanted to dig deeper ...
Borders, much of the time, are complicated places, and the 224-mile border dividing the Dominican Republic and Haiti is no exception. Over the centuries, the border has been the site of revolutions, ...
“The hunting of Latinos.” That’s how the mayor of Los Angeles described the last few months of increasingly violent immigration raids. They’re the brainchild of a Border Patrol chief who went rogue.
Samantha Ortiz remembers her childhood in Houston, Texas filled with memories of smells and foods her grandmothers on both, her Puerto Rican and Mexican sides of the family made. “When I think about ...
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