Episodes

  • Ruth Behar: The Dancing Anthropologist
    Jul 19 2024

    Anthropologist Ruth Behar is a groundbreaking scholar who also delights in salsa dancing.

    Born in Cuba to a Jewish family, Ruth draws from her heritage as an anthropologist and writer. Her latest middle grade novel, “Across So Many Seas,” was released in early 2024.

    In this episode, we spend the afternoon with Ruth and producer Elisa Baena before salsa class. They discuss Ruth’s writing process, how Ruth’s personal history inspired “Across So Many Seas,” and why the creative experiences of writing and dancing are connected.

    You can read more about the episode here.

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    21 mins
  • My Divo: Juárez and Its Secrets
    Jul 14 2024

    Today, Latino USA shares episode 2 of the "My Divo" podcast.

    Get in, we’re going clubbing in Juárez! It’s going to be glitzy, it’s going to be gritty. This is the nighttime scene that birthed Juan Gabriel. But like many cities, Juárez holds secrets. Maria uncovers a haunting secret about Juan Gabriel and, along the way, confronts a dark piece of the past in her own family.

    "My Divo" is an Apple Original podcast produced by Futuro Studios.

    Follow and listen on Apple Podcasts.

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    41 mins
  • Introducing: My Divo
    Jul 12 2024

    This week, Latino USA shares an episode of the "My Divo" podcast.

    For host Maria Garcia, Mexican megastar Juan Gabriel has always held a singular allure. He was a prolific composer and one of the world’s greatest showmen. There was a lightness and a bigness to him—a big queer exuberance. And now, as the first openly gay woman in her family line, Maria looks to Juan Gabriel as a key to reconcile her queerness with her Mexican heritage.

    "My Divo" is an Apple Original podcast produced by Futuro Studios.

    Follow and listen on Apple Podcasts.

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    28 mins
  • The Strange Death of José de Jesús, Part 2
    Jul 7 2024

    In part two of our two-part special, we continue our investigation into the death of a man in a U.S. immigration detention center in 2015. José de Jesús turned himself into Border Patrol saying somebody was after him. Three days later, he died by suicide after stuffing a sock down his throat. In part two of this story, surveillance video reveals clues about what happened inside his cell, and an internal investigation from Immigration and Customs Enforcement answers many of our questions about what happened to José in the days leading up to his death.

    This story originally aired in 2016.

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    46 mins
  • How I Made It: Lido Pimienta on ‘Miss Colombia’
    Jul 5 2024

    Colombian-Canadian singer-songwriter Lido Pimienta tells us how her experience of migration led to her love of Afro-Colombian music, how a beauty pageant and its underlying anti-blackness inspired her new album, and how she came to collaborate with the legendary Afro-Colombian ensemble, Sexteto Tabalá, in her track "Pelo Cucú.”

    This episode originally aired in 2020.

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    13 mins
  • The Strange Death of José de Jesús, Part 1
    Jun 30 2024

    A man dies in a U.S. immigration detention center, under unusual circumstances. He is found unresponsive in his cell, with a sock stuffed down his throat. His death is ruled a suicide, but little information is put out about what happened, and the family wants answers. In this first part of a special two-part series, Latino USA investigates why José de Jesús died in the custody of the U.S. government, and what his death tells us about conditions—especially mental health services—inside the immigration detention system.

    This story originally aired in July of 2016.

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    49 mins
  • How I Made It: Apple Emojis
    Jun 28 2024

    When Angela Guzman started her internship at Apple back in 2008 she had no idea her first project would have such an impact on how we communicate. Guzman co-designed the first set of Apple Emojis and our keyboards haven't been the same since.

    This episode originally aired in 2019.

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    9 mins
  • In the Shadow of the Wall
    Jun 23 2024

    This election year, a question roams in many voters' minds: Is there an “invasion” on our southern border? The answer from plenty of the people who live and work there is no. To understand what is really going on at the border, we travel to Sasabe, a tiny community in a remote area of the Arizona border with Mexico, to find out how human-smuggling battles within the Sinaloa cartel turned it into a ghost town. We also visit a pop-up camp set up on the U.S. side of the border fence. There, volunteers help thousands of asylum seekers from all over the world who turn themselves into the Border Patrol every day.


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    56 mins