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Posted 5/5/10 2:19 pm ET by MTV Tr3s in Celebrities, Immigration, Movies & CineMás
![]() image via aintitcool.com |
By Erika Ramirez
“We didn’t cross the border, the border crossed us,” Jessica Alba declares in Robert Rodriguez’s upcoming film, "Machete." On Cinco De Mayo, and in the midst of SB 1070 protests, a new trailer for "Machete" was released — throwing a clear shot at Arizona.
(The trailer was pulled from YouTube, but you can still watch it at aintitcool.com!)
Perfect timing, don't you think? According to Harry Knowles of aintitcool.com, who premiered the hot clip, Rodriguez is calling this his "illegal" trailer. Knowles explained how the re-edited version of the director’s original featured in "Grindhouse" (2007) came to be:
“Robert talked Fox into letting him [Rodriguez] put together a Cinco de Mayo message for Arizona.”
In the film, Danny Trejo stars as Machete, a Mexican ex-federal who hunts corrupted politicians who have betrayed him. Two weeks ago, Trejo sat down with IGN movies to speak about the film:
"It is going to be awesome. We duplicate scenes from the trailer in the movie. What that movie has is the three B's, what I like to call the three B's. And what that is babes, bullets and blood. And then it's got machetes, too. The film takes off from the trailer and then it just gets so over the top. I think the movie really lives up to the trailer. I'm really, really proud of it."
Written and co-directed by Rodriguez, "Machete" features Latino favorites such as Jessica Alba, Michelle Rodriguez, Cheech Marin and other Hollywood stars such as Robert De Niro, Steven Seagal and Lindsay Lohan.
"Machete" is scheduled to open on Labor Day weekend. We can't wait!
Tr3s Comunidad, what do you think about the "Machete" trailer? Sound off in the comments or @MTV3!
Posted 5/1/10 3:22 am ET by danielacapistrano in Cultura, Immigration
(image via trail2010.org) |
In a few weeks, an estimated 65,000 undocumented immigrants in the U.S. will graduate from high school, watching their dreams crumble as they struggle to survive. To combat this and other injustices, people across the country will gather on Saturday (May 1) to protest our immigration system.
MTV Tr3s Senior Producer Daniela Capistrano spoke with the Trail of Dreams group about their event in Washington D.C. and the journey that brought them there.
Juan, Felipe, Gaby and Carlos — undocumented Hispanic students in their 20s — took turns on Friday (April 30) introducing themselves to me through a crackling speaker phone, doing their best to condense years of unspeakable hardships.
All graduated high school with honors but were unable to attend universities. All were prohibited at various times from applying for a drivers license or library card. Sadly, each one of them shared similar stories of working odd jobs for less than minimum wage and standing by helplessly while family members were brutally dragged to jail and deported.
These are the voices of the Trail of Dreams group — young activists committed to convincing President Barack Obama to pass the DREAM Act (The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act). Beginning in January 2010, they marched 1,500 miles with other undocumented students and allies to Capitol Hill. On Saturday (May 1) they will stand with over 1,000 other students to demand the basic rights that many of us take for granted.
The DREAM Act, a bipartisan legislation pioneered by Sen. Orin Hatch [R-UT] and Sen. Richard Durbin [D-IL], would provide qualifying undocumented youth with a 6 year long conditional path to citizenship that requires completion of a college degree or two years of military service.
"Nobody feels good about the situation these kids are in," says Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which advocates for reduced immigration. "It was the decision of their parents to violate the law that put their children in this difficult situation."
For Carlos Roa, a 22 year old Trail of Dreams member who left Venezuela in 1987 with his parents, the DREAM Act would mean a chance for a new start — without living in fear.
"Senior year was depressing," Carlos recalled. "Friends were looking forward to graduating and their futures, while I felt like my life was going backwards and down the drain. I remember the assistant principal asking me, 'What are you going to do after high school?' I didn't know what to tell him. I ended up saying I was going to join the armed forces, knowing that I couldn't legally do that. After high school, I ended up working [low paying] odd jobs, 6 days a week. It was a difficult time."
After Carlos' mother passed away from cancer in 2006, the honor student who had dreamed of being an architect found himself unemployed and evicted. "It was tough for me," Carlos admitted. "I was 18 years old and I couldn't do anything. About a year after her death I told myself I could no longer live being undocumented or voiceless."
Carlos proceeded to submit his story to newspapers and magazines, eventually reaching Julia Preston at the New York Times. Her response (and other support) led to his involvement in the Trail of Dreams campaign.
(See more photos from their journey in our "Trail of Dreams" photo gallery!)
Gabby Pacheco, a 25 year old activist who remembers racing home after school to watch "TRL" on MTV, feels that everything changed when immigration came to her door. "After that, my activism hit another level. When the Trail of Dreams project was presented to me — after earning 3 degrees and seeing how life was going no where — I knew I had to do something."
Pacheco and her friends are tired after their trek to D.C., but not defeated. They also understand that others are afraid too. On their 1,500-mile walk, they were exposed to the other side of the immigration issue. Felipe Matos shared what it was like to be confronted by a minutemen member who was convinced it was their fault his wife was dying:
"Through out this journey, we've seen the power that sharing stories has on people.
A man in South Carolina who's eyes were watering because he was so angry, [approached us] to say that his wife needed an organ transplant. Because there was no donor, the [doctors] told them she only had a couple of months to live. He told us, 'It's all your fault because immigrants are talking all resources, she will die because of you!' We saw him as a man deeply in love with his wife, who was deeply concerned for her. We shared our story as students, as leaders who have only tried to contribute and we listened to his story and pain.
By the end, Gabby gave him hug and afterward he said, 'I'm sorry, you're completely not what I expected you to be.' So, lots of hearts and minds have changed along the journey. By sharing stories with the President, hopefully we can end this suffering."
Believing in Obama's campaign promises to support the Dream Act and immigration reform, the trekkers are refusing to be satisfied with simply meeting with a White House official — "We want to talk to him," Pacheco says.
For Juan Rodriguez, a 20 year old student from Colombia who lost all of his family through deportation, advocating for the DREAM Act empowers him to move past tragedy and help others. "I've seen how [current immigration law] has torn apart anything that was meaningful in my life. I want those same injustices to stop happening to millions of people facing terror on a daily basis."
With controversial immigration laws pending in Arizona and other states, even U.S. citizens who simply appear Hispanic are in danger of harassment from immigration officials. "We have to do something," Gabby explained. "No more talk — now it's time to act."
Supporters who would like to sign the DREAM Act petition can do so by simply texting TRAIL to 30644 on their mobile phones.
For more ways to show your support, send your feedback to @Trail2010 on Twitter, visit trail2010.org to learn more about the DREAM Act and participate in ongoing immigration events in your town.
The views expressed in this post by Daniela Capistrano do not necessarily reflect the views of Viacom, MTV Tr3s, Blogamole, MTV Networks or any other subsidiaries.
Posted 4/26/10 11:33 am ET by danielacapistrano in Cultura
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Arizona's new controversial immigration bill has ignited flames of controversy across the nation. Immigrants and lawmakers alike are criticizing the law; Gothamist reported that the Reverend Al Sharpton is planning a protest:
"We will go to Arizona when this bill goes into effect and walk the streets with people who refuse to give identification and force arrest."
In response to Arizona Governor Jan Brewer’s signing of the country’s most extreme anti-immigrant legislation, protests and rallies around the country are planned for May 1.
SB 1070 has awakened a youth protest movement in Arizona: Jessica Mejia, who was born and raised in Tucson and attends the University of Arizona, told CNN that she doesn't leave the house without three pieces of identification:
"Even if you're legal, you're in fear that maybe your driver's license isn't going to be enough or if you're walking down the street and the police stop you," said Mejia, 21. "It's a constant fear we're living in and even legal citizens are afraid to go out."
On April 22, more than 500 Arizona students walked out of a local high school in protest of the impending bill.
Two days days after SB 1070 was signed, a Phoenix man was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and claims he was a victim of racial-profiling.
Even Meghan McCain, who was born and raised in Arizona, doesn't support the bill. Her recent column for The Daily Beast was prefaced with this statement:
Let me say upfront that I do not support the bill that was signed by Governor Jan Brewer. I believe it gives the state police a license to discriminate, and also, in many ways, violates the civil rights of Arizona residents. Simply put, I think it is a bad law that is missing the bigger picture of what is really going on with illegal immigration.
The concept that a law-enforcement official can stop an individual when “reasonable suspicion exists that a person is an alien, who is unlawfully present in the United States” is essentially a license to pull someone over for being Hispanic.
If enacted, the law (which President Obama has called "misguided") will make being an undocumented immigrant in Arizona a state crime and police officers will be allowed to ask anyone suspected of being an illegal immigrant for documentation.
According to the New York Times, there is a growing split in Arizona over immigration. Supporters of SB 1070 say the continued failure of the federal government to secure Arizona’s borders required this drastic measure. Back in March, Arizona rancher Robert Krentz was shot and killed by someone who was believed to be an illegal immigrant.
Investigators said Krentz apparently came upon one person when he was shot. Krentz was heard telling his brother "illegal alien" on the radio before his death, and the area of the killing is a known smuggling corridor, according to authorities. The murder stirred unease in Arizona about illegal immigration after law enforcement officials tracked footprints from the crime scene back to the border.
A Phoenix New Times blog claims that "by the time this battle is over, Arizona will be further impoverished and reviled as a backwater, the laughing stock of America, a hick land of anti-Mexican rednecks that's worthy of its reputation for ugliness and tyranny. In other words, the same as now, just a little lighter in the pocket."
The jokes have already begun: Saturday Night Live took aim at the state's intolerance in a recent Weekend Update segment. It begins around 27:24 minutes into the show.
Mayor Bloomberg has weighed in about a potential boycott of Arizona:
"[M]any people from around the world may think twice before visiting Arizona and subjecting themselves to potential run-ins with the police."
The bill is set to take effect in early fall, if it withstands legal challenges. "It will probably be in July or August," said Phoenix lawyer Daniel Ortega to Time Magazine, "That's the first thing I am telling people. There's panic in the community."
If you are interested in participating in a rally or protest, there are many ways to get involved. Visit
The Campaign to Reform Immigration FOR America for more information.
Tr3s Comunidad, what do you think about SB 1070? Tell us in the comments or @MTV3!
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