The Música Files
San Bernardino band Fuerza Regida has broken records on the Billboard charts and is up for its first Grammy in 2026 — but frontman Jesús Ortiz Paz has a bigger agenda.
Rawayana’s sixth album, ‘¿Dónde Es El After?,’ is a vibrant show of Venezuelan pride amid conflict — with a prescient message from the country’s late intellectual Arturo Uslar Pietri.
Edgar Barrera is up for songwriter of the year Grammy for the third time in a row and is the only Spanish-language songwriter ever recognized in this category.
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Remember This Banger
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Thirty years after the singer’s death, we look back on the song that encapsulated what could’ve been.
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“Ahora Te Puedes Marchar” is Luis Miguel’s cover of Dusty Springfield’s “I Only Wanna Be With You,” Unlike the tender original, the track stings in its righteous resentment of a lover who let him down.
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Juan Gabriel wrote the ‘80s pop ballad ‘Gracias a Dios.’ The track cemented Thalía’s Latin music star status — an innocent, sexy and cheeky coquette brand was born.
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Released on April 11, 2005, the hit song “La Tortura” marked Shakira’s glorious return to the Spanish-language music world.
Latinx Files Newsletter
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What’s happening in Chicago feels like a mirror image of what transpired in Los Angeles over the summer.
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Nearly two weeks after Bad Bunny was announced as the halftime performer at the Super Bowl, right-wingers are still upset.
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As the Trump administration continues to make landmark political decisions through executive orders and judicial means, a human rights lawyer examines whether the U.S. has become the latest example of authoritarianism in the Americas.
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Hurricane Erin was the first major storm of the 2025 U.S. hurricane season. Here’s a look back at some of the most devastating hurricanes that deeply affected minority communities in the U.S. over the last 20 years.
Beyond Los Angeles
Las Valentinas del Valle de Coachella are a group of middle and elementary schoolers who are taking on the sport of escaramuza — an essential component of Mexico’s national sport of charrería, or Mexican rodeo.
For over 180,000 Ecuadoreans in New York City, ecuavoley, a sport from their homeland, brings together identity, community and an opportunity for mutual aid.
In the Inland Empire, where local news has been severely diminished, Ahmed Bellozo’s “On the Tira” local news videos, inspired by Huell Howser, are resonating on social media.