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Showing results for: Latinx (page 8)

We are far from Stoneybrook now: On the quiet revolution of “The Baby-Sitters Club”

Danielle J. Lindemann
Watching the new Netflix series as an adult makes me realize that the books I read as a kid were always subversive

Julián Castro on the pandemic, the election and our “manifestly unqualified” president

Dean Obeidallah
Former candidate tells Salon that Biden "gets it" on immigration and police reform, but Trump is "unconscionable"

White allies, stop asking me if I’m OK. Black people are not OK

Takirra Winfield Dixon
Could I contract the coronavirus while protesting? Yes. But racism is a virus, too

Is Camden a model for police reform? Activists who live there don’t think so

Igor Derysh
The most dangerous city in the U.S. dissolved its police; crime plummeted. Some say the truth is more complicated

Enough already with the white warrior woman worship

Melanie McFarland
"Warrior Nun," "Hanna" & "Cursed" join the pantheon of white women who kick butt. But where are heroines of color?

Get police out of schools — including university campuses

Claudia Garcia-Rojas, Charlotte Rosen
Municipal police departments' racist policing practices do not stop when policing university campuses

Why coronavirus cases vary wildly between U.S. states

Matthew Rozsa
As the federal government throws its hands up, state leaders wield tremendous power to save lives (or not)

Progressives may have scored big wins in Tuesday’s New York, Kentucky primaries

Roger Sollenberger
Early results may have rattled New York's Chuck Schumer, where moderate candidates in his state face several upsets

“It’s a quiet revolt”: Filmmaker on how “The Last Tree” moves between Black and white spaces

Gary M. Kramer
"Showing a young Black male self-actualizing is still revolutionary," director Shola Amoo told Salon

Netflix’s potent “Disclosure” explores how Hollywood has both damaged and uplifted transgender lives

Melanie McFarland
Executive produced by Laverne Cox, the new documentary balances equal-rights education with well-earned celebration

“Love, Victor” is Hulu’s likable spinoff of “Love, Simon” that questions who gets a great love story

Melanie McFarland
The Hulu series deepens the conflict for the Latinx teen who's the new kid in his Georgia high school

With affordable housing already scarce, Oakland is poised for a post-pandemic homelessness boom

Nicole Karlis
Without rent relief for California tenants, housing advocates fear the pandemic will worsen the homelessness crisis

Camden is not a blueprint for disbanding the police

Rann Miller
What happened in Camden and the conversations taking place nationwide around disbanding police aren't the same

The coronavirus’ next victim? Capitalism

Matthew Rozsa
The pandemic has exposed how political attacks on science are the only way to maintain the capitalist order

From “Pose” to Spike Lee’s “Da 5 Bloods,” Netflix’s June offerings spotlight LGBTQ and Black voices

Ashlie D. Stevens
With summer around the corner, you can beat the heat inside with these new TV shows, specials, movies, and docs

“We are an invisible people”: Creator Tanya Saracho on the end of her queer Latinx series “Vida”

Kevin Smokler
The showrunner spoke to Salon about mourning the end, evolving identity, and what she hopes for the show's legacy

Voter disenfranchisement and COVID-19 are connected — here’s why

Mienah Z. Sharif, Anna K. Hing, Héctor E. Alcalá
COVID-19 is a dual threat — to public health and to our democracy

“My Dark Vanessa” author: Canceling Nabokov’s “Lolita” is “missing the point” of society’s problem

Erin Keane
Salon talks to Kate Elizabeth Russell about her long path to writing one of 2020's biggest and most urgent novels

Political journalists are eager to kick Bernie Sanders on his way out the door

Dan Froomkin
Bernie's not imagining it: He makes political reporters personally uncomfortable, and they hate him for it

The most exciting new fiction books coming out in March

Erin Keane, Ashlie D. Stevens, Hanh Nguyen
Salon previews the month in publishing and takes a closer look at 6 new books coming out in March

“Gender is at the core of this”: Elizabeth Warren voters frustrated with grim Super Tuesday results

Hanh Nguyen
The party never really started for Elizabeth Warren supporters watching Sanders and Biden clean up on Tuesday

In Nevada, Culinary Union members make last-minute turnout push

Nicole Karlis
Even though union members aren't endorsing a specific Democrat, they are eager to drive turnout and defeat Trump

Shakira and Jennifer Lopez stun in a stealthily political Super Bowl halftime show

Melanie McFarland
Most of the Super Bowl LIV audience likely had no clue of what Shakira and J.Lo were actually saying. That's fine

What’s new on Netflix in February, from “Altered Carbon” to “Narcos: Mexico”

Ashlie D. Stevens
It's a leap year, so this month you get an extra day to binge on rom-coms, graphic novel adaptations & crime series
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