Posts in Feature
Rent Me

Titans of the new economy breezily muse about the efficiency and “flexibility” of the new gig army. Laws affirming job security for U.S. workers count only those in regular employment. More people in contingency work are feeling like borrowed tools, so it’s time to reset the rules of work

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Featurepalabra.
We Do The Work

Latino essential workers have suffered disproportionately in the pandemic. A new study says these workers sacrificed and “stepped up for America.” Now they’re leading an economic comeback

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Feature, Financepalabra.
Young, Strong And Honest

June is Pride Month. We celebrate the increased visibility of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people. ... Sometime between the appetizer and our family dinner’s main course, Isabella decided it was time to tell us she is bisexual

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Culture, Featurepalabra.
Dreaming of Afro-Cuba

For a proud community of Cuban artists and musicians in Washington, D.C., the COVID-19 pandemic was a gut punch. A once-thriving scene of live performances and raucous jam sessions is silent. For palabra., filmmaker Josee Molavi documented the artists’ dilemma and captured their resilience

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
The Money Coach

Many Gen Z and millennial Latinos have used time in pandemic lockdown to build financial literacy. They’ve turned to social media influencers like Delyanne Barros to help close their own wealth gaps.

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
Where’s the HIV Vaccine?

Billions of dollars are spent on HIV vaccine research. Many scientists have devoted their careers to the effort. But it hasn’t been enough: Dozens of HIV vaccine candidates have shown promise, only to fail in large clinical trials.

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
Mi Acento, Mi Identidad

Ella fue una adolescente embarazada. Mucha gente le dijo que su origen y su acento limitarían su carrera periodística. Hoy Liliana Soto es una reconocida periodista de investigación en Arizona, tiene nueve Emmys decorando su casa y decenas de seguidores.

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
My Accent, My Identity

She was a pregnant teenager in Mexico. Later, she was told her background and her accent would limit her English-language journalism career. Today Liliana Soto has nine Emmys decorating her home, and scores of followers as an investigative video journalist in Arizona.

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
For Damages Done

Discrimination was long baked into housing policy and practice in Evanston, Illinois. Now the city is the nation’s first to officially compensate African Americans for what systemic racism has done to their community

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
Ella lo logró: la podcaster

Silvia Viñas supo que estaba en el lugar correcto cuando escuchó el primer episodio al aire del podcast que cofundó: El Hilo. Este podcast profundiza en el "cómo" y el "por qué" de las noticias de América Latina. La audiencia es de habla hispana, principalmente basada en las Américas, incluyendo los Estados Unidos. Este público está ansioso por conocer, semana a semana, un análisis de los acontecimientos que ocurren en sus comunidades.

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Culture, Featurepalabra.
She Did It: The Podcaster

Silvia Viñas pulled a thread and co-founded an innovative podcast that dives deep into the “how” and “why” of news in Latin America. Today “El Hilo” resonates with Spanish-speaking audiences in the U.S. eager to understand what’s happening in their world

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Feature, Culture, Profilepalabra.
Living (And Dying) In Fear

Complicated histories of discriminatory policing, community distrust and cycles of violence can’t hide the simple truth that a young Latino died in a controversial shooting by Chicago police. Now a fed-up neighborhood wants answers

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Feature, Culturepalabra.
What Is Home?

Keith Dannemiller has called Mexico City home for 33 years. But since 2017, the U.S.-born photojournalist has aimed a bicultural lens at a growing Latino community in North Carolina. Ahead of a post-pandemic exposition, Dannemiller shares a series of portraits from his return to the U.S. South, and contemplates notions of “home”

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To Be Asian and Atlantan Today

A horrific shooting in suburban Atlanta is a stark reminder of what’s before us: Hate crimes against Asians in the United States are up 150%, a product of the vitriol contained in phrases like “China virus.” We must recognize this for what it is -- a symptom of an epidemic.

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Feature, Politicspalabra.