The 25 Most Influential Hispanics in
America
From music to politics to business, Hispanics are remaking America. The 25
titans leading the Latino charge into the 21st century
WASHINGTON
(By Viveca Novak, Time) August 18, 2005 - Spanish has become the U.S.'s de facto
second language, Nuevo Latino has taken its rightful place in haute cuisine, the
sounds of rock en Espaρol and reggaeton have filtered up the charts, and Latinos
not only star on but own and manage major league baseball teams. But like any
immigrant group that has shaped mainstream U.S. culture before fully asserting
its economic or political power, the nation's 41.3 million Hispanics are just
getting warmed up. While they command nearly $600 billion in buying power, they
are only starting to attract the marketing attention on Madison Avenue that they
merit, and their political clout similarly lags behind their sheer numbers. The
country's largest ethnic minority, Hispanics promise to help remake America in
the 21st century as vitally as African Americans did in the 20th.
Still, perhaps more than any of their immigrant
predecessors, Hispanics defy easy categorization. Mexican Americans, Cuban
Americans and Argentine Americans may all speak the same language, but many
wouldn't dream of standing under the same cultural umbrella. A fair number of
U.S.-born Hispanics don't speak Spanish, and many others have little or no
European blood. Indeed, the category Hispanic is a gringo constructfirst used
by the U.S. Census Bureau in 1980and the only one based on culture and language
instead of race. That dubious distinction frustrates some Hispanics, who believe
they belong to a separate race, the product of an epic Latin American
miscegenation of Iberian, Native American and African heritage. A growing
number, especially in California and the Northeast, prefer the term Latino. But
in a Time poll of Hispanic adults, 42% said they choose to be called Hispanic,
only 17% said Latino and 34% had no particular preference. Such a wide array of
opinions and agendas is reflected in Time's list of the nation's 25 most
influential Hispanics, who range from celebrities like J. Lo and Los Angeles
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to the lesser-known labor activist Pablo Alvarado and
art curator Mari Carmen Ram"rez. She says her job is to be an evangelist for
Latino culture. With these 24 powerful Hispanics at her side, no wonder word is
spreading fast.
| |
|
Jon Garrido Network Mall Sponsored Links
| |
|
|
Act Arizona Arizona Universal Health Care
|
|
| |
|
|
Blue Dogs Home for the Blue Dogs of the Democratic Party
organizing across America.
|
|
| |
|
|
Hispanic News is the
largest news website on the Internet for American Hispanics and
Latinos providing daily news, editorials, articles of interest,
plus home to the Hispanic News National Diabetes Center and the
Hispanic News National Election Center. Hispanic News is ranked
number 1 of 73,100,000 websites at Google.
- |
|
| |
|
|
Arizona News Premier
Arizona News website which includes Arizona 2006 Election Center
with focus on Phoenix.
- |
|
| |
|
|
The US Times is ranked number 1
of 39,848,811 national USA news websites at MSN. The U.S. Times
includes the National 2006 Election Center.
- |
|
| |
|
|
Latin America News is the
largest website on the Internet covering Mexico, the Caribbean,
Central and South America. Latin America News is being formatted
to become the premier business website of Latin America. Latin
America News is ranked number 1 of 4,097,970 websites at MSN.
- |
|
|
|
|
|
51 Plus
is the number
one ranked website for America's active Baby Boomers. 51 Plus is
number 1 of 243,000,000 websites at Google. |
|
Buy a link to your website
|
|