Letters to the Editor

Knight Ridder Confidential Action Report #01-47Miami simpleton strategy exceeds projections; prepare to roll out in all KR Latin markets: I stopped getting the Miami Herald because it neither understands nor represents me. And I don’t read El Nuevo Herald despite having free daily access to it and being part of…

Shake

“We’re putting together the online with the offline,” booms Yemil Martinez with the enthusiasm of a game show host. The chat events coordinator for Starmedia.com proudly sweeps his arm across the panorama of Espacio Latino, the new Latin night inaugurated last Thursday at Club Space. Before beginning their first Miami…

Doom, Gloom, and Bloom

Nearly two decades before legions of concerned parents and oh-so-earnest editorial writers spent sleepless nights fretting over Eminem winning a Grammy Award, heavy metal was the musical siren luring America’s impressionable youth to their ruin. As he answers the door to his spacious Miami Shores home, Swedish-born heavy-metal warrior Yngwie…

Letters to the Editor

It Wasn’t Such a Bad Article About My NewspaperIt just wasn’t a very smart article: Regarding Jacob Bernstein’s entertaining and (mostly) balanced article about El Nuevo Herald, where I work (“Sex! Sin! Sensation!” January 11), you don’t have to reach back into the dim recesses of pre-Carlos Castañeda history to…

Shake

Uncle Sam is a smirking skeleton flying toward a cruel heaven. A handbill advertising Negroes for sale is bound in a book opposite the Declaration of Independence. Africans in chains scream in pain, their backs bloody with welts from the slave driver’s whip. This is the vision of American Massacre,…

One Last Push

“I need a drink.” Walking out of the ballroom, Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt was feeling a little parched after speaking to more than 400 environmentalists Friday evening at the sixteenth annual conference of the Everglades Coalition. The coalition, composed of more than 40 environmental groups across the nation, was meeting…

Letters to the Editor

Padron’s Power GrabIt sounds distressingly familiar, and I should know: Gaspar González’s inferences regarding the manner in which MDCC district president Eduardo Padron operates are right on target (“Power Play,” January 4). This story about Juan Galan’s resignation from the MDCC Foundation is a replay of Padron’s power takeover of…

Shake

When Duran Duran came to Detroit in 1984, the only girl I knew who got to go to the sold-out arena show was my best friend Linda’s cousin Anne, who scored tickets because she lived around the block from a record store. The rest of us had to be content…

Promises to Keep

Two weeks after Hurricane Andrew ripped through South Florida, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton toured the hardest-hit areas of Homestead and Florida City. “We have more tornadoes in our state, and I’ve seen a lot of little towns leveled,” he offered in September 1992. “But I’ve never seen anything of this…

Reeling in the Year

This was a lousy year to be a film buff in Miami. Not that there weren’t plenty of great movies released. Just that Miami was one of the worst cities in the nation in which to see them. Reissued classics such as the vintage noir Rififi, Krzysztof Kieslowski’s The Decalogue,…

Letters to the Editor

Cringe at the Story, Embrace the StorytellerIt wasn’t just a tale, it was life: I very much enjoyed Celeste Fraser Delgado’s article “Tales of the Hood” (December 21). Her experience in that Little Haiti neighborhood seemed very interesting. I don’t know if I would have handled it as well as…

Shake

A dizzying blitz of corporate-generated hits blasts the ears of today’s songsmiths, plaguing them with a sense that if their music does not sell, it does not matter. That sense is especially sharp in Miami. The boom of the Latin-music industry brings to our beaches the platinum pop idols of…

Vox Populi

With the decision on the future of Homestead Air Force Base now less than three weeks away, newspapers around the state have begun publishing editorials urging President Clinton to kill Miami-Dade County’s efforts to transform the base into a major commercial airport. The editorials reflect growing public sentiment that an…

Kulchurkampf: 365 Days of Pop Music

There’s a theory that the pop music of a given moment in time isn’t determined by aural trends, record-company marketing plans, or even artistic flashes of brilliance. All those elements simply are dogs chasing the rabbit. Instead, if you want to decipher a period’s music, look to its drug of…

Letters to the Editor

Editor’s note: We greatly appreciate receiving letters from our readers and try to publish as many of them as possible. Predictably, though, some missives fall victim to space limitations or time constraints. In this issue we try to make amends. Below is a sampling of correspondence from the past year…

Shake

Few people have invested more in the business of salsa than Ralph Mercado. The 59-year-old CEO of RMM Records was in the game before the genre even had a name, representing originators in the early Seventies such as Eddie Palmieri and Ray Barretto. In the universe of Fania Records, whose…

Mullin

Although the complex proposal to build a new baseball stadium for the Florida Marlins is fraught with uncertainty, two things are clear: Secrecy was absolutely necessary in order for Marlins owner John Henry and his Miami political collaborators to fashion a dishonest deal like this; and should they succeed in…

Destiny’s Child

As Bill Clinton’s presidency draws to a close, one of his last acts will be to decide the future of Homestead Air Force Base. Miami-Dade County is pushing to have the base turned into a major commercial airport, while environmentalists oppose such a plan, arguing the base’s location between Everglades…

Letters to the Editor

Elections the Miami WayThe Electoral College of the Americas sets the standard: I really enjoyed “Professionalism in Politics” (December 14) and the Electoral College of the Americas. Indeed we should take Miami’s political culture to a national level, as you suggest. Perhaps the nation could see to it that we…

Requiem for a True Original

“The difference between the communist and capitalist systems is that, although both give you a kick in the ass, in the communist system you have to applaud, while in the capitalist system you can scream. And I came here to scream.” — Reinaldo Arenas, shortly after arriving in Miami, 1980…

Letters to the Editor

Public Service the Braddock WayFirst thing you do, you tell the damn public to go to hell: When I first read Miami-Dade school board member G. Holmes Braddock quoted in the Miami Herald as saying, “I’ve never thought we had a very bright public,” I thought he might have been…

Shake

The novelist Ngugi wa Thiongõ once complained that it is impossible to write satire about Kenya; the dictatorship that rules his native land is already too absurd. No writer could possibly invent anything more ridiculous. The same could be said about the contemporary-music industry, which might as well be called…