missing kissing

daily dos

fri 5/1/2009

 

There will be no kissing on Mexican telenovelas – until the swine flu scare passes, say TV producers.

 
 

Ximena Sariñana vs. Eiza González "Lola"

versus

tue 12/2/2008

 
A collage of Ximena Sariñana and Eiza González, aka "Lola."
name Ximena Sariñana Rivera. Eiza González Reyna.
hometown Mexico City, México. Mexico City, México.
born on October 29, 1985. January 30, 1990.
daughter of Mexican film director Fernando Sariñana. Mexican supermodel Glenda Reyna.
style Pop influenced by the blues and jazz. Pop rock.
sounds like Natalia LaFourcade and Feist. Belinda and RBD.
the look Winona Ryder in the '90s movie Reality Bites. Cyndi Lauper meets Punky Brewster.
breakthrough single Vidas Paralelas. Si Me Besas.
killer collab La Tina remix by Metronomy. Amor Letra Por Letra with Flex.
could be the next Julieta Venegas. Miley Cyrus.
I'm an actress Telenovela Luz Clarita and Mexican movies Todo El Poder, Amar Te Duele and Niñas Mal. The star of the popular tween Mexican telenovela Lola... Érase Una Vez.
most recent release Mediocre. Érase Una Vez.
the critics Rolling Stone: "[T]his Mexican actress-turned-singer belts out jazz- and blues-influenced songs with poetic lyrics and imaginative production… There's sultry torch songs, folky ballads, smart rock — and not a bum track among them." Billboard En Español: "The popularity of this Mexican girl grows day by day in the U.S.… and even though she is a new artist with no singles in the Hot Latin Songs chart, her album is selling like hotcakes."
webprops 42,494 friends on official MySpace. 27,171 friends on official MySpace.
best video moment Becoming one with nature in No Vuelvo Más. Suffering for love in Masoquismo.
 
 

slipping away

daily dos

wed 6/20/2007

 

NBC is set to produce "Without Breasts There Is No Paradise," the story of a flat-chested 17-year-old prostitute, adapted from the popular Colombian telenovela "Sin Tetas No Hay Paraíso," which broke ratings records once held by "Bety La Fea."

 
 

wearin' it out

daily dos

wed 12/27/2006

 

English-language television networks are cooling to the telenovela format according to the New York Times. (via VivirLatino)

 
 

La 5a Estación

whodat

fri 11/3/2006

 
Promotional photo of La 5a Estación.

When Spanish pop-rock band La 5a Estación decided to stay in Mexico City after a promo tour of their first album, Primera Toma (First Take) in 2001, they probably didn't think it would become the launching pad for their return as multi-platinum selling artists. But when their upbeat "¿Dónde Irán?" (Where Will They Go?) was chosen as the theme song to the teen soap Clase 406, singer-songwriter Natalia Jiménez' romantic lyrics about unfulfilled dreams struck a deep chord with the telenovela's young female audience.

By the time Natalia and her bandmates, fellow madrileños Angel Reyero (guitarist) and Pablo Domínguez (bassist) released their second album in 2004, Flores de Alquiler (Rented Fowers), the band had already cemented their reputation as a chart-topping music act that could write heartfelt songs with plenty of hooks. The album yielded four hit singles that still get plenty of airplay on Mexican radio stations, including the track "Niña", which generated welcome controversy with a video of a teenaged girl who naively experiments with lesbianism and drugs only to end up being gang-banged by two businessmen. Like always.

La 5a Estación recently released their third album, El Mundo Se Equivoca (The World Makes Mistakes), which features slicker production and punchier instrumentation as in their current single, Tu Peor Error. The band sounds brightest on tracks like Me Muero where they combine the horn section of a Mariachi band with cinematic strings. This third time around, La 5a Estación continues to ask the tough questions every teen asks, over and over again, with simultaneously sweet and angst-ridden ballads.

Recommended tracks (iTunes)

 
 

contra

daily dos

wed 9/20/2006

 
 
 

contra

daily dos

wed 9/20/2006