Karina Del Valle Schorske
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah. That's a great parallel. I wouldn't have thought of that.
A distinction I would kind of make with Cowboy Carter, though they're both very scholarly archival projects and very innovative sonically at the same time. I think a point of difference is the way kind of those politics are lived out explicitly in the public sphere. Because, you know, everybody wants to ask Bad Bunny about Trash Island or about the Latino vote.
A distinction I would kind of make with Cowboy Carter, though they're both very scholarly archival projects and very innovative sonically at the same time. I think a point of difference is the way kind of those politics are lived out explicitly in the public sphere. Because, you know, everybody wants to ask Bad Bunny about Trash Island or about the Latino vote.
A distinction I would kind of make with Cowboy Carter, though they're both very scholarly archival projects and very innovative sonically at the same time. I think a point of difference is the way kind of those politics are lived out explicitly in the public sphere. Because, you know, everybody wants to ask Bad Bunny about Trash Island or about the Latino vote.
But that's not really relevant in Puerto Rico where people can't vote for president. What is relevant was the major election for governor that happened also in November of last year. Juan Dalmao was a candidate supported actually by an alliance between the old Independence Party and a younger kind of decolonial coalition.
But that's not really relevant in Puerto Rico where people can't vote for president. What is relevant was the major election for governor that happened also in November of last year. Juan Dalmao was a candidate supported actually by an alliance between the old Independence Party and a younger kind of decolonial coalition.
But that's not really relevant in Puerto Rico where people can't vote for president. What is relevant was the major election for governor that happened also in November of last year. Juan Dalmao was a candidate supported actually by an alliance between the old Independence Party and a younger kind of decolonial coalition.
Yeah, he bought billboards across the country, you know, and he showed up to a rally with artists like Residente, who's been a musical mentor, and artists from the 70s like Roy Brown, who was kind of part of this left populist folk music movement back then. And there's this photograph of Bad Bunny embracing Roy Brown.
Yeah, he bought billboards across the country, you know, and he showed up to a rally with artists like Residente, who's been a musical mentor, and artists from the 70s like Roy Brown, who was kind of part of this left populist folk music movement back then. And there's this photograph of Bad Bunny embracing Roy Brown.
Yeah, he bought billboards across the country, you know, and he showed up to a rally with artists like Residente, who's been a musical mentor, and artists from the 70s like Roy Brown, who was kind of part of this left populist folk music movement back then. And there's this photograph of Bad Bunny embracing Roy Brown.
And I think where the older generation had often been very critical of reggaeton and stuff like that, he's kind of making a play for their support in this moment where it feels like Puerto Rico needs unity.
And I think where the older generation had often been very critical of reggaeton and stuff like that, he's kind of making a play for their support in this moment where it feels like Puerto Rico needs unity.
And I think where the older generation had often been very critical of reggaeton and stuff like that, he's kind of making a play for their support in this moment where it feels like Puerto Rico needs unity.
Assuming that that's the liberal position.
Assuming that that's the liberal position.
Assuming that that's the liberal position.
The original Puerto Rican flag.