#Diego navarrette
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Video
vimeo
WhatsApp "Here When You Can't Be There" from ELLIOTT POWER on Vimeo.
Directed by Elliott Power & Bafic Cinematographer: Diego Garcia Managing Partner: Kelly Bayett Executive Producer: Daniel Wolfe Executive Producer: Deannie O'Neil Head of Production: Paige Kauffman Production Company: Love Song 1st Assistant Director: Robert Kay 2nd Assistant Director: Dominic Pacitti Producer: Pete Vitale Producer DTL: Ron Sierra Director's Assistant: Louis McCourt Editor: Mah Ferraz & Scot Crane Colourist: Simon Bourne Colour Producer: Chris Anthony Executive Creative Director: Dan Williams at The Mill Creative Director: Carl Norton at The Mill Vfx Producer: Clare Melia Production Design: Rene Navarrette Script Supervisor: Edye Rice Sfx: Barking Owl Stylist: Natasha Newman-Thomas Casting: Elise Tyler Nimzo Casting Casting Director: Dan Bell Casting
Client: WhatsApp Agency: BBDO
0 notes
Text
I know y’all say not to tag hate but here we are!!!
Diegosaurs/Diego Navarrette needs his ass fucking kicked and to have a big bottle of piss poured on him.
In fact, I’d say he needs those pretty teeth knocked down his fucking throat. Oh! And let’s mention him kissing underage fans CONSTANTLY!
Yeah, you’re a pretty little bitch but fuck, you need your goddamn shit rocked, guy.
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Wander Darkly (15)
Wander Darkly (15) Director: Tara Miele Runtime: 1h 37m Cast: Sienna Miller, Diego Luna, Vanessa Bayer, Aimee Carrero, Beth Grant, Ayden Mayeri, Tory Kittles, Inde Navarrette, James Landry Hébert Synopsis: A traumatic accident leaves a couple in a surreal state of being that takes them on a disorienting journey through the duality of their shared moments. URL:…
View On WordPress
#Aimee Carrero#Ayden Mayeri#Beth Grant#Diego Luna#Inde Navarrette#James Landry Hébert#Sienna Miller#Tara Miele#Tory Kittles#Vanessa Bayer
1 note
·
View note
Text
BREAKING NEWS
‘Superman & Lois’: Inde Navarrette To Play Sarah Cushing In the CW Series Based On DC Characters
EXCLUSIVE: Inde Navarrette (Wander Darkly) is set as a series regular opposite Erik Valdez and Emmanuelle Chriqui in Superman & Lois, the CW’s straight-to-series drama about the iconic DC couple, played by Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch. Navarrette will play Sarah Cushing in the series from The Flash executive producer Todd Helbing, DC Universe architect Greg Berlanti and Warner Bros. TV.
Written by Helbing, based on the DC characters created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, Superman & Lois revolves around the world’s most famous superhero and comic books’ most famous journalist, as they deal with all the stress, pressures and complexities that come with being working parents in today’s society.
Navarrette’s Sarah Cushing, the daughter of Kyle (Valdez) and Lana (Chriqui), is a whip smart, super cool wild child with some demons in her past who becomes friends with the Kent boys, Jonathan and Jordan.
Series regular cast also includes Wolé Parks.
Helbing executive produces with Berlanti, Sarah Schechter and Geoff Johns via Berlanti Productions. The drama, which was slated to film the pilot episode during regular pilot season before taking a break and resuming production on the rest of its 13-episode order in the summer, now will go straight into series production after all pilot production was suspended over the COVID-19 pandemic.
Navarrette will next be seen playing Estela De La Cruz, in Netflix’s praised 13 Reasons Why, which returns for its fourth and final season in June. On the big screen, Navarrette was most recently seen starring opposite Sienna Miller and Diego Luna in Wander Darkly, which premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. Navarrette also starred in the Snapchat Original Series Denton’s Death Rate. She is repped by Fictious Management and Mavrick Artists Agency.
Deadline.
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
’13 Reasons Why: Season 4′ Release date, cast, plot and latest updates
The Liberty High which is always in mayhem is back with another year, the final year with a plan to find closure. The teen’s favorite Netflix original show “thirteen reasons why” is all set to premiere its final season on June 5, 2020.
Though the series was adapted based on the book by Jay Asher it has ventured out from the cocoon to 3 successful seasons and season 4’s promising trailer establishes the fact that there is definitely something intriguing on the way.
Plot
In 13 Reasons Why Season 4, we are yet to see liberty highs dearest prepare for their graduation, but before that, they have some final finishing to do. As usual, they have to deal with the perilous secrets as such make their lives pass along the pathway of various unprecedented situations. Season 1 dealt with the Hannah baker’s tapes, season 2 demanded justice for Hannah baker, season 3 revolves around the murder mystery of Bryce walker and in season 4 it is likely that we will follow through various other things.
The trailer gave us a glimpse of what we can expect from this season. Liberty high is perhaps shaken by the death of monty , Winston who beliefs that Montgomery was not guilty of Bryce’s death is seen to retaliate, whether or not he finds the secrets under the veil has to be seen. The main character clay seems to be dealing with anger and depression issues, well without our beloved clay Jensen’s mind working properly we don’t know what detour the storyline of the show takes. Season 2 also ended with a fisherman finding the guns that clay, tony, and Tyler are accountable for, what future has in store their deeds remains the question to be answered.
Reprising And The New Cast For 13 Reasons Why Season 4
Along with the trailer, behind the scenes where the cast bids each other adieu, Netflix also released the cast of 13 Reasons Why Season 4 which is as follows-
Dylan Minnette as Clay Jensen
Brandon Flynn as Justin Foley
Alisha Boe as Jessica Davis
Grace Saif as Ani Achola
Miles Heizer as Alex Standall
Christian Navarro as Tony Padilla
Ross Butler as Zach Dempsey
Devin Druid as Tyler Down
Deaken Bluman as Winston Williams
Anne Winters as Chloe
Tyler Barnhardt as Charlie St. George
Austin Aaron as Luke Holliday
Apart from the students, the supporting characters will remain the same. Although Montgomery de la Cruz played by timothy granaderos, Hannah Baker played by Katherine Langford, Bryce Walker played by Justin Prentice are dead in the show they might appear in the flashbacks, after all its a wrap-up everyone deserves an eye. New cast members such as Gary Sinise (Apollo 13, Forrest Gump) will be seen as Dr. Robert Ellman in the upcoming season as clay’s therapist. As a soccer team member Jan Luis Castellanos as Diego Torres can be seen and Inde Navarrette as Estela de la Cruz, Monty’s sister. Natalie Lander of this Center is rumored to be playing a character named Amanda, the truths in this rumor can be gauged only after watching the show.
We all know that most of the time a show will be judged and criticized mainly for the finale season. will the finale make the viewers happy or will it be another series with an unanticipated and unwanted climax? Let’s look forward to watching it and judging it for ourselves.
This content is brought to you by Thenuttyscribes, a news subsidiary of Blissful Plans Events and Media Private Limited, based out of Gurugram In India which was conceptualized with an idea of giving our readers what they love the most. Entertainment news and more of it.
Watch More Upcoming TV Shows
0 notes
Note
Estella is a freshman at liberty. Played by Inde navarrette. She’s a Latina and her description said she’s dealing with a recent loss so people think it’s Monty’s sister
hmm she could be related to Diego as well? he's latino... that's interesting..... WAIT OKAY CAN WE JUST..... her & Diego are both described as dealing with loss, and br*an made his post about s4 and how it deals with relevant loss and learning to deal with grief (like Diego getting abusive to cope?). not to clown but maybe Justin doesn't die, maybe its just these characters dealing with m*nty’s death.... which we don't know what it is yet? like, clay’s grandparents COULD be purely innocent. they could have just taken clay to the funeral because Justin was in hospital with matt and laine there? maybe they filmed TWO funerals in that ep? LET ME CLOWN FOR TWNETY SECONDS THEN BRING ME DOWN TO EARTH
0 notes
Text
0 notes
Text
Navarrette: Who was Beto O’Rourke? We still don’t know.
Navarrette: Who was Beto O’Rourke? We still don’t know.
SAN DIEGO — Bye bye, Beto. Or, as they say in the universe of cultural appropriation, adios.
Last week, Robert Francis O’Rourke — who had been interviewed by Oprah Winfrey, profiled in an HBO documentary and featured on the cover of Vanity Fair declaring that he was “born” to make a White House bid — announced that he was leaving the race for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.
O’Rourke…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Navarrette: Trump's record with Hispanics: What's love got to do with it?
Navarrette: Trump’s record with Hispanics: What’s love got to do with it?
SAN DIEGO — I feel better. As a Mexican American journalist who has written about the immigration debate from ground zero — i.e., the Southwest …
from Google Alert – immigration https://ift.tt/2MV7inl via IFTTT
View On WordPress
0 notes
Link
This Biography is about one of the best YouTuber Diego Navarrette including his Height, weight,Age & Other Detail…
Biography Of Diego Navarrette Real Name Diego Navarrette Profession Instagram Stars, YouTubers Famous as YouTuber Nationality American Personal life of Diego Navarrette Born on 09 August 1996 Birthday 9th August Age 20 Years Sun Sign Leo Height 1.67 m Born in Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA Married No Personal Fact of Diego Navarrette
Diego Navarette or Diegosaurus, as he is known to his fans, is an American Social Media Star, popular on multiple social media platforms like YouTube, YouNow, Twitch, Live Stream and Instagram. He is well-known for posting personal vlogs on his YouTube channel titled Diegosaurs Navarrette and hugely popular interactive live streams in YouNow and Twitch Live Streams.
He has a considerable fan base on all these platforms with around five hundred thousand followers on each. He has created stir with his punk look with multiple tattoos and piercings and vividly colored hair. His videos center on his personal experiences, experiments, achievements, pranks and dare. He has also successfully collaborated with other YouTubers as well.
This Biography Written By 7infi.com
0 notes
Text
Navarrette: Kevin de Leon, this pummeling is for you
SAN DIEGO — Politicians speak for a living. So they should be especially careful with their words. When elected officials make inflammatory statements that exploit fears and drive people apart, they need to be called out and told to pipe down. Over the ye http://breakingnewslive.net/news/navarrette-kevin-de-leon-this-pummeling-is-for-you?uid=259557&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
0 notes
Text
New top story from Time: Why It’s A Mistake To Simplify the ‘Latino Vote’
Ten years after political science professor Marisa Abrajano wrote about the false assumptions made towards Latino voters, political pundits and campaigns are still making the same mistakes in this election, she says. The assumption of a singular “Latino vote” is wrong, for one, and actually it should come as no surprise that Cuban Americans in Miami Dade voted for President Trump.
Latinos are not a monolith, and not one unified force. The differences between communities are vast and deep. The U.S. is home to an estimated nearly 61 million Latinos, according to the Pew Research Center, and range in age, race, gender, religion, socio-economic status, political ideology and educational attainment. Most are English proficient, and most were born in the U.S.
Despite these nuances, on Election Day the “Latino vote,” was analyzed as a single, unified entity by some political pundits, journalists and campaign officials without acknowledgment of the complexities of a demographic that makes up an estimated 18% of the U.S. population—a symptom of a wider trend of limited Latino outreach during political elections.
Latinos in the U.S. come from all parts of Latin America, Central America and Mexico. Some Latinos have lived in the U.S. for generations. There’s a variety of Spanish dialects, languages, foods, and traditions. It should come as no surprise that there are also differences in political ideology.
“The assumption is that Latinos are a monolithic group of voters, and the reality is that Latinos make up individuals hailing from more than a dozen different countries,” Abrajano, who teaches at UC San Diego, tells TIME. “The Latino vote in Florida is different from the Latino vote in California, and from Nevada, Arizona—and so to make broad strokes, or using this pan-ethnic term, can be problematic, and the same trend was evident 10 years ago.”
In the aftermath of Election Day, many took to social media to express their concern that analysts were painting Latinos with a broad brush. “It’s laughable that in 2020, this country still needs to be reminded, Sesame Street style, that Latinos are not a monolith & the Latino vote is a mirage,” wrote Los Angeles Times writer Esmeralda Bermudez in a Twitter thread.
It’s laughable that in 2020, this country still needs to be reminded, Sesame Street style, that Latinos are not a monolith & the Latino vote is a mirage. This misconception comes from how little u bother knowing us, how superficially u cover us & how absent we are in newsrooms.
— Esmeralda Bermudez (@BermudezWrites) November 4, 2020
“I think the most important thing for people to understand is that there is no ‘Latino vote,'” says Lisa García Bedolla, vice provost for graduate studies and dean of the Graduate Division at the UC Berkeley. “What we call Latinos or the Latino community is made up of folks who are very different in terms of national origin, in terms of generation, in terms of language use, nativity, class, gender, gender identity, sexuality, and then it also really matters where people end up living.”
But though social scientists like García Bedolla and Abrajano have for decades studied and even provided advice for how political campaigns could better engage wide-ranging communities with nuance, not much has changed, including this election year. García Bedolla says what often happens is that campaign managers wait until late into a campaign to begin Latino voter outreach. Often that comes in the form of a campaign ad in Spanish.
“I have been involved for at least a decade in trying to educate [political operatives] about these nuances,” García Bedolla says, but, she adds, often the people in decision-making positions lack the cultural awareness necessary to be effective.
“I literally had somebody ask me in 2016 what’s the bumper sticker that is going to mobilize Latinos?” García Bedolla says. “What we actually needed were mobilization strategies that would talk to the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth generation English monolingual Mexican Americans in San Antonio…That’s the kind of specificity that we need.”
García Bedolla and those who spoke to TIME all say that political campaigners need to engage with Latinos early and often, year-round, to understand the needs of individual communities. What’s important to Puerto Ricans in New York City, for example, will differ from Mexican Americans in the Rio Grande Valley.
Because Latinos nationwide vote for Democrats in larger numbers than they do for Republicans, one misconception is that as the population of eligible Latino voters grows in the U.S., so will votes for Democrats. It’s a myth social scientists refer to as “demography as destiny.” Of the estimated nearly 61 million Latinos in the U.S., Pew estimates 32 million were eligible to vote this year, or 13.3% of all eligible voters.
“Both political parties in this country need to recognize that Latinos are not a given entity, they are a constituency that demands recruitment,” says Antonio Arrellano, interim executive director of Jolt Action, a progressive organization in Texas that aims to increase Latino political engagement. Texas is home an estimated 5.6 million eligible Latino voters, coming in second only to California with an estimated 7.9 million, according to Pew.
For that reason, Arrellano says, campaigns cannot take Latino voters for granted. “We need to recognize that Latinx folks across the country have been here for decades, for centuries and have…for generations been overlooked, neglected and underrepresented,” he says. “It looks like now more than ever before, Latinos are coming to terms with the fact that the political power in this country is rightly in their hands and you have seen that turnout in Arizona, in Nevada, in Texas, where Latinos are engaged like never before because they know that the next chapter of American history will be written by them.”
Party recruitment, Arrellano, Abrajano, and García Bedolla stress, cannot be as simple as speaking Spanish during a political debate, or opening a rally with mariachi music—symbolic cultural messaging to relate to Latino voters that lack substance, which García Bedolla adds, she finds insulting.
Just like all voters, life’s experiences inform the way Latino voters vote, not just ethnic or racial identity. “It makes it seem that, if I’m a Democrat, it’s just because I’m a Latina,” she says. “It’s not because of anything that’s happened to me in my life.”
In fact according to Pew, in 2018, 62% of Latino voters identified with or leaned toward the Democratic Party, while 27% leaned toward or identified with Republicans. But this is not something that is widely recognized and political pundits’ surprise at Latino support for Trump on Election Day—the Cuban vote in Florida, for example—points to a lack of understanding of nuances of Latinos in the U.S., says Geraldo Cadava, a professor of history at Northwestern University who wrote “The Hispanic Republican.”
“I mean it really shouldn’t be a surprise,” he tells TIME. “The fact of the matter is that in every presidential election since Richard Nixon won the election in 1972, between a quarter and a third of Latinos have voted for the Republican candidate…by this point you could say that there has been a half-century tradition of Latinos, a significant minority of Latinos, voting for Republican candidates.”
The Cuban American population of Miami-Dade County, for example, has since the 1970s leaned towards the Republican party. But within that community exists nuances as well. Older Cubans who fled from the Castro Regime are still more likely to vote for a Republican than younger generations, Cadava says.
The Trump 2020 Campaign did make attempts to reach Cuban Americans by propagating an anti-socialist message, one that may also resonate with other Latino groups who have their own anti-socialism sentiments, Cadava adds. Venezuelan’s, for example, who take issue with President Nicolás Maduro.
On the other side of the coin, former Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders also saw wide support from Latinos in Nevada. Analysts credit that success to the months-long effort to win over Nevada Latinos, who eventually helped him win the state in February. “It’s because he did something that other politicians sometimes forget to do: He asked for their votes,” wrote USA Today’s Ruben Navarrette Jr.
When political campaigns fail to do the robust outreach to individual Latino communities, grassroots organizers are often the one ones to fill the void. In Arizona, a battleground state, grassroots organizers have stepped up to mobilize Black, indigenous and people of color, an effort at least 10 years in the making, since campaigners were not taking the steps to engage with this block of voters.
This year, the state saw a strong turn out for Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, something Alejandra Gomez, co-executive director of Living United for Change in Arizona (LUCHA), a grassroots organization that works to support communities of color, credits to long-term mobilization efforts of organizations like hers.
For a decade, the organization has mobilized around campaign season, knocking on doors in neighborhoods that went ignored by party officials. They helped to increase Latino voter registration, hosted community meetings in key locations, and developed relationships within communities. Gomez says they considered how an outreach strategy for Latinos who are newly naturalized citizens could differ from a strategy intended for Latinos who have lived in the U.S. for multiple generations.
“Demographics are absolutely not destiny,” Gomez tells TIME. “We just did something historic…and for us that is incredible, that is the work, that is 10 years of organizing. And those voters, we’re not going to lose them because we’re gonna call them next week and we’re gonna debrief and thank them for having participated.”
from Blogger https://ift.tt/3k6MPua via IFTTT
0 notes
Text
Navarrette: Dems' treatment of immigrants as bad as GOP's
Navarrette: Dems’ treatment of immigrants as bad as GOP’s
SAN DIEGO — In their treatment of immigrants and refugees, Republicans are really bad. But this doesn't mean Democrats have been any better.
from Google Alert – immigration https://ift.tt/2sueltF via IFTTT
View On WordPress
0 notes