Alejandra Molina
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Alejandra Molina is a former reporter with the Latino Initiatives team at the Los Angeles Times. Before joining The Times in 2023, she was a national reporter for the independent and nonprofit Religion News Service as part of a global religion journalism initiative with the Associated Press and the Conversation. There, she covered Latinos and spirituality. She has worked for newsrooms under the Southern California News Group, covering city, immigration and breaking news beats. She grew up in the L.A. region, including El Monte and Pomona. A graduate of the University of La Verne, she mentors youth journalists at Boyle Heights Beat.
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Archbishop José Gomez has been a longtime champion of immigrant rights, but his critics argue he has become too narrowly focused on culture war issues.
Peso Pluma’s upcoming performance at the Viña del Mar Festival in Chile is stirring controversy as high-profile Chilean government officials, sociologists, and public television officials are challenging his headlining slot, saying his music condones narcoculture.
Valdez-Yeager was instrumental in the creation of the Riverside Art Museum’s Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art and Culture. Her legacy “is one of respect and purpose,” said actor and arts collector Cheech Marin.
‘It all started with a simple dream,’ Ronstadt wrote in an Instagram story on Wednesday confirming the news.
With this new album, Lopez said she’s excited for fans to ‘understand the feeling that this was a 20-year journey.’
Venezuelan billionaire businessman Gustavo Cisneros, who grew the family business Cisneros Group into an influential media conglomerate across Latin America and the U.S., has died at age 78.
The survey — conducted by the National Assn. of Hispanic Journalists between 2021 and 2023 and published Wednesday — reveals that 60% of investigative news reporters are white.
The Christmas holiday highlights the similarities between Filipinos and Latinos communities in the United States
The Justice Department and Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus say Colony Ridge ran a land sales scheme targeting Latinos through false statements and predatory loans.
On Tuesday, Netflix released its first biannual engagement report, detailing the number of hours a program was viewed in the first six months of the year. Six of the top 25 featured a Latino lead or co-lead.