Posted on 10/19/2010 11:22:30 PM PDT by nutmeg
FNC launched Fox News Latino, a new website, whilst honoring the 2010 Ailes Apprentice Program graduates Tuesday night at the Water Club in Manhattan. Fox News CEO/chair and founder of the program, Roger Ailes hosted the dinner...
-snip-
The night was also the kick-off of Fox News Latino, an English-language website for the rapidly growing Hispanic population in the U.S. Will the website one day turn into a TV channel, like CNN en Espanol? Thats nowhere in sight, manager Francisco Cortes told The Miami Herald. Though, trust me, its in the back of my mind. Cortes himself is a graduate of the Ailes Apprentice Program.
(Excerpt) Read more at mediabistro.com ...
If there wasn't a need for Spanish language television or radio in America, Obama would not be president today. Our crime rate would not be what it is. Our hospitals wouldn't be broke. Our school systems wouldn't be in such a state of chaos with dual-language services. And so on...
Multiculturism is pandering.
And one more item to the less-than-exhaustive list. Maybe we'd not have to press 1 for English.
There is a Spanish language TV station called "Immigrante TV" which only covers the illegal side of the debate. And it is on 24-7. Liberty-loving non-English-speakers deserve to hear the truth, and if Roger Ailes wants to make a run at it I am all for it.
Just to ensure that I'm not mistaken in any way, I don't advocate rescinding the license of Telemundo, Univision or any of the others. Nor am I in favor of content control by the FCC wherein English is mandated for broadcast services.
What piques my interest in this tread and galls me is that Univision and the others are able to do so well in an otherwise down economy for advertising-driven media. Why? So much of their target audience (mostly Mexicans here in Texas) cling to their old culture, refusing to embrace the ways and language of the country that gives so much opportunity.
QLA noted that having some English-language choices on television in another country is enjoyable. I agree 100%. When I was recently in Brazil, it was great to watch college football on ESPN. However if I were to become a Brazilian citizen, I'd make every effort to learn Portuguese and even develop an affinity for soccer. In short, I'd do my best to assimilate.
I think a case can be argued that Univision and now the nascent Fox effort are among those things that retard assimilation.
en espanol:
http://latino.foxnews.com/espanol/index.html
in English:
http://latino.foxnews.com/index.html
Previously...
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/07/murdochs-news-corp-launch-arabic-fox-news/
“Murdoch, Saudi prince team up to launch Arabic Fox News”
By Daniel Tencer
Friday, July 9th, 2010 — 5:06 pm
SNIPPET: “The new channel, based in Saudi Arabia, “will focus on development in Saudi Arabia and the Arab world on the political, economic and social fronts,” Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the world’s 19th-wealthiest person according to Forbes, said in a statement.
The network will be competing with the two principal international Arabic news services, Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya, and “is going to become an addition and an alternative for viewers,” bin Talal said.”
One of my ancestors was a German immigrant in the 1830’s. He founded and edited a German language newspaper in America. He was very patriotic and was even a delegate to the Republican Convention in 1856. He was a big advocate of learning the English language and assimilating with American culture. But it was easier to express these views to the German-American community by writing in German.
I no longer have children anywhere near school age, so I'm pretty much out of the loop on this. What are you thoughts about young people learning English? I wonder if your immigrant ancestor from Germany still spoke any German to his children?
There's one theory that total immersion is most effective and others maintain that bi-lingual education produces good results.
This thread does make me recall the scene from the classic Casablanca where the German couple at Rick's is about to depart for America.
My general sense is that the whole family pretty much spoke German at home until the outbreak of World War I made it wildly unfashionable.
this may be a good thing. Spanish TV news in the US is very biased against the USA. The the American rescuers of the miners or even their part in it wasnt even covered.
Local SA coverage did.
maybe we will be able to keep up with this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7_GIbvTE3A
mexican controlled.
Pandering to illegals.
You have to start somewhere.
I’d rather Fox deliver programming for Spanish speakers than the DNC.
Mexicans are very family oriented and, I think, we have a chance of making inroads. This is a start. Yes, they have to learn English too.
In fact, Jerry Brown’s slam about Meg Whitman’s maid was not meant to sway Caucasians, it was to thwart her successful outreach to hispanics. It can only help.
I guess Hispanics forgot they are ‘conservative’. Thank God we have Fox News to remind them. Wonder if the will get input from LaRaza and the Hispanic Caucus?
Giving Latinos a view of fair & Balanced news is a good thing.
Like it or not..to get a job in the future you will be at an advantage to speak Spanish..
I am not a Rino...just have common sense
yankeesbesibol.com
p.s. I loved the video of Sarah-Just-Wanna-Throwup on stage with MOOSHELE at the Blumenthal event. Add her to the "no-watch" list. Actually, she was there already - another talentless windbag.
Not necessarily. All hispanics aren’t Mexican illegals. My elderly Puerto Rican mother-in-law loves Rush. Listens to right wing talk radio all day long. She is computer literate. She loves watching her novellas and would probably enjoy visiting the Fox News Latino website. Now she’s what I call a “wise latina”.
How do you know that all of the people who watch Univision can not speak English? I could list many examples that can refute your assumption, but I will just give you this one:
I was taking German at a community college and met a gal who had a slight Spanish accent. As I got to know her, I found out that she was from Chile and that her husband was the local DFW Telemundo weatherman. They were newlyweds and she could not work, because of the green card thing, so she was taking some college classes to bid away her time. Back in Chile, she was a journalist at the largest newspaper in the country.
What blew me away was the fact that she was a native Spanish speaker taking a German class, where English was the main language spoken. So while I was trying to handle just German which is in itself difficult, she was doing a great job conversing in two languages known to be difficult for non-native speakers.
A FOX-Spanish language news program would be a very healthy addition to the news choices they have right now.
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