logo
Cinco de Mayo celebrates resilience and culture of Mexican people

Cinco de Mayo celebrates resilience and culture of Mexican people

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Cinco de Mayo festivities are taking place across the U.S. with music, tacos, tequila and colorful displays of Mexican culture — even if they're not always the most authentic.
The day falls on a Monday this year, meaning the bulk of the celebrations took place over the weekend. In California, a state with a large Mexican American population, there was a mix of art displays, classic car shows, parades and food truck offerings.
In Austin, Texas, events included an opportunity for children to get their photo taken with characters from the Disney animated musical
'Encanto,'
which is itself a celebration of Mexican culture. A luncheon with speakers talking about the significance of the Mexican holiday and Mexican Americans in Austin was planned for Monday.
Here's a look at the celebration and its roots:
What the day celebrates
Cinco de Mayo marks the anniversary of the 1862 victory by Mexican troops over invading French forces at the Battle of Puebla. The triumph over the better-equipped and much larger French troops was an enormous emotional boost for Mexican soldiers led by Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza.
In Mexico,
historical reenactments
are held annually in the central city of Puebla to commemorate the victory. Participants dress as Mexican and French troops, and as Zacapoaxtlas — the Indigenous and farmer contingent that helped Mexican troops win.
In the United States the date is seen as a celebration of Mexican American culture, stretching back to the 1800s in California. Festivities typically include parades, street food, block parties, mariachi competitions and baile folklórico, or folkloric ballet, with whirling dancers wearing bright, ruffled dresses and their hair tied with shiny ribbons.
Latino activists and scholars say that disconnect in the U.S. is bolstered by the hazy history of Cinco de Mayo, and marketing that plays on stereotypes that include fake, droopy mustaches and gigantic, colorful sombreros. The day often is mistaken for Mexican Independence Day, which is in September.
It's not all about tequila and tacos
For many Americans with or without Mexican ancestry, the day is an excuse to toss back tequila shots and gorge on tortilla chips, nachos and tacos.
The celebrations in the U.S. started as a way for Mexican Americans to preserve their cultural identity, said Sehila Mota Casper, director of Latinos in Heritage Conservation.
'Since then we've seen a shift to more commercialization and commodification and mockery over the years,' Mota Casper said. 'I think that has a lot to do with the commercialization of products and especially Latino heritage.'
Mota Casper encourages people to learn about that day in history and its importance in Mexico.
Jacob Troncoza, 49, said he celebrates Cinco de Mayo in his household because he's proud of his Mexican ancestry.
'I try to make sure that the kids understand what it's about, which was the revolution, the war, and the battles that our grandfathers fought on,' said Troncoza, who was born in east Los Angeles.
Others, like Andrea Ruiz don't because her Mexican dad never did. But she noted what she deemed the irony in widespread celebrations.
'I think it's funny Trump … and all of his supporters want to get Mexicans out, call them criminals, but then on Cinco de Mayo, they want to go and eat tacos and drink tequila,' the 23-year-old Ruiz said.
Political rhetoric
Since returning to the White House, Trump has continued to label
Mexican immigrants as criminals and gang members
. He's also sought to
end birthright citizenship
,
renamed the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America
and ended the federal government's diversity, equity and inclusion programs.
Trump acknowledged Cinco de Mayo during his first term, posting on X, 'Happy #CincoDeMayo!' and 'I love Hispanics!' as he sat with a 'taco bowl.' In the last presidential election, data showed more young Hispanic men moved to the right and
voted for Trump
.
It's unclear if the current administration will acknowledge Cinco de Mayo — designated a holiday in Mexico but not in the United States. The Associated Press sent an email to the White House Press Office late Friday seeking comment.
Trump's handling of immigration remains a point of strength as he ramps up deportations and targets people living in the U.S. without legal status, according to a recent poll from
The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research
. While Trump's actions remain divisive, there's less of a consensus that the Republican president has overstepped on immigration than on other issues, the poll found.
Organizers of Chicago's Cinco de Mayo parade said they canceled it because the city has become a target for immigration agents.
___
Associated Press writer Jaimie Ding in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Movie Review: Margaret Qualley shines in 'Honey Don't!' as Philip Marlowe in red lipstick

time2 hours ago

Movie Review: Margaret Qualley shines in 'Honey Don't!' as Philip Marlowe in red lipstick

The skies are blue, the sun unrelenting and the body count escalating in the Bakersfield, California, of 'Honey Don't!,' where Margaret Qualley's private investigator tries to get a handle on the nefarious goings-on in her city with a small-town feel. It's the second film in Ethan Coen and Tricia Cooke's so-called 'lesbian B-movie trilogy,' and while this shaggy caper might not add up to anything significant — perhaps part of the 'B-movie' point — it is fun and immensely watchable. That's thanks in large part to Qualley's turn as the smoothly confident Honey O'Donahue, kind of a Philip Marlowe, or maybe Veronica Mars, in cherry-red lipstick, high heels and silks (inspired choices for the sweltering setting by costume designer Peggy Schnitzer). Honey is meant to be strikingly 'other' in this very downtrodden Bakersfield of eccentrics, dropouts and lost souls, where missing teeth seem to be more prevalent than pedicures. It's a carnival of very memorable, very Coen-esque misfits, like a grumpy bartender played by Don Swayze and Charlie Day's clueless police officer Marty Metakawitch. Marty is not the only man in town who has trouble accepting that Honey will never be interested in him. You could play a drinking game with how many times she has to tell hapless men, 'I like girls.' Not only is queer literacy low in this Bakersfield, but many in town seem to have come under the influence of a church leader played by Chris Evans, the Rev. Drew Devlin, whose high-wattage smile and proclivity for flirting have made him a local celebrity. Evans, who seems to be having fun in a weirder role, plays the Rev. Drew as a charismatic creep, an ego-driven and possibly sex-addicted influencer who is also peddling drugs and arranging hits around town. He too has a boss, or bosses, known only as 'the French,' which is amusingly underexplained. And he's often completely, or nearly, naked and involved in some cringey, experimental acts with his naive followers. Not unlike the new 'The Naked Gun,' this saga begins with a suspicious vehicular death. The deceased was an almost-client of Honey's, which sets her off poking around and looking for answers. Most of her cases are of the cheating spouse type, and this is just more interesting. Meanwhile, others start dropping dead too. Some of these deaths feel spiritually, comedically similar to the Mark Pellegrino sequence in 'Mullholland Drive' (not the only Lynchian nod). And all signs are pointing back to the church, though Honey gets a bit distracted with a new fling in Aubrey Plaza's lustful cop MG Falcone and some family drama with her wayward niece Corinne (Talia Ryder). 'Honey Don't' might play more like a pilot episode of a television series than a contained film, but it is a step up from Coen and Cooke's previous effort, 'Drive Away Dolls,' which felt constructed of comedic parts whose shelf life expired 20 years ago. This script, written by Coen and Cooke, is probably just as vintage, technically speaking, but it feels more timeless. With a stable of memorable side characters, including Josh Pafchek as the reverend's assistant and Jacnier as a skittish new drug dealer named Hector, 'Honey Don't' is gory, unapologetically sexual, quippy and dark. It also clocks in at under 90 minutes — they knew just when to get out. As Ethan Coen finds his groove as a solo director, 'Honey Don't' might not be 'The Big Lebowski' or 'Raising Arizona,' but it is a swing in the right direction. At this rate, if we get the pleasure of seeing a third film, it might just be a classic. 'Honey Don't!' a Focus Features release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for 'some strong violence, language, graphic nudity, strong sexual content.' Running time: 88 minutes. Three stars out of four.

Learn about the 5 people charged in connection with Matthew Perry's death
Learn about the 5 people charged in connection with Matthew Perry's death

San Francisco Chronicle​

time5 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Learn about the 5 people charged in connection with Matthew Perry's death

LOS ANGELES (AP) — One year ago, federal authorities announced that five people had been charged in connection with the ketamine overdose death of Matthew Perry. All five have now agreed to plead guilty, including the personal assistant of the 'Friends' star, an old acquaintance and two doctors. On Monday, Jasveen Sangha, who prosecutors say was a dealer known as the 'Ketamine Queen,' became the fifth and final defendant to reach a deal and avoid trial. Here is a look at each of the defendants. Jasveen Sangha Sangha admitted in her plea agreement that she sold Perry the lethal dose of ketamine in the days before his death on Oct. 23, 2023. A 42-year-old who was born in Britain, raised in the United States and has dual citizenship, Sangha's social media accounts before her indictment last year showed a jet-setting lifestyle, with photos of herself in posh spaces alongside rich-and-famous faces in Spain, Japan and Dubai along with her dual homes of London and Los Angeles. Prosecutors say that lifestyle was funded by a drug business she ran for at least five years from her apartment in LA's San Fernando Valley. They say she presented herself as 'a celebrity drug dealer with high quality goods" and missed no opportunity to promote the idea that she was known to customers and others as the 'Ketamine Queen.' Her lawyers have derided the title as a 'media-friendly' moniker. Sangha went to high school in Calabasas, California — perhaps best known as home to the Kardashians — and went to college at the University of California, Irvine, graduating in 2005 and going on to work at Merrill Lynch. She later got an MBA from the Hult International Business School in London. She was connected to Perry through his acquaintance and her co-defendant, Erik Fleming. In a raid of her apartment in March 2024, authorities said they found large amounts of cocaine, methamphetamine and ketamine. She was arrested and released on bond. In August 2024, she was indicted again with charges that tied her to Perry's death, and has been held without bail ever since. CHARGES: Three counts of distribution of ketamine, one count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death or serious bodily injury and one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises. SENTENCING: A judge will set her sentencing in the coming months after she appears in court to officially change her plea. She could get up to 45 years in prison. WHAT THEY SAID: Sangha's lawyer Mark Geragos says 'She's taking responsibility for her actions.' Kenneth Iwamasa Iwamasa, Perry's live-in personal assistant, was intimately involved in the actor's illegal ketamine use, acting as his drug messenger and personally giving injections, according to his plea agreement. It was the 60-year-old Iwamasa who found Perry dead in the hot tub of his Pacific Palisades home on a day when he'd given him several injections. He would become the first to reach a deal with prosecutors as they sought to use him as an essential witness against other defendants. Iwamasa said he worked with co-defendants to get ketamine on Perry's behalf, including Dr. Salvador Plasencia, who taught him how to give Perry the injections. 'Found the sweet spot but trying different places led to running out,' Iwamasa told Plasencia in one text message. Iwamasa said in his plea deal that he injected Perry six to eight times per day in the last few days of his life. CHARGE: One count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine causing death. SENTENCING: He's scheduled to be sentenced November 19 and could get up to 15 years in prison. Dr. Salvador Plasencia 'I wonder how much this moron will pay?' That was a text message Plasencia sent to a fellow doctor when he learned Perry wanted to be illegally provided with ketamine, according to a plea agreement where the doctor admitted to selling 20 vials of the drug to the actor in the weeks before his death. Plasencia, a 43-year-old Los Angeles-area doctor known to patients as 'Dr. P,' was one of the two main targets of the prosecution and had been headed for a joint trial with Sangha when he reached the plea agreement in June. According to court records, Perry was connected to Plasencia through another patient. Perry had been getting ketamine legally from his regular doctor as treatment for depression, an off-label but increasingly common use of the surgical anesthetic. But the actor wanted more. Plasencia admitted to personally injecting Perry with some of the initial vials he provided, and left more for Iwamasa to inject, despite the fact that Perry froze up and his blood pressure spiked, after one dose. Plasencia graduated from UCLA's medical school in 2010 and had not been subject to any medical disciplinary actions before the Perry case. He has been free on bond since his indictment. His lawyers said he is caregiver for a toddler child. Plasencia even got to keep practicing medicine after his indictment, but had to inform patients of the charges against him and couldn't prescribe dangerous drugs. He now intends to voluntarily surrender his license to practice, according to his lawyers. CHARGES: Four counts of distribution of ketamine. SENTENCING: He's scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 3 and could get up to 40 years in prison. WHAT THEY SAID: His lawyers say he's 'profoundly remorseful for the treatment decisions he made while providing ketamine to Matthew Perry.' Erik Fleming Fleming, 55, was an acquaintance of Perry's who learned through a mutual friend that the actor was seeking ketamine, according to his plea agreement. He told Iwamasa in text messages that he had a source known as the 'Ketamine Queen' whose product was 'amazing,' saying she only deals with 'high end and celebs.' In all, prosecutors say, Fleming delivered 50 vials of Sangha's ketamine for Perry's use, including 25 sold for a total of $6,000 to the actor four days before his death. CHARGE: One count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death. SENTENCING: He is scheduled to be sentenced November 12 and could get up to 25 years in prison. WHAT THEY SAID: Fleming's lawyers have declined comment. Dr. Mark Chavez Chavez, a San Diego doctor who ran a ketamine clinic, was the source of the doses that Plasencia sold to Perry, according to their plea agreements. Chavez admitted to obtaining the ketamine from a wholesale distributor on false pretenses. Chavez, 55, graduated from UCLA's medical school in 2004. He has surrendered his medical license. CHARGE: One count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine. SENTENCING: He is scheduled to become the first defendant sentenced, on Sept. 17. He could get 10 years in prison. WHAT THEY SAID: His lawyer says he's 'incredibly remorseful,' has accepted responsibility and has been 'trying to do everything in his power to right the wrong.' ___ A version of this story first ran on Aug. 15, 2024.

Why 'Wishbone' Was the 'Right Time' for Conan Gray to Depict a Queer Summer Romance in His Music Videos (Exclusive)
Why 'Wishbone' Was the 'Right Time' for Conan Gray to Depict a Queer Summer Romance in His Music Videos (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why 'Wishbone' Was the 'Right Time' for Conan Gray to Depict a Queer Summer Romance in His Music Videos (Exclusive)

The pop star's fourth studio album 'Wishbone' released Friday, Aug. 15 NEED TO KNOW Conan Gray released his fourth studio album Wishbone on Aug. 15 The era also saw the pop star portray a queer love story over the course of three music videos with longtime friend and actor Corey Fogelmanis It's the first time the singer-songwriter has explicitly depicted queer themes in his visuals — and he tells PEOPLE why now felt like the "right time" If Conan Gray was going to fall in love on screen, he knew he had to be comfortable. It's why he enlisted the help of former Disney actor and decade-long friend Corey Fogelmanis to costar in a trilogy of music videos to accompany his fourth studio album Wishbone. 'I knew I couldn't do it with a stranger, and Corey was right there in my contacts list. I called him up, I said, 'Hey, Corey. Can we fall in love in a music video?' ' the 26-year-old pop star tells PEOPLE. 'I truly don't think I could have done it if it wasn't for [him].' Gravitating to what feels natural was Gray's mantra when crafting the world of Wishbone, a cathartic '90s-tinged record chronicling a devastating breakup. Released Friday, Aug. 15, the singer-songwriter's 12-track LP was a return to tradition: He penned most of the songs alone on a guitar, only listened to music he loved and collaborated with his first-ever producer and 'musical dad' Dan Nigro again. He even got back in touch with his Texan roots while creating the album, heading back to his hometown of Georgetown, Texas, to film the music videos for Wishbone's singles, 'This Song,' 'Vodka Cranberry' and 'Caramel.' 'In so many ways, this album is a confrontation and a reminder to myself of who I am and where I grew up and the dreams that I had when I was a kid,' he says. 'Just the person I've always been.' Still, Gray ventures into new territory in his latest era. For the trio of videos, Gray and Fogelmanis play Wilson and Brando, best friends who have a whirlwind summer romance full of emotional peaks and valleys — and a whole lot of kissing. He has never shied from queer themes in his songwriting. 'The Story' from his 2020 debut album Kid Krow references two boys who were best friends, 'but always wished they were more.' In 'Boys & Girls' from last year's Found Heaven, he writes about a love interest who's the object of both male and female attention. With Wilson and Brando, it's the first time Gray has explicitly depicted queer love in his visuals. 'It absolutely felt like the right thing,' says the 'Heather' singer of the choice to portray love between two boys. 'It's just an instinct that I had in me. I knew I wanted to tell a story of these two childhood friends falling in love. And, I don't know, it just felt like the right time.' He continued, 'It felt like a story that I wanted to see for myself. And so maybe it was a bit selfish, really. I just wanted to see a cute little summer romance.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. In the wishbone superstition, two people make a wish while holding a bird's forked bone. When it breaks apart, the person who receives the larger half will have their desire granted, while the other walks away with nothing. Gray confesses that the last time he got the losing end of the metaphorical wishbone was when he began writing the album two years ago. Through making record and coming back to himself, his life and his perspective have transformed. 'I realized that somebody getting a short end of the stick is not entirely always true,' he explains. 'When you lose something, oftentimes it's actually just a reallocation or a little nudge into the right direction in life, but you don't even realize you were in the wrong direction.' He says, 'I felt like I'd lost something, but ultimately ended up finding something that was so much more me and so much more what I was supposed to have versus what I wanted.' Wishbone is out on all streaming platforms. Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store
Cinco de Mayo celebrates resilience and culture of Mexican people