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- Immigration 2007-2008
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As part of NPR's Latino USA financial report to funders, the producers of Latino USA put together an hour's worth of programming featuring some highlights of our immigration coverage in 2007 and 2008. The result was a reflective look at this issue at a time when it dominated the national discussion. The end result pleased the producers so much that we decided to put it out for stations to air, should they decide it met their programming needs.
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Piece Description
As part of NPR's Latino USA financial report to funders, the producers of Latino USA put together an hour's worth of programming featuring some highlights of our immigration coverage in 2007 and 2008. The result was a reflective look at this issue at a time when it dominated the national discussion. The end result pleased the producers so much that we decided to put it out for stations to air, should they decide it met their programming needs.
Broadcast History
Individual pieces had various broadcast dates.
Transcript
FROM NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO, THIS IS A SPECIAL EDITION OF LATINO USA. I?M MARIA HINOJOSA.
MANY AMERICANS HAVE LONG KNOWN ABOUT IMMIGRANTS WORKING IN AN UNDERGROUND ECONOMY OF DAY LABORERS AND DOMESTIC WORKERS, YET FOR YEARS THE IMMIGRATION ISSUE WAS LARGELY INVISIBLE ON THE NATIONAL AGENDA.
BUT WHEN SOME LAWMAKERS TRIED TO MAKE IT A CRIME TO BE IN THE U.S. WITHOUT DOCUMENTATION, THE ISSUE EXPLODED ONTO THE NATIONAL SPOTLIGHT WITH A SERIES OF PRO-IMMIGRANT MARCHES IN 2006.
OVER THE PAST YEAR, LATINO USA HAS WORKED TO GO BEYOND THE SENSATIONALISM, THE POLITICAL POSTURING AND THE CONVENIENT SOUND-BITE, TO BRING A COMPLICATED ISSUE MORE SOPHISTICATED COVERAGE.
OVER THE NEXT HOUR, WE?LL HEAR SOME OF THESE STORIES. AS WE CHRONICLE A POLITICAL YEAR?S WORTH OF IMMIGRATION.
COMING UP ON THIS SPECIAL EDITION OF NPR?S LATINO USA.
BREAK///
INTRO: I?M MARIA HINOJOSA.
TO BEG...
Read the full transcript
Timing and Cues
Stand-alone hour (59:00) of programming.
Musical Works
| Title | Artist | Album | Label | Year | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| She's Dirty as a Boy | Chris Washburne | Paradise in Troube. | Jazzheads | 2003 | 01:50 |
| Tragos Amargos | Ramon Ayala | 20 Exitos Gigantes. | Freddie | 1998 | 00:20 |
| Arrancame El Corazon | Ramon Ayala | 20 Exitos Gigantes. | Freddie | 1998 | 00:24 |
| El Disgusto | Ramon Ayala | 20 Exitos Gigantes. | Freddie | 1998 | 00:12 |
| Julio Cesar Chavez | Ramon Ayala | 20 Exitos Gigantes. | Freddie | 1998 | 00:18 |
| Nadie Como Tu | Ramon Ayala | 20 Exitos Gigantes. | Freddie | 1998 | 00:22 |
| Debajo de Aquel Arbol | Ramon Ayala | 20 Exitos Gigantes. | Freddie | 1998 | 00:20 |




James Reiss
Posted on June 03, 2008 at 02:29 PM | Permalink
Review of Immigration 2007-2008
To rave about this piece -- and I recently suggested this in connection with Jake Warga's productions -- is like preaching to the choir. "Immigration 2007-2008" has already been licensed by five public radio stations, including the legendary WNYC in the Big Apple. Far from millions of listeners in New York, we have KUT in Austin and Latino USA to thank for Maria Hinojosa's hour-long, year's worth of immigration stories.
As with any medley, this compilation of a dozen crossing-the-border tales may be excerpted, chopped into twelve drop-ins. The cumulative effect of this piece, however, is more than the sum of its parts. As Hinojosa comments in her postscript, in 2006 the immigration issue was "dead, no longer sexy." In 2007 and 2008, especially during this election year, it has come alive again. Although the issue hasn't emerged noisily during the past few months, this autumn it may well resurface like a drowned corpse.
Speaking of which: one of the strangest stories included here involves a statue of Jesus floating facedown in the Rio Grande near Eagle Pass, Texas. Whoever launched the statue possibly had in mind the image of an undocumented border-crossing Christ. The image of Jesus doing the dead man's float like a dirt-poor immigrant without official papers inspired one brave local pastor to declare, "Our lives should always be based in terms of the human person because a human person in Judeo-Christian thought is the image and likeness of God, and God's entire focus is His love of each and every single human being."
Another story I find particularly compelling has to do with the way the Department of Homeland Security has singled out land owned by Mexican-Americans for hundreds of years to build a 370-mile border wall that would supposedly deter illegal immigrants -- while bypassing wealthy Anglos. Billionaire Roy L. Hunt's 6000 acres of borderland are exempt from Michael Chertoff's land grab, whereas Dr. Eloisa Tamez's acres, held by her family for centuries, are threatened with a ridiculous segmented fence. Is this racism or what?
Who among us can turn a deaf ear to what Hillary Clinton, interviewed here, calls the "immigration challenge"? The fact that Clinton voted in favor of the border wall is certainly another tidbit to savor in this comprehensive wrap-up.