Regarding two points you discussed in a recent episode: the excitement over Abuela from Encanto being portrayed as a villain, (did I hear that right? ) and the discussion about collaborations among Latino artists- there’s some context worth considering.
First, your reaction to seeing a female villain surprised me. Historically (and ongoing), women have been disproportionately cast as antagonists, manipulators, obstacles, or sources of conflict in media. Those portrayals do not exist in a vacuum. They contribute to broader cultural narratives that teach audiences to associate women with blame, dysfunction, and social problems, while normalizing the mistreatment and devaluation of women in real life. Had you explored that history, you might have approached that character differently.
Second, your hot take about there being too many collaborations among Latino artists caught my attention because I have often viewed the abundance of collaborations as evidence of something positive: a cultural emphasis on community. My perception has been that Latino artists frequently work together because they value collective success, relationships, and shared cultural expression. Is that perception wrong?
I have always assumed artists choose collaborators because creative work is strongest when the people involved genuinely want to create together. If labels are the primary force driving these collaborations, that would certainly be worth discussing. But I would caution against treating collaboration itself as a negative phenomenon.
From my perspective, dismissing collaboration can unintentionally echo a colonial mindset that has spent centuries attempting to fragment Indigenous communities, weaken communal bonds, and elevate individual competition over collective strength. For more than 500 years, Indigenous peoples throughout the Americas have faced systematic efforts to break apart communities and disconnect people from one another. Community has often been one of the primary tools of survival.
If you are not of Indigenous heritage, or if you primarily identify with a European or other ancestral lineage, what I am saying here may not resonate in the same way. But for many people of Indigenous ancestry, the pressure to distance themselves from their origins is a very real experience.
Be mindful of the ideas you absorb and promote. Internalized racism is often subtle. It rarely arrives announcing itself. Instead, it convinces people that rejecting their own heritage is progress, that proximity to a dominant culture is superiority, and that community ties are something to outgrow rather than preserve.
Over time, that psychological conflict can become deeply damaging. Researchers have long documented the mental and emotional harm associated with internalized racism, including chronic stress, self-rejection, identity conflict, depression, and other forms of psychological distress. The consequences can extend even further. When people spend years suppressing who they are, defending narratives that diminish their own ancestry, and living in conflict with themselves, that damage does not remain confined to the mind. It affects the body as well.
I have seen people embrace the belief that their Indigenous heritage is something to hide while elevating a forced or imposed heritage in the hope of gaining acceptance from others. They convince themselves that self-rejection is necessary for belonging. The result is often a profound form of suffering that manifests psychologically, emotionally, and physically. In many cases, people do not recognize what is happening until years later, after the damage has already taken hold, like developing cancer never seen before in their family.
It is worth asking why so many people become disconnected from themselves, their communities, and their histories- and what that disconnection costs them.
You have a solid platform, and I have enjoyed listening so far. That is precisely why I think these conversations deserve deeper examination.