television

George Lopez & Conan O'Brien
Getty Images (2)

George Lopez & Conan O’Brien Are Making History Together Tomorrow!

By Amaris Castillo | 06/08/2011 - 16:00 | 0 Comments

George Lopez and Conan O’Brien will make history this week by appearing on each others shows on the same night on the same network, Deadline.com reports.  According to the website, O’Brien will appear on the Mexican-American’s show Lopez Tonight, and Lopez will appear on Conan this...

Casting News: Alana de la Garza Returns to 'Law & Order,' Andy Garcia Moves Into Springfield

By Lee Hernandez | 01/29/2011 - 01:35 | 1 Comment

— Andy Garcia is set to guest star in an upcoming episode of FOX's long-running animated comedy, The Simpsons. Garcia, who recorded his lines earlier this week, will lend his voice to the role of an evil children's fantasy book...

Mark Indelicato

EXCLUSIVE: Mark Indelicato Congratulates Golden Globe Nominee Chris Colfer

By Lee Hernandez | 01/14/2011 - 11:25 | 1 Comment

A few weeks ago, Mark Indelicato told us he wished that Chris Colfer’s Glee character Kurt was less of a victim. “I think every gay character on TV—whether it be a boy or a girl, or...

Oprah Story

No Latinos on Oprah's New Network—or Anywhere Else on TV

By Lee Hernandez | 01/07/2011 - 19:19 | 7 Comments

Since the launch of Oprah's OWN cable television channel on January 1st, we've noticed that most of the protégés on Lady O's new network are white, and that while there's plenty that's worth seeing on the channel, there's one thing that's missing: Latinos! 

We make up...

15 TV Stars You Never Knew Were Latino

By Lee Hernandez | 04/26/2010 - 12:00 | 75 Comments

Latinos don’t fit into any one mold. We come in all shapes, sizes and colors—and our TV stars are no exception. Last week, Latina.com reader Maria Ortiz proved that when she pointed out that Glee star, Lea Michelle, is actually part-Spanish (she has Sephardic Jewish heritage) on our...

Children’s Programming for Adults

By Grace Bastidas | 03/05/2010 - 10:21 | 3 Comments

Chile’s 31 Minutos is the kind of children’s television show I would’ve loved as a kid—and as an adult, too. Unlike Sesame Street, its content was built on double entendres and sarcastic humor. On TV from 2003 to 2008, it educated kids while addressing social problems.

It was such a phenomenon throughout Latin America, that some of...

Syndicate content