You are not logged in | Log in | Register

Dennis Miller
423.702.9111

  • How many cups of coffee do you drink on an average workday?

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...
  • Events Calendar Sponsored by ChattanoogaHasFun.com
    March 2010
    MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
      
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7
    8 9 10 11 12 13 14
    15 16 17 18 19 20 21
    22 23 24 25 26 27 28
    29 30 31  

    Today\'s Events
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • Daikaju, One Shoe Untied, Ampline at JJ's Bohemia, 10pm
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit, The Cadillac Saints at Rhythm & Brews, 9:30pm
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • "Twenty Original American Etchings" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Preson Parris at The Palms, 10pm
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am
    • St Patrick’s Day ”Lucky” Go Red for Women Event at Blue Water Grille, 6pm
    • "Peter Pan" at Tivoli Theatre

    Tomorrow\'s Events
    • Tasting Series 2010: Into to Wine Part I - "The World of Whites" at Back Inn Cafe, 6pm
    • "Twenty Original American Etchings" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am
    • The Mystery of the TV Talk Show at Vaudeville Cafe , 7pm
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • "Peter Pan" at Tivoli Theatre
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Sweet Adelines, Region 23 "Six Minutes to Fame" Convention at Chattanooga Convention Center
    • "Imaging Identity" Lecture at Hunter Museum of American Art, 6:30pm
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am

    Later Events
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am
    • "Peter Pan" at Tivoli Theatre
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • "Recent Landscapes: Lawerence Mathis" Exhibition at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • The Mystery of Flight 138 at Vaudeville Cafe , 8:30pm
    • Hubble in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • A Night To Remember 2010 at Chattanooga Convention Center, 8pm
    • Mike Speenburg at The Comedy Catch, 7:30pm
    • Opening Reception for "Recent Landscapes" at Warehouse Row, 6pm
    • "Hubble 3D" Opens @ IMAX at IMAX 3D Theater
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group
    • Sweet Adelines, Region 23 "Six Minutes to Fame" Convention at Chattanooga Convention Center

    Ask A Mexican: What’s Mexican for “Oreo”?

    Written by Gustavo Arellano
    July 15, 2009 – 4:06 pm


    Dear Mexican,
    How can I get Mexicans to arrive to a meeting ON TIME?
    — Punctual Pete

    Dear Gabacho,
    Tell them you’re offering green cards on a first-come, first-serve basis. And then diles a gabachos to eliminate the concept of arriving “fashionably late” the way they did the Polish joke.

    Dear Mexican,
    I was reading through the glossary in your ¡Ask a Mexican! book and I came upon the word pocho, an Americanized Mexican. To me, it suggests some sort of essential Mexican-ness that I find to be disturbing. There is a similar ethic in the black community. The term “Uncle Tom” comes to mind. It is used as the ultimate humiliation to a black person and I wonder if pocho has the same weight to it? Being a person who has never fit into the ideal of anything, I sympathize with anyone else finds themselves on the outside. The pressure to relate to everyone else in your gene pool is ridiculous. In my experience, it often comes from the most mentally and economically impoverished, hence the term “ghetto pass.” The pressure is so great in the black community that black professors regularly use the words ain’t and folk, as if to prove their blackness. I suspect that there is a class component in the Mexican community also. What say you, wise Mexican?
    — Alma on Ice

    Dear Negrito,
    The idea of ethnic or national purity of course isn’t limited to Mexicans, and I’m with you in ridiculing anyone who subscribes to such pinche notions. In the Mexican case vis-à-vis the negrito community example, differences exist.
    Pocho doesn’t necessarily signify a betrayal of the Mexican community to shuck and jive for the gabachos like “Uncle Tom” does for blacks; it just means the dilution of Mexican cultural and linguistic features in someone of Mexican descent (the term comes from an alternate meaning for pocho—rotting fruit—but not even the Royal Academy of Spanish has a clue about the word’s etymological origins).  The most immediate corollary to Uncle Tom in Spanish is Tío Tomás or Tío Taco, but both are pochismos (pocho sayings) with little usage in Mexico, where the slur for a sellout is malinchista, referring to Cortes’ Indian translator, or a vendido. As you imply, the only Mexicans who care whether someone is Mexican enough are insecure twits who aren’t Mexican enough, and some of the most notorious examples come from Chicano Studies professors (but not all of you, o noble researchers of everything wab!) and Carlos Mencia. Oh, and immigrant elders, but their angst is excused—that’s the American immigrant experience, after all.

    Dear Mexican,
    Why can’t Mexicans seem to learn and use English like most other immigrants elsewhere around the country?
    — Fucking Mexicans

    Dear Gabacho,
    Consult page 21 of my ¡Ask a Mexican! libro, then go ask New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez about his family. Hopefully, he’ll aim a spiral at your huevos.

    ¡ASK A MEXICAN GRATIS BOOK CONTEST!

    Sí, gentle readers: It’s that time of the año again where I give away an autographed copy of my book to one lucky reader from each paper that carries my columna, and cinco readers from everywhere else.  The challenge: in 25 words or less, tell me your favorite local Mexican restaurant and what makes it so bueno.  I’ll be traveling ’round los Estados Unidos in my trusty burro soon to research my coming book on the history of Mexican food in the United States, and need places to haunt and cactuses to sleep under.  One entry per person, one winner per paper, and contest ends when I say so!

    Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net, myspace.com/ocwab, find him on Facebook, Twitter, or write via snail mail at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815-1433


    Posted in Ask a Mexican | | Print This Post | No Comments »

    Leave a Reply

    Home, About Us, Arts, Arts Calendar Picks, Arts Feature, Ask a Mexican, Breaking News, City Councilscope, Columns, Film, Film Feature, Letters to the Editor, Life in the Noog, Music, Music Calendar Picks, Music Feature, New Music Reviews, News & Features, News Feature, On the Beat, Podcasts, Police Blotter, Pulse Beats, Pulse Blogs, Shades of Green, Shrink Rap, The List