Playlist: Marcos Nájera's Portfolio
Featured
ZETA PODCAST SERIES (Series)
Produced by Marcos Nájera
Most recent piece in this series:
Episode #1: "Who the F is that?"
From Marcos Nájera | Part of the ZETA PODCAST SERIES series | 13:29
- Playing
- Episode #1: "Who the F is that?"
- From
- Marcos Nájera
Host Marcos Nájera introduces us to the Zeta podcast series. Who is Oscar Zeta Acosta? If you know, you are way ahead of Nájera who admits the US public school system failed him and his fellow Latinos. The good news is that Nájera insists this podcast series is opportunity for you, me, he and we to learn once and for all about this Chicano luminary that history forgot.
People interviewed in this podcast are:
1) Phillip Rodriguez, Director/Producer/Writer of the PBS documentary "The Rise and Fall of the Brown Buffalo".
More information on the documentary can be found here: www.BrownBuffaloFilm.com
2) Guillermo Gomez-Pena, MacArthur genius and international performance artist.
3) Anita Acosta, Oscar Zeta Acosta's sister.
Episode #1: "Who the F is that?"
From Marcos Nájera | Part of the ZETA PODCAST SERIES series | 13:29
Host Marcos Nájera introduces us to the Zeta podcast series. Who is Oscar Zeta Acosta? If you know, you are way ahead of Nájera who admits the US public school system failed him and his fellow Latinos. The good news is that Nájera insists this podcast series is opportunity for you, me, he and we to learn once and for all about this Chicano luminary that history forgot.
- Playing
- Episode #1: "Who the F is that?"
- From
- Marcos Nájera
Host Marcos Nájera introduces us to the Zeta podcast series. Who is Oscar Zeta Acosta? If you know, you are way ahead of Nájera who admits the US public school system failed him and his fellow Latinos. The good news is that Nájera insists this podcast series is opportunity for you, me, he and we to learn once and for all about this Chicano luminary that history forgot.
People interviewed in this podcast are:
1) Phillip Rodriguez, Director/Producer/Writer of the PBS documentary "The Rise and Fall of the Brown Buffalo".
More information on the documentary can be found here: www.BrownBuffaloFilm.com
2) Guillermo Gomez-Pena, MacArthur genius and international performance artist.
3) Anita Acosta, Oscar Zeta Acosta's sister.
Episode #2: "Hunting for Buffalo in Arizona"
From Marcos Nájera | Part of the ZETA PODCAST SERIES series | 22:40
Nájera travels home to the Southwest to visit Latino scholars from ASU’s Transborder Studies department. The first of its kind in the nation. Chicano literature and history experts weigh in on Zeta’s life, times and writing. This episode explores the divide between the learned and the layman and women of the Latinx community.
Nájera travels home to the Southwest to visit Latino scholars from ASU’s Transborder Studies department. The first of its kind in the nation. Chicano literature and history experts weigh in on Zeta’s life, times and writing. This episode explores the divide between the learned and the layman and women of the Latinx community.
Episode #3: "The Ladies in His Life"
From Marcos Nájera | Part of the ZETA PODCAST SERIES series | 31:40
The women in Zeta’s life. From family to friends to former lovers. The ladies speak up and out about Oscar Zeta Acosta. From his spark-light sister Anita Acosta to his former lover Dorinda Moreno to his ex-wife, we hear how and why Zeta’s relationships with women were fraught with tension, laughter and tons of lingering questions.
- Playing
- Episode #3: "The Ladies in His Life"
- From
- Marcos Nájera
The women in Zeta’s life. From family to friends to former lovers. The ladies speak up and out about Oscar Zeta Acosta. From his spark-light sister Anita Acosta to his former lover Dorinda Moreno to his ex-wife, we hear how and why Zeta’s relationships with women were fraught with tension, laughter and tons of lingering questions.
Episode #4: "A Vandalized Voice"
From Marcos Nájera | Part of the ZETA PODCAST SERIES series | 16:59
The men in Zeta’s life. From family to friends to former lovers? You never know—some say Zeta was a constant chameleon in life, love, and the law. Now, the men weigh in on the Brown Buffalo. Hear how his son still battles to come to terms with a dad who disappeared from his family, long before he disappeared in Mexico. Meanwhile, his Rolling Stone editor can’t hold back the emotion when he recalls the conversations he had with the man who’d come to write two of the most important books in the American Chicano cannon. Hear how a high school student became a Hollywood mogul, in large measure because Zeta the lawyer stood by his side.
- Playing
- Episode #4: "A Vandalized Voice"
- From
- Marcos Nájera
The men in Zeta’s life. From family to friends to former lovers? You never know—some say Zeta was a constant chameleon in life, love, and the law. Now, the men weigh in on the Brown Buffalo. Hear how his son still battles to come to terms with a dad who disappeared from his family, long before he disappeared in Mexico. Meanwhile, his Rolling Stone editor can’t hold back the emotion when he recalls the conversations he had with the man who’d come to write two of the most important books in the American Chicano cannon. Hear how a high school student became a Hollywood mogul, in large measure because Zeta the lawyer stood by his side.
Episode #5: "Law, Literature & Racism: Zeta Style"
From Marcos Nájera | Part of the ZETA PODCAST SERIES series | 17:24
In the end, we wrap up our series at the beginning. Host Marcos Nájera reports on what he’s learned about Oscar Zeta Acosta. And the contributions he made to the fields of law, literature and long-form journalism. Did the public system fail Nájera and his fellow Latinos? Perhaps it doesn’t matter. Ultimately, Oscar Zeta Acosta’s memory lives on as a reminder simply to always use life as opportunity to do more. And then some more.
In the end, we wrap up our series at the beginning. Host Marcos Nájera reports on what he’s learned about Oscar Zeta Acosta. And the contributions he made to the fields of law, literature and long-form journalism. Did the public system fail Nájera and his fellow Latinos? Perhaps it doesn’t matter. Ultimately, Oscar Zeta Acosta’s memory lives on as a reminder simply to always use life as opportunity to do more. And then some more.