Fútbol. Fashion. Music. One night built for the woman who shows up for all three.
🎟️ Verizon Golden Ticket Raffle
👕 Savage x Fenty jersey customization
💄 Hair + Beauty Station by Ponte Your Moños
🛍️ Curated vendors
🎶 Live DJ
🏆 Fit contest
🎁 Gift bags
This is LA's first Fashion × Fútbol Experience, and your ticket starts at $10.
Link in bio. Space is limited.
Becky G knows exactly how to make culture feel loud.
Her new song “EPA” is full of movement, color, community, and in the video, even the ice gets smashed like a statement.
It feels bigger than a track. It’s joy, pride, and Latino culture taking up space without asking for permission.
Everybody outside.
María Lorena Ramírez didn’t wear huaraches to make a statement.
She wore them because they are part of where she comes from.
For the Rarámuri people of Chihuahua, running is not a trend or a performance aesthetic, it is culture, history, survival, and connection to the land. 🇲🇽
So when María Lorena won a 50K ultramarathon in traditional huaraches and a long skirt, the story was never just about what was on her feet.
It was about everything those steps carried.
$100 million.
That's the goal behind Shakira's decision to donate every dollar generated by "Dai Dai" to children's education.
The World Cup anthem, set to reach 4 billion viewers across the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, will funnel all royalties, streams, and commercial rights through FIFA's Global Citizen Education Fund, directing resources to vulnerable communities in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
Fútbol really is life.
Cristo Fernández, the Mexican actor who made Dani Rojas one of Ted Lasso’s most loved characters, just signed a professional contract with El Paso Locomotive FC.
Before Hollywood, he grew up playing fútbol in Mexico. Now, the story comes full circle: from playing a footballer on screen to stepping onto the pitch for real.
That’s not a plot twist. That’s a comeback.
Being first-gen means you’re never just chasing your own dream.
For Alondra Lopez, stepping onto the track as a Latina student-athlete at the University of the Pacific has always carried something bigger: her family’s sacrifices, her culture, and the responsibility of creating space in places that weren’t always built with her in mind.
Her journey has meant balancing the demands of college and Division I athletics while learning how to navigate those spaces on her own. It has meant showing up on the hard days, trusting the work nobody sees, and letting sports teach her resilience, discipline, and belief.
Because for Alondra, representation isn’t just about being seen. It’s about making sure the next girl watching knows she belongs there too, on the track, in the classroom, and in every room she once thought was out of reach.
✨ ProxYMás is a DRAFTED series highlighting the next and more — Latinas building their path in sport and beyond.
Carlos López Estrada is part of a wave of Mexican filmmakers proving there isn’t just one way to enter Hollywood, or one way to tell a story once you get there.
That wave is directors, writers, animators, and visual storytellers bringing their own rhythm into spaces that have not always made room for them. It’s indie films, music videos, animation, bilingual influence, cultural memory, and global imagination all existing in the same career.
For López Estrada, that path led from Mexico City to music-driven storytelling, independent cinema, and eventually co-directing Disney’s Oscar-nominated Raya and the Last Dragon. But the bigger story is what that kind of visibility can do for the next person watching.
“I hope people in Mexico can see what we’re doing and feel proud. If being nominated motivates a young filmmaker or artist, it fills me with emotion.”
Because representation is not just about being in the room. It’s about expanding what the room can look like. 👏
This isn’t just Padres merch. It’s a whole storefront sign turned into a baseball drop.
Giovanni Bautista brought Mexican rotulismo, the bold, hand-painted lettering you see on mercados, taquerías, and neighborhood walls, straight into MLB. 🇲🇽
“Una Aventura Más.” “Expendio de Home Runs.”
The details feel local, loud, and instantly recognizable. Oaxaca in the brushwork. San Diego in the colors. Baseball in the punchline.
Culture didn’t get “inspired by” here. It got signed, painted, and put on the field. ⚾️
📸: rotulos.bautista
Maria Micheo’s story doesn’t fit into one flag, one country, or one ring.
Before boxing, she represented Guatemala in karate. Then came the harder chapter: starting over in a new country, adapting to a different culture, and rebuilding herself in a sport where there was no clear blueprint waiting for her.
That road made her La Imparable.
Now, as Guatemala’s first professional female boxer, Maria carries more than a record into the ring.
She carries the discipline it took to begin again, the pride of where she comes from, and the proof that sometimes history is made by the ones willing to create the path themselves. 🇬🇹🇺🇸
Brittany Bravo being behind this campaign is the part we need to talk about!
Rare Beauty’s new 48-shade foundation campaign is centered on the full spectrum of Latina identity, 48 shades, 48 stories, and 48 people from across Latin America. But behind the lens is Brittany Bravo, a Los Angeles-based Mexican and Costa Rican photographer and director whose work is rooted in culture, family, love, and identity.
That makes the campaign feel even more intentional. Because this wasn’t just a beauty brand saying “representation.” It was a Latina creative helping shape how that representation looked, felt, and landed.
Because this campaign wasn’t just photographed, it was understood.