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  • Introducing: More Than a Movie: American Me
    2022/08/30

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    2 分
  • 1. American Me: The Backstory
    2022/09/12

    American Me was supposed to help end gang violence — instead, it may have led to the murders of at least three people.

    Host Alex Fumero unpacks the story of American Me, a film directed by legendary Latino actor Edward James Olmos, and his choice to base the film on a real-life gang called the Mexican Mafia or La Eme. Did Olmos' decision to fictionalize the lives of these men lead to the murders of several crew members?

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    25 分
  • 2. Edward James Olmos (Santana)
    2022/09/15

    Edward James Olmos is one of the most decorated and respected actors alive, especially in the Latino community. Who is the man responsible for American Me, and why did he make it?

    Most of us know Edward James Olmos as a legendary actor, but he's also an activist who for decades has worked on behalf of Latino causes from Hollywood to Washington D.C. But when both of those sides of him collided to make a movie that would stop gang violence what resulted may have been the exact opposite. Why did Olmos make American Me and what went wrong in the process?

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    39 分
  • 3. Jacob Vargas (Paulito)
    2022/09/22

    Actor Jacob Vargas shares his experience on and off screen with gangs, movies and American Me.

    Jacob Vargas caught a big break when at the age of 20 he was tapped to play Paulito in American Me. Since then he's had a career most actors would envy and continues starring in TV and film even today. How has he thrived as a Latino in Hollywood? What was it like being a kid in LA growing up around real gangs? And what impact did American Me actually have in his neighborhood? Was it the cautionary tale Olmos claims it was or did it somehow make kids think gangs were cool?

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    38 分
  • 4. The Puppets: Danny de la Paz and Daniel Villarreal
    2022/09/29

    The actors who played Puppet and Little Puppet, Danny de la Paz and Daniel Villarreal, share their experiences on-set and in the aftermath.

    Danny de la Paz (Puppet) and Daniel Villarreal (Little Puppet) weren't just actors cast in American Me — they were part of a family of actors and filmmakers assembled by Edward James Olmos over the years that culminated with two powerful performances in American Me. They also share how the news hit them when they heard about the murder of gang interventionist and crew member, Ana Lizarraga.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    34 分
  • 5. Sal Lopez (Pedro)
    2022/10/06

    Actor Sal Lopez spent months close to Edward James Olmos on the set of American Me and remembers the day he was told that people from the movie were dying.

    Sal Lopez trained as a dancer, but his real breakout was when he went to his first casting call. Sal was part of the first wave of Mexican American actors to break into the mainstream, and American Me would be his magnum opus. But Sal was also in France at the peak of the movie’s success at the Cannes Film Festival when he was told that people connected to the film in LA were being killed.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    31 分
  • 6. Milton Grimes
    2022/10/13

    Milton Grimes represented a Mexican Mafia leader who sued the production of American Me for stealing his life story.

    Milton Grimes represented Rodney King after his beating by the LAPD. He has served as a defense attorney in nine death penalty cases in 56 jury trials, and once got the call to represent notorious gang leader Joe “Peg Leg“ Morgan in his lawsuit against the movie.

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    37 分
  • 7. Erick Galindo: What The Streets Said About American Me
    2022/10/20

    Writer Erick Galindo grew up with American Me and remembers vividly the impact it had on the streets of L.A.

    Podcaster and writer Erick Galindo doesn't hold back in the recounting of his childhood in East and Southeast LA in the 1990s. And in those days, the movie that every kid in the barrio knew backwards and forwards was American Me. Erick says he saw firsthand how the film impacted recruitment into gangs and the word on the street when it came to the murders connected to the movie.

    More Than a Movie: American Me is a podcast that digs into the history and mystery of American Me, a film directed by and starring Edward James Olmos that had a huge impact on Latino cinema and culture. In every episode, our host, Alex Fumero will be diving into the controversy behind the movie.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    37 分