Tumgik
#vanessa rubio icons
gt-icons · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Random Actress icons
‒ like or reblog if you save
15 notes · View notes
calisources · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
VANESSA RUBIO AS CARMEN DIAZ IN NETFLIX'S COBRA KAI, FROM SEASON ONE TO SEASON FIVE.
base icons are 230x130 in order to be use for any type of icon template.
the icons are already sharpened, as well brightened due to the show being very dark.
Vanessa Rubio (b. 1983) is of American-Colombian Ancestry.
remember to reblog if you save/use. credit somewhere if you save.
these base icons are free.  consider donating to  to  paypal or buy me a coffee through ko-fi. it truly helps me a lot.    
SEASON 1 - 101 ICONS SEASON 2 - 158 ICONS SEASON 3 - 134 ICONS SEASON 4 - 229 ICONS SEASON 5 - 232 ICONS
9 notes · View notes
Text
I HAVE RETURNED FROM THE FNAF MOVIE AND I HAVE SOME THOUGHTS
✨ Non-spoiler section ✨
I had such a fun time with this movie! There were a ton of Easter eggs I caught and I’m sure there’s a few that I missed! My best advice for anyone wanting to see this movie is don’t take it super seriously, you’ll enjoy it more! The makers of this film weren’t lying when they said that they made this movie for the fans, I do feel like fans will enjoy this movie way more than a general audience and that’s perfectly fine! It’s campy at some parts and funnier than I thought it would be, but that’s what made it so fun! Now for the nitty-gritty…
❌ SPOILERS BELOW ❌
What I liked…
• First off, Matthew Patrick is a fucking LIAR! He does have a cameo in the movie, he says his iconic “That’s just a theory” line which was great! He’s a waiter at a diner, which leads me to my next point
• The diner was named “Sparky’s”, which I feel like only OG fans will get the reference. But for those of you who don’t know, back when FNAF 1 came out, there was a rumor of a secret/rare animatronic in the game called Sparky the Dog. There was a fake image floating around showing him standing in the door to parts and service. This was later confirmed to be fake. BUT! In the movie they also have a dog-looking animatronic in the parts and service room which absolutely took me out lol
• Acting was great! Everyone was fun to watch, Josh Hutcherson was a great lead as Mike and Piper Rubio was so sweet as Abby but I gotta give my props to Matthew Lillard towards the end of the movie, he looked like he was having so much fun being this unhinged monster! Speaking of…
• There is a spring lock scene!! It is real!! And God was it cathartic to watch! Obviously being PG-13, they couldn’t do blood and guts galore, but I think they managed to pull it off pretty well! Afton’s scene was definitely my favorite in the film hands down! And yes, he gets his “I always come back” line which put 5 years back on my life if I’m being honest lmao
• There is blood in this movie! Not a gratuitous amount, but it was enough for what they were going for I think! The kills of the people breaking to Freddy’s were more entertaining to watch than I thought! Especially Freddy’s kill…that caught me completely off guard lmao
• There aren’t too many jumpscares but that was fine with me! They do this repeat jumpscare with a little figurine of Balloon Boy like 3 times and I thought it was funny every time! They do a really good job with tension in this movie!
• The animatronics!!!! LOVED THEM!!!! They were so detailed and well designed, they were so fun to watch!! The Jim Henson company did an absolutely stellar job with the designs, I want to hug them 🥺
• So the story…I thought it was fine! They do stray from canon by making Vanessa Afton’s daughter in the movie instead of Mike being his son. They do confirm Afton was the one who kidnapped and killed Mike’s brother Garrett. The story is kind of left open ended as if they could continue the story (which I hope they do), but I think it leaves a more or less satisfying ending!
• There’s a minor mid-credit scene with Cory Kenshin and a secret message at the very end of the credits. I couldn’t hear it well but it’s spelled-out letters exactly like the ones from the death minigames in FNAF 2
• Yes, The Living Tombstone’s FNAF song is in the end credits, I felt my soul leave my body 😭
Minor Negatives…
• The story is slow at the beginning, it takes a little bit for anything super interesting to take place
• There are some plot points that don’t get explained or resolved (which is par for the course for FNAF) but that leads me to believe that they want to make sequels which I am all here for
• The Aunt Jane character wasn’t super important, she was fine, but she was there just to serve as an antagonist to Mike for a whole 5 minutes of the movie, if that
• I wanted so much more Afton/Spring Bonnie time, it was too short for me but I am happy with what I got. Also, he didn’t wear any purple in the movie which I think is a crime 😂
• Kind of wish there was an R rated version of this movie even though FNAF isn’t known for being bloody and gory, but some parts felt a little tame
• Also please correct me if I’m wrong but, they didn’t use the Toreador March music at all?? If I missed it, please tell me but I was waiting to hear it and it never came from what I remember
Speculation…
• So the biggest plot issue for me was that they never explained Afton’s intentions for killing. I think fans of the games know why he’s killing, but the general audience won’t. I’m sure it has something to do with the saw blade machine that tries to stuff your head into Freddy’s head. But it wasn’t clear. Vanessa never gave us a straight answer either even though she was in on it from the beginning.
• Towards the beginning of the movie, Abby is shown to be talking to her “invisible friend”, this is before Mike is hired as Freddy’s security guard. Turns out that friend is the ghost kid who possess Golden Freddy/Fredbear (again, isn’t clear lol). I wanna know why that kid showed up before Mike and Abby even went to the location??
• I may be reading too much into this, but when Mike goes in to get a new job after being fired from his mall security guard job, he’s talking to “Steve” and Steve does something interesting. He’s berating him for his inability to hold down a job, the he looks at his name on the file and just goes “…Mike S…” and just, doesn’t finish saying his name. He looks at Mike really weird like he’s trying to find something, and then just completely changes the subject. IDK, I’ll probably have to watch it again, and I think it would be a stretch to go the “Mike Afton” route especially since they established Vanessa was his kid. But ya never know with FNAF 😂
• Also the secret message that was spelled out at the end of the credits. If any of y’all know what they spelled, please tell me because I could not figure it out! I would love to know what it said!
Conclusion…
I just had a blast with this movie! I wasn’t sure what to expect with this movie but I think Blumhouse and everyone who worked on this movie did an amazing job, you can tell they put so much heart and soul into this! I will patiently be awaiting the announcement of the next movie until then!
Rating - 8.5/10
47 notes · View notes
gamergirljournalist · 11 months
Text
Review: Five Nights at Freddy's (2023) - I actually enjoyed it
Tumblr media
RATING: 3.5 out of 5
Warning: this review contains spoilers for the 2023 Five Nights at Freddy's film
For those who have been living under a rock, Five Nights at Freddy's is a 2014 indie horror video game that went through development hell after a film adaptation was announced. After years of waiting, plus it being passed down from Warner Bros to Blumhouse, the movie is now showing in theatres and Peacock.
As of writing, the 2023 film adaptation of Five Nights At Freddy's has an average critic score of 26 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. Regardless of what those film snobs say, I actually enjoyed this horror flick. Sure it has its flaws, but for a film adaptation, I think it did a pretty good job.
Warning, I will be spoiling the film and the games, so if you want to watch it blind, steer clear for now.
The film has a proper plot
Tumblr media
This movie has a plot, like a real working plot. And no, it's not convoluted compared to the mess that's the franchise's lore. It's about a night security guard who's at risk of losing his sister. To prove that he could still have custody of her, he took on the job as the night guard for an abandoned Pizzaria from the 80's. Little did he know that this was no ordinary night shift gig.
What Blumhouse and Scott Cawthon have done to present this game in movie form was great. It took parts of the first two games, as well as sprinkling in aspects from later titles and the books, to create a cohesive story. The best way to watch this movie is to view it as its own thing. Because if you're going to watch this and find ways to connect the movie to the game's story, many things really don't make sense.
The cast
Tumblr media
Five Nights at Freddy's has a tremendous cast. While most of the people featured were smaller actors who appeared in one minor role in TV shows or unknown films, Matthew Lillard and Josh Hutcherson did a tremendous job performing the franchise's iconic characters, William Afton and Mike Schmidt.
Mike has a personality, rather than just a boring character we play as in the first game. Meanwhile, we see William as this cunning character, who managed to fool so many people, to the point he had a different alias.
The children also did an amazing job, even if we rarely see them. They act all scary and not so innocent. Even Mike's sister, Abby (played by Piper Rubio) was shrouded in mystery. She's no ordinary kid, even if she does look like it. Why is she not like the other kids? What's with the drawings? So many questions that my first theory was that she was psychic.
Speaking of theories... MATPAT WAS IN IT!!!! That guy lied to everyone on the internet, only for it to be revealed that he had a minor cameo and said the line. And it's not just him. A few YouTubers were featured and Markiplier could have been in it if it wasn't for scheduling issues.
If there was one character I didn't like, it was Vanessa. Played by Elizabeth Lail, her job was to warn Mike about the dangers of the Pizzaria but wouldn't explain why due to "reasons" explained in the film's climax. The moment that happened, I was like "Okay, that checks out." Blumhouse's decision to implement a character that was introduced in Security Breach was an odd choice. I can somewhat see why it was made, however, its execution made it feel corny at most. 
My thoughts on the film
Tumblr media
In all honesty, Five Nights At Freddy's isn't like other great video game adaptations, like HBO's The Last of Us or Illuminations' The Super Mario Bros. However, it's pretty clear that so much love and attention was given to this project. And to be fair, that's to be expected since it's a Blumhouse production.
While it is branded as a horror movie, it felt like I was watching M3GAN all over again. Lots of comedy and the push of the importance of family. Some paranormal stuff here and there, easter eggs from the original games, while also coming up with something original. And I think that's the problem with this film.
Unlike Super Mario Bros, which barely had any lore, Five Nights At Freddy's has a story that spans many of its titles, including children's activity books. If viewed as a standalone story, it's fine. But let's be real, those who will be watching this movie on opening weekend are Five Nights At Freddy's fans. The film did reference stuff from the original story, but many changes were made which had many, including me, reacting with "that wasn't in the games at all." I watched this picture with my boyfriend and he was like "Can you explain x" and I had to tell him "Sorry dude, that's an original thing. Didn't see it in the games."
Regardless, I did enjoy the final product and how it gave some tribute to the content creators that boosted the franchise's popularity. It's still a good film, just expect some head scratches and camp. I bet Matpat is working on something to connect the movie to the overall lore.
7 notes · View notes
nowayhomz · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
like/reblog if you save
25 notes · View notes
torishasupremacy · 4 years
Text
gonna do the cobra kai tag thing with explanations below the cut
daniel or johnny - tbh im only choosing daniel bc he gives me the least second hand embarrassment  
robby or miguel - i refuse to choose between my boys
sam or tory - i actually really like them both but i have a big gay crush on peyton list so
demetri or hawk - demetri is great but he gives me a ton of second hand embarrassment plus hawk is super extra and i love him for it
aisha or moon - aisha is show stopping. incredible. it was an absolute crime that they wrote her out. unforgivable. 
bert or nate - don’t really have an opinion but i saw a gif of bert’s face during the eagle fang reveal scene and it was hilarious but shoutout to nate for that “they fucking kicked my face” or whatever that line was it was hilarious 
lawrusso or kiaz - im the unofficial ceo of kiaz sooo
binary boyfriends or story - im gonna guess that story is sam x tory (aka lanichols) but im honestly becoming more of a torisha shipper plus i love the binary boyfriends
amanda or carmen - amanda is great but vanessa rubio is a goddess and also my mom’s name is carmen so yeah
amanda/carmen or amanda/ali - carmanda is a power couple
daniel/kumiko or daniel/ali - dont have much of an opinion but they seem sweet
johnny/ali or johnny/carmen - they just have so much more chemistry tbh
miyagi-do or cobra kai - what can i say i love them
kreese or silver - kreese is a great villain and I haven't even seen kk3 but from what i hear silver is absolutely unhinged and im so excited to see him in s4
barnes or chozen - dont know much ab either but chosen was a fucking icon in ck 
tom cole or armand - literally do not care ab either of them
kicks or punches - I LOVE PUNCHING
paint the fence or get in the cement truck - that cement truck looked scary af give me a paintbrush any day
sand the deck or break windows at the junkyard - fuck yeah I wanna break shit
mohawk or french braid - hawk has made me unironically want a mohawk SO BAD
defense or offense - my karate class was complaining how we haven't been able to spar anybody for almost a year bc of covid I wanna punch people
balance pond or walk-in freezer - dont think id like doing either of these but freezers scare me
headbutts or punches in the face - yes i have been punched in the face before yes i have been concussed because of it yes i still choose punches in the face because headbutts make me afraid im gonna crack my head open
8 notes · View notes
aion-rsa · 4 years
Text
Cobra Kai and the Debate Around Cultural Appropriation
https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
This article contains Cobra Kai spoilers.
Why aren’t there more Asians in Cobra Kai? 
Since Cobra Kai first premiered on YouTube, The Los Angeles Times, Vanity Fair, and other publications have called out the series for its lack of Asianness. The series also scored poorly on UCLA’s 2020 Hollywood Diversity Report. Miguel (Xolo Maridueña) and Carmen (Vanessa Rubio) are the only non-white main characters. This was exacerbated when the recently-released season 3 excluded Aisha (Nichole Brown), a major character of color who was a fan favorite. 
Granted, Cobra Kai does have a few non-white actors in reccurring roles. They just aren’t leads. Nate Oh plays Nathaniel, but he is a minor character with minimal development. Kyler (Joe Seo) was the first bully to appear in Cobra Kai constantly harassing Miguel. To their credit, the writers made him a wrestler instead of a stereotypical martial artist, just because he’s Asian. Cobra Kai has revealed character backstories for nearly all the show’s bullies, including Kreese (Martin Kove), but not Kyler. He remains a secondary character, but has potential to emerge as a major villain next season. 
Season 3 also enjoyed some added Asian representation during Daniel’s trip to Okinawa with heartfelt cameos from Tamlyn Tomita (Kumiko) and Yuji Okumoto (Chozen) from The Karate Kid Part II. While both characters figure largely in the canon, their Cobra Kai appearance was too limited to be as Asian inclusions to the main cast. Perhaps they’ll return in season 4. Maybe Johnny (William Zabka) needs to learn Chozen’s pressure point technique too. (I would love to see Johnny in Okinawa.)
This is all to say that Cobra Kai is not as diverse or Asian-centric as one might expect a property about martial arts to be. But that just makes it the latest in a long line of Karate Kid properties that has had to grapple with the reality of how karate operates in a globalized world. 
In some ways, The Karate Kid was groundbreaking for Asian representation when it premiered in 1984. Daniel’s (Ralph Macchio) crane kick inevitably degraded into a mocking anti-Asian gesture. The pose is iconic, but mostly as ridicule. Even Will Smith took a poke at it when Morita made a guest appearance on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. And yet, Mr. Miyagi’s (Pat Morita) remarkable backstory in the film brought attention to the plight of Japanese Americans like never before.
In Miyagi’s poignant drunken scene, we discover that he was a veteran of the 100th/442nd Infantry Battalion (a.k.a. the ‘Purple Heart’ Battalion) and his wife died during childbirth in a WWII internment camp. The scene was almost cut because the filmmakers felt the tangent interrupted the momentum of the action. In retrospect, it was likely that this very scene sealed Morita’s Oscar nomination. Manned completely by Japanese Americans, the 100th/442nd was the most decorated unit for its size and service in U.S. history. 
Japan was the enemy, so the Battalion was constantly confronted by racism from surrounding ranks. The Army didn’t quite know what to do with them. They were sent on suicide missions in Europe, but they prevailed and kept coming back for more. They were awarded 18,143 individual decorations including 52 Distinguished Crosses and 21 Congressional Medals of Honor. The Medal of Honor is America’s highest award for combat valor. Miyagi has one. Recognizing the Purple Heart Battalion gave The Karate Kid a lot of soul, but Miyagi’s medal was historically awkward. The real story exposes deeper racial discrimination. 
The Next Karate Kid begins with Miyagi attending a 442nd commendation. In a respectful cameo, appearing as the Senator at that event was Daniel Inouye, an actual veteran of the 442nd who lost his arm in combat. He was the first Japanese American to serve in the House and Senate, and was a recipient of the Medal of Honor. However, The Next Karate Kid came out in 1994, six years before he received it. Twenty of the Medals of Honor that 100th/442nd vets received were upgrades awarded in 2000 after Congress rectified the oversight. The only one prior to that was given to Pfc. Sadao Munemori posthumously. He gave his life jumping on a grenade to save his comrades. When Daniel met Miyagi, no living Asian vets had a Medal of Honor.
On a personal note, my grandfather was Captain Taro Suzuki of the 100th Battalion. Like so many of his comrades, he was wounded in action. His right hand was permanently crippled, and he still had so much shrapnel in his body that he couldn’t pass through a metal detector. I inherited his Purple Heart which I cherish like the LaRussos treasure Miyagi’s medal. I heard his war stories growing up. The Karate Kid was the first time I saw his battalion represented in a movie. Miyagi’s drunken scene is still intensely moving and personal for me. 
Morita died in 2005 so Miyagi only appears in Cobra Kai flashbacks culled from the original movies. Although the series goes to great lengths to honor him, the lack of any Asian leads does give credence to those accusations of cultural appropriation and whitewashing. The thing is, much of the martial arts scene in the Western world has already been, for lack of a better term, whitewashed. And one character’s journey (and the real life figure he’s based on), helps illustrate martial arts’ approach to worldwide growth.
In Cobra Kai season 3, Young Kreese’s journey mirrors the real-life experience of the action choreographer of the original films, Master Pat E. Johnson. Kreese learned martial arts from his Caucasian commander, Captain Turner (Terry Serpico), who learned it while serving in Korea from Master Kim Sun-Yung. It was actually Korean Tang Soo Do, not Karate. Johnson learned Tang Soo Do from Master Kang Lo Hee while stationed as a U.S. Army chaplain in Korea. This is how Tang Soo Do spread westward. Many of the leading American martial arts proponents are not Asian. 
Today, martial arts belong to the world. For generations, Asian traditional martial arts have striven to propagate themselves globally. Judo and Taekwondo have become Olympic events and Karate was going to be added in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. It’s still on track when the games are rescheduled this summer. International organizations are found in every major martial arts style now and they are continuing to spread. So, it’s not entirely fair to begrudge the diaspora’s non-inclusivity. 
While The Karate Kid brought martial arts to the San Fernando Valley, other films and shows have spread the martial diaspora globally. The Blaxploitation genre glorified martial arts with its own unique take on the culture. Netflix’s Seis Manos is a Kung Fu based adult animated series set in Mexico. Although it does have a leading Asian role in Chiu (Vic Chao), is this cultural appropriation? Indian movie stars like Tiger Shroff and Akshay Kumar have brought martial arts to Bollywood in force with films like Commando, Baaghi, and Khiladi. That’s not Asian cultural appropriation, even though India is a different region of Asia where we don’t typically associate martial arts. 
Nevertheless, the international spread of Asian martial arts does not give filmmakers carte blanche to deny whitewashing and cultural appropriation. We must not go back to the days of Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins where Joel Grey played Chuin with slant eye makeup. 
Whether Cobra Kai culturally appropriates Asian culture or not, it can certainly increase its diversity. The setting, West Valley High School, is attended by students from Encino and Reseda. While Encino is over 80% white, Reseda is over 50% Hispanic and over 11% Asian. Statistically, the inclusion of Miguel and Carmen isn’t enough. The Karate Kid franchise was pivotal for representation. Conversations about appropriation and whitewashing aside, Cobra Kai can at least honor the franchise’s tradition and increase its diversity next season. 
cnx.cmd.push(function() { cnx({ playerId: "106e33c0-3911-473c-b599-b1426db57530", }).render("0270c398a82f44f49c23c16122516796"); });
Cobra Kai season 3 is available to stream on Netflix now.
The post Cobra Kai and the Debate Around Cultural Appropriation appeared first on Den of Geek.
from Den of Geek https://ift.tt/2M2KULR
6 notes · View notes
blackkudos · 4 years
Text
Babyface
Tumblr media
Kenneth Brian Edmonds (born April 10, 1959), known professionally as Babyface, is an American singer, songwriter and record producer. He has written and produced over 26 number-one R&B hits throughout his career, and has won 11 Grammy Awards. He was ranked number 20 on NME's 50 of The Greatest Producers Ever list.
Early life
Edmonds was born on April 10, 1958, in Indianapolis, Indiana, to Marvin and Barbara Edmonds. Barbara was a production operator at a pharmaceutical plant. Edmonds, who is the fifth of six brothers (including future After 7 band members Melvin and Kevon Edmonds, the latter of whom went on to have a modestly successful solo career), attended North Central High School in Indianapolis, and as a shy youth, wrote songs to express his emotions. When he was in eighth grade, Edmonds' father died of lung cancer, leaving his mother to raise her sons alone. At this stage, Edmonds became determined to have a career in music.
Music career
Edmonds later played with funk performer Bootsy Collins, who tagged him "Babyface" because of his youthful look. He also performed in the group Manchild (which had a 1977 hit "Especially for You" with band member Daryl Simmons) as a guitarist. In 1982 Edmonds played with funk band Redd Hott produced by Geoge Kerr. He played keyboards in the light-funk and R&B group the Deele (which also included drummer Antonio "L.A." Reid, with whom he would later form a successful writing and producing partnership). One of his first major credits as a songwriter for outside artists came when he wrote the tune "Slow Jam" for the R&B band Midnight Star in 1983. The tune was on Midnight Star's 1983 double-platinum No Parking on the Dance Floor album. Babyface remained in the Deele until 1988, when both he and Reid left the group.
His album Playlist consists of eight cover songs and two original works. It was released on September 18, 2007. It was the first album on the newly re-launched Mercury Records label.
On February 4, 2014, he released a Grammy Award-winning duet album with Toni Braxton titled Love, Marriage & Divorce on Motown Records.
Other ventures
Writing and producing
From the late 1980s to the early 90s, he wrote R&B and dance songs, writing and producing music for Bobby Brown ("Roni"), Karyn White ("Love Saw It"), Pebbles ("Girlfriend", "Mercedes Boy"), The Whispers ("Rock Steady", "In the Mood"), The Deele ("Two Occasions"), Johnny Gill ("My My My"), After 7 ("Ready or Not"), The Boys ("Dial My Heart"), Damian Dame ("Right Down to It") and Sheena Easton.
In 1989, Edmonds co-founded LaFace Records with Reid. Three of the label's early artists, TLC, Usher, and Toni Braxton, were very successful. TLC's second album CrazySexyCool, for which he wrote and produced some of the hits, became the best-selling album of all time by an American girl group. Under his direction, TLC sold more than 60 million albums worldwide, and a combined total of 75 million records. Toni Braxton's first two albums, Toni Braxton (1993) and Secrets (1996), for which he wrote the majority of the songs, went on to sell a combined total of over 10 million copies in America alone.
Babyface helped form the popular late-1990s R&B group Az Yet. Edmonds also helped to mold and work with some of his then-wife Tracey Edmonds' acts, such as Jon B and producer Jon-John Robinson.
Edmonds has worked with many successful performers in contemporary music. “I’m Your Baby Tonight” (1990), produced for Whitney Houston, was Houston's introduction to R&B music and Edmonds' first No. 1 Top 40 hit in the US. He also wrote and produced Boyz II Men's 1992 "End of the Road" and 1994 "I'll Make Love to You", both of which established records for the longest stay at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. He co-wrote, co-produced, and provided backing vocals on Madonna's 1994 Bedtime Stories, which featured the seven-week No. 1 hit "Take a Bow", and shared billing with Eric Clapton on the chart-topping Grammy winner "Change the World" from the Phenomenon soundtrack. He also wrote and produced the No. 1 hit "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" for Houston as well as the rest of the critically acclaimed 10 million-selling Waiting to Exhale soundtrack in 1995, which spawned additional hits for Houston, Brandy and Mary J. Blige.
Additionally, Edmonds has produced and written music for many artists including Bobby Brown, The Whispers, Pebbles, After 7, Johnny Gill, Deele, Karyn White, The Boys, Damian Dame, Tevin Campbell, Patti LaBelle, Chaka Khan, Aretha Franklin, Madonna, Janet Jackson, Faith Evans, Beyoncé, Diana Ross, Sheena Easton, Toni Braxton, Michael Jackson, Michael Bolton, Paula Abdul, Eric Clapton ("Change the World"), Whitney Houston, Brandy, Mary J. Blige, Tamia, Shola Ama, 3T, Sisqó, Dru Hill, Fall Out Boy, Céline Dion, Samantha Jade, Backstreet Boys, Honeyz, Katharine McPhee, Mariah Carey, Vanessa L. Williams, Bruno Mars, Kelly Clarkson, Chanté Moore, En Vogue, Zendaya, Kenny G, Kristinia DeBarge, Lil Wayne, Kevin Abstract, P!nk, Marc Nelson, TLC, Ariana Grande, Jessica Mauboy, Xscape, K-Ci & JoJo, NSYNC, Jordin Sparks and Phil Collins, among others. He received three consecutive Grammy Awards for Producer of the Year from 1995 to 1997.
Babyface was in the studio for about two years with Ashanti to produce her album The Declaration (2008).
He worked on the Lil Wayne album Tha Carter III (2008), on the Kanye West-produced "Comfortable". He also worked with R&B singer Monica for her sixth studio album Still Standing (2010).
In 2013, Babyface served as producer for Ariana Grande's debut album Yours Truly, producing the majority of her songs, including her second single, "Baby I".
In September 2014, Babyface collaborated with Barbra Streisand on her album Partners, performing a duet on the track "Evergreen" and background vocals for other album tracks.
Babyface also collaborated with Foxes on her second album, All I Need (2016), producing and co-writing "Scar".
In July 2016, Babyface along with Bruce Roberts and Carole Bayer Sager helped write the song "Stronger Together" sung by Jessica Sanchez. The song was played after Hillary Clinton's speech at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. The song's title is named after the slogan that the Clinton campaign used as a show of uniting behind the Democratic nominee. The song was one of the top trending songs on Shazam that week. The song was widely perceived as positive by the listeners, and received praise by celebrities like Jennifer Lopez and Kim Kardashian.
Acting career and film producing
In 1994, he appeared and performed on an episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 entitled "Mr. Walsh Goes to Washington (Part 2)".
In the mid-1990s, Edmonds and his then-wife Tracey Edmonds expanded into the business of motion pictures. Upon setting up Edmonds Entertainment Group, the company producing films such as Soul Food (1997), Josie and the Pussycats (2001), and also the soundtrack for the film The Prince of Egypt (1998), which included contributions from numerous artists, including Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston. They also executive produced the BET reality series College Hill (2004-2009). Edmonds also worked with David Foster to compose "The Power of the Dream", the official song of the 1996 Summer Olympics, performed by superstar Céline Dion. Linda Thompson provided the lyrics.
Babyface also participated as a duet partner on the Fox reality show Celebrity Duets (2006).
He was portrayed by Wesley Jonathan in the 2015 Lifetime biopic Whitney and is portrayed by actor Gavin Houston in the Lifetime biopic based on Toni Braxton entitled Un-Break My Heart, which premiered on the network in early 2016.
On August 30, 2016, Babyface was revealed as one of the celebrities who will compete on season 23 of Dancing with the Stars. He was partnered with professional dancer Allison Holker. He and Holker were eliminated on the fourth week of competition and finished in 11th place along with Vanilla Ice and Witney Carson.
Soda Pop Records
Edmonds founded his record label Soda Pop Records in 2009. Since founding the label he has signed R&B icons K-Ci & JoJo, releasing their first album for the label entitled My Brother's Keeper. In 2013 Babyface secured a distribution deal with E1 Music for the label.
Personal life
Babyface married his first wife, Denise during his young adult years. In 1990, Babyface met Tracey Edmonds when she auditioned for the music video for his song "Whip Appeal". They married on September 5, 1992, and have two sons, Brandon and Dylan. On January 7, 2005, Tracey filed for divorce in Los Angeles County Superior Court, citing irreconcilable differences. In October 2005, Babyface and Tracey announced that they were ending their marriage of thirteen years.
In 2007, Babyface began dating his backup dancer Nicole "Niko" Pantenburg (former backup dancer for and personal friend of Janet Jackson). Babyface and Pantenburg have a daughter born in 2008. The pair married on May 17, 2014.
In 2015, Babyface donated money to the presidential campaign of Republican Senator Marco Rubio.
Impact
In 1999, a 25-mile (40 km) stretch of Interstate 65 that runs through Indianapolis was renamed the Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds Highway.
Babyface was placed at number 20 on NME's "50 of the Greatest Producers Ever" list. NME wrote of his impact:
"One of the founding fathers of all the best bits of modern US R&B. And so you can't hate him if some of the schlock can be traced back to him also. Babyface was a pioneer of New Jack Swing in the 80s, before setting up LaFace with old mucker Antonio 'LA' Reid to give the world TLC, Usher and Toni Braxton under their guiding hand. There's barely a prominent artist in the genre he hasn't worked with, and as a result he's clocked up a mammoth 26 R&B number ones."
Discography
Studio albums
Lovers (1986)
Tender Lover (1989)
For the Cool in You (1993)
The Day (1996)
Face2Face (2001)
Grown & Sexy (2005)
Playlist (2007)
Return of the Tender Lover (2015)
Collaboration albums
Power and Love with Manchild (1977)
Feel the Phuff with Manchild (1978)
Street Beat with The Deele (1983)
Material Thangz with The Deele (1985)
Eyes of a Stranger with The Deele (1987)
Love, Marriage & Divorce with Toni Braxton (2014)
Accolades
On August 30, 2006, Babyface was honored as a BMI Icon at the 6th annual BMI Urban Awards. Throughout his career, Babyface has won the BMI Pop Songwriter of the Year trophy seven times and a total of 51 BMI Awards, which includes Song of the Year for his Toni Braxton hit, "Breathe Again", in 1994.
Babyface was honored with the 2,508th star of the Hollywood Walk of Fame on October 10, 2013. The star is located at 6270 Hollywood Boulevard.
On October 18, 2018, he was conferred with an honorary doctorate degree from Indiana University Bloomington in recognition of his illustrious career in music.
13 notes · View notes
tasksweekly · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
[TASK 075: MEXICO]
There’s a masterlist below compiled of over 580+ Mexican faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever character or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Beatriz Aguirre (1926) Mexican - actress.
Luz María Aguilar (1935) Mexican - actress.
Jacqueline Andere (1936) Mexican - actress.
Susan Kohner (1936) Mexican [Roman Catholic, Czech Jewish] - actress.
Joan Baez (1941) Mexican / English - musician and activist.
Norma Mora (1943) Mexican [Unspecified Arab, Jewish, Irish] - actress.
Susana Alexander (1943) Mexican [German Jewish] - actress, hostess, producer, director, and dancer.
Victoria Wyndham (1945) Mexican / Unknown - actress.
Linda Ronstadt (1946) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other], German, English, Italian / English, German, Dutch - singer and actress.
Liliana Abud (1948) Mexican [Lebanese] - actress and screenwriter.
Olivia Harrison (1948) Mexican (including Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous, more distant African) - author and producer.
Belita Moreno (1949) Mexican - actress.
Rosanna DeSoto (1950) Mexican - actress.
Lynda Carter (1951) Mexican/Spanish-Mexican / English, German, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish - actress and musician.
Olga Breeskin (1951) Mexican - violinist, dancer and actress.
Lyn May (1952) Mexican [Chinese, Japanese, possibly other] - actress, vedette, and dancer.
Rosa Gloria Chagoyán (1953) Mexican [Armenian] - actress and singer.
Catherine Bach (1954) Mexican - actress.
Jesusa Rodríguez (1955) Mexican - actress, director, and writer.
Amparo Rubín (1955) Mexican [Jewish, possibly other] - singer.
Ana Gabriel (1955) Mexican [Chinese] - singer-songwriter.
Gina Gallego (1955) Mexican - actress.
Janet Arceo (1955) Mexican - actress, TV presenter, announcer, director and businesswoman
Sheila Escovedo / Sheila E (1957) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] / Creole [African, French, distant English] - drummer, singer-songwriter, actress, and author.
Astrid Hadad (1957) Mexican [Lebanese] - actress and performing artist.
Apollonia Kotero (1959) Mexican, possibly some German Jewish - actress, singer, model, and talent manager.
Lisa Mary Moretti / Ivory (1961) Italian, Mexican/ Swedish, German, Irish - professional wrestler.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus (1961) Ashkenazi Jewish, German, Mexican, English, French, Scottish, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish - actress, comedian, and producer.
Michele Greene (1962) Irish / Mexican, Nicaraguan - actress, musician, and author.  
Carmen Amezcua (1962) Mexican - former actress and novelist.
Laura Harring (1964) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] / Austrian, German - actress and model.
Yareli Arizmendi (1964) Mexican - actor, writer, and director.
Laura Cerón (1964) Mexican - actress.
Rebecca de Alba (1964) Mexican - presenter and model.
Jackie Guerra (1965) Mexican - actress.
Alejandra Bogue (1965) Mexican [English, possibly other] - actress, comedian, tv host, and producer. - Trans!
Alex Meneses (1965) Mexican / Ukrainian, possibly some Polish - actress and model.
Michelle Forbes (1965) Mexican, English, possibly other - actress.
Constance Marie (1965) Mexican - actress.
Hope Sandoval (1966) Mexican - musician.
Marta Martin (1966) Mexican, possibly other / Unknown - actress.
Gabriella Hall (1966) Mexican - model and actress.
Suzette Quintanilla (1967) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish], Cherokee - actress and musician.
Mónica Dionne (1967) Mexican - actress.
Dacia Arcaráz (1967) Mexican - actress.
Lila Downs (1968) Mexican [Mixtec] / British - singer-songwriter and actress.
Vanessa Marcil (1968) Mexican / French, German, English, Italian, Portuguese - actress.
Lupita Jones (1968) Mexican, English, Basque - actress, director, and beauty queen.
Gloria Trevi (1968) Mexican [Spanish Jewish] - singer-songwriter and actress.
Susana Harp (1968) Mexican [Lebanese / Mixe] - singer.
Penélope Menchaca (1968) Mexican - television host, singer, and actress
Lucero Hogaza León / Lucero (1969) Mexican - musician.
Patricia Vonne (1969) Mexican - musician and actress.
Mayrín Villanueva (1970) Mexican - actress and model.
Julieta Venegas (1970) Mexican [French] - musician and producer.
Amairani (1970) Mexican - actress.
Ninel Conde (1970) Mexican - musician and actress.
Alix Bauer (1971) Mexican [German Jewish] - singer.
Ariadna Thalía Sodi Miranda / Thalía (1971) 15/16 Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish], 1/16 Italian - singer-songwriter and actress.
Paulina Rubio (1971) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish, possibly distant Italian, possibly other] - singer, actress, and model.
Bibi Gaytán (1972) Mexican - singer and actress.
Chantal Andere (1972) Mexican [Argentinian, Basque] - actress.
Úrsula Murayama (1972) Mexican [Japanese, possibly other] - actress.
Kate del Castillo (1972) Mexican - actress.
Marisol Nichols (1973) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] / Hungarian Jewish, Romanian Jewish, German Jewish - actress.
Delilah Vaniity Kotero / Vaniity (1973) Mexican [Purepecha] - porn actress and model. - Trans!
Jennifer Hanson (1973) Norwegian, German, Catalan, Mexican, Irish, possibly English - musician.
Oscar De La Hoya (1973) Mexican (including Spanish, Castilian, Unspecified Indigenous, and some African) - boxer.
María Fernanda Blázquez Gil / Fey (1973) Mexican [Argentinian] - singer.
Alpha Acosta (1973) Mexican - actress.
Anaís (1974) Mexican - actress.
Sandra Navarro Gillette / Gillette (1974) Mexican / Puerto Rican - musician.
Ara Celi (1974) Mexican - actress.
Adrienne Janic (1974) Mexican, Serbian - actress and television host.
Angélica Vale (1975) Venezuelan / Mexican, possibly other - actress, musician, and comedian.
Eva Longoria (1975) Mexican [Mayan, Unspecified African, Spanish] - actress, producer, and director.
Itatí Cantoral (1975) Mexican [Spanish, including Andalusian, possibly other], Chilean, French / Argentinian [Italian] - actress, singer, dancer, and producer.
Jaydy Michel (1975) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Spanish, distant French] / English, Irish, Welsh, Norwegian, French - actress and model.
Alanna Ubach (1975) Mexican / Puerto Rican - actress and singer.
Sara Ramirez (1975) ¾ Mexican, ¼ Irish - actress and singer-songwriter.
Aracely Arámbula (1975) Mexican [French, Basque, possibly other] - actress, model, and singer.
Ruth Livier (1975) Mexican - actress.
Jaci Velasquez (1976) Mexican, Spanish, French, Scottish, Arab - actress and musician.
Vinessa Shaw (1976) Russian Jewish, Italian, German, Irish, English, Mexican, and Swedish - actress and model.
Mariana Seoane (1976) Argentinian / Cuban, Mexican - actress, model and singer.
Shar Jackson (1976) Mexican, Puerto Rican / African-American, Unspecified Native American (Unconfirmed) - actress and singer.
Natalia Livingston (1976) Mexican, Ashkenazi Jewish, Swiss, German / English, Irish, French - actress.
Jessica Mas (1976) Mexican, Puerto Rican - actress.
Iyari Limon (1976) Mexican - actress.
Alana de la Garza (1976) Mexican, Irish - actress.
Elsa Benítez (1977) Mexican - model and presenter.
Marisa Ramirez (1977) Mexican (five eighths), along with Scottish, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish, German, possibly English, Irish, French, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Nancy Taira (1977) Mexican [Japanese] - actress.
Ana de la Reguera (1977) Mexican - actress.
Elizabeth Álvarez (1977) Mexican - actress.
Sophie Alexander (1978) Mexican [German Jewish, possibly other] - actress.
Vanessa Villela (1978) Mexican - actress.
Courtney Ford (1978) Mexican, English, Irish, possibly other - actress.
Kimberly McCullough (1978)  Mexican / Irish, possibly other - actress, television director, and dancer.
America Olivo (1978) Italian, Chilean, Mexican, Basque, Spanish / Belgian, Irish - actress, musician, and model.
Maya Jupiter (1978) Mexican [Mayan] / Turkish - rapper, songwriter, MC, and radio personality.
Eden Espinosa (1978) Mexican - actress.
Mandy Gonzalez (1978) Mexican / Jewish [of Polish and Romanian origin] - actress and musician.
Kandee Johnson (1978) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish], Danish, English, Irish, Swedish, remote French and Welsh, likely Scottish - youtuber.
Bibelot Mansur (1978) Mexican / Lebanese - actress.
Ana Serradilla (1978) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] - actress.
Alejandra Robles (1978) Afro Mexican - singer and dancer.
Aimee Garcia (1978) Mexican / Puerto Rican - actress.
Bárbara Mori (1978) Mexican [Japanese, Lebanese, Basque, Uruguayan] - actress, model, producer, and writer.
Elizabeth Gutiérrez (1979) Mexican - actress and model.
Melina Perez (1979) Mexican - model, actress, retired professional wrestler and valet.
Blanca Soto (1979) Mexican - actress, model and beauty pageant titleholder.
Cristela Alonzo (1979) Mexican - comedian, actress, writer and producer.
Laura Govan (1979) Mexican / African-American - television personality.
Angelique Cabral (1979) Mexican, Unspecified Native American / English, French - actress.
Jacqueline Bracamontes (1979) Mexican / Belgian/Flemish - actress and model.
Jessica Coch (1979) Mexican [Argentinian] - actress.
Nina Mercedez (1979) Mexican [Aztec, possibly other] / Italian, possibly other - model, dancer, producer, and former porn actress.
Sara Maldonado (1980) Mexican - actress.
Sachi Tamashiro (1980) Mexican / Japanese - actress.
Yoanna House (1980) Mexican / European - model and television host.
Lela Loren (1980) Mexican / European - actress.
Rosie Mercado (1980) Mexican - makeup artist, fashion designer and television personality.
Adriana Sage (1980) Afro Mexican - actress, model, and former porn actress.
Marisa Quinn (1980) Lipan Apache / Mexican - actress.
Claudia Álvarez (1981) Mexican - actress and model.
Alexis Bledel (1981) Argentinian [Danish, German] / Mexican [Scottish, English, Irish, Welsh, French] - actress and model.
Christina T / T Lopez (1981) Mexican - actress and musician.
Shawndey “Dey” Gomez (1981) Mexican, Arapaho, Yavapai Apache, Spanish - musician (Dey & Nite).
Tawnya “Nite” Gomez (1981) Mexican, Arapaho, Yavapai Apache, Spanish - musician (Dey & Nite) and actress.
Ericka Cruz (1981) Afro Mexican - beauty pageant titleholder.
Jessica Alba (1981) Mexican [Mayan, Sephardi Jewish, Spanish] / Danish, Welsh, German, English, Scottish, Irish, French - actress.
Miriam Rivera (1981) Mexican - tv personality, model, and porn actress.
Nicole Richie (1981) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish], African-American, Louisiana Creole [Unspecified African, French, English], possibly other - actress, tv personality, author, and fashion designer.
Bitsie Tulloch (1981) Mexican, English, Scottish, Spanish - actress.
Dafne Molina (1982) Mexican - designer, model and beauty pageant titleholder.
Natalia Cordova-Buckley (1982) Mexican - actress.
Anjelah Johnson (1982) Mexican / English, possibly other - her official website states she’s also Unspecified Native American - actress and comedian.
Angélica Celaya (1982) Mexican - actress.
Elena Finney (1982) Mescalero Apache, Mexican [Purepecha], Irish - actress and producer.
Giselle Itié (1982) Mexican / Brazilian - actress.
Martha Higareda (1982) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] -actress, model, writer, and producer.
Vanessa Laine Bryant (1982) Mexican - insta model.
Vic Fuentes (1983) Mexican - musician.
Fernanda Romero (1983) Mexican - actress, model, and musician.
Aundrea Fimbres (1983) Mexican - musician and dancer.
Lupita Nyong’o (1983) Mexican [Luo Kenyan] - actress.
Vannessa Vasquez (1983) Mexican - actress.
Maite Perroni (1983) Mexican [including Spanish, Italian, Basque, possibly other] - actress, model, and musician.
Ashley Dzerigian (1983) Mexican / possibly French - musician.
Sandra Hinojosa (1983) Ojibwe, Ottawa, Potawatomi, Mexican - actress.
Claudia Salinas (1983) Mexican [Russian Jewish, possibly other] - actress, model, and blogger.
Anahí Giovanna Puente de Velasco / Anahí (1983) Spanish, Mexican - actress and musician.
Brie Bella (1983) Mexican / Italian, English, Irish, Scottish - wrestler.
Nikki Bella (1983) Mexican / Italian, English, Irish, Scottish - wrestler.
Teresa Castillo (1983) Mexican, Chinese, Spanish - actress.
Tessa Thompson (1983) Afro Panamanian / Mexican, Unspecified European - actress.
Edy Ganem (1983) Mexican, Lebanese - actress.
Johanna Santos Polanco (1983) Afro Mexican / Dominican - model.
Ilean Almaguer (1984) Mexican - actress.
Naima Mora (1984) Mexican, African-American, Native American, Irish - model.
Gabrielle Ruiz (1984) Mexican - actress.
Melody Thornton (1984) Mexican / African-American - musician and dancer.
Celeste Thorson (1984) Mexican [Mescalero Apache, Spanish], Lebanese, Syrian / Korean, Scottish, Irish, English - actress, model, and screenwriter.
Sandra Echeverría (1984) Mexican, Dominican - actress and singer.
Sabrina Bryan (1984) Mexican [Spanish, likely other] / Cherokee, German - actress, singer-songwriter, dancer, and tv personality.
Natalia Lafourcade (1984) Mexican, possibly small amount of English / Chilean, French Basque - musician.
Megan Ewing (1984) Mexican, German - model.
Luz Reality (1984) Mexican - rapper.
Krysta Rodriguez (1984) Mexican / English, possibly other - actress and singer.
Arianny Celeste (1985) ¾ Mexican, ¼ Filipina - model.
Gloria Govan (1985) African-American / Mexican - television personality.
Mariee Sioux (1985) Paiute, Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] / Polish, Hungarian - singer-songwriter.
Dulce Maria (1985) Mexican, likely around 1/8th German - actress and musician.
Vanessa Huppenkothen (1985) Mexican / German - model, actress, and television presenter.
Karla Souza (1985) Mexican / Chilean [likely Portuguese, possibly other] - actress.
Eréndira Ibarra (1985) Mexican - actress.
Kavka Shishido (1985) Mexican [Japanese] - singer-songwriter, drummer, actress, radio personality, and tv personality.
Alyssa Diaz (1985) Colombian / Mexican - actress.
Sebastián Zurita (1986) Mexican [German, Italian] - actor.
Nazanin Mandi (1986) Iranian, Mexican, Unspecified Native American, Spanish - actress, singer, and model.
Charlyne Yi (1986) Korean, Yuki, Mexican, Irish, German, French / Filipina, Spanish - actress, comedian, musician, and writer.
Audrey Esparza (1986) Mexican [Catalan, Spanish, possibly other] - actress.
Camila Sodi (1986) 31/32 Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish], 1/32 Italian - singer, actress, and model.
Carla Morrison (1986) Mexican [English, possibly other] - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Cassie Ventura / Cassie (1986) Mexican, African-American, Unspecified Caribbean / Filipina - actress, model, singer, and dancer.
Noël Wells (1986) Tunisian / Mexican, other - actress and filmmaker.
Yrahid Leylanni (1986) Mexican [Lebanese] - actress.
Ana Brenda Contreras (1986) Mexican - actress and singer.
Lauren Lopez (1986) Mexican / Jewish - actress, singer, and dancer.
Mare Advertencia Lirika / Mare (1987) Mexican [Zapotec] - rapper and singer-songwriter.
Courtney McCullough (1987) Chinese / Mexican - actress.
Claudia A. Feliciano / Snow tha Product (1987) Mexican - musician.
Brooke Westbrooks (1987) Mexican, African American, Creole [Unspecified Native American, possibly other], Indian - social media star and tv personality.
Stephanie Sigman (1987) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] / German, possibly other - actress.
Rose Leslie (1987) ⅛ Mexican, ⅞ mix of Scottish, English, Irish, French Huguenot - actress.
Carla Esparza (1987) Mexican, Ecuadorian / Irish, English, Scottish - professional mixed martial artist.
Bárbara de Regil (1987) Mexican [Lebanese, possibly other] - actress.
Daniella Pineda (1987) Mexican - actress, comedian, and writer.
Summer Bishil (1988) Indian / Mexican, Cherokee, German, English, Dutch - actress.
Teresa Ruiz (1988) Mexican - actress and producer.
Ximena Navarrete (1988) Mexican - actress, television host, model, and beauty queen.
Erica Rivera (1988) Mexican - actress and musician.
Francia Raisa (1988) Mexican / Honduran - actress.
Natalie Mejia (1988) Mexican / Cuban - singer.
Alicia Sixtos (1988) Mexican / Portuguese [including Azorean] - actress.
Teneil Whiskeyjack (1988) Mexican, Plains Cree - actress.
Sara Paxton (1988) Mexican [Spanish Jewish, Dutch Jewish, German, Chilean] / Irish, Scottish, English, French - actress, singer, and model.
Emily Rios (1989) Mexican - actress and model.
Devin Star Tailes / Dev (1989) Mexican, Portuguese - musician.
Paula Deanda (1989) Mexican - musician.
Kristin Herrera (1989) Mexican, Puerto Rican - actress.
Jamillette Gaxiola (1989) Mexican [Lebanese] / Cuban [Lebanese] - beauty pageant titleholder.
Lindsey Morgan (1990) Mexican / Irish - actress.
Morgan Westbrooks (1990) Mexican, African American, Creole [Unspecified Native American, possibly other], Indian - social media star and tv personality.
Nia Sanchez (1990) Mexican, German / Spanish, German, English, other - actress, model, taekwondo coach, television host, and beauty queen.
Kristinia DeBarge (1990) Mexican / Unspecified Other.
Eiza González (1990) Mexican - actress and singer.
Giza Lagarce (1990) Mexican / French - model.
Kristinia DeBarge (1990) ⅜ Mexican [Spanish, smaller amounts Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African], ¼ African-American, 1/32 Danish, 1/32 Norwegian, rest mix of English, Irish, French, Welsh, German, Icelandic - singer-songwriter, actress, and dancer.
Liz Lee (1991) Mexican / Unknown - actress.
Seychelle Gabriel (1991) Mexican, French / Italian, Sicilian - actress.
Chanel Celaya (1991) Mexican / English, possibly other - actress and model.
Luz Pavon (1991) Afro Mexican - model.
Cayleigh Elise (1991) Mexican, other - youtuber.
Michelle Álvarez (1991) Mexican - actress and musician.
Kirstin Maldonado (1992) Mexican / Spanish, Italian - singer-songwriter.
Nikki Glamour (1992) Mexican - youtuber.
Shelbie Bruce (1992) Mexican / English, Scottish, German, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish - actress.
Okairy Giner (1992) Mexican - actress.
Raye Zaragoza (1993) Mexican, Akimel O’odham / Taiwanese, Japanese - singer-songwriter.
Daniela Bobadilla (1993) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] - actress.
Naressa Valdez (1993) African-American, Mexican, Unspecified Native American, Italian, Portuguese - model and instagrammer.
Miranda Cosgrove (1993) ⅛ Mexican, ⅞ mix of Irish, English, French, German [Alsatian] - actress and singer-songwriter.
Ally Brooke Hernandez / Ally Brooke (1993) Mexican - singer.
Nizhoni Cooley (1993) Mexican, Navajo, Irish, Czechoslovakian - model and instagrammer.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993) Mexican [Jewish, possibly other] - singer, drummer, actress, model, and talk show host.
Crystal Westbrooks (1993) Mexican, African American, Creole [Unspecified Native American, possibly other], Indian - social media star and tv personality.
Anahi Altuzar (1993) Mexican - beauty pageant titleholder. - Trans!
Jasmine Villegas / Jasmine V (1993) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] / Filipina, German, Irish - singer.
Raini Rodriguez (1993) Mexican - actress and musician.
Bree Westbrooks (1993) Mexican, African American, Creole [Unspecified Native American, possibly other], Indian - actress, social media star, and tv personality.
Julia Michaels (1993) Mexican [Spanish, some Unspecified Indigenous] / Dutch, English, French, German, Irish, Scottish - musician.
Megan Nicole (1993) Mexican / English, German, Scottish, Unspecified Native American - singer, songwriter, actress, and model.
Lourdes Montes / Lulu Montes / Sheslulu (1993) Mexican - youtuber.
Hayley Orrantia (1994) Mexican, English, Irish, French - actress and musician.
Cristina Valenzuela (1994) Mexican, Spanish - youtuber.
Julia Goldani Telles (1995) Mexican [Spanish, probably other] / Brazilian [Italian, probably other] - actress and ballerina.
Sofia Reyes (1995) Mexican - musician.
Issa Lish (1995) Mexican / Japanese - model.
Bethany Mota (1995) Mexican, English / Portuguese - youtuber.
Jessica Sanchez (1995) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Spanish, possibly other] / Filipina [Aklanon, possibly other], possibly Chinese - singer-songwriter.
Cierra Ramirez (1995) Mexican / Colombian - actress, model, and singer.
Danna Paola (1995) Mexican - actress, model, fashion designer and musician.
Vanessa Merrell (1996) Mexican, Filipina, Spanish, Irish, Portuguese, German - actress, singer, and youtuber.
Georgie Flores (1996) Mexican, remote French - actress.
Veronica Merrell (1996) Mexican, Filipina, Spanish, Irish, Portuguese, German - actress, singer, and youtuber.
India Westbrooks (1996) African American, Mexican, Creole [Unspecified Native American, possibly other, Indian - internet personality.
Lucero Rios (1996) Mexican - isnta model.
Chachi Gonzales (1996) Mexican - dancer, choreographer, and actress.
Brianna Hildebrand (1996) Mexican / German, English, Irish - actress.
Antoinette Marie Martin (1996) Mexican / African-American - model.
Victoria Moroles (1996) Mexican / French, Polish, English, Finnish - actress.
Eva Noblezada (1996) Filipina / Mexican - actress and musician.
Becky G (1997) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - actress, singer-songwriter, model, rapper, and dancer.
Matreya Fedor (1997) Mexican - actress.
Rebecca Black (1997) Mexican / English, Polish, Italian - singer.
Emilia McCarthy (1997) Mexican / Unspecified White - actress, dancer, and writer.
Kiana Brown / Kiana Ledé (1997) Unspecified Black, Mexican (Unconfirmed), Cherokee (Unconfirmed), Swedish - actress and musician.
Justine Biticon (1998) Mexican / Filipina - model.
Karol Sevilla (1999) Mexican - actress, singer-songwriter, and youtuber.
Mia Xitlali (1999) Mexican [Aztec, possibly other] - actress.
Madison De La Garza (2001) Mexican - actress.
Jenna Ortega (2002) ¾ Mexican, ¼ Puerto Rican - actress.
Sharon Anne Henderson (?) Navajo, Mexican, Basque - actress.
Dana Jeffrey (?) ¼ Ojibwe, ¼ Thai, unspecified amounts of Mexican, Afro Guyanese, Indo Guyanese, distant English - actress.
Tania Teyacapan Garcia (?) Mexican [Pame, Huastec, Apache, Guachichil, Afro Potosina] - model.
Niña Dioz (?) Mexican - rapper.
Linda Oliver (?) Mexican / Cherokee, Irish - model.
Miranda Lombardo (?) Mexican - beauty pageant titleholder. - Trans!
Morningstar Angeline (?) Navajo, Blackfoot, Chippewa Cree / Mexican, Unspecified European - actress.
Mariana Treviño (?) Mexican [Spanish Jewish] - actress.
Miika Bryce Whiskeyjack (?) Mexican, Plains Cree, possibly other - actress.
Italia Navarrete (?) Mexican - beauty pageant titleholder. - Trans!
Thana Redhawk (?) Mexican [Mexica, Lipan Apache] / Cherokee, Lakota Sioux, Osage - musician and poet.
Brenda Contreras (?) Mexican - beauty pageant titleholder. - Trans!
Kelly Montijo Fink (?) Mexican, Apache, Spanish - singer-songwriter.
Jackeline Arroyo (?) Mexican - actress and presenter.
Giselle Valero (?) Mexican - beauty pageant titleholder. - Trans!
Estrella Hood (?) Mexican [Matlatzinca, Spanish, possibly other] - musician (World Hood).
Soni Moreno (?) Mexican [Apache, Mayan, Yaqui] - musician (Ulali).
Angela Lanza (?) Mexican - actress.
Seidy López (?) Mexican - actress.
Tanya Saracho (?) Mexican - playwright and writer.
Elena Tovar (?) Mexican - actress.
Karime Bribiesca (?) Mexican - model.
Cindy Gradilla (?) Mexican - model.
Chhoti Maa (?) Mexican [Aztec], Peruvian [Quechua] - rapper.
Mariana Zaragoza (?) Mexican - model.
Daniella Valdez (?) Mexican - model.
Jezzy P (?) Mexican - rapper.
Sabinee Camou (?) Mexican - model.
Joss Corona (?) Mexican - model.
Amara Zaragoza (?) Mexican [Purepecha] / German - actress.
Kimberly Loaiza (?) Mexican - instagram model and youtuber.
Erika Palomera Plascencia (?) Mexican - model.
Jailyne Ojeda (?) Mexican - insta model.
Jimena Sanche (?) Mexican - insta model.
Sofia Solares (?) Mexican - insta model.
Samantha Leyva (?) Mexican - insta model.
Patricia Ancira (?) Mexican - actress.
Jessica Meraz (?) Mexican / Scottish, Irish - actress.
M:
Armando Manzanero (1935) Mexican [Mayan] - singer, pianist, accordionist, actor, producer, and composer.
Héctor Bonilla (1939) Mexican - actor.
Abraham Quintanilla Jr. (1939) Mexican (Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous Mexican) - musician and producer.
Manuel Ojeda (1940) Mexican - actor.
Juan Ferrara (1943) Mexican - actor.
Danny Trejo (1944) Mexican - actor.
Cheech Marin (1946) Mexican - actor, comedian, writer, and activist.
Carlos Santana (1947) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish, distant Unspecified African] - musician.
Edward James Olmos (1947) Mexican - actor.
A Martinez (1948) Mexican, Apache / Pikuni Blackfoot, Unspecified Northern European - actor and singer.
Benny Urquidez (1952) Mexican, Blackfoot, Spanish - actor, pro boxer, and choreographer.
Salvador Pineda (1952) Mexican - actor.
Robert Beltran (1953) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - actor.
Alejandro Camacho (1954) Mexican - actor and producer. 
David Ostrosky (1954) Mexican [Saudi Arabian, Ukrainian Jewish, Polish Jewish] - actor.
Humberto Zurita (1954) MExican - actor, director, and producer.
Griffin Dunne (1955) Irish, English, German, Mexican, Swedish / Irish - actor, producer, and director.
Manuel Landeta (1958) Mexican [Lebanese, Basque] - actor and singer.
Sergio Goyri (1958) Mexican - actor.
Alfredo Adame (1958) Mexican [German] - actor, producer, and host.
Fher Olvera (1959) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Fernando Ciangherotti (1959) Mexican [Italian] - actor.
Eduardo Yáñez (1960) Mexican - actor.
Odiseo Bichir (1960) Mexican [Lebanese, possibly other] - actor.
René Casados (1961) Mexican - actor.
Peter Michael Escovedo (1961) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] / Creole [African, French, distant English] - percussionist.
Emilio Rivera (1961) Mexican - actor and comedian.
Alfonso Mejia-Arias (1961) Mexican [Romani, Spanish] - musician and writer.
Eugenio Derbez (1961) Mexican, some French - actor, comedian, director, writer, entrepreneur, and producer.
Rafael Rojas (1961) Mexican - former model and actor.
Chuck Billy (1962) Mexican / Pomo - musician.
Arturo Peniche (1962) Mexican - actor.
Juan Calleros (1962) Mexican - musician.
Jesse Borrego (1962) Mexican [Mescalero Apache, Aztec] - actor.
Ari Telch (1962) Mexican [Jewish, possibly other] - actor.
Alberto Estrella (1962) Mexican - actor.
Omar Fierro (1963) Mexican - actor and host.
Kevin John Wasserman / Noodles (1963) ¼ Mexican, ¾ mix of German, Irish, possibly other - musician.
Rob Moran (1963) Mexican - actor.
Demián Bichir (1963) Mexican [Lebanese, possibly other] - actor.
Damian Chapa (1963) Mexican [including Spanish and Italian] / German - actor, producer, and director.
A.B. Quintanilla (1963) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish], Cherokee - musician.
Alejandro González Iñárritu (1963) Mexican - actor.
Raúl Araiza (1964) Mexican - actor and presenter.
Héctor Soberón (1964) Mexican - actor.
Guillermo del Toro (1964) Mexican - director, screenwriter, producer, and novelist.
Paul Weitz (1965) ¾ Ashkenazi Jewish, ⅛ Mexican, ⅛ Irish - actor, director, producer, and screenwriter.
Alexis Ayala (1965) Mexican - actor.
Fernando Colunga (1966) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] - actor.
Bruno Bichir (1967) Mexican [Lebanese, possibly other] - actor.
Matt Chamberlain (1967) Mexican / possibly English - musician and producer.
Carlos Mencía (1967) Honduran, Mexican - comedian, writer, and actor.
Dave Navarro (1967) Mexican [Spanish, some African, possibly other] / English, German, remote Welsh - musician and actor.
Eduardo Santamarina (1968) Mexican - actor.
Jeff Becerra (1968) Mexican [Lebanese] - musician.
Robert Rodriguez (1968) Mexican - director, writer, cinematographer, producer, editor, musician, actor, and cartoonist.
Jorge Salinas (1968) Mexican - actor.
Chris Weitz (1969) ¾ Ashkenazi Jewish, ⅛ Mexican, ⅛ Irish - actor, director, producer, screenwriter, and author.
Israel Jaitovich (1969) Mexican [Jewish, Spanish] - actor, producer, writer, and racing car driver.
Gary Paul Davis / Litefoot (1969) Mexican [Chichimeca] / Cherokee - rapper and actor.
Diego Schoening (1969) Mexican [German Jewish] - actor, singer, and tv host.
Chris Pérez (1969) Mexican - guitarist and songwriter.
Rene L. Moreno (1969) Mexican - actor.
Armando Araiza (1969) Mexican - actor.
Zack de la Rocha (1970) ¾ Mexican [Unspecified African, Sephardi Jewish, Spanish], ¼ mix of English, French, German, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Dutch, Swiss - rapper, singer-songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist.
Adam Goldberg (1970) Ashkenazi Jewish / German, Mexican, French, English, Irish - actor, musician, director, and producer.
Stephen Carpenter (1970) Mexican / English, possibly other - musician.
José María Yazpik (1970) Mexican [Unspecified Arab] - actor.
Eduardo Capetillo (1970) Mexican [Basque, small amount of Unspecified African] / Spanish - actor and singer.
Noel Gugliemi (1970) Mexican / Italian - actor.
Clifton Collins Jr. (1970) Mexican - actor.
Eddie Bravo (1970) Mexican - Jiu-Jitsu instructor.
Clifton Collins, Jr. (1970) Mexican / German - actor. 
Luis Miguel (1970) Mexican [Italian, Spanish] - musician.
Al Madrigal (1971) Mexican / Italian [Sicilian] - comedian and actor.
Bobby Pulido (1971) Mexican - musician and actor.  
John Wozniak (1971) ¼ Irish, ¼ Mexican, ½ mix of Polish, Ukrainian, English, Irish, Scottish - musician.
Jacob Vargas (1971) Mexican - actor.
Christian Camargo (1971) ¼ Mexican, ¾ English, possibly other - actor, producer, writer, and director.
Ricardo Antonio Chavira (1971) Mexican / German, Irish - actor.
Mark Consuelos (1971) Mexican / Italian - actor.
Michael Irby (1972) Mexican / African-American - actor.
Kurt Caceres (1972) Mexican / German, English, Irish - actor.
Víctor Noriega (1972) Mexican - actor, musician, and model.
Mauricio Islas (1973) Mexican - actor.
Alfred Nevarez (1973) Mexican - musician.
Mario Lopez (1973) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - actor and television host.
Javier Poza (1973) Mexican - actor.
Efren Ramirez (1973) Salvadoran, Mexican - actor and DJ.
Tariano Adaryll Jackson II (1973) Mexican / African-American - musician.
Chino Moreno (1973) ⅞ Mexican [Unspecified African, Spanish, possibly Unspecified Indigenous], ⅛ Chinese - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and keyboardist.
Jaime Camil (1973) Mexican [Egyptian, possibly other] / Brazilian [Portuguese, possibly other] - actor, singer, and tv personality.
Jean Duverger (1973) Mexican [Haitian, French] - actor.
David Zepeda (1973) Mexican - actor, model, and musician.
Roberto Orci (1973) Mexican [Italian, Spanish] / Cuban - screenwriter and producer.
Juan Manuel Márquez (1974) Mexican - boxer.
Fermin IV (1974) Mexican - musician.
Rey Mysterio (1974) Mexican - wrestler.
Eduardo Verástegui (1974) Mexican - actor, model, and musician.
Cedric Bixler-Zavala (1974) Mexican [German, Spanish, possibly other] - musician.
Pablo Montero (1974) Mexican - musician and actor.
Fabián Robles (1974) Mexican - actor.
Taryll Adren Jackson (1975) Mexican / African-American - musician.
Jaime Luis Gomez / Taboo (1975) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified African, Spanish], Shoshone - rapper, singer-songwriter, actor, and DJ.
Samuel Parra Cruz / Samo (1975) Afro Mexican - singer-songwriter.
Bodie Olmos (1975) Mexican / English, German, Swiss-French, Swedish - actor.
Tom DeLonge (1975) English, some Mexican - musician, businessperson, and producer.
Gabriel Soto (1975) Mexican - actor and model.
Pato Machete (1975) Mexican - musician.
Valentino Lanús (1975) Mexican - actor.
Aarón Sanchez (1975) Mexican [66.4% European, 24.6% Unspecified Native American, 3.7% Sub-Saharan African, 1.6% North African, 0.7% South Asian, 0.1% Oceanian, 2.9% unknown] - chef and television personality.
Baby Bash (1975) Mexican / English - rapper.
Mauricio Aspe (1975) Mexican - actor.
Frankie J (1975) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - musician.
Marco Méndez (1976) Mexican - actor.
Alfonso de Nigris (1976) Mexican [Italian] - actor and television personality.
Adrian Grenier (1976) Mexican [Apache, Spanish], French / English, Irish, Scottish, German - actor, musician, producer, and director.
Carter Oosterhouse (1976) Mexican, Dutch - television personality and model.
Michael Peña (1976) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - actor and musician.
Kevin Alejandro (1976) Mexican - actor.
James Roday (1976) Mexican / English, Irish, Scottish, distant Swiss-German and German - actor, director, and screenwriter.
José Pasillas (1976) Mexican - musician.
Toy Selectah (1976) Mexican / Colombian - musician.
Gabriel Iglesias (1976) Mexican - actor, comedian, writer, and producer.
MC Babo (1976) Mexican - rapper (Cartel de Santa).
Nicholas Gonzalez (1976) Mexican - actor.
Raul Castillo (1977) Mexican - actor and playwright.
Edward Furlong (1977) Mexican / Unknown, possibly Russian - actor and musician.
Jorge Poza (1977) Mexican - actor.
Rafael Amaya (1977) Mexican - actor.
José María Torre (1977) Mexican - actor.
Mark Tacher (1977) Mexican [Romanian Jewish] - actor, musician, and tv host.
Erasmo Catarino (1977) Mexican [Nahua] - singer.
Facundo (1978) Mexican [Argentinian] - tv host.
Tito Joe Jackson (1978) Mexican / African-American - musician.
Bocafloja (1978) Mexican - rapper and writer.
RedCloud (1978) Mexican, Huichol - rapper.
Ariel Pink (1978) Mexican [Jewish, possibly other] / Unknown - singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist.
Kuno Becker (1978) Mexican (Yaqui, Other Unspecified Native American), German, Spanish - actor.
José Luis Reséndez (1978) Mexican - actor and model.
Carlos Galvan (1978) Mexican / Korean - musician.
Nick Wechsler (1978) Mexican, English, German, Swiss-German, possibly other - actor.
Jay Hernandez (1978) Mexican - actor.
Diego Dreyfus (1979) Mexican - actor and model.
Diego Luna (1979) Mexican / English, Scottish - actor, director, and producer.
Rowan Rabia (1979) Mexican - rapper (Cartel de Santa).
Jeremy Ray Valdez (1980) Mexican / Navajo - actor.
Beau Bokan (1981) Mexican / Unspecified Other - musician.
Manuel Garcia-Rulfo (1981) Mexican - actor.
Eugenio Siller (1981) Mexican / German - actor and musician.
Miguel Torres (1981) Mexican - martial artist.
Joe Arquette (1981) Mexican - actor.
John Joseph Kongos (1981) English, Mexican, Scottish / Greek - musician.
José Ron (1981) Mexican - actor.
Rodrigo Nehme (1982) Mexican [Lebanese, probably other] - actor.
Aarón Díaz (1982) Mexican / Irish - actor, singer, and model.
Cain Velasquez (1982) Mexican - martial artist.
Kalimba Marichal / Kalimba (1982) Afro Mexican / Afro Cuban - actor and singer.
Ferdinando Valencia (1982) Mexican - actor.
Luis Gerardo Mendez (1982) Mexican - actor and producer.
Jesse Garcia (1982) Mexican, Spanish - actor.
Felipe Colombo (1983) Argentinian / Mexican - actor, singer, guitarist, and composer.
Alfonso Herrera (1983) Mexican - actor, producer, and former singer.
José María de Tavira (1983) Mexican / Argentinian - actor.
Manny Montana (1983) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish, Irish] - actor.
Cub Swanson (1983) Mexican / Swedish - martial artist.
Richard Cabral (1984) Mexican - actor.
Kid Cudi (1984) ¾ African-American, ¼ Afro Mexican - rapper and actor.
Jesse Dean Kongos (1984) English, Mexican, Scottish / Greek - musician.
Carlos Condit (1984) Austrian, German, Cherokee, Spanish-Mexican, Unspecified Indigenous Mexican - martial artist.
Paul Rodriguez (1984) Mexican - skateboarder and actor.
MC Dharius (1984) Mexican - actor and rapper (Cartel de Santa).
Chris Olivero (1984) Mexican, Italian - actor.
Big Dan (1985) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous] - musician.
James Lafferty (1985) Mexican / Irish, English, German, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish - actor, director, and producer.
Michael Trevino (1985) Mexican - actor.
Alex Meraz (1985) Mexican [Purepecha] - actor, dancer, and martial artist.
Miguel Jontel Pimentel (1985) Mexican / African-American - musician, actor, and producer.
Millonario (1985) Mexican - rapper (Cartel de Santa).
Christopher Uckermann (1986) Swedish, German, Mexican - musician.
Joseph Julian Soria (1986) Mexican - actor.
Mark Ballas (1986) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other], Greek / English, Irish - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, dancer, and choreographer.
Dylan Gabriel Kongos (1986) English, Mexican, Scottish / Greek - musician.
Peter Gadiot (1986) Mexican / Dutch - actor.
Ricardo Abarca (1986) Mexican - actor.
Imanol Landeta (1987) Mexican [Lebanese, Basque] - actor and singer.
Ryan Guzman (1987) Mexican / English, Scottish, German, Swedish, French, Dutch - actor.
Carlos Athié (1987) Mexican - actor, model, and presenter.
Orson Chaplin (1987) Ashkenazi Jewish, Mexican / English, Irish, 1/16th Scottish - actor and rapper.
Victor Ortiz (1987) Mexican - boxer.
Arin Ilejay (1988) Mexican, Filipino [Aklanon] / Dutch, German, possibly other - drummer.
Alvin Alvarez (1989) Mexican - actor.
Carlito Olivero (1989) Mexican / Puerto Rican - singer-songwriter, actor, and dancer.
Logan Henderson (1989) 50% English, Scottish 25% Mexican 12.5% Moravian (Czech) 12.5% Polish  - actor and musician.
Kenta Sakurai (1989) Mexican / Japanese - model.
Lane Hughes (1989) Mexican - actor and musician.
Daniel Lee Kongos (1989) English, Mexican, Scottish / Greek - musician.
Sotelúm (1989) Mexican [Sephardi Jewish] - musician.
Cameron Quiseng (1990) Mexican, Filipino, Native Hawaiian, Unspecified European - bassist.
Levi Johnston (1990) ¼ Mexican, ¾ mix of English, German, Swedish - model and actor.
Diego Amozurrutia (1990) Mexican - actor and model.
Erick Elías (1990) Mexican - actor.
Ryan Bergara (1990) ½ Japanese, ⅜ Mexican, ⅛ Filipino - buzzfeed employee.
Miles Luna (1990) Mexican - actor and filmmaker.
Diego Boneta (1990) Mexican / Puerto Rican, Spanish, German, Swiss - actor and singer-songwriter.
Canelo Álvarez (1990) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] - boxer.
Jesús Pat Chablé / Pat Boy Rap Maya / Pat Boy (1991) Mexican [Mayan] - rapper.
José Pablo Minor (1991) Mexican - actor, television host, and model.
Erick Lopez (1991) Mexican - actor.
Mariana Bayón (1991) Mexican - model.
Erick Orrosquieta / Deorro (1991) Mexican - DJ.
Jorge Blanco (1991) Mexican - recording artist, dancer, songwriter, and actor.
Ashton Moio (1992) Mexican / Italian - actor.
Cameron Dallas (1994) Mexican, German / Scottish - internet personality, actor, and model.
Michel Duval (1994) Mexican - musician and model.
Beng Zeng (1995) Mexican [Chinese] - actor, comedian, and tv host.
Alen Rios (1995) Mexican, Guatemalan, Chinese, German - actor.
Roman Zaragoza (1996) Mexican, Akimel O’odham / Taiwanese, Japanese - actor.
Ryan Ochoa (1996) brother has said that he is of Mexican descent describing himself as a “white Mexican” - actor.
Juanpa Zurita (1996) Mexican - model and youtuber.
Jacob Emmanuel Perez (1996) Mexican, African-American - musician.
Jimmy Bennett (1996) ¼ Mexican, ¾ mix of German, English, Scottish, Cornish - actor and musician.
Austin Zajur (1996) Mexican / English, possibly other - actor.
Jamison Long / JJ Long (1997) Afro Mexican, Navajo, Chinese - actor.
Froy Gutierrez (1998) Mexican, Caxcan - actor.
Rico Rodriguez (1998) Mexican - actor.
Ricky Garcia (1999) Mexican, Puerto Rican, German - actor and singer.
Rebel Rodriguez (1999) Mexican / Unknown - actor.
Joel Pimentel (1999) Mexican - singer.
Xiuhtezcatl Martinez (2000) Mexican [Nahuatl], Hopi - rapper.
Raymond Ochoa (2001) has said that he is of Mexican descent describing himself as a “white Mexican” - actor.
Prolific The Rapper (?) Lakota Sioux, Mexican, Unspecified European - rapper.
Taylor Zakhar (?) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] / Unspecified Middle Eastern - actor.
Rene Orozco / Yaotl Mazahua (?) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish] - musician (Aztlan Underground).
Caxo (?) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - musician (Aztlan Underground).
Joe “Peps” (?) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - musician (Aztlan Underground).
Gregory Cruz (?) Mexican, Chiricahua Apache - actor.
Boogat (?) Mexican, Paraguayan - musician.
Olmeca (?) Mexican [Tepehuán, possibly other] - rapper.
Juliocesar Chavez (?) Mexican, Guatemalan - actor.
David Rose (?) Mexican / Choctaw, Cherokee, Irish - musician.
Omar LinX (?) Mexican - rapper.
Victor-E (?) Mexican [Mayan, possibly other] - musician (El Vuh).
Zero (?) Mexican [Mayan, possibly other] - musician (El Vuh).
E-Rise (?) Mexican [Mayan, possibly other] - musician (El Vuh).
Wake Self (?) Mexican [Aztec, Mescalero Apache], Cherokee - rapper.
Randy Granger (?) Mexican [Chontal, Apache, Unspecified Non-Indigenous], Comanche, Tequesta, Tłı̨chǫ, Alaskan Athabaskan - flutist.
Vic Buildsafire (?) Navajo, Pomo, Mexican [Aztec, Spanish] - rapper.
Del Zamora (?) Mexican, Mescalero Apache - actor.
Alex Soto / MC Liaison (?) Mexican [Tohono O’odham] - rapper (Shining Soul).
Franco / The Bronze Candidate (?) Mexican - rapper (Shining Soul).
Ryan Little Eagle (?) Mexican [Apache, Mayan], Taino, Lakota Sioux - musician.
DJ Augustín (?) Mexican - rapper (Cartel de Santa).
Eddie Gutierrez / Eddie Styles (?) Mexican - dancer.
Clap Pina / Clap Freckles (?) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, possibly other] - musician.
Sergio Gomez (?) Mexican - rapper (Akwid).
Francisco Gomez (?) Mexican - rapper (Akwid).
Saso Jimenez / Saso Fresh (?) Mexican - dancer.
Alek Carrera (?) Mexican - model, actor, and producer.
Fermin Sanchez (?) Mexican - musician (The Guadaloops).
Sami Mendoza (?) Mexican - drummer (The Guadaloops).
Ferdinand González (?) Mexican - musician (The Guadaloops).
Berni Pérez (?) Mexican - musician (The Guadaloops).
NB:
Karis Wilde (1982) Mexican - Genderqueer - multi-disciplinary artist.
Pidgeon Pagonis (1986) Mexican, Greek - Non-Binary Intersex - artist and writer.
Danny Noriega / Adore Delano (1989) Mexican, Unspecified Native American, German - Non-Binary - drag queen, actor, singer-songwriter, and youtuber.
Lukas Avendaño (?) Mexican [Zapotec] - Muxe - performing artist.
Mike J. Marin (?) Mexican, Navajo, Laguna, Washoe - Two-Spirit - actor, rapper, and filmmaker.
Problematic:
George Lopez (1961) Mexican [Unspecified Indigenous, Spanish, possibly other] - actor, comedian, and tv personality - anti-black comments, anti-asian comments, and sexist comments.
Salma Hayek (1966) Mexican [Lebanese, Spanish, possibly other] - actress, producer, and former model - spoke over and attempted to rebuke Jessica Williams (a black actress)’s comment that black and trans women are constantly put in the center of conflict for the way they look with a tone deaf “what about the rest of us” and also used the condescending “baby” to refer to Jessica, called Jessica Lopez (a Puerto Rican actress and singer who, while not black, is darker than Salma) a “non-latina n***o”, and said that Ugly Betty (a show Salma is an executive producer on) tries to model Betty off black women (though they even casted a non black Latina for Betty) due to black women having “uglier facial features”.
Louis C.K. (1967) Mexican [Hungarian Jewish / Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous] / Irish, German, English - actor, comedian, writer, producer, director, and editor - accused of 5 counts of sexual assault.
Stacey Dash (1967) Afro Barbadian, Mexican - actress and talk show host - transphobic comments and said that people were overreacting with #OscarsSoWhite.
Cesar Millan (1969) Mexican - dog behaviorist and television personality - controversial dog training techniques.
Reginald Arvizu (1969) Mexican / French, English - musician - cultural appropriation.
Louis Freese / B-Real (1970) Mexican, Cuban - musician - n-word.
Hilary Swank (1974) ¼ Mexican [Shoshone, Spanish], ¾ mix of English, German, Swiss, Scottish, Irish, Welsh, Dutch - actress and producer - publicly supports Ramzan Kadyrov and took the role of a trans man character in Boys Don’t Cry when she is not a man (let alone a trans man).
Fergie (1975) English, Irish, Mexican, Unspecified Native American, and Scottish - cultural appropriation.
Gael García Bernal (1978) Mexican - actor, director, and producer - signed Polanski petition and supports Roman Polanski.  
Lin-Manuel Miranda (1980) Puerto Rican, as well as small amounts of Mexican, African-American, English - actor, singer-songwriter, and playwright - classist comments.
Adan Canto (1981) Mexican - actor - took the role of an Afro Brazilian character in X-Men: Days of Future Past when he is not Afro Latino.
Melissa Villaseñor (1987) Mexican - actress and comedian - anti-black tweets.
Emeraude Toubia (1989) Mexican / Lebanese - actress and model - appropriated cornrows and participated in the white-washing of her character.
Scout Taylor-Compton (1989) Mexican / English, Irish - actress - cultural appropriation.
Fo Porter (1990) Mexican / African-American - model - cultural appropriation.
Christian Serratos (1990) Mexican / Italian - actress - cultural appropriation.
Samuel Larsen (1991) Mexican, Iranian, Danish, Spanish - actor, singer, and model - cultural appropriation.
Tyler Posey (1991) Mexican / English, Scottish, Irish, German, French - actor and musician - has made coming out of the closet jokes multiple times, used the q slur, and said “I mean, people don’t know what race I am. They never know if I’m Hawaiian or Italian or Mexican or Spanish or White. I could play Jewish, I could play anything.” which implies that he would not mind taking a role of a race not his own.
Selena Gomez (1992) Mexican / Italian, possibly other - actress and singer - cultural appropriation, wore a hijab as a fashion accessory, wore a short with the g slur on it, has used the g slur on multiple occasions (and threw a “[g slur] inspired” birthday party), and supports Woody Allen.
John Elvis (1992) Mexican / Korean - actor - took the role of a Comanche character in Texas Rising when he is not Native American (let alone Comanche).
Demi Lovato (1992) Mexican [Spanish, Unspecified Indigenous, Jewish, Portuguese] / English, Scottish, Irish - singer-songwriter, actress, and author - tried to take the spotlight away from Zendaya getting a black Barbie modeled after her by complaining about the lack of a curvy Barbie and saying she’d be happy to model for it, chose Kim Kardashian to praise for the “Big Butt Movement”, transphobia in her lyrics and in response to Caitlyn Jenner’s looks, exploits bisexuality in her song Cool For The Summer, and appropriated dreadlocks.
JC Caylen (1992) Mexican [Spanish, possibly other] - youtuber - made homophobic “gay jokes”.
Camila Cabello (1997) Cuban / Mexican - singer-songwriter - has said “it’s not rape if you like it”, has used the f and n slurs, and trivialized cocaine addiction.
Ethan Cutkosky (1999) Mexican / Polish, English, Scottish, Irish - actor - cultural appropriation.
Samuel Kim Arredondo (2002) Mexican / Korean - singer - cultural appropriation.
95 notes · View notes
calisources · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
COBRA KAI BASE ICONS : A MASTERLIST. this post will be updated as I go through other characters from the show. as usual, if you find these useful, please like but specially reblog the post. Cobra Kai is a show that began in 2018 and it's currently on production of their last season which will air likely at the end of the year.
RALPH MACCHIO AS DANIEL LARUSSO: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
WILLIAM ZABKA AS JOHNNY LAWRENCE: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
MARY MOUSER AS SAM LARUSSO: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
TANNER BUCHANAN AS ROBBY KEENE: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
XOLO MARIDUEÑA AS MIGUEL DIAZ: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
PEYTON LIST AS TORY NICHOLS : season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
RON THOMAS AS BOBBY BROWN: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
THOMAS IAN GRIFFITH AS TERRY SILVER: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
MARTIN KOVE AS JOHN KREESE : season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
COURTNEY HENGGELER AS AMANDA STEINER: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
ROBYN LIVELY AS JESSICA ANDREWS: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
YUJI OKUMOTO AS CHOZEN TOGUCHI: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
SEAN KANAN AS MIKE BARNES: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
SELAH AUSTRIA AS PIPER ELSWITH: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
HANNA KEPPLE AS MOON: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
ANNALISA COCHRANE AS YASMINE: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
ELISABETH SHUE AS ALI MILLS: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
VANESSA RUBIO AS CARMEN DIAZ: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
TAMLYN TOMITA AS KUMIKO: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
ALICIA HANNAH KIM AS KIM DA-EUN: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five |
DIORA BAIRD AS SHANNON KEENE: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
JACOB BERTRAND AS HAWK MOSKOWITZ: season one | season two | season three | season four | season five
32 notes · View notes
blackkudos · 6 years
Text
Babyface
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Kenneth Brian Edmonds (born April 10, 1959), known professionally as Babyface, is an American singer, songwriter and record producer. He has written and produced over 26 number-one R&B hits throughout his career, and has won 11 Grammy Awards.
Early life
Edmonds was born on April 10, 1959, in Indianapolis, Indiana,to Marvin and Barbara Edmonds. Barbara was a production operator at a pharmaceutical plant. Edmonds, who is the fifth of six brothers (including future After 7 band members Melvin and Kevon Edmonds, the latter of whom went on to have a modestly successful solo career), attended North Central High School in Indianapolis, Indiana, and as a shy youth, wrote songs to express his emotions. When he was in eighth grade, Edmonds' father died of lung cancer, leaving his mother to raise her sons alone. At this stage, Edmonds became determined to have a career in music.
Music career
Edmonds later played with funk performer Bootsy Collins, who tagged him "Babyface" because of his youthful look. He also performed in the group Manchild (which had a 1977 hit "Especially for You" with band member Daryl Simmons) as a guitarist. He played keyboards in the light-funk and R&B group the Deele (which also included drummer Antonio "L.A." Reid, with whom he would later form a successful writing and producing partnership). One of his first major credits as a songwriter for outside artists came when he wrote the tune "Slow Jam" for the R&B band Midnight Star in 1983. The tune was on Midnight Star's 1983 double-platinum No Parking on the Dance Floor album, and while it never was a single, it received massive radio airplay and the song is still played on quiet storm radio stations. Babyface remained in the Deele until 1988, when both he and Reid left the group.
His album Playlist consists of eight cover songs and two original works. It was released on September 18, 2007. It was the first album on the newly re-launched Mercury Records label.
On February 4, 2014, he released a Grammy Award-winning duet album with Toni Braxton titled Love, Marriage & Divorce on Motown Records.
Other ventures
Writing and producing
In the late 1980s, he contributed to the creation of new jack swing, writing and producing music for the likes of Bobby Brown, Karyn White, Pebbles, Paula Abdul and Sheena Easton.
In 1989, Edmonds co-founded LaFace Records with Reid. Three of the label's early artists TLC, Usher, and Toni Braxton were very successful. TLC's second album CrazySexyCool, for which he wrote and produced some of the hits, became the best selling album of all time by an American girl group. Under his direction, TLC was able to sell more than 60 million albums worldwide, and a combined total of 75 million records. Toni Braxton's first two albums, Toni Braxton (1993) and Secrets (1996), for which he wrote the majority of the songs, went on to sell a combined total of over 10 million copies in America alone.
Babyface helped form the popular late-1990s R&B group Az Yet. Edmonds also helped to mold and work with some of his then-wife Tracey Edmonds' acts, such as Jon B and producer Jon-John Robinson.
Edmonds has worked with many successful performers in contemporary music. “I’m Your Baby Tonight” (1990), produced for Whitney Houston, was his first No. 1 Top 40 hit in the US. He also wrote and produced Boyz II Men's 1992 "End of the Road" and 1994 "I'll Make Love to You", both of which established records for the longest stay at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. He co-wrote, co-produced, and provided backing vocals on Madonna's 1994 Bedtime Stories, which featured the seven-week No. 1 hit "Take a Bow", and shared billing with Eric Clapton on the chart-topping Grammy winner "Change the World" from the Phenomenon soundtrack. He also wrote and produced the No. 1 hit "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" for Whitney Houston as well as the rest of the critically acclaimed 10 million-selling Waiting to Exhale soundtrack in 1995, which spawned additional hits for Houston, Brandy and Mary J. Blige.
Additionally, Edmonds has produced and written music for many artists including Carole King, Patti LaBelle, Chaka Khan, Aretha Franklin, Madonna, Janet Jackson, Faith Evans, Al Green, Beyoncé, Diana Ross, Sheena Easton, Toni Braxton, Michael Jackson, Michael Bolton, Paula Abdul, Eric Clapton, Pebbles, Tevin Campbell, Bobby Brown, Whitney Houston, Brandy, Mary J. Blige, Tamia, Shola Ama, 3T, Sisqó, Dru Hill, Fall Out Boy, Céline Dion, Samantha Jade, Backstreet Boys, Honeyz, Katharine McPhee, Mariah Carey, Vanessa L. Williams, Chanté Moore, En Vogue, Zendaya, Kenny G, Kristinia DeBarge, Lil Wayne, Japanese singer Ken Hirai, P!nk, Colbie Caillat, Marc Nelson, TLC, Ariana Grande, Ella Henderson, Jessica Mauboy, Xscape, K-Ci & JoJo, NSYNC, and Phil Collins among others. He received three consecutive Grammy Awards for Producer of the Year from 1995 to 1997.
Babyface was in the studio for about two years with Ashanti to produce her album The Declaration (2008).
He worked on the Lil Wayne album Tha Carter III (2008), on the Kanye West-produced "Comfortable". He also worked with R&B singer Monica for her sixth studio album Still Standing (2010).
In 2013, Babyface served as producer for Ariana Grande's debut album Yours Truly, producing the majority of her songs, including her second single, "Baby I".
In September 2014, Babyface collaborated with Barbra Streisand on her album Partners, performing a duet on the track "Evergreen" and background vocals for other album tracks.
Babyface also collaborated with Foxes on her sophomore album, All I Need (2016), producing and co-writing "Scar".
In July 2016, Babyface along with Bruce Roberts and Carole Bayer Sager helped write the song, "Stronger Together" sung by Jessica Sanchez. The song was played after Hillary Clinton's speech at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. The song's title is named after the slogan that the Clinton campaign uses as a show of uniting behind the Democratic nominee. The song was one of the top trending songs on Shazam that week. The song was widely perceived as positive by the listeners, and even received praise by celebrities like Jennifer Lopez and Kim Kardashian.
Acting career and film producing
In 1994, he appeared and performed on an episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 entitled "Mr. Walsh Goes to Washington (Part 2)".
In the mid-1990s, Edmonds and his then-wife Tracey Edmonds expanded into the business of motion pictures, setting up Edmonds Entertainment Group and producing films such as Soul Food (1997), Josie and the Pussycats (2001), and also the soundtrack for the film The Prince of Egypt (1998), which included contributions from numerous artists, including Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston. They also executive produced the BET reality series College Hill (2004-2009). Edmonds also worked with David Foster to compose "The Power of the Dream", the official song of the 1996 Summer Olympics, performed by superstar Céline Dion. Linda Thompson provided the lyrics.
Babyface also participated as a duet partner on the Fox reality show Celebrity Duets (2006).
He was portrayed by Wesley Jonathan in the 2015 Lifetime biopic Whitney and is portrayed by actor Gavin Houston in the Lifetime biopic based on Toni Braxton entitled Un-Break My Heart, which premiered on the network in early 2016.
On August 30, 2016, Babyface was revealed as one of the celebrities who will compete on season 23 of Dancing with the Stars. He was partnered with professional dancer Allison Holker. He and Holker were eliminated on the fourth week of competition and finished in 11th place along with Vanilla Ice and Witney Carson.
Soda Pop Records
Edmonds founded his record label Soda Pop Records in 2009. Since founding the label he has signed R&B icons K-Ci & JoJo, releasing their first album for the label entitled My Brother's Keeper. In 2013 Babyface secured a distribution deal with E1 Music for the label.
Personal life
Babyface married his first wife, Denise during his young adult years. In 1990, Babyface met Tracey Edmonds when she auditioned for the music video for his song "Whip Appeal". They married on September 5, 1992, and have two sons, Brandon and Dylan. On January 7, 2005, Tracey filed for divorce in Los Angeles County Superior Court, citing irreconcilable differences. In October 2005, Babyface and Tracey announced that they were ending their marriage of thirteen years.
In 2007, Babyface began dating his backup dancer Nicole "Nikki" Pantenburg (former backup dancer for and personal friend of Janet Jackson). In 2008, Babyface and Nicole welcomed a daughter. The pair married on May 17, 2014.
In 2015, Babyface donated money to the presidential campaign of Republican Senator Marco Rubio.
Legacy
In 1999, a 25-mile (40-km) stretch of Interstate 65 that runs through Indianapolis was renamed Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds Highway.
Discography
with Manchild
Power and Love (1977)
Feel the Phuff (1978)
with the Deele
Street Beat (1983)
Material Thangz (1985)
Eyes of a Stranger (1987)
with Toni Braxton
Love, Marriage & Divorce (2014)
Solo
Lovers (1986)
Tender Lover (1989)
For the Cool in You (1993)
The Day (1996)
Face2Face (2001)
Grown & Sexy (2005)
Playlist (2007)
Return of the Tender Lover (2015)
Accolades
On August 30, 2006, Babyface was honored as a BMI Icon at the 6th annual BMI Urban Awards. Throughout his career, Babyface has won the BMI Pop Songwriter of the Year trophy seven times and a total of 51 BMI Awards, which includes Song of the Year for his Toni Braxton hit, "Breathe Again", in 1994.
Babyface was honored with the 2,508th star of the Hollywood Walk of Fame on October 10, 2013. The star is located at 6270 Hollywood Boulevard.
Wikipedia
5 notes · View notes
tasksweekly · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
[TASK 061: GUATEMALA]
In celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month! There’s a masterlist below compiled of over 50+ Guatemalan faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever character or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
Ladies:
Daphne Zuniga (54) Guatemalan, likely including Basque / Polish, Finnish - actress and environmentalist.
Georgina Pontaza (41) Guatemalan - actress, singer, choreographer, theater director and producer.
Gaby Moreno (35) Guatemalan - musician.
Daniela Carpio (34) Guatemalan - singer-songwriter, model, and TV Host.
Shery (32) Guatemalan - singer..
Soluna Samay (27) Guatemalan - singer.
Adria Arjona (25) Guatemalan / Puerto Rican - actress.
Fabiola Rodas (25) Guatemalan - singer.
Jacky Vasquez (20) Guatemalan - YouTuber.
Elizabeth Liang (born in 1972) Guatemalan - actress.
Amy Correa (?) Puerto Rican, Guatemalan, Japanese and Jewish - actress.
Karen Martinez (?) Guatemalan - actress.
Janeva Zentz (?) Guatemalan, Sicilian, German - actress.
Libette Garcia (?) stated as being of Cuban and Guatemalan heritage - actress.
Melanie Aitkenhead (?) Guatemalan - director.
Jennifer Castle (?) stated as being part Guatemalan and part Irish - actress.
Alejandra Flores (?) Guatemalan - soprano.
Natasha Escobar (?) of Belgian, Russian, Guatemalan descent - actress.
Claudia Cifuentes (?) stated as being of Guatemalan descent - writer, director and producer.
Vanessa Spatz (?) Guatemalan - actress.
Mildred Brignoni (?) Puerto Rican, Guatemalan - actress.
Linda Maria Girón (?) Guatemalan-American - actor, playwright, and musician.
Sajida Malik (?) Pakistani, Guatemalan, German - actress.
Jennifer Chajon (?) Guatemalan - actress.
Roxy Valle (?) Guatemalan / Nicaraguan - director, screenwriter, and photographer.
Yesenia Juarez (?) Guatemalan, Puerto Rican and Dominican - actress.
Celina Juarez (?) Guatemalan, Puerto Rican and Dominican - actress.
Males:
Ricardo Arjona (53) Guatemalan - singer.
Juan Carlos Alvarado (52) Guatemalan - singer.
Héctor Sandarti (49) Guatemalan - host and actor.
Benito Martinez (46) stated as being “of Guatemalan descent” - actor.
Dennis Chua (46) Guatemalan - actor.
Oscar Isaac (38) Cuban, Guatemalan, French - actor and musician.
Fernando Marroquín (31) Guatemalan - actor.
Kevin Cordón (30) Guatemalan - professional badminton player.
Juan Jose Dubon (30) stated as having parents of Guatemalan descent - actor, dancer, and host.
Carlos Peña (29) Guatemalan - singer and songwriter.
Diamanté Anthony Blackmon (26) Guatemalan - DJ, rapper and music producer.
Antonio Gramajo (24) Guatemalan - actor.
Alen Rios (22)  Mexican, Guatemalan, German, Chinese - actor.
Tony Revolori (21) Guatemalan (Spanish and Indigenous) - actor.
Rubio Rubin (21) Mexican / Guatemalan - professional soccer player.
Frank Juarez (?) Guatemalan - actor.
David Danipour (?) Guatemalan / Middle Eastern - actor.
Antonio Muñoz (?) Guatemalan - actor.
Richie Quinto (?) Guatemalan - actor.
Arturo Castro (?) Guatemalan - actor.
Luigi Lanuza (?) Guatemalan - actor and producer.
Luis González Palma (born in 1957) Guatemalan - photographer.
Marvin Lemus (?) Mexican/Guatemalan-American - writer, director and producer.
Henry Raudales (?) Guatemalan - violinist.
Francisco Páez (?) Guatemalan - singer.
Juliocesar Chavez (?) of Guatemalan and Mexican heritage - actor.
Randy Mendez-Kestler (?) Guatemalan, Irish, American Indian, German - actor.
Julio Molina (?) Costa Rican /Guatemalan - filmmaker.
NB:
N/A
23 notes · View notes