Multicultural

Memory Protects Freedom – What Exiles Teach Us About America

After conducting thousands of hours of immigrant oral histories through the Immigrant Archive Project, I have noticed a quiet pattern in the stories of political refugees.  Whether they came from Cuba, Vietnam, Nicaragua, Iran, or the former Soviet Union, many arrived in the United States carrying something that people born inside stable democracies rarely have to develop.  A deep awareness of how fragile freedom can be.  By Tony Hernandez - The Immigrant Archive

Understanding Generation Alpha

I have a front row seat to Generation Alpha. They’re my daughters.  Ruby was born in 2010 and Sophia in 2012, placing them at the beginning of the first generation born entirely in the 21st century. The name “Generation Alpha” was coined by Australian social researcher Mark McCrindle. After Gen Z, we ran out of letters in the Latin alphabet, so he moved to the Greek alphabet. Alpha. A beginning. It fits.  By David Morse

Black History Month Isn’t Gone. It’s Just Quiet.

This Black History Month feels unusually quiet. By Pepper Miller - Cultural Insights Strategist & Trust Steward 

America’s Fastest-Growing Consumer: Radio at the Center of Growth

In a previous Sound Answers release, we explored how radio earns the trust of Hispanic consumers. It's a connection built on culture, community, language, and daily habit. That relationship remains strong. But the larger market reality tells a more urgent story.

The New American Child

Through my work on the Immigrant Archive Project, I have interviewed thousands of immigrants about the lives they left behind—and the ones they built here.  But some of the most revealing interviews I have ever conducted took place much closer to home. I interviewed my parents, and I interviewed my three daughters. What emerged was not simply a family story. It was a generational arc that explains how America renews itself.  By Tony Hernandez

Latina Fandom Report. [REPORT]

Latina fans do not experience culture in isolation. They experience it collectively. They share recommendations in group chats. They bring products into family conversations. They turn brand discovery into communal validation. Culture does not stop with them, it moves through them.

Behind the Game

How Marketing Made Sports a Global Business.  By Maiver Yepes

In the United States, language tells a powerful story about culture, identity, and opportunity.

While 247.7 million Americans report speaking only English at home, tens of millions maintain other languages within their households ; preserving heritage across generations.  By Grace Agostino

Complexity is fear.

Complexity is fear.  It's hiding behind layers so as not to omit an opinion.  By Jose-Guillermo DIAZJ - Founder & Chief Vision Architect // Miami Ad School Punta CanaFounder & Chief Vision Architect

CMO “AI Blind Spot” as 65% Expect Role Disruption, Yet Only 32% Say Significant Skill Changes Are Needed

Marketing Leaders Face a Widening AI Literacy Gap as AI Shifts From Productivity Tool to Growth Capability.

How do President Trump’s Executive Orders on DEI apply a company?  Impact on Hispanic Marketing?

Some of President Trump’s actions apply only to the federal government, but several of his executive orders impact the private sector. EO 14173, for example, applies to all companies in the private sector and has additional implications and requirements for federal contractors and grantees.

Mortgage industry failing Spanish-speaking buyers as Hispanic homeownership surges, says broker – Why the language barrier is holding back Hispanic buyers

While some mortgage companies offer documents in Spanish, there are many others that do not. One mortgage broker is shining the spotlight on this issue in hopes that there will be more industry-wide adoption of document translation.  By Matt Sexton

The Bad Bunny Effect: Why This Is Good Marketing

When the news broke in 2025 that Bad Bunny would be part of the Super Bowl conversation, the reaction was immediate and loud. Not just from music fans, but from brands, marketers, and audiences who don’t always see themselves reflected in America’s biggest sporting moment.  By Carla Urdaneta - fluent360

Latinos Are Not a Bucket Anymore — It’s Time Institutions Catch Up

For years, “Hispanic” has been treated as a convenient bucket.  But the market has already moved — and the institutions still using that model are falling behind in real time.  This isn’t a cultural argument. It’s a growth one. By Cesar Espindola - Customer Insights & CX Strategy

Authenticity Trumps Optimization

As a Hispanic, it felt like a triumph of Latino culture.  As a marketer, it felt like the ultimate triumph of authenticity.  Luis Caballero - VP Marketing Strategy and Analytics

Storytelling That Elevates

“Stories sell; facts tell” is a popular saying used in marketing and leadership arenas. By Melissa Vela-Williamson, M.A., APR, Fellow PRSA

FOR THE CULTURE: How Multicultural Gen Z Creators Are Shaping Brand Narratives. [REPORT]

We are excited to share the launch of our new five-part cultural intelligence report, The Omnicultural Series. This series explores the rise of the Omnicultural segment: who they are, how they behave, and, most importantly, what this evolution means for brands and business opportunities, along with other key insights shaping today’s cultural landscape.

Bigger than Valentine’s Day: How Hispanics lead with Emotional Intentionality

14% of Hispanics say Valentine’s Day is the holiday they spend the most money on - nearly 2x the total population.  The question is ... why?  By Mike Black - Chief Growth Officer at Collage Group.   

The Faces we choose to See.

Every now and then, something happens that jolts us — a cruel image, a careless remark — and suddenly we’re reminded that the work of empathy is never finished. It’s in those moments that we see how fragile our progress can be, how quickly the thin layer of civility can crack. By Luis Miguel Messianu

Advertising us Showmanship: Rediscovering the Power of Entertaining Ads

Somewhere along the way, marketing started measuring the wrong thing.  By Diego Usai - Marketing Analytics

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