. “In a lot of Latino households, you’re either fully practicing it or your family’s like, ‘Don’t go near that.’ My family was more of the latter, but my friends growing up were more in tune with all of it. But as Latinos, it really is part of our culture. We definitely have a long, long tradition of practicing. It’s really about us just getting back in touch with those roots.”As Latinos, [brujeria] really is part of our culture. We definitely have a long, long tradition of practicing.
”When it came to connecting with her cultural roots, the Mexican American says she has her friends and America Ferrera to credit for that. “is the first time I ever saw myself on screen,” she says. “To this day, people are like, ‘you remind me so much of young America Ferrera,’ and that’s such a compliment to me because she’s literally one of the people that made me see that I could do this, that we could be on screen. And she’s so good in that movie.
This stuff is fucked up now it's being normalized in the demented West.