cuba
Fidel Castro: Gay Reeducation Camps My Fault
Max Read · 09/01/10 02:24AMCommie Teacher Too Cool For School
Hamilton Nolan · 07/21/10 08:50AMFidel Castro Has a Very Important Announcement To Make
Jeff Neumann · 07/12/10 07:30AMFidel Castro Appears In Public for First Time Since 2006
Jeff Neumann · 07/11/10 10:08AMElian Gonzalez, 10 Years Later
Max Read · 07/01/10 02:42AMDo Not Pitch Inside to Cuban Baseball Players Unless You're Wearing Running Shoes
Mike Byhoff · 03/12/10 10:10AMIn America, it's very formulaic: pitcher beans batter, batter charges pitcher, benches clear, and serious physical altercations are usually avoided. Not in Cuba! In Cuba, the pitcher runs for dear life as the batter maniacally chases after him.
Perez Hilton's Rumors of Fidel Castro's Death Were Greatly Exaggerated
Gabriel Snyder · 11/02/09 03:47PMCuba and U.S., Sitting in a Tree....
Andrew Belonsky · 09/30/09 05:45AMHappy Second Anniversary of the Death of Fidel Castro
Pareene · 08/24/09 10:26AMFidel Castro's Son Tricked Into Flirting With Man on Normal Day on the Internet
Hamilton Nolan · 06/15/09 09:34AMFlirty Prancing: Havana Nights
Richard Lawson · 05/29/09 04:48PMCuba will begin performing sexual reassignment surgeries it was announced today, a year after a nationwide ban on the operation was lifted. To cover the story, AFP photographer Adalbert Roque took shots of some transsexual women in Havana, which are intriguing and lovely in an odd, quiet way. A gallery:
Viva La Octogon!
John Cook · 04/22/09 03:32PMCuba thumbs nose at American embargo, will run fiber-optic cables to Venezuela
Jackson West · 07/18/08 04:20PMIt's unlikely that the average Cuban will be catching Ron Paul mania on YouTube, but there will be more cries of "Viva la revolucion!" being uploaded from official sources thanks to a fiber-optic line running across the Caribbean from Cuba to Venezuela, to be completed in 2010. And, naturally, Cuban telecommunications vice minister Boris Moreno is blaming the current lack of access on Fortress America:
Che For Sale
Hamilton Nolan · 06/06/08 12:03PMTwo of the revolutionary hero (to some) Che Guevara's kids said this week that they've had enough of their dad being used as a branding icon for advertisers of all stripes. "The appropriation of the figure of Che that has been used to make enemies from different classes" is "embarrassing," said one of his daughters. That's true. But Che's image today is largely made up of consumer products, that people buy in solidarity with a complicated man whose popular representation is—to say the least—highly simplified. Below, ten of the most important Che items that any dedicated revolutionary should own. Get em before they're outlawed.
Fidel Castro Resigns, No Confirmation From Perez Hilton Yet
Ryan Tate · 02/19/08 03:51AMFidel Castro has "resigned" as the ruler of Cuba, but he hasn't been seen in public for 19 months, so don't believe anything you read in the mainstream media until brave Perez Hilton explains to you how this means Castro is even more dead. (In the attached picture, Castro is shown holding a book published about a month after Perez's groundbreaking scoop that he was dead, click through for a larger picture.) UPDATE: At 6:30 AM, Perez confirmed that "Castro Steps Down!!!!!!!" Approximately 10 seconds later, his site receives the first in a long, ongoing series of comments along the lines of this one, number 42: "How can he step down if he's dead???? Perez what's going on?? Please bring us op to date!!"
Ten Miami Journalists in Uncle Sam's Pocket
Chris Mohney · 09/08/06 04:05PMApparently, the golden age of government-journalist payola didn't end with radio host Armstrong Williams and "marriage expert" Maggie Gallagher taking cash to push political agendas. Ten Miami journos — three from El Nuevo Herald, the Spanish-language paper run by the Miami Herald's corporate owner — have been paid by the U.S. for appearances and punditry on Radio Mart and TV Mart . Both Mart s are themselves United States government entities created to broadcast pro-American propaganda at Cuba. Icky! The top earner was Cuba columnist Pablo Alfonso, who took home almost $175,000 since 2001 in exchange for his program hosting duties. Alfonso, plus another El Nuevo Herald staffer and a freelancer, were kicked to the curb. Several of the reporters were hardly contrite, such as Channel 41's Juan Manuel Cao ($11,400 this year): ''There is nothing suspect in this ... I would do it for free. But the regulations don't allow it. I charge symbolically, below market prices.'' Way to take a hit for the team, fiscally speaking. Of course, given that El Nuevo Herald has long been regarded with serious hostility by Cuba's government already, it's not like these columnists were deviating much (if at all) from their paper's regular editorial stance. Why not make a little extra dosh on the side for the same material? It's almost patriotic.