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Growing Up Spanglish
Growing Up Spanglish
Author: Roselyn Cornier
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© Roselyn Cornier
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Growing up Spanglish is intended to be a lighthearted, joyful audio platform bringing together all corners of the Latinx diaspora. Through this podcast we aim to provide a multigenerational perspective and anecdotes on our culture, upbringing, and journey’s as a way to remind us of the similarities between us all. Because while the road that lead us here looked different for all of us, we all grew up watching Sabado Gigante y siempre "hay cominda en la casa".
31 Episodes
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Wrapping up season 1 with Hialeah's finest, Gustavo Villalobos. We dive into his Colombian and Argentinian summers as a kid, the controversy behind how Latino's identify and Roxy's beef with Rosalia.
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In this powerful episode of Growing Up Spanglish, we sit down with Panamanian-Haitian creative strategist and wellness founder Cristina “Cris” Jerome (@cristinaashly_) for a conversation that bridges culture, burnout, and the radical act of rest.
From her no sabo kid upbringing in Virginia to building community in Miami, launching the beloved RnBae showcase, and now leading the mental health nonprofit Off-Worque, Cristina walks us through what it means to burn out, break down, and still find the strength to heal — for yourself and your family.
If you’ve ever felt pressure to hustle harder, prove your worth, or ignore your body’s cries for rest, this one’s for you.
*This episode contains a discussion of suicidal ideation and mental health struggles beginning around the 35:00 mark. Please take care of yourself while listening, and skip this section if needed. If you or someone you know is struggling, help is available: 988lifeline.org or dial 988 for 24/7 support in the U.S.
⏱️ Timestamps
00:00 – Intro + Word of the Day: Entre (Between)
02:00 – Cristina’s background: Panamanian-Haitian & proud no sabo baddie
04:00 – Growing up in Virginia: Little Panama at home, Southern outside
07:00 – Moving to Miami and finally feeling embraced
09:00 – Breaking into Power 96 & the early days of social media
12:00 – From digital marketing to Slip N Slide Records
15:00 – Founding RnBae: a show for R&B artists, not rappers
18:00 – Creating community while building a brand
21:00 – Branding RnBae: flower crowns, drinks, and discipline
23:00 – Artist compensation, ticket links & structure
26:00 – The pandemic hits: Cristina tries to expand to LA
27:00 – Burnout, backlash & pulling the plug on RnBae
30:00 – Jumping industries and chasing everything at full speed
33:00 – “If I kept going like this, I wouldn’t exist.”
35:00 – Early childhood mental health moment (TW: suicidal ideation)
39:00 – Why rest feels wrong in Black & Brown homes
41:00 – Founding Off-Worque: rest as resistance, PTO as a tool
43:00 – Creating the Out of Office Fund
45:00 – Do you really want that goal — or did someone assign it to you?
47:00 – Why she quit marketing — and started healing
49:00 – Helping her parents learn to rest, too
51:00 – Cultural pressure: No kids? Not married? You’re “behind”
53:00 – Her first trip to Panama: connecting a missing puzzle piece
55:00 – Healing through land, ancestry & legacy
57:00 – Cookie tin test: certified Panamanian ✅
58:30 – Final reflection: take inventory of your goals — and take one off the list
🎧 Listen to the full episode on Spotify, Apple & everywhere you get podcasts
🌐 Learn more or donate to the Out of Office Fund: offworque.com
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We’re back with Part 2 of our conversation with Dominicana, entrepreneur, and mother Ashley Flete — and this time, we’re talking about strength, purpose, and doing it scared.
Ashley walks us through her career journey, from working as a news anchor to suing her former employer in a class action lawsuit — and how that moment of risk opened the door for so many others. We also get into spiritual growth, being used as a vessel, her connection to FAMU, and what “redefining strength” really means.
This one will leave you empowered, emotional, and feeling like healing really is possible.
🎧 Available now on Spotify, Apple & YouTube.
⸻
⏱️ Timestamps for Part 2
00:00 – Welcome back (Part 2)
01:00 – From anchor desk to lash tech: career pivots and identity
04:00 – Losing the job, filing the lawsuit, finding her voice
07:00 – “God used me as a vessel” — speaking up & getting red-flagged
09:00 – Lessons from the industry: contracts, self-worth, and trusting timing
11:00 – Teaching advocacy through example
12:00 – Redefining strength for the next generation
15:00 – The FAMU effect: choosing an HBCU as a Dominicana
18:00 – Divine timing, Will Packer, and God’s alignment
20:00 – Spiritual awakening through motherhood
23:00 – “Why am I worried when God got me?”
26:00 – Making space for faith to work
29:00 – Stop praying the same prayer if you already gave it to God
30:00 – Religion vs spirituality
31:00 – Cookie break! Selena Gomez’s horchata Oreos 😂
35:00 – Reflections, gratitude, and feeling light after the conversation
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This week on Growing Up Spanglish, we’re joined by Dominican-American media host, marketing coordinator, FAMU grad, and proud mama Ashley Flete for the first of a two-part conversation about parenting, boundaries, and healing out loud.
Ashley grew up in a traditional Hispanic household — old-school values, tight-knit family, summers in DR. But now as a mother, she’s raising her daughter with more intention, more emotional safety, and a different kind of love.
In Part 1, we talk about:
Choosing not to rush into marriage for tradition’s sake
Reparenting yourself while raising your kid
Saying no to old expectations — even from your own family
Teaching your child to feel, speak up, and set boundaries
And redefining what respect looks like in a modern Latino family
Whether you’re a parent, a cycle breaker, or healing your inner child — this one’s for you.
🎧 Listen now and come back next week for Part 2.
⏱️ TIMESTAMPS
00:00 – Word of the Day: Criar (to raise)
02:00 – Meet Ashley: Dominicana, mama, FAMU grad, creative
04:00 – Growing up with both sets of grandparents & big family values
06:00 – What generational commitment looks like through Ashley’s eyes
10:00 – When you realize your parents were hurting too
11:00 – Rejecting the pressure to marry just because you’re pregnant
13:00 – Breaking cycles + earning your parents’ respect as an adult
18:00 – Parenting with intention: how Ashley parents her 6-year-old differently
24:00 – Boundaries, being seen, and asking: “Do you still love me if I stop playing the role?”
27:00 – From people-pleasing to self-rediscovery
30:00 – Teaching her daughter consent, emotional processing, and critical thinking
33:00 – Passing on Dominican culture: food, dance, and summer trips to DR
36:00 – The “grandparent effect” – how they’re softer with grandkids
39:00 – Addressing mental health + the guilt of healing when they didn’t get to
46:00 – “Your ceiling is your kid’s floor”: rethinking generational privilege
50:00 – Do I owe my parents a seat at the table?
53:00 – Learning to say: I love you, and this still hurt me.
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In Part 2 of our conversation with Peruvian-American singer Marcel Ledoux, we explore music, identity, and the pressure to be culturally “authentic.” Marcel opens up about his artistic evolution, the tension between creativity and belonging, and what it means to reconnect with your heritage — even if you didn’t grow up speaking the language.
🎙️ We talk Drake, Bad Bunny, NSYNC, the power of vulnerability, and Marcel’s upcoming music project — built around identity, healing, and real-life emotions.
⏱️ Timestamps:
00:00 – Previously on Growing Up Spanglish…
01:00 – Optimism bias & the illusion of safety
02:00 – A Black men’s book club, sparked by his son
03:00 – Why Bad Bunny feels authentic (and Drake doesn’t)
06:30 – What it means to “plant your flag” for your people
08:00 – Genre-hopping vs. cultural ownership
09:00 – Is Drake just playing a role?
10:30 – Take Care, vulnerability, and the “cool guy” shift
13:00 – Genre rules: why hip hop doesn’t get grace
14:00 – Shaboozey, cowboys & country rap
15:00 – When the music doesn’t match the story
16:00 – Can artists still evolve and be real?
17:30 – Artists who changed the game: GOAT talk
20:00 – Why authenticity always wins
21:00 – Marcel’s own musical evolution
24:30 – Happy-sad music & resisting the industry “product”
26:30 – Writing through depression: “Everything’s Fine”
29:00 – Why Marcel struggles with the “product” of being an artist
30:00 – Paying homage vs. crossing a cultural line
31:00 – The moment he was given “permission” to claim his Peruvian identity
34:00 – Roxy’s final words: This is your green light to explore your heritage
🎧 Part 1 is live now — go back and listen if you missed it!
👇 Like, rate & share if this episode spoke to you.
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In this episode of Growing Up Spanglish, artist and curator Lauryn Lawrence joins Roxy and Kovi to talk about growing up Afro-Caribbean in South Florida, preserving culture through food, and choosing tenderness over transaction in art and identity. From stew peas and short hair to photography and feminism, Lauryn keeps it real, raw, and rooted.
Timestamp Guide:
[00:00:00] Intro + Spanish Word of the Day: Colegio
[00:02:50] Meet Lauryn Lawrence: Artist, curator, Afro-Latina storyteller
[00:04:10] Growing up in Miramar + favorite Caribbean dishes
[00:07:30] Food as cultural memory: stew peas, sancocho, family recipes
[00:10:00] The power of family archives and handwritten photo notes
[00:11:30] Photography as personal storytelling vs. freelance work
[00:14:45] Shifting from transactional to tender creative practice
[00:18:30] On being raised by storytellers + choosing an art path
[00:21:00] Switching majors, moving to London, and betting on purpose
[00:24:00] What curators actually do + intersectional feminist lens
[00:27:00] Feminism, womanhood, and personal definitions of freedom
[00:29:00] Hair politics, identity, and Lauryn’s big chop journey
[00:36:30] Roxy’s short hair rebellion + the “pixie intimidation” theory
[00:41:00] Body image, family affirmations, and internalized voices
[00:47:30] Curating the algorithm: digital self-defense tools
[00:51:30] Combating insecurity with presence, hobbies, and community
[00:55:00] Lauryn’s dream curations + championing visibility in art
[01:00:00] The power of showing up, softness, and shared storytelling
[01:03:30] Outro + Roselyn’s final thoughts
🎙 Hosted by: @ohroxc (Roxy) & Kovi
🎨 Guest: @laurynn_l , laurynlawrence.com
📍 Recorded at CoLab Studios, Miami www.letscolab.us
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After being sentenced to federal prison, Amanda and Legend wrote over 300 letters to each other — letters that would eventually become the foundation of their nonprofit, 300 Letters. In this powerful episode, they join Roselyn to share their journey from incarceration to inspiration.
We talk about:
Growing up in survival mode
What it really means to be labeled a “felon”
How incarceration impacts entire families — not just individuals
Rebuilding after prison, raising emotionally-aware sons, and founding a nonprofit that’s rewriting the system
This episode is raw, honest, and full of the kind of healing our community needs to hear.
🎧 Listen now and support Amanda and Legend’s work at 300letters.org.
🎭 Attend their Masquerade of Miracles Gala on June 5th in Miami → Get tickets here
📲 Follow them on Instagram: @300letters
⏱️ Timestamps:
00:00 – Spanish Word of the Week: Embarazada
04:00 – Meet Amanda & Legend
08:00 – Growing up in survival mode
12:30 – From college student to indictment
17:00 – Why incarceration is a family issue
26:00 – Finding out she was pregnant in prison
31:00 – The truth about medical care while incarcerated
39:00 – The cost of prison on families
45:00 – Reentry and healing through 300 Letters
52:00 – Redefining “felon” and changing the narrative
1:07:00 – Raising emotionally-aware kids
1:13:00 – Starting a nonprofit as returning citizens
1:19:00 – Real success story from a 300 Letters family
1:22:00 – Gala info + final thoughts
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In the Season 3 premiere, Roselyn sits down with Puerto Rican multidisciplinary artist D’ana, aka COVL, to talk about growing up in Miami, navigating the in-between of cultural identity, and creating art that heals. From the word of the day (mudanza) to the challenges of being “Latina enough,” this episode is full of laughter, love, and real talk about the diaspora experience.
⏱️ Episode Highlights:
00:00 – Welcome back! Duolingo owl is dead, and Roselyn is teaching us Spanish now
01:45 – Word of the Day: Mudanza – what does it mean and why it matters
04:00 – Meet D’ana / COVL – Miami-born, Puerto Rican artist redefining creativity
06:00 – The Miami that raised us: salsa, color, chaos, and community
10:00 – Navigating identity as a Boricua not from the island or New York
13:00 – The pain of not being “Puerto Rican enough” — diaspora tensions
16:00 – “No sabo” kids and owning your Spanglish experience
19:00 – Where is the Puerto Rican community in Miami?
22:00 – Orlando, Kissimmee, and the realest Puerto Rican parties in Florida
26:00 – Growing up Latina in a predominantly white Florida town
30:00 – Culture, pride, and plastic couches — childhood stories from PR
36:00 – Creating from inner child healing and the emotional weight of art
41:00 – Breaking free from brand validation and finding creative freedom
48:00 – How D’ana negotiates with brands (and when she walks away)
51:00 – Manifesting a collab with Bad Bunny 👀
53:00 – Building in the metaverse — bringing la isla into digital worlds
56:00 – Chosen family, deep friendships, and safe spaces
1:00:00 – Giving back to our communities and showing up with purpose
1:02:00 – Who gets to decide if you’re Latina enough? (Hint: not them.)
1:06:00 – Final thoughts on unity, heritage, and creating your own story
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In the season 2 finale of 'Growing Up Spanglish,' host Roxy visits Cafe Antilles in Little Caribbean, Brooklyn. Joined by cafe owners Drew and Erick, they discuss their connection to Miami, their Caribbean roots, and the unique cultural blend that inspired their menu. The episode delves into their college days as fraternity brothers at Johnson & Wales University, the importance of Dominican and Haitian camaraderie, and the founding of Antilles Cafe. The episode also highlights the importance of business acumen, community, hospitality, and the uplifting role of family traditions. Concluding with future aspirations, Drew and Erick hope to expand the cafe globally, promoting Caribbean and African diaspora unity and excellence.
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In this episode of 'Growing Up Spanglish,' host Roxy sits down with Miami DJ, Kamari Esson, at CoLab Studios. Kamari shares his family's Cuban heritage and their unbelievable migration story. He also discusses how his diverse musical tastes influenced his DJ career and reflects on the post-COVID club scene in Miami, celebrity encounters, and the unspoken rules of DJing. The episode is a heartfelt blend of nostalgia, family traditions, and the unique history of Miami's growth and gentrification, wrapped up with memories of childhood comforts like favorite cookies and vaca frita.
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In this episode, Abe Acay shares his incredible life story. Born in Cuba and raised in Miami, Abe opens up about his Afro-Cuban heritage and the challenges his family faced, including his father's political imprisonment and their emigration to the USA in 1991. Abe discusses his early passion for performing arts, growing up in culturally rich Hialeah, and the impact of his parents' untimely passing on his life. Abe's journey from Miami's vibrant arts scene to teaching theater resonates deeply as he reflects on identity, cultural heritage, and finding purpose through creativity and mentoring. The episode is a heartfelt exploration of resilience, community, and the transformative power of the arts.
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Meet Tony M. Centeno, also known as Tony MC, a Cuban and Puerto Rican music journalist. He opens up about deciding between speaking English or Spanish in elementary school and how it affected him. The conversation dives into the influence of Latin music, discovering reggaeton in his teen years and his experiences interviewing high-profile Latin artists like Ozuna and Anuel. We also get to hear about the importance of brotherhood & mentorship through his fraternity, Lambda Theta Phi. And of course, we couldn’t let Tony pass by and not discuss Kendrick vs Drake and the state of hip hop.
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In this episode, Roxy and KJ talk with Mario De Los Santos, aka Telescope Thieves, about his Dominican heritage, growing up in the Hialeah park system, and his diverse musical journey from rap group to dance-rock band member. The conversation also delves into Mario’s transition from music to software development, spurred by the pandemic as well as the decision to step back from his DJ career to finding happiness and balance.
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Wendy Giovanna shares her life story of moving from Colombia to the U.S. at the age of six, dealing with the challenges of undocumented status, family separation, and growing up mostly alone. Wendy discusses the strain her parents' pursuit of the American dream placed on their marriage, her subsequent spiritual journey and passion for art. We touch on Christina Aguilera and Shakira, contextualizing their artistic journeys within broader discussions about identity and heritage.
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Melissa Marin discusses her Colombian heritage, life in West Palm Beach, and her diverse career from soccer to the music industry to motherhood. We explore the intersection of cultural identity, dating interracially, and the balance between artistic integrity and modern marketing techniques like TikTok.
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Meet Ricky Perez, a Salvadoran-American from West Palm Beach. Ricky discusses his journey from graphic design to owning Zipitios, a Mesoamerican taqueria. He shares his experiences hosting 'Tacos & Hip Hop' parties and his family's immigration story. Listen as he highlights his culinary inspirations from Mexico and his plans to open a restaurant in a now safer El Salvador. The episode underscores his passion for food, culture, and community.
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This episode we sit down with Shanice, an Afro-Latina of Costa Rican descent. The discussion delves into personal experiences with colorism and racism, reflecting on family dynamics, societal expectations, ethical travel, and the importance of community. Additionally, it highlights the pivotal role of nurturing young black girls and preserving cultural legacies.
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This week’s podcast episode features guest Kangela (a.k.a. Kangie). We delve into Kangie's experiences of growing up as an immigrant from Peru, adopting a new cultural identity in America, and her creative journey. The conversation also highlights significant moments like Kangie's name change, her community-building efforts through art and music collectives like X-Laced, and the emotional impact of returning to Peru after many years.
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Angel Martinez recounts his transition from the Dominican Republic to the United States, exploring the impact of his family connections, cultural changes, and personal growth influenced by his father's choices. Through discussions on resilience and changing identities, he presents a modern view on love and family relationships.
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In this episode we sit down with Aldhair, creative director and founder of Up 2 Something Studios. We discuss his mother's influence in his creative career, the responsibility of providing for family back home in Venezuela and his love for zombie movies.
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