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Jorge Ramos is a Uruguayan sports commentator, [1] who started out in the U.S. as a writer and editor in La Raza, a top Spanish-language newspaper based in Chicago. Before joining ESPN, [2] he and Hernan Pereyra co-hosted Univision Radio’s national program, Locura por el Futbol. Currently, Ramos has a 3-hour national live program on ESPN+.
La venida del Rey Olmos (The Coming of King Elms) is a 1975 Mexican film written by Eduardo Luján and directed by Julián Pastor. After returning from the small Mexican town of Dublán , Chihuahua , a 20th-century Son of the Father creates a new Church in the outskirts of Mexico City .
El Rey" ("The King") is a 1971 song by Mexican singer José Alfredo Jiménez. It is one of his best known songs and a Latin Grammy Hall of Fame recipient. [1] ...
A King and His Movie (Spanish: La película del rey) is a 1986 Argentine comedy drama film, directed by Carlos Sorín, and written by Sorín and Jorge Goldenberg. The movie features Ulises Dumont and Julio Chávez , among others.
Pero sigo siendo el rey ("But I'm Still the King" in Spanish) is a 1988 Mexican musical drama film, [1] directed by René Cardona Jr. and starring Leonardo Daniel, Jorge Ortiz de Pinedo, Lourdes Munguía, and Sonia Infante.
Jorge Gilberto Ramos Ávalos (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈxoɾxe ˈramos]; born March 16, 1958) is a Mexican-American journalist and author. Regarded as the best-known Spanish-language news anchor in the United States of America, [ 4 ] he has been referred to as "The Walter Cronkite of Latin America".
Jorge Batlle: Between Heaven and Hell (Spanish: Jorge Batlle: entre el cielo y el infierno) is a 2024 Uruguayan documentary filmed and directed by Federico Lemos.It compiles the life of Uruguayan lawyer, journalist and politician Jorge Batlle Ibáñez (1927–2016); in particular, it displays the historical, political, economic and social events that took place during his presidency (1 March ...
Y llegaron de noche is a Mexican television comedy series created by Rob Greenberg and Bob Fisher that revolves around the production of the 1931 Spanish-language version of Dracula, which was concurrently produced with the English-language version.