Time Magazine August 22, 2005
The 25 Most Influential
Hispanics in America
From music to politics to business, Hispanics are remaking
America. TIME presents 25 titans leading the Latino charge
into the 21st century
Spanish has become the U.S.'s de facto second language,
Nuevo Latino has taken its rightful place in haute cuisine,
the sounds of rock en Español and reggaeton have
filtered up the charts, and Latinos not only star on but
own and manage major league baseball teams. But like any
immigrant group that has shaped mainstream U.S. culture
before fully asserting its economic or political power,
the nation's 41.3 million Hispanics are just getting warmed
up. While they command nearly $600 billion in buying power,
they are only starting to attract the marketing attention
on Madison Avenue that they merit, and their political
clout similarly lags behind their sheer numbers. The country's
largest ethnic minority, Hispanics promise to help remake
America in the 21st century as vitally as African Americans
did in the 20th.
Still, perhaps more than any of their immigrant predecessors,
Hispanics defy easy categorization. Mexican Americans,
Cuban Americans and Argentine Americans may all speak the
same language, but many wouldn't dream of standing under
the same cultural umbrella. A fair number of U.S.-born
Hispanics don't speak Spanish, and many others have little
or no European blood. Indeed, the category Hispanic is
a gringo construct—first used by the U.S. Census
Bureau in 1980—and the only one based on culture
and language instead of race. That dubious distinction
frustrates some Hispanics, who believe they belong to a
separate race, the product of an epic Latin American miscegenation
of Iberian, Native American and African heritage. A growing
number, especially in California and the Northeast, prefer
the term Latino. But in a Time poll of Hispanic adults,
42% said they choose to be called Hispanic, only 17% said
Latino and 34% had no particular preference. Such a wide
array of opinions and agendas is reflected in Time's list
of the nation's 25 most influential Hispanics, who range
from celebrities like J. Lo and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa to the lesser-known labor activist Pablo Alvarado
and art curator Mari Carmen Ram"rez. She says her
job is to be an evangelist for Latino culture. With these
24 powerful Hispanics at her side, no wonder word is spreading
fast.
The List:
- Alberto Gonzales
- Mel Martinez
- Lionel Sosa
- Antonio Gonzalez
- Antonio Villaraigosa
- Cristina Saralegui
- Gustavo Santaolalla
- Robert Rodriguez
- Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez
- Anthony Romero
- Arturo Moreno
- George Lopez
- Jennifer Lopez
- Jorge Perez
- Mari Carmen Ramirez
- Narciso Rodriguez
- Aida Giachello
- Bill Richardson
- Jorge Ramos
- Pablo Alvarado
- Mario Molina
- Jose Gomez
- Salma Hayek
- Sara Martinez Tucker
- Ysrael Seinuk
Copyright © 2005 Time Inc.