Ain’t I Latina? founder Janel Martinez is taking part in the Year of the Black Woman, a series of 365 in-person and online events focused on Black and Latina wealth creation. The initiative was founded by Mutale Nkonde.
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This week, we’re featuring millennial techie Ariel Lopez as our Everyday Chica. La boricua spoke with Ain’t I Latina? about why she founded 2020Shift, how her mamá has influenced her and why Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is a #latinawhorocks.
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This week, we’re featuring radio show host, trainer, doula and Prom King founder Evelyn Alvarez as our Everyday Chica. The working mother spoke with Ain’t I Latina? about why she founded Prom King, creating a career that fulfilled her and why Celia Cruz is the business.
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This week, Ain’t I Latina? is featuring fashion designer Brittny Wood. As the daughter of well-known designer Guy Wood, the Puerto Rican, Black, Belizean and Honduran mamá naturally fell into fashion. From working alongside her father to starting her own women’s wear brand, Valencia Atelier, alongside fellow Latina, Vanessa Posso, Wood shares her fashion industry insights and how she balances motherhood and career.
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This week, Ain’t I Latina? featuring the CEO of Cheeky Chick Concepts, LLC and Executive Director of its subsidiary, bluGarden Events, Karina Garden Jimenez. La dominicana shares her career insights and path to embracing her Afro-Latino identity.
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Ain’t I Latina?’s Everyday Chica series highlights millennial Latinas that are blazing a trail in their respective industries, leading by example for future generations of Latinas. This week, we’re featuring Puertorriqueña Marie Nubia-Feliciano. She shares her passion for Afro-Latino identity within education.
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Ain’t I Latina? features Brooklyn-born model and actress-turned-entrepreneur Rosemarie Reyes. Reyes shares how she went from modeling alongside Jay Z, 50 Cent and Aventura, among others, to owning her own public relations firm, Handz Dirty Public Relations.
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Ain’t I Latina? features NYC-based author and events professional Sulma Arzu-Brown (Bad Hair Doesn’t Exist!). This Garifuna woman embraces her roots wholeheartedly.