Dropped In Featured in Guadalajara Reporter Newspaper
We are honored to have been featured in both the online and print editions of the Guadalajara newspaper, in an article entitled, “Expat bloggers add fresh perspective to Mexico.” In it, reporter Meredith Veto covers the explosion of expatriate bloggers who are documenting their experiences in Mexico online. They’ve even got our picture at the top of the story! If only we could get a copy of the print edition here in the Yucatan…
Because the story will only be available to subscribers after the initial feature run, we are reprinting it here…but by all means, do head over to the Guadalajara Newspaper website and have a poke around…they have a ton of great articles, no matter where you may live in Mexico.
Expat Bloggers Add Fresh Perspective to Mexico
by Meredith VetoForget Lonely Planet and Fodors. Because at this moment, hundreds of English-speaking expatriates are not only enjoying new lives south of the border, but recording their ups and downs, travels and home life, good eats and unusual finds through digital journaling and photography posted on web logs for the world to browse. After a bit of web sifting, I’ve caught on to a few that really shine: the chosen expatriate blogs are easy on the eye, informative, and fun to read.
qualitypeoples.com
Ed Fladung lives and breathes surfing in Bucerias (just North of Vallarta) where he’s been, as his web/photoblog’s heading announces, on a “perpetual Mexican surf sabbatical” for the last four years. Fladung is about as güero as they come, with a shoulder length head of sun-bleached hair and a healthy beach glow. He occasionally appears in the vibrant, Technicolored shots of candid small-town Mexican life he posts — a click on the photography link in the upper right hand corner will send you to an online Flickr gallery which is like peering into a candy shop, sun-saturated rainbow colored pictures you could sort through for hours.The photography is bright and entries light; his Keanu Reeves-esque surf lingo is endearing and readable. “OK, I’m off to go pre-book our hotels,” he writes in preparation for a surf trip to Bali. “Bummer, I was hoping to just roll up …” And of a boat captain’s suspiciously high fees, “I told dude that’s the gringo rate, that I live in Bucerias and I’d be willing to pay 300 pesos total. Dude said no.” Recent entries include movie reviews of a dozen or so films that passed through his “two horse town,” as well as an anti-Adobe Acrobat rant and several single photograph posts. Check the March 26, 2007 entry to learn how Mr. Fladung ran into members of The Whitest Boy Alive and Broken Social Scene at a local restaurant and witnessed an impromptu acoustic concert (with Leslie Feist on spoons and glasses).
droppedin.com
I’ll admit, the tone of this blog was initially off-putting (and beware of strong language, folks), but I’m now a droppedin addict. Maybe it’s the cleverly categorized entries (“Mexico is Baffling: Lace up your Jesus sneakers,” or “Entertaining at Home: Stop drinking you’re already drunk, a story about moderation”). Or maybe it’s the way some of the travel notes sound like poetic verse (“Progreso is a port town and a carnival … It’s got that Coney Island desperation and democratic fun feel just barely below the surface of good time tourist town in training”).The blog is a joint-effort by an artsy, bespectacled, and often crass 20-something couple from New York who now make their home in the Yucatan. It’s a live staging of the World of Jillian & Malcolm, a strange and beautiful adaptation of two cultures laid out in photostories, lists (from Jillian’s Likes about Mexico: “the sexy ‘conductores’ of Telehit, Uriel and Amanda; Sundays are for bicycles and brunch and dancing; superior chicken”), and ceremony—Jillian pays homage to Grandpa Jack in the form of a pot roast on the Day of the Dead (“I learned a lot about Scotch and comedy from Jack, and so I did my best to honor him, to channel his improvised kitchen alchemy with some simple food and spices”).
In the World of Jillian & Malcolm, blue crabs trespass kitchen floors, blackbirds squawking “MEK!” serve as alarm clocks before sunrise, and 29th birthdays are spent climbing the “World’s Deadliest Playground” in Dzilam Bravo and the isolated “casual ruins” of Xcampo. The appeal of this world, above all, is the sheer honesty the authors express about their living adventure, and the love of their new home and for each other that ignites each tale despite occasional irreverence.
www.cancuncanuck.com
The author of this reflective travel diary is a relative rookie to the blogging scene, first posting last October. Four years ago this 36-year-old Canadian came down for a post-divorce yoga recovery in Cozumel, met a charismatic Mexicano in a bar where she ended up doing most of her recovering, fell in love and now lives with her “hubby,” as she refers to him, in Cancun with their two and a half year-old son, Max.The adventurous Canuck admits the blog is “like free therapy … I love to talk and this is a great way not to be interrupted,” and that’s the sense you get when you scroll through—you might as well be sitting on a bar stool next to her and at least three drinks into the night. She dotes on her little cropped-hair boy, whom she claims danced to opera music while still in the womb and who already enjoys browsing YouTube videos. The Canuck is still struggling with Spanish and growing close to a new extended family (struck by nerves after being requested to address 30 relatives on Christmas Eve: “I fumbled my way through a speech [in Spanish!] and received a round of applause before I collapsed in my seat.”). It will be interesting to see where she takes this blog.
mexfiles.wordpress.com
The Mex Files is a priceless resource for expats who don’t read Mexican newspapers but want to keep informed—the blog covers current politics, culture, economics, and some U.S.-Mexico related news. Richard Grabman, a writer, translator, and Mexican historian based in Mexico City, started the project to fill the “need for an English-language Mexican website that wasn’t a tourism site, or ‘my life in wherever-tlan.’”The site, as any politically oriented forum might be, is somewhat less than objective—the average post includes a translated clipping from a local paper along with a short rant or rave, but not without foundation and historical perspective. See Grabman’s analysis of the potential reorganization of Mexican political parties for an example of the blog’s tone: “With PAN and PRI often uniting to maintain the status quo … the PRI has been trying to re-invent itself to maintain relevance. While it is still Mexico’s largest political party, it seems hopelessly adrift, caught between a growing united left (PRI is technically a socialist party) and the ‘neo-liberal’ PAN.” This webpage demands a bookmark—it’s simple way to keep afloat in an unfamiliar political culture.
Did You Like this Post? Here Are Some Similar Entries From the Archives:
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Comment by Ed Fladung on 18 January 2008:
very innerestin’ article. i didn’t know anything about it. hmmm. keanu reeves talk? yeah, if keanu grew up in NYC and listened to hip-hop his entire childhood… but i’m digressing. pretty cool article. thanks for turning me on to it, i was wondering why my daily hits had gone up by 2x, earlier this week.
keep up with the good work, i’ll keep droppin’ in…
…just to see what condition, your condition is in.
// Edmundillo
Pingback by RSVP Now for the “Latin American Blogger Meetup” : Dropped In on 18 January 2008:
[…] because we weren’t tuned in to Cancun Canuck’s blog until today, when we were both featured in the same newspaper article. But they’ve got a great idea, and one that we all should’ve been doing a long time […]
Pingback by Expat Bloggers | Quality Peoples on 18 January 2008:
[…] the article will fall behind a pay wall, after the issue leaves news stands**, so here’s a link to the full article, posted by Jillian and Malcolm from Dropped In, two firebrand ex-new york hipsters in overly […]
Comment by Elizabeth on 20 January 2008:
Very cool! I like the bits and pieces she quoted from your blog/magazine. Mucho funno!
Comment by Matt on 21 January 2008:
Well, I’m glad I’ve also found my way to liking you guys, despite your occasional irreverence. Hard work really.
Comment by CancunCanuck on 22 January 2008:
Hey, nice to “meet” you guys. Congrats on the article, I look forward to reading more of your blog.
Comment by Mexpat on 24 January 2008:
Hey- thanks for the link in your blog roll! I like the new look of the site. We’ve been contemplating moving to a Wordpress magazine-style template, too. Even ported over the content in December but figured I should wait till I was actually physically living in Mexico, rather than just dreaming about it.
Comment by Sarah on 1 February 2008:
I love you guys and your strong language.