Episodios

  • First Gen Fridays: I Went From Debt to $100K as a First Gen Latina
    Apr 3 2026

    What happens when a first-gen Latina from a low-income background decides to build wealth anyway? Viviana Vazquez, the daughter of Mexican immigrants, founder of Over Gen Poverty, and the woman who manifested her first $100K job chats with us on one of the most honest conversations we've had on this podcast.Viviana opens up about growing up first gen in New York City, watching her parents sacrifice everything to give her the gift of choice, and what it really means to feel privileged when you grew up low income.In this episode we cover:-What "first gen" actually means and how it differs from being an immigrant-Why she decided to document her wealth building journey-How she negotiated her way to a six figure salary-Her exact approach to budgeting, investing, and building $100K in investments-The mental health side of being the "third parent" in an immigrant household-How therapy and boundaries changed her relationship with her family and herself-Why ambition and humility are not opposites"It's not selfish to be ambitious. Be ambitious, stay humble." Welcome to First Gen Fridays, a limit series by DOCE Podcast. This episode is for every Latina, every first gen, every daughter of immigrants who was never shown that wealth was an option. It is.Connect with Viviana:Instagram: overgenpov @overgenpoverty @TQMpod LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/viviana-vazquez/Support DOCE:Instagram: doce.podcast @doce.podcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/106231328/admin/page-posts/published/For sponsorship inquiries email us at emeraldedgepro@gmail.com, subject: SPONSORSHIP

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    1 h y 14 m
  • FRIDA: The Peruvian Director Who Brought Her Story to Life
    Mar 18 2026

    Carla Gutiérrez is the Peruvian director behind FRIDA, the Emmy winning documentary that redefines how we see Frida Kahlo. In this interview, she shares her journey as a Latina immigrant in the United States and how her identity shaped one of the most powerful documentary films of the decade.Carla is a director, editor, Emmy winning filmmaker, and one of the minds behind projects like RBG, Julia, and now FRIDA.🎙️ Growing up as a Peruvian immigrant in the United States🎙️ Transitioning from STEM to film and documentary work🎙️ The role of the editor as a second director🎙️ What makes a story truly powerful🎙️ Telling Frida Kahlo’s story through her own words🎙️ The responsibility of representing cultural icons🎙️ The experience of being Latina in the film industry🎙️ Balancing identity, art, and ambitionTimestamps00:00:00 Intro00:01:14 Carla Gutiérrez and her Emmy for FRIDA00:03:00 What it means to tell Frida Kahlo’s story00:07:00 Latina identity and rebellion00:11:00 Immigrating young and finding your voice00:16:40 From STEM to film00:21:00 Growing in the documentary industry00:24:00 Adapting to a new culture00:32:00 Advice for those who want to enter film🎧 This episode is forLatino immigrants in the United States, filmmakers and storytellers, women navigating identity and ambition, and anyone who wants to understand how the stories that shape culture are made.FRIDA is an Amazon MGM Studios film, you can stream on Amazon Prime.Support DOCE:Instagram: @doce.podcast https://www.instagram.com/doce.podcast/LinkedIn: DOCE Podcast https://www.linkedin.com/search/results/all/?heroEntityKey=urn%3Ali%3Aorganization%3A106231328&keywords=DOCE%20Podcast&origin=ENTITY_SEARCH_HOME_HISTORY&sid=.2BFor sponsorship inquiries email us at emeraldedgepro@gmail.com, subject line: SPONSORSHIP

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    35 m
  • De Argentina a NYC: lo que nadie te dice sobre migrar, la soledad y la salud mental
    Mar 5 2026

    Paula Inhargue llegó a Nueva York con 25 años, una maleta, un sueño y un plan perfecto. Cuatro años después, descubrió que ningún plan te prepara para la soledad, la depresión silenciosa, ni para la versión de ti misma que aparece cuando no hay nadie más.

    En este episodio hablamos de lo que nadie te cuenta antes de migrar: el choque cultural que no es el idioma sino la calidez que te falta, la crisis de identidad que llega cuando terminan los estudios y empieza la vida adulta, y cómo aprender a estar sola puede ser lo más difícil y lo más transformador que te pase lejos de casa.

    Paula es argentina, politóloga, activista, y una de las personas más honestas que han pasado por DOCE.

    En este episodio hablamos de:

    🎙️ Crecer en Buenos Aires y migrar a Nueva York a los 25

    🎙️ El choque cultural que nadie anticipa: la frialdad social en NYC

    🎙️ La crisis de identidad al pasar de estudiante a adulta en otro país

    🎙️ Depresión, medicación y el estigma de pedir ayuda

    🎙️ Aprender a estar sola y descubrir que si podías

    🎙️ La política como vocación: de militar en las calles de Buenos Aires a trabajar en NYC

    🎙️ El rescate de animales como comunidad y propósito inesperado

    🎙️ El consejo que le daría a la Paula de 25 años

    CAPÍTULOS:

    00:00 – Intro

    02:01 – ¿De dónde eres y cuánto llevas acá?

    02:37 – Buenos Aires: el mejor país del mundo

    04:28 – Crecer en familia, mudarse al mundo

    06:30 – Por qué Nueva York desde los 12 años

    07:20 – ¿La ciudad cumplió lo que prometía?

    08:45 – El choque cultural real: no el idioma, sino la calidez

    11:05 – Cuatro años y la parte social sigue costando

    13:22 – Universidad en Buenos Aires vs. posgrado en Manhattan

    16:42 – La transición de estudiante a adulta sola en NYC

    18:12 – El desafío más inesperado: ¿y ahora qué?

    20:26 – Cuando estuve a punto de volverme a Argentina

    22:42 – Terapia, psiquiatra y soltar el control

    25:19 – Por qué hablo sin vergüenza de la medicación

    29:49 – Los mejores momentos de estos cuatro años

    30:23 – Amelia: la perra que le cambió la vida

    32:07 – Descubrir que puedo estar sola — y disfrutarlo

    38:09 – Por qué elegí la política y por qué nunca puedo salir

    40:09 – El proyecto político que más me impresionó

    42:09 – El día que el trabajo se volvió realidad en NYC

    48:18 – Frases argentinas que necesitas saber

    50:24 – El consejo para la Paula de 25 años

    🎧 Este episodio es para migrantes latinos en Estados Unidos, argentinos en la diáspora, mujeres en sus veintes navegando la vida adulta lejos de casa, y para cualquiera que alguna vez haya tenido que aprender a estar solo para encontrarse a sí mismo.

    Para conocer más de Paula, síguela en Instagram: @pauinhargue

    Apoya a DOCE Podcast:Instagram: @doce.podcastLinkedIn: DOCE Podcast

    #MigranteLatina #ArgentinosEnNYC #SaludMentalMigrante #DOCEpodcast #PodcastEnEspañol #VidaEnNuevaYork #MigrantesLatinos #ArgentinosEnElMundo #PodcastLatino #CrisisDeIdentidad

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    51 m
  • Producer's Pick: Being an Immigrant in America, The Unspoken Rules
    Feb 16 2026

    What does it mean to be Latino in the United States when you might be the only one in the room?Growing up immigrant means navigating things nobody prepared you for: the unspoken hierarchy of birth order, the quiet ego hit of working a job that has nothing to do with your degree or your dream, and the constant tension between surviving and becoming.In this clip, Nick Fuentes Zuluaga, TedX speaker and Engineer, reflex about the resilience that defines the immigrant experience, not as a romanticized idea, but as a daily, unglamorous choice. "This is what we need to do right now." That mindset is both our superpower and our burden.We also talk about representation and why it carries real weight. The idea of "reach and rise", where moving upwards (and forward) is never just about yourself, its about pulling our community upwards with us, as we rise. pulls someone behind you upward too. And why being Latino in spaces where you're the only one is not just an identity, it's a responsibility.🎧 Watch the full interview on @doce.podcast and join the conversation about what it really means to build a life, a career, and a community far from where you started.#latino #latinosinusa #immigrants #immigrantlife #representationmatters #firstgeneration #firstgen #hispanic #reachandrise #midset #immigrants #immigration #latinosenusa

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    11 m
  • Producer's Pick: My Parents Had One Conversation, It Changed Our Entire Lives
    Feb 14 2026

    What does it mean to be Latino in the United States when you might be the only one in the room?Growing up immigrant means navigating things nobody prepared you for: the unspoken hierarchy of birth order, the quiet ego hit of working a job that has nothing to do with your degree or your dream, and the constant tension between surviving and becoming.In this clip, Nick Fuentes Zuluaga, TedX speaker and Engineer, reflex about the resilience that defines the immigrant experience, not as a romanticized idea, but as a daily, unglamorous choice. "This is what we need to do right now." That mindset is both our superpower and our burden.We also talk about representation and why it carries real weight. The idea of "reach and rise", where moving upwards (and forward) is never just about yourself, its about pulling our community upwards with us, as we rise. pulls someone behind you upward too. And why being Latino in spaces where you're the only one is not just an identity, it's a responsibility.🎧 Watch the full interview on @doce.podcast and join the conversation about what it really means to build a life, a career, and a community far from where you started.

    #latino #latinosinusa #immigrants #immigrantlife #representationmatters #firstgeneration #firstgen #hispanic #reachandrise #midset #immigrants #immigration #latinosenusa

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    14 m
  • Growing Up Colombian in the U.S. (Welcome to My TED Talk)
    Feb 13 2026

    Nicolas Fuentes, engineer, data scientist, and TEDx speaker, shares his story of growing up as a Colombian immigrant in the United States and a first-generation college graduate. In this conversation, we explore the invisible weight of growing up between systems, languages, and legal realities, and how learning to have difficult conversations can quite literally save your life.

    From his parents’ sacrifices to the anxiety of living with long-term uncertainty, Nick reflects on identity, resilience, and why this life is for people who are brave.In this episode, we talk about:🎙️ Growing up as an immigrant without fully understanding your legal status🎙️ Being first-generation and navigating imposter syndrome🎙️ Living with uncertainty and not being able to leave the country🎙️ Anxiety passed down from immigrant parents🎙️ The professional sacrifices immigrant parents make🎙️ Being “too Latino” for some spaces and “too American” for others🎙️ Difficult conversations that change the direction of your life🎙️ Technology, artificial intelligence, and what can never be automated🎙️ Why using your voice is also a form of resistanceTimestamps00:00:00 – Intro00:03:10 – Growing up between cultures and expectations00:04:06 – The difficult conversations that saved his life00:07:46 – Being an immigrant and the mental limits we carry00:10:35 – Learning the “corporate language” as a Latino00:14:06 – Growing up as the outlier00:17:35 – The decision to migrate and family sacrifice00:21:57 – The moment you realize you’re an immigrant00:26:06 – When everything changes00:30:11 – Not being able to return to Colombia00:33:10 – Using your voice as a tool for change00:35:06 – Being the oldest child of immigrant parents00:42:02 – Mourning the dreams your parents left behind00:49:25 – Not staying where you started00:50:54 – Advice for young Latinos and first-generation students🎧 This episode is for immigrants, children of immigrants, first-generation students, and anyone who had to grow up too fast—and learn how to face conversations that are uncomfortable, but transformative.Connect with Nick:Instagram: @_nickfacts https://www.instagram.com/_nickfacts/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickfuentes/Support DOCE:Instagram: doce.podcast https://www.instagram.com/doce.podcast/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/search/results/all/?heroEntityKey=urn%3Ali%3Aorganization%3A106231328&keywords=DOCE%20Podcast&origin=ENTITY_SEARCH_HOME_HISTORY&sid=.2BFor sponsorship inquiries email us at emeraldedgepro@gmail.com, subject line: SPONSORSHIP

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    1 h y 6 m
  • Producer's Pick: Ser latina en NPR, cuando el arte se vuelve revolución
    Feb 12 2026

    Ser latina dentro de una institución como NPR no se trata solo de ocupar un espacio, sino de entender la responsabilidad que viene con él.En este clip, hablamos de la importancia de que mas latinos estén presentes en espacios con poder e influencia real como NPR. Cuando eso sucede, se crea un efecto dominó. Hay más representación, más conciencia y se abren caminos hacia nuevas audiencias.Isabella reflexiona sobre lo fundamental que ha sido contar con líderes como Felix Contreras, jefes que te animan a luchar por las historias que te importan. Y ese respaldo solo existe gracias al trabajo que personas como Daniel Alarcón y otros latinos hicieron antes.También hablamos de la expansión de la música venezolana y la cultura, en Nueva York, en Estados Unidos y en el resto del mundo. El arte no solo representa quiénes somos, sino que nos une y nos ayuda a procesar lo que vivimos como comunidad.🎧Este episodio es una conversación sobre identidad, legado y la responsabilidad de abrir la puerta sin volverla a cerrar solo en DOCE Podcast, for immigrants by immigrants.​

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    11 m
  • Producer's Pick: Ser venezolana en Estados Unidos: la identidad que nadie te explica
    Feb 11 2026

    ¿Qué significa ser venezolana en Estados Unidos? Vivir entre dos culturas no es solo una experiencia, es una herida abierta y, al mismo tiempo, una fuente constante de orgullo. Quienes hemos emigrado sabemos lo que se siente cargar dos hogares en el corazón.En este clip, Isabella Gómez Sarmiento, reportera de NPR e inmigrante venezolana, reflexiona sobre los momentos que la han hecho sentirse profundamente orgullosa de su país y aquellos que también le han dolido. Desde Rawayana ganar un Grammy y dedicarlo al pueblo venezolano, hasta presenciar en tiempo real la ola de desinformación que atraviesa a la comunidad latina, una realidad difícil de procesar, especialmente desde el periodismo.También hablamos de la identidad latina “fabricada” en Estados Unidos, de las contradicciones que conlleva y de por qué apropiarnos de ella puede convertirse en un acto de resistencia y de unión.🎧 Mira la entrevista completa en DOCE Podcast y acompaña a Isabella Gómez Sarmiento en su recorrido de Venezuela a NPR Music, y en cómo su trabajo busca fortalecer una identidad latina que se rehúsa a desaparecer.#venezuela #vnzla #migracion #migrantes #inmigracion #inmigrantes #venezolanos #rawayana #grammys #npr #nprmusic

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    11 m