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Dora The Explorer, Illegal Immigrant?

SOPHIA TAREEN   05/21/10 03:07 PM ET   AP

Dora The Explorer Illegal Immigrant
In this composite image provided May 20, 2010 courtesy of Debbie Groben and FreakingNews.com, is an image of Nickelodeon cartoon Dora the Explorer created late last year by Debbie Groben of Sarasota, Fla., for a contest for the fake news site FreakingNews.com. The image, and others like it that question or make fun of the Latina cartoon character's immigration status and country of origin, have been in wide circulation since Arizona passed a controversial immigration law. Groben, who is against

CHICAGO — In her police mug shot, the doe-eyed cartoon heroine with the bowl haircut has a black eye, battered lip and bloody nose.

Dora the Explorer's alleged crime? "Illegal Border Crossing Resisting Arrest."

The doctored picture, one of several circulating widely in the aftermath of Arizona's controversial new immigration law, may seem harmless, ridiculous or even tasteless.

But experts say the pictures and the rhetoric surrounding them online, in newspapers and at public rallies, reveal some Americans' attitudes about race, immigrants and where some of immigration reform debate may be headed.

"Dora is kind of like a blank screen onto which people can project their thoughts and feelings about Latinos," said Erynn Masi de Casanova, a sociology professor at the University of Cincinnati. "They feel like they can say negative things because she's only a cartoon character."

The depictions, whether through irony or protest, are being used by those who oppose and support Arizona's law. On one hand she's a likable symbol who many can relate to, and at the same time, perceived as an outsider who doesn't belong anywhere.

It's not the first time a children's character has been dragged into a serious debate.

In the late 1990s, Tinky Winky the Teletubby, a purple children's TV character with a triangle antenna – was called out by Christian leaders for being gay. Sesame Street roommates Bert and Ernie are often involved in statements on same-sex marriage.

Both shows' producers say the characters aren't gay.

In Dora's case, especially because her image is so widely available, she's an easy target as discussion ramps up on how lawmakers should address the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants living in the United States.

For about a decade, the pint-sized Latina character has taught millions of children the English alphabet, colors and Spanish phrases on a Nickelodeon TV show and through a global empire. Her smiling cherub face is plastered on everything from backpacks to T-shirts to fruit snacks.

But since the passage of the Arizona law – which requires authorities to question people about their immigration status if there's reason to suspect they're in the country illegally – Dora's life and immigration status have been scrutinized and mocked.

Several websites, including The Huffington Post, have narrated Dora's mock capture by immigration authorities. One picture circulating on Facebook shows an ad for a TV show called "Dora the Illegal Immigrant." On the Facebook page "Dora the Explorer is soo an Illegal Immigrant," there are several images showing her sailing through the air over the U.S.-Mexican border.

Many of the Dora images assume the Latina character is an illegal immigrant from Mexico.

But that's where it gets complicated.

Representatives from Nickelodeon declined to comment on Dora's background, and her place of birth or citizenship have never been clear." She has brown skin, dark hair and some experts who have studied the show say she speaks Spanish with an American accent.

"She's always been ambiguously constructed," said Angharad Valdivia, who teaches media studies at the University of Illinois and has explored the issue. "In the U.S. the way we understand race is about putting people in categories and we're uncomfortable with people we can't put into categories."

Dora lives in an unidentified location with pyramids that suggest Mexico, but also tropical elements such as palm trees and her friends, Isa the iguana and Boots the monkey. Does that mean she's from South America or Florida?

Then there's oak trees and her fox nemesis Swiper, which are more common to the American Midwest.

The show often plays Salsa-like music, which has some roots in Cuba and is popular across Latin America.

Even the voice actresses behind Dora don't provide insight.

The original Dora voice belonged to Kathleen Herles, whose parents are from Peru. Dora is currently voiced by actress Caitlin Sanchez, a New Jersey-born teen who calls herself Cuban American; her grandparents are Cuban.

The images have been used on all sides of the immigration reform debate.

Many immigrant families, particularly Latinos, see Dora as a symbol of freedom, someone to relate to. She's a young girl with brown skin who lives in a borderless world and can travel anywhere she wants without consequence.

"It's symbolic of the way many Latinos live ambiguously in the United States," said Nicole Guidotti-Hernandez who teaches gender studies at the University of Arizona. "It's a shorthand for claiming our lives in the United States, especially for children."

At the same time, Guidotti-Hernandez says the ambiguity and negative imagery makes Dora susceptible to being used by those who support the Arizona law.

As for the mug shot, it's been around since late last year, when Debbie Groben of Sarasota, Fla. created it and entered it in a contest for the fake news site FreakingNews.com.

Since debate over the Arizona law heated up the nation's immigration debate, it's been e-mailed and texted widely and used on signs at rallies.

"My intentions were to do something funny, something and irreverent," said Groben, who said she opposes Arizona's law. "I actually like the little kid."

The issue appears to have resonated little with Dora's biggest fans, the millions of parents and their children who seem mostly unaware of the discussion encircling their beloved cartoon.

Altamise Leach, who has three children, said Dora's ethnicity and citizenship are irrelevant.

The stay-at-home mom credits the cartoon with helping teach her children team work. She even threw her 3-year-old daughter a Dora birthday party, complete with a Dora-like adventure, Dora cake and a woman who dressed up as Dora.

"We have so many diverse cultures, let's try to embrace everybody," Leach said. "She puts a smile on my daughter's face, that's all I want."

Erick Wyatt said he never thought about Dora's origins and his three children never asked.

"I just thought she was a cartoon character that spoke Spanish," the Flint, Mich., man said.

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CHICAGO — In her police mug shot, the doe-eyed cartoon heroine with the bowl haircut has a black eye, battered lip and bloody nose. Dora the Explorer's alleged crime? "Illegal Border Crossing R...
CHICAGO — In her police mug shot, the doe-eyed cartoon heroine with the bowl haircut has a black eye, battered lip and bloody nose. Dora the Explorer's alleged crime? "Illegal Border Crossing R...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:27 AM on 06/01/2010
interesting that there is no mug shot for the white guy "where's waldo". he goes everywhere too, but it seemed funny and appropriate to focus on poor little Dora because of her skin color.
no doubt she was the better choice, as no one would understand why waldo would have a mug shot, and immediately, just looking at the Dora phot you know exactly the reason for the mug shot. very sad.
01:22 AM on 05/27/2010
Has anyone seen Dora's birth certificate? Barney doesn't look like he's from around here either.
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10:13 AM on 05/26/2010
Where are her parents??? I think CPS needs to be involved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
prodigyMx
07:51 PM on 05/25/2010
HAHAHAHAH
11:07 AM on 05/25/2010
Sending the children of illegals home with their parents, merely sends them where they belong, to countries like Mexico that are NOT poor, where there is no national debt, where there is no unemployment problems or hunger. Countries like Mexico can raise taxes on their wealthy and middle classes to do more for their poor. It's amoral to demand that struggling US citizens be forced to subsidize illegal aliens, their children and their corrupt employers who are also violating the law.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Newsradiohead
Friendship is magic!!!!
03:36 AM on 05/26/2010
Good thinking. I can just see those drug lords gathering their receipts and making the trip to H&R Block to file their taxes.
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10:14 AM on 05/26/2010
No. They send out an enforcement squad to kidnap the accountant's family and then bring the accountant to them.
11:06 AM on 05/25/2010
Exaltedroots tries to equate enforcing US immigration laws to being an act of "violence" to the children of illegal aliens, yet doesn't provide examples to prove his or her claim. The sad fact is, that those who make those claims are silent about the real acts of violence against illegal aliens happens in Latin America. The graphic of a Dora with a black eye, and bleeding
mouth, are a more accurate depiction were she to have entered Mexico across it's southern border, as Calderon's corrupt Mexican police, and army routinely beat, abuse, and rape illegal aliens, including children, and such things are winked at by Mexican society and culture. Mexico refuses to educate, provide health care or aid to illegals in their country. You also go to
jail for waving a flag of another country or offering a political opinion in Mexico, whether your status is legal or illegal. Yet those facts don't seem to bother those who hide behind a claim of "rights" being violated when we enforce our laws. Nor do they care about the violence done to the children of US citizens, when their parents are displaced from their jobs, and they
are discriminated against for being US citizens in their quest for new employment. Homelessness and deprivation cause real harm.
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10:33 AM on 05/25/2010
Dora should get armed with automatic assault weapons to defend herself from all the ugly hating whites in America.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fwupow
01:45 AM on 05/24/2010
What msg is media trying to send ppl? 2 me it seems that they want us 2 feel sorry 4 illegal immigrants by asking "What if it was Dora the Explorer" or your grandmother etc. So they are, in essence, suggesting that laws should only apply to ugly, poor people that we generally don't like having around anyway. If Dora isn't a U.S. citizen or have proper approval/papers to be in the country she's in, then she should be arrested and deported, but not beaten up.
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03:16 PM on 05/24/2010
"... ugly, poor people..." like who? DORA? Yeeeaaaaaaa! Dorky Donkey Dora.
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dbrett480
08:20 PM on 05/23/2010
I understand the part about Dora being in a mug shot for border crossing, but making her look beat up doesn't really have a point and just seems tasteless.
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10:52 AM on 05/23/2010
Hey Dora, maybe Betty Suarez can take you back to Guadalajara with her.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
exaltedroots
10:02 AM on 05/23/2010
The racist comments by so many HuffPost readers when it comes to something like Dora the Explorer is revealing an ugly side of American social and political discourse--Liberal and Conservative. The circulation of this document is at least partially connected to that young girl that asked the First Lady if her mother was going to be deported.

For this reason, this doctored photo is even more alarming. It represents the violence done by our immigration laws to the children. Some Arizona Republicans are attempting to take citizenship away from children born in the US to illegal parents. The tragedy about our immigration laws is the seemingly acceptability of violence. This cartoon shows that physical violence is seemingly tolerated against immigrant children. But also the violence brought forward by poverty, poor education and fear.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
redstateblues69
09:25 PM on 05/23/2010
The violence was committed by the coyotes her parents hired to ferry her to a drop house where they continued to abuse her until relatives came up with more $$$$.
09:47 AM on 05/23/2010
"Dora, Dora, Dora, Let's deport her. Late at night she snuck across the border."
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Thor Larson
09:06 AM on 05/23/2010
Where in the world is Carmen San Diego was about an illegal on the run.
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08:48 AM on 05/23/2010
Go back to mexico
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thor Larson
08:54 AM on 05/23/2010
if only changing the channel would work with the REAL illegals..
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02:07 AM on 05/23/2010
"Many immigrant families, particularly Latinos, see Dora as a symbol of freedom, someone to relate to. She's a young girl with brown skin who lives in a borderless world and can travel anywhere she wants without consequence."

What a wonderful bit of crap that is.
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middleoftheroad
05:27 AM on 05/23/2010
This pic shows what happens when fellow latinos sneak into MEXICO from their southern border!