Help us uplift Austin’s Latinidad 🦋

Austin Vida needs your support! Donate today to our Summer Fundraising Drive or become a monthly supporter. Let’s ensure that culturally-relevant news and culture stories continue.

Murals painted by artist Raúl Valdez at the Hillside Theater in East Austin showcase different aspects of comunidad. Photo by Kessly Salinas/Austin Vida

¡Saludos!

Have you heard the saying, “ni de aquí, ni de allá?” I’m not from here, nor there. 

I grew up in the small Texas border town of Eagle Pass, and I’m the daughter of Mexican immigrants. As a first generation born in the U.S., I often felt like that. My life has been braided by cultural strands that are impossible to untangle. It’s taken me some life experience to realize that living in nepantla, or that space in between culturas, is actually among my superpowers. 

When I became a journalist in 2003, I made it my personal mission to amplify underrepresented communities through my writing. I didn’t often see families like mine featured in mainstream news outlets — except when something bad happened. 

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Austin Vida aims to change that. We want to help lift our comunidad by focusing on solutions storytelling. Our stories are part of what make Austin special. We are movers, shakers and glass-ceiling breakers. Our stories are worthy of being told and deserve to be uplifted. 

In the summer of 2020, while a reporter at the Austin American-Statesman, I headed to Austin Police Department headquarters to cover the massive protests following the killing of George Floyd during the height of a global pandemic. 

Austinites were on the streets demanding change. I knew the time had come for me to step up for my community and bring back Austin Vida for a new generation. 

While Austin Vida had previously published online, it had ceased publication during a time when anti-immigrant rhetoric ramped up across the country. But Latinos are a big part of this community’s rich history, present and future. We make up about 33 percent of the city’s population and our historias should not be ignored. 

In the midst of the uncertainty that the pandemic brought, I decided to leave my job and dedicate myself to a grassroots effort of amplifying, informing and celebrating local Latinidad. 

Austin Vida has since celebrated many milestones. So far this year, we’ve launched a monthly Latino cultural radio segment with our partners at Austin’s NPR radio station, and added a mental health columnist to our team as a direct result of your feedback seeking more culturally-relevant support. 

In the past six months, we’ve also produced six monthly Cultura Guides curating the best of Latino cultural arts locally, as well as reported on the city’s César Chávez March and Rally, and the life and legacy of Joe Vela, a local beloved boxing coach and youth advocate who passed away in April. 

But being a small, indie publisher isn’t easy. We need your support to ensure our stories are never an afterthought. Will you help us?

Right now, 30 readers send us monthly contributions to support our journalism, and we are truly grateful to each and every one of you.

If just 20 more people sign up right now to become monthly supporters, we could hire freelance journalists to boost our community and cultural news coverage. 

We could also plan ahead to secure intern stipends for Latino student journalists. 

Will you champion our cultura and help us serve our gente?

Together, we can shine a brighter light on our comunidad. 

¡Juntos podemos!

Abrazos,

Nancy Flores, Austin Vida editor & publisher

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Author
Nancy Flores

An award-winning local journalist, Nancy Flores leads Austin Vida as its editor and publisher. She’s the founder of Cultura Media, Austin Vida’s umbrella organization, and was recently named one of “Austin’s Top Latina Entrepreneurs to Watch,” by the digital news outlet Austonia (now called ATXtoday).

Nancy grew up in the border town of Eagle Pass, Texas, and is the proud daughter of Mexican immigrants. She has specialized in writing about underrepresented Central Texas communities, most recently reporting for the Austin American-Statesman and Austin360. Her contributions to Austin’s Latino community recently earned her the Award of Excellence in Media Arts from the city’s Mexican American Cultural Center. In 2019, Remezcla named her among the nation’s “Latino Columnists You Should Be Reading.”

Nancy revived and reimagined Austin Vida during the pandemic to amplify, inform and celebrate the Latinidad of our local community with culturally-competent news and culture that centers the voices of nuestra gente.

A graduate of St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, Nancy received a College Assistance Migrant Program (CAMP) scholarship, and earned a BA in Communication with a Minor in English Writing.

She’s also an alumna of the Hispanic Austin Leadership Program, the Google News Startup Bootcamp program, the Leadership Academy for Diversity in Digital Media program presented by Poynter and The Washington Post, and was part of the inaugural cohort of the Tiny News Collective, which continues to serve as Austin Vida’s nonprofit fiscal sponsor.

Nancy served on the board of directors for the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, and helped relaunch its local Central Texas chapter. She is the founding president of the St. Edward’s University College Assistance Migrant Program Alumni Association.

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¡Viva la Latinidad de Austin!

Help our small Latina-run newsroom amplify our comunidad's voces and celebrate our Latinidad.