Video Archives La Vida Baseball Page 2

Bonisiwe Shabane
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video archives la vida baseball page 2

As the NLCS shifts to the Nationals home park a young Latino outfielder has the eyes of the baseball world upon him. As Juan Soto begins his career we look back at arguably the greatest outfielder in the history of the Nationals/Expos franchise, Vladimir José Altuve or Carlos Correa. Astros fans have the benefit of cheering for both, but what if they had to make a choice? We asked some big leaguers which they would pick if they had to pick one. Who’s your favorite?

Related Mexican Saying was Fitting for L There has been plenty of conversation about the Hall of Fame credentials of Yadier Molina during these playoffs. As he continues to etch his name into the history books in the NLCS we look back at another Puerto Rican catching icon, Iván “Pudge” Rodríguez Yankees third baseman Gio Urshela is spending his 28th birthday flying to Houston to get ready for the ALCS. Earlier this season our Jennifer Mercedes spoke him him about his breakout season and proud he is to represent Colombia in the majors. He also tal

Immigrants come to this country to achieve their dreams. These immigrants also include professional baseball players. Watch this video as Juan Escalante, the communications manager with America’s Voice, shares his voice on how baseball and immigration are Even during a rare drought, José Altuve is good enough to pull water out of nothing when he’s not even putting the ball in play. The Astros’ diminutive giant proved as much yet again Sunday when he drew a walk to plate a run. That RBI wasn’t nearly as thr

The St. Louis Cardinals’ José Martínez was never going to have a say in what his nickname would be. As the son of the late former major leaguer Carlos “Café” Martínez, he was destined to be “Cafecito.” The Cardinals’ backup outfielder/first baseman’s gran MILWAUKEE — Brewers manager Craig Counsell met with his pitchers at American Family Fields of Phoenix to discuss offense this spring. He asked a simple question. “Can you hit a home run?” Counsell inquired.

“If you can, that means something different.” As Venezuela was mired in gloom for more than 74 hours last weekend. The South American country went through its longest blackout of the modern era. More than two dozen deaths were attributed to problems associated with the blackout. According to José Manuel As their families and countrymen suffer, some of Major League Baseball’s most prominent Venezuelans are using social media to urge their armed forces to let humanitarian aid enter their country.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s troops have blocked hu In this episode of Locker Room Talk, Jennifer Mercedes and Julie Alexandria have an important conversation with baseball writer Shakeia Taylor, discussing how HOUSTON – In many ways, Suite 5 at Minute Maid Park felt like a happy hour for a Who’s Who of Houston’s vibrant Latino community on Sunday afternoon. Some of the Bayou City’s civic, judicial, business and political leaders, past and present, were enjoying The flags of Panama and Puerto Rico were held aloft and waved vigorously whenever the names of Mariano Rivera or Edgar Martinez were mentioned two weeks ago at the Clark Sports Center. Chants of “Mariano” and “Edgar” would ring out from the crowd.

For the COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. – After 10 years on the Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, Edgar Martinez wasted no time turning his attention to his gente, his people, during his induction speech Sunday afternoon. The legendary designated hitter long ago settled into the P COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. – As he reached the final stages of his induction speech, Mariano Rivera’s voice rose a few octaves and his pace grew quicker.

He was in his element, delivering most of the final pitch of his speech in his native language, making himself COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. – With a large Puerto Rican flag flying a few feet away, Luis and Maritza Balmaceda waved their miniature Panamanian flags while a gentleman nearby wore a large Panamanian flag as a cape. Panamanian and Puerto Rican flags dotted the crow In a new report from The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal and Evan Drellich, members of the Astros are said to have "felt powerless" to stop Beltrán's use of the now infamous sign-stealing scheme. Players said Beltrán was considered "El Jefe, the Godfather, the k

Cristina Silva is the National Enterprise Editor for USA Today. Today, she’s joining La Vida Baseball to talk about the newly launched series “Hecho en USA,” or “made in America,” that aims to tell the stories of the Latino community in the United States. The Guilléns have a lot to talk about on this episode. Pete Rose is back in the news and is asking to be reinstated in MLB. Should MLB let him back in? Anthony De Lucia started customizing shoes while he was in college.

Now, his client list includes athletes like MLB stud Robinson Cano and more. Depending on your worldview, the performance was empowering, overtly sexual, too political, nationalistic or tone deaf. We wanted to unpack some of the criticism with our Know You’re Wrong panel. As a social media manager, collaborating with the production team is crucial in creating, writing, editing, and translating video content. During major MLB events, I also edited and translated content live to provide our audience with timely and relevant content. In addition, I re-purposed raw archival interviews into vertical videos that fit natively within Instagram Reels, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts.

Below are some examples. At the 2022 All-Star Game, La Vida Baseball asked Latino baseball players to share their favorite Bad Bunny song. Shortly after receiving the raw interview videos I directed our editor to create this compilation featuring the eye-catching title boxes to keep viewers engaged. The video was published to social media within two hours of the interviews being recorded. The best Latino catcher of all time breaks down the advice he gives pitchers. The interview took place in 2019 but had never been edited down for social media.

In 2022 I edited it to fit the IG Reel/TikTok format and La Vida Baseball's new branding. A tragic story known to many Latino baseball fans is the story of how Cuban-born players have abandoned their country to pursue their dreams of playing professional baseball. The interview with José took place in 2018 but this segment had never been shared before. In 2022, I edited it to fit the IG Reel/TIk Tok format and La Vida Baseball's new branding. At a game in 2022, Harold Ramírez explains his hair style to La Vida Baseball producer Jennifer Mercedes. I edited the video to include translated subtitles, b-roll and La Vida Baseball's watermark.

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As The NLCS Shifts To The Nationals Home Park A

As the NLCS shifts to the Nationals home park a young Latino outfielder has the eyes of the baseball world upon him. As Juan Soto begins his career we look back at arguably the greatest outfielder in the history of the Nationals/Expos franchise, Vladimir José Altuve or Carlos Correa. Astros fans have the benefit of cheering for both, but what if they had to make a choice? We asked some big leaguer...

Related Mexican Saying Was Fitting For L There Has Been

Related Mexican Saying was Fitting for L There has been plenty of conversation about the Hall of Fame credentials of Yadier Molina during these playoffs. As he continues to etch his name into the history books in the NLCS we look back at another Puerto Rican catching icon, Iván “Pudge” Rodríguez Yankees third baseman Gio Urshela is spending his 28th birthday flying to Houston to get ready for the ...

Immigrants Come To This Country To Achieve Their Dreams. These

Immigrants come to this country to achieve their dreams. These immigrants also include professional baseball players. Watch this video as Juan Escalante, the communications manager with America’s Voice, shares his voice on how baseball and immigration are Even during a rare drought, José Altuve is good enough to pull water out of nothing when he’s not even putting the ball in play. The Astros’ dim...

The St. Louis Cardinals’ José Martínez Was Never Going To

The St. Louis Cardinals’ José Martínez was never going to have a say in what his nickname would be. As the son of the late former major leaguer Carlos “Café” Martínez, he was destined to be “Cafecito.” The Cardinals’ backup outfielder/first baseman’s gran MILWAUKEE — Brewers manager Craig Counsell met with his pitchers at American Family Fields of Phoenix to discuss offense this spring. He asked a...

“If You Can, That Means Something Different.” As Venezuela Was

“If you can, that means something different.” As Venezuela was mired in gloom for more than 74 hours last weekend. The South American country went through its longest blackout of the modern era. More than two dozen deaths were attributed to problems associated with the blackout. According to José Manuel As their families and countrymen suffer, some of Major League Baseball’s most prominent Venezue...