Dear Mexican: I was going through a local state collegeโ€™s academic program the other day and found that they offer a bachelorโ€™s degree in Chicano Studies. My question is in what field of work would someone with a bachelorโ€™s in Chicano Studies land? Here are a few jobs I came up with: working at a lowrider or tattoo shop; designing Virgin de Guadalupe T-shirts; make Locโ€™s shades; work for Nike in their Cortez shoe department; design a Web page like Mapquest but only to show popular cruising routes in the city.


The Bean who Thinks Outside the Burrito

Dear Wab: Iโ€™ve launched darts at Chicano Studies with the best of them. Iโ€™ve accused the program of creating humorless PC pendejos who focus too much on victimization. And I still maintain Chicano Studies faces a looming crisis borne from the fact that so few folks nowadays identify themselves as Chicanos. But as a discipline, Chicano Studies employs the same rigorous standards of research and inquiry (save for the extra-credit Ozomatli concert) as other majorsโ€”a degree in the subject is equally valid (or worthless, conversely) as any other member of the humanities. As for jobs? The short list includes doctors, lawyers, social workers, non-profit saints, artists, journalists, musicians and un chingo de teachers and professorsโ€”and those are just the professions of people I know. But donโ€™t believe meโ€”listen to the graduates themselves. Awright, Chicano Studies cabrones: this is your chance to show America your degree isnโ€™t just a capitulation to whiny minorities. Tell the Mexican how Chicano Studies helps your career, and heโ€™ll publish the best testimonials in the coming weeks!

I own a red 1994 Ford Ranger with a fiberglass shell. Mexicans are always asking me if I want to sell it. At first, I was confused when a woman asked, โ€œDo you wan sell jour pee cup?โ€ They ring my doorbell, accost me in my driveway, put notes on my windshield and send their kids after me. No one will cop as to why they think my short is so hot. Why do Mexicans want my truck?


Camionero Rojo De la Madre

Dear Red Bad-Ass Truck Driver: โ€œMy short is so hotโ€? This is ยกAsk a Mexican!, not Car Talk or The Anal Dwarf, so cut the ambiguous lingo. Donโ€™t worry too much about Mexicans coveting your trocaโ€”itโ€™s as natural to us as mustaches and menudo. See, Mexicans have largely replaced burros and horses with trucks (and SUVs) in the past couple of decades as their beasts of burden and leisure. I really donโ€™t need to overstate the utilitarian purposes of a pickup, but here it is for yโ€™all non-hillbilly gabachosโ€”big bed, extra seats for work buddies or familia, ideal for smuggling contraband. To honor the trocaโ€™s place in modern-day Mexican culture, a new generation of singers pen hits about big vehicles much like previous corridistas praised horsesโ€”famous examples include โ€œEl Cherokee de La Muerteโ€ (โ€œThe Cherokee of Deathโ€), โ€œEl Suburban,โ€ and Los Tigres del Norteโ€™s infamous โ€œLa Camioneta Grisโ€ (โ€œThe Gray Truckโ€). But not all is glamorous with Mexicans and their trucks: In the 1995 study โ€œWho Carries Passengers in the Back of Pickup Trucks?โ€ researchers with the University of California, Irvine, found that Hispanics (read: wabs) were more likely to do what the paperโ€™s title stated, which led to muchos injuries. Goes to show that sometimes, you can take the wab out of the rancho but you canโ€™t take the rancho out of the wab.

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