Sunday, May 15, 2011

Undocumented Celebrities: These Nine Celebrities Came to the U.S. Illegally! (Most now Legal)

Salma Hayek
“I was an illegal immigrant in the United States,” the now-leading lady told V Magazine Spain during an interview. “It was for a small period of time, but I still did it.”


Dorismar

In January 2006, the model, actress and Univision personality—who the U.K.’s “Mirror” once named by as one of the top 25 derrières in entertainment—was visited by immigration agents at her home in Miami and subsequently deported with her husband. According to her lawyer, she had entered the U.S. on a 90-day tourist visa and overstayed it by five years to pose for calendars, get in bubbly baths and the like. Her lawyer subsequently petitioned that she be allowed back in the country under a visa classifying her as “an alien of extraordinary ability. He even appeared on Tucker Carlson’s “The Situation” to argue the case. “You‘re saying that because this girl has a cute butt, she should be a U.S. citizen?” Carlson said. “That's a valid criterion for entry into the country, having an extraordinary body?” Apparently, immigration didn’t think so: Dorismar is still in Argentina.


Cesar Millan
"I am not ashamed to say it: I came to the United States illegally," wrote Millan in his best-selling book "Cesar's Way." According to him, for "the poor and working class of Mexico, there is no other way to come to America except illegally. It's impossible." The Dog Whisperer subsequently took the oath of U.S. citizenship in March 2009.


Arnold Schwarzenegger
During the Terminator’s 2003 campaign for governor, the San Jose Mercury News raised the possibility that the Austria-born actor, who went to live in California as a 21-year-old bodybuilder, had violated his visa in those early years. In his 1977 autobiography, Schwarzenegger said that he was paid a weekly salary – something that was verboten under his B-1 athlete’s visa, which only allows training and competition, the newspaper pointed out. And in a 1981 appearance on “The Tonight Show,” Schwarzenegger described working as a bricklayer in 1971—three years before he got the resident visa that would have allowed him to do so.
His campaign’s novel explanation? They said he'd simply lied in those interviews. "[I said] a lot of outrageous things to get the headlines," Schwarzenegger himself added.


Luis Enrique
The Latin pop crooner was 15 in 1978, when he fled his war-torn home country, Nicaragua, for the United States. "I did not speak English. I did the best I could. I finished high school, but I couldn't go to college because I was illegal," he told USA Weekend in an interview. Luis Enrique went on to win record contract and build a huge fan base. But when his CD, Ciclos, won a Grammy this year, he dedicated the award “to all the people in my country that are still struggling to make a better life.”


Los Tigres del Norte
One of the most successful groups in North America, this Norteño band has sold 34 million records since 1972, with multiple platinum and gold albums. Back in the 1960s, though, they were a band of six brothers and cousins trying to get into the United States for a concert they were playing at Soledad prison, outside of San Jose. They told this story to The New Yorker: When an immigration officer asked Jorge Hernández, then still a teenager, if he had permission from his mother to go into the United States, he said yes, then wandered a distance off and asked a female stranger to pretend to be her and wave. With that, he was in. “’I’m going to baptize you Los Tigritos,’” Hernán says the official said. And, in his telling, Jorge replied, “No, we are Los Tigres.”


Eduardo 'Piolín' Sotelo
The outspoken and enormously popular host of the Los Angeles-based morning show "Piolín por la manana" was brought across the border in a car trunk about 24 years ago. He became a citizen in 2008.


Michael J. Fox
This Canadian actor suffered some nervousness at the border early on in his career, when, as he wrote in his 2010 autobiography, "the actual visa had not yet come through" and he was asked if he was entering the country for work or pleasure.


Rodolfo Jiménez
According to Celestrellas, this Mexican-born telenovela star and TV host first tried crossing the border when he was 15 years old, following his father. Today he is one of the hosts of the Univision's 'La Tijera'--and one of People en Español's 50 Most Beautiful People.

2 comments:

  1. I had no idea Tigres del Norte and Selma Hayek were in the same position as some of our Hispanic counterparts. Great post!

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  2. VIDEO, Fox News Spins Arizona Anti-Immigrant Law's Loss in 9th Circuit - Lies and smears of Fox News against the Ninth Circuit of Appeals, based in San Francisco, Fox News lies and twists the arguments : Lou Dobbs, Shannon Bream, Trace Gallagher

    Repugnant and Repulsive Bias and Lies of Fox News :

    These ignorants lie and lie and spin and spin foolishness ! - Two of the court's panel were appointed by Republican Presidents - Judge John Noonan is very famous and respected in legal circles



    Uploaded by LiberalViewer on Apr 16, 2011

    140+ Fox News Bias videos at http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=A3BD2524FE99BD4D

    When Fox News reported on the latest court to strike down large parts of Arizona's, anti-immigrant law, SB 1070, a law that promotes racial profiling and violates federal preemption of immigration policy, the supposed straight news program both mischaracterized the substance of the court's decision and unfairly smeared the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals itself, as I show in this video.

    The clips I use of Fox News anchor Shannon Bream and Fox News reporter Trace Gallagher come from a longer segment of Fox News' April 11, 2011, broadcast of "America Live" also available from FoxNewsInsider on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yf_SR-A87Ko

    The clips I use of Fox News anchor Shannon Bream and Fox Business anchor Lou Dobbs come from a longer segment of Fox News' April 11, 2011, broadcast of "America Live" also available online at http://video.foxnews.com/v/4638350/governments-broke-but-still-hiring

    The image I use of my April 2010 video titled "Arizona Anti-Immigrant Law Un-American?" comes from the YouTube video player page at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awOpRXyjIiY

    The image I use of the April 11, 2011, opinion of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals affirming the district court's decision striking down large parts of Arizona's anti-immigrant law, SB 1070, comes from the page at http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2011/04/11/10-16645.pdf

    The image I use of Erwin Cherminsky's 2004 law review article titled "The Myth of the Liberal Ninth Circuit" comes from the page at http://llr.lls.edu/volumes/v37-issue1/documents/chemerinsky.pdf

    The image I use of Roy E Hofer's 2010 ABA article titled "Supreme Court Reversal Rates: Evaluating teh Federal Courts of Appeals" comes from the page at http://apps.americanbar.org/intelprop/magazine/LandslideJan2010_Hofer.pdf



    VIDEO : Fox News Spins Arizona Anti-Immigrant Law's Loss in 9th Circuit?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uydIY1VVdMA

    .

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