" Me Got Em College Degree" Commericials Are Outrageously Funny.

luckystrike

Rookie
May 25, 2011
108
2
0
I don't know if you've seen them but near my area, there are several private colleges trying to get Latinos to sign up with them by having the commercial done with "real Latino people".

They're funny because of the broken English these people speak. Some have nose pins and tattoos too. I guess that is to attract the "gang banger" crowd.

They always show a female who is a "single parent" playing with her "bastard". (Hey! I didn't invent the word.:lol:) She talks about her scummy life and how she corrected it by getting a diploma from "whatever" University.

Then she is standing in front of a beautiful house in a white neighborhood with a big smile.

Who are you trying to kid, bitch. You sell crack, to the college kids.:lol:
 
The basic narrative—penniless Mexican teenager jumps the border, learns English, and goes to Harvard Medical School to become a brain surgeon—describes such an implausible arc that one is tempted to look, in vain, for the catch. (“It’s too good to be true,” says a close friend, Harvard neurobiologist Ed Kravitz. “But it’s true.”)

Hopkins Medicine Magazine - The Alfredo Story

23-q1a-72.jpg

20-Alfredo.jpg


Hilarious. Wonder how many rich, white American lives he's saved?
 
  • Thread starter
  • Banned
  • #3
The basic narrative—penniless Mexican teenager jumps the border, learns English, and goes to Harvard Medical School to become a brain surgeon—describes such an implausible arc that one is tempted to look, in vain, for the catch. (“It’s too good to be true,” says a close friend, Harvard neurobiologist Ed Kravitz. “But it’s true.”)

Hopkins Medicine Magazine - The Alfredo Story

23-q1a-72.jpg

20-Alfredo.jpg


Hilarious. Wonder how many rich, white American lives he's saved?

Is one good one worth having 13,000,000 others?
 
I don't know if you've seen them but near my area, there are several private colleges trying to get Latinos to sign up with them by having the commercial done with "real Latino people".

They're funny because of the broken English these people speak. Some have nose pins and tattoos too. I guess that is to attract the "gang banger" crowd.

They always show a female who is a "single parent" playing with her "bastard". (Hey! I didn't invent the word.:lol:) She talks about her scummy life and how she corrected it by getting a diploma from "whatever" University.

Then she is standing in front of a beautiful house in a white neighborhood with a big smile.

Who are you trying to kid, bitch. You sell crack, to the college kids.:lol:

ill give ya a another day Gordo before your banned again......geezus your a dumb shit.....
 
Their just trying to bring third worlders up to par.
 
The basic narrative—penniless Mexican teenager jumps the border, learns English, and goes to Harvard Medical School to become a brain surgeon—describes such an implausible arc that one is tempted to look, in vain, for the catch. (“It’s too good to be true,” says a close friend, Harvard neurobiologist Ed Kravitz. “But it’s true.”)

Hopkins Medicine Magazine - The Alfredo Story

23-q1a-72.jpg

20-Alfredo.jpg


Hilarious. Wonder how many rich, white American lives he's saved?

Is one good one worth having 13,000,000 others?

I don't know. Ask those Americans who are alive today because this man worked and studied and made something of himself. What do you think they would say? There's more where he came from?

Funny, why do you assume he's the "only one"?
 
they just really dont want to think of any person of color doing good.

It ruins their preconcieved notions about people.

It is just so unAmerican.

We are a nation of immigrants and mutts.

Its actually what has made our country excell.
 
Born to illegal immigrants, couple builds future in Wyoming

Life for Mexican-Americans has improved. Inez says it’s the family’s stability and a new generation of educated Hispanics.
“It has changed, but I’ll have to tell you the truth ... discrimination will always be with us,” Inez said. “It’s more subtle now, but it’s still there. People are still leery about you, and we still have to prove ourselves.”

“I started at the very bottom,” she said. “I volunteered first and I went to being a cook. After being a cook, I became and aide and finally a teacher. Even though I didn’t have college or finish high school, they gave me classes and training.”
Inez, who was recognized as Wyoming’s Teacher of the Year in 1991, now serves on the board of directors for Absaroka Head Start, monitoring, among other things, the migrant Head Start program, which provides care and education for children of migrant workers.

Their children have found success in their own pursuits. Their pictures cover the walls of this quiet Lovell home.
Cec works as an executive assistant at the Wyoming Press Association. Milton is a communications specialist with the University of Wyoming.
Anna works in the Lovell hospital cafeteria, Mike for Nestle Foods. Tom, who lives in San Antonio, owns two Ultimate Cheese Cake bakeries, and Victoria processes mortgages for USAA, a financial services company.

Born to illegal immigrants, couple builds future in Wyoming
 

Forum List

Back
Top