Ricky Martin, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Rita Moreno Respond for Puerto Rico
You might be surprised whom some people consider trash.
The most-streamed musical star of this decade so far was born and raised in a small Puerto Rican town called Vega Baja. It’s possible that Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, known to the world as Bad Bunny, could have captured the world’s imagination if he’d been born and raised somewhere other than Puerto Rico, also now known as “a floating island of garbage” according to the comedian Tony Hinchcliffe.
But it’s unlikely.
You see, the next town up the road is called Vega Alta, where the Miranda family hails from. It turns out the view from Vega Alta is a great perspective for writing a musical about one of our nation’s founders, who grew up on another island in the middle of the same ocean.
If you drive 30 minutes east from Vega Alta, you’re in San Juan, where one of us would start a very different music career and would end up selling more than 70 million records.
You could fill Madison Square Garden every night for several decades with all the American fans of the artists born in, raised in or nurtured by Puerto Rico. As the singer Lucecita Benítez has said at her concerts, if you pick up a rock in Puerto Rico, an artist comes out. Our small islands have a rich artistic culture and history that was overlooked and undervalued for too long.
Like us or not — and it’s obvious that some people really don’t like us — the threads of Puerto Rican culture are woven into our shared American story. That story speaks loudly and proudly to tens of millions of Americans.
It wasn’t always this way. The face of Puerto Ricans in our culture was until recently distorted into a caricature that still lingers in some minds. You might not appreciate the creativity and generosity of Puerto Ricans if you knew us only as the Sharks from “West Side Story.”