Representation Matters: 15 Latinxs I Saw on TV While Growing Up

I didn’t care much for having Barbie dolls when I was little. I had her Latinx friend Teresa (I still have to find out who bought this doll for me and thank them). Maybe it’s because Teresa looked more like me, with dark hair and dark eyes. The point is that it’s imperative that little girls and boys see people who look like them, everywhere — and this includes television and film. On the small screen, among the sea of human Barbies, with blonde hair, blue eyes, no accents, and European names, I felt empowered and seen to witness the presence of a doll such as Teresa. Here are those Latinx actors and actresses whom I saw on television, while growing up in the eighties and nineties. Because representation matters.

3Lynda Carter on Wonder Woman

Wonder Woman Representation
Photo Credit IG @vintage_celebrities

Every girl needs a superhero who looks like her, and/or has a similar background. I have always loved Wonder Woman, even more so when I learned that Lynda Carter is of blended heritage, half-Latina and half-European like me. She continues to be a Latinx hero for women everywhere.