How I Got Radicalized

When Niurka Marcos Ruled the Spanish-Language Tabloids

Her messy beefs with ‘good girl’ celebrities proved no famous woman could escape scrutiny in the 2000s

Mariana Viera
GEN
Published in
8 min readOct 23, 2020

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Pop art-esque graphic of Niurka Marcos.
Photo illustration; Image source: Medios y Media/Contributor/Getty Images

Welcome to “How I Got Radicalized,” a new series at GEN that tells a story about a cultural moment — a TV show, commercial, character, song, book, musical, etc. — that made you drastically rethink how society works. Here’s how you can pitch us.

“Baby, let me tell you, the most mind-blowing sex I’ve ever had is with myself,” sneers Niurka Marcos from my television screen, gazing directly into the camera with smug self-satisfaction. It’s 2006. I’m 13, and my family just moved into our fifth apartment in the San Fernando Valley, only three blocks away from our last one. I’ve been following “la mujer escándalo” on gossip shows and magazines for years. I really never meant to get into that sort of thing. It’s just that Mami and I get home around the same time, and we like eating together on the couch with the TV on.

We’re a Univision household, and El Gordo y la Flaca comes on every weekday at 4 p.m. Mami rolls her eyes and scoffs, “mu-jer ri-dí-cu-la.” Must be a jab at her ex, she concludes, and clearly a lie because just the other day she was on some show gushing about their…

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Mariana Viera
GEN
Writer for

Los Angeles born-and-raised writer. Lover of all things femme and disobedient. Words in Teen Vogue, Vibe, Remezcla, Okayplayer, Bustle, Vice, and more.