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🇬🇧 The Unique Alliances of Mexico: Italy and Brazil
In the immense cultural jigsaw puzzle of the Americas, Mexico occupies a unique place: it is simultaneously the most Latin of the Latin nations and the one that most comfortably dresses itself up as European when convenient; it is the Northern giant that understands the soul of the South like no other; it is the only one that can feel like a blood brother to Italy and, at the same time, an unbreakable partner to Brazil. Few nations achieve this dual brotherhood without their identity exploding. Mexico does.
With Italy: The Unexpected Mixed Heritage Brotherhood
At first glance, nothing unites them: an ocean lies between them, different languages, separate histories. And yet, when an Italian and a Mexican sit down at the table, they instantly recognise each other.
* They recognise each other in the nonna and the abuelita who rule the home and decide even the Christmas menu.
* They recognise each other in the almost religious fervour with which they experience football and boxing, where a goal or a knockout can bring an entire country to a standstill.
* They recognise each other in the noisy patron saint festivals, in the processions, in the Virgin of Guadalupe and the Madonna del Carmine.
* They recognise each other in the tomato sauce that both claim as their own (and rightly so: one took it to Europe, the other perfected it).
* They recognise each other in the art of enjoying life with noise, with music, with long hugs, and with food that tastes like home even if you are six thousand miles away.
Italy is an ancient mosaic of Etruscans, Greeks, Romans, Lombards, and Arabs. Mexico is a recent mosaic of Mayas, Aztecs, Spaniards, Africans, and French. Both know what it means to be many peoples in one. That is why, while other Latin American countries desperately seek to "look like Europe," Mexico and Italy look at each other and laugh: they are already Europe and America fused without complexes.
They even share the same "uncomfortable neighbour": some Mexicans feel certain Argentinians look down on them for being "Indians"; some Italians feel Spain treats them with historical condescension. And in that small, shared wound, they also understand each other.
With Brazil: The Two Colossi Who Need and Admire Each Other
If Italy is the brother of the soul, Brazil is the partner of power. Together they total almost 350 million inhabitants, the two largest economies in Latin America, and a market that makes Hollywood, Netflix, and the Japanese anime industry tremble.
They were the first to understand that Dragon Ball and Los Caballeros del Zodiaco (Saint Seiya) were not just "cartoons": they were advertising gold. While Europe and the US looked on with disdain, Televisa and Globo turned them into mass phenomena and sold millions of toys.
Today, CCXP in São Paulo and Mexican film premieres are a mandatory stop for any self-respecting studio. When Disney, Marvel, or Warner want to test if a film works in "the real world," they first release it in Mexico City or Rio de Janeiro.
They admire each other in the diversity that makes them unstoppable: samba and mariachi, Carnival and the Day of the Dead, axé and son jarocho, feijoada and mole, Pelé and Hugo Sánchez, Anitta and Natalia Lafourcade. They taught each other through soap operas (telenovelas): Brazil discovered mariachi in Mexican soaps of the 80s; Mexico fell in love with bossa nova and samba thanks to the carioca storylines.
And when the world closed the doors to mass events, Mexico invented La Mole, and Brazil created CCXP: conventions made by fans for fans that are now larger than many of the North American ones.
The Shared Secret Engine: Diversity, Creativity, and Indomitable Inequality
Mexico and Brazil are the most unequal countries on the continent and, paradoxically, the ones that draw the most creativity from that wound. When free-to-air television stopped airing anime, Crunchyroll and specialised channels were born. When Hollywood hesitated, Huevocartoon, Las Leyendas, Turma da Mônica, and Cidade Invisível emerged. When money is scarce, imagination abounds.
Italy, for its part, shares that same alchemy with Mexico: taking the little that is available and turning it into eternal art, whether it's an opera, a plate of pasta al pomodoro, or tacos al pastor.
Conclusion: The Country with Two Soulmates
Very few countries in the world can boast two such deep and distinct brotherhoods at the same time:
* With Italy, it shares the Mediterranean-Latin passion, the matriarchal family, the religious celebration, the endless table, and the certainty that life, though hard, deserves to be lived with intensity and beauty.
* With Brazil, it shares the continental size, the ungraspable racial and cultural diversity, the creativity born of adversity, and the ability to turn any global phenomenon into something of its own and something bigger.
Mexico doesn't need to choose between being "European" or "Latin American," between the Old and the New World, between the north and the south of the continent. Mexico simply is all of that at once.
And that is why, when an Italian embraces a Mexican, he feels he is embracing a distant cousin who speaks funny but thinks alike.
And when a Brazilian toasts with a Mexican, he knows he is toasting with the only country that understands what it means to be giant and chaotic, diverse and powerful, tragic and joyful at the same time.
Mexico doesn't have just one brother in the world. It has two. And with both, it forms a perfect triangle that explains, better than a thousand treaties, why this part of the planet will never cease to surprise.
