Tuesday, April 19, 2016

U.S. talent agent deal with Cuban entrepreneur marks change in business climate

A U.S. talent agency signed a contract in Havana on Monday to work with a Cuban entrepreneur, a seemingly simple deal that marks a big change in the relationship between the two countries.

Jonathan Blue, chairman and managing director of the Louisville-based investment firm Blue Equity, made a deal with Pedro Rodriguez, an entrepreneur licensed by the Cuban government to work in the entertainment field. Rodriguez will scout talent in Cuba for Blue’s talent company, Blue Entertainment Sports Television, or BEST, which represents broadcasters, models and celebrities.

The deal is not the first time a U.S. company has hired one of Cuba’s entrepreneurs, a new segment of the population that works outside of the state-run economy. What’s different is both parties’ willingness to operate openly in public.

San Francisco-based Airbnb began working with private homeowners in Cuba last year, and U.S. companies have hired Cuban computer programmers, translators and fixers since the two countries announced in Dec. 2014 that they would re-establish diplomatic relations. Most of those deals have stayed deliberately under the radar, says Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban-American businessman in Miami, and chairman of the Cuba Study Group, who travels frequently to the island and advises companies interested in working there.

Regulations passed by the Obama administration allow U.S. companies to hire Cuban workers, and lets those workers establish bank accounts in the U.S. to make it easier to get paid. Saladrigas said the Cuban government has not kept up with its own changes, leaving Cuban entrepreneurs uncertain if they can legally work for American businesses.

“The difficulty is that in our system, everything is legal unless it is prohibited. In Cuba, everything is prohibited unless it is made legal,” said Saladrigas, who has briefed Obama about Cuba and traveled there for the president’s historic visit last month. “That leaves Cubans in a legal limbo.”

Blue and Rodriguez are not hiding anything. On Monday, they held a signing ceremony and press conference at the José Martí Cultural Society headquarters in Havana announcing the new partnership.

That openness, Saladrigas said, is what makes the deal unique. “That would be a first,” said Saladrigas, who was not part of the deal.

Blue has traveled to Cuba for years, but started looking for ways to expand his business there after President Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro announced that the Cold War foes would begin normalizing relations.

Blue said his company, which represents sports broadcasters including Bomani Jones, Lawrence Taylor, and Ronde and Tiki Barber, helped arrange a Havana fashion photo shoot in December. That’s where he met Rodriguez, who coordinated the shoot logistics. Blue said the two hit it off immediately, which started the months of research that led to Monday’s deal.

Under the agreement, Rodriguez will find artists in Cuba and funnel them to Blue’s BEST company, which will then serve as their agents for events in the U.S. and elsewhere. Blue said his firm could also represent the Cuban artists in Cuba, but said they are many limitations there. For example, if one of the artists performs at an event paid for by the Cuban government, Blue could not receive any compensation for that because it would violate U.S. law.

That’s why Blue and Rodriguez worked for months to craft a contract that satisfied both U.S. and Cuban law. Blue hired a Miami-based law firm that focuses on Cuba to advise him on U.S. law, and Rodriguez frequently ran the proposals by Cuban officials.

The end result, Blue said, is the start of a long-term presence in a Cuban market filled with all kinds of largely unknown talent.

“We see so much potential in Cuba,” Blue said before traveling to Havana for the ceremony. “We’ve done this all over the world, so Cuba is just such a natural, close market. We’re big believers in the long-term potential there.”

Augusto Maxwell, an attorney at the Miami-based Akerman law firm who helped craft the contract, said he’s confident the deal will pass legal muster. Regulations passed by the U.S. Treasury and Commerce departments since 2014 created a general license that allows U.S. businesses to import goods and services from private entrepreneurs. And while Cuban law doesn’t expressly state that Cuban entrepreneurs can work for U.S. companies, Maxwell said Cuban law doesn’t prohibit it either.

“This is all new terrain,” he said. “We’ve moved from a situation where Cubans weren’t even allowed to enter a hotel room for fear they would come into unauthorized contact with Americans, to one where American companies are welcomed to be in Cuba and Cubans are welcome to provide services to them. This deal is another step in that direction.”

Many of the question marks hanging over Cuba’s entrepreneurs could be addressed by Cuba’s Communist Party Congress, which began Saturday in Havana. But for now, Saladrigas said Blue’s new, public deal could pave the way for other companies to take the plunge.

“The good news is that they are happening and they’re growing,” he said. “It is leaving the Cuban government with few options but to come around to the idea that (these deals) have to be recognized and made legal. I hope they do.”

 

Source: USA Today



Why even Google cant connect Cuba

Carnival may delay Cuba cruise over discrimination concerns

Carnival says it will delay the first cruise from the United States to Cubaif the Cuban government does not allow Cuban-Americans to travel aboard.

Cuban regulations bar people born in Cuba from returning to the country by ship. As a result, Carnival had prohibited barred Cuban-Americans from buying tickets on the May 1 cruise from Miami to Havana and a series of other Cuban ports.

Carnival said in a written statement Monday that it was optimistic that Cuba would allow Cuban-Americans to join the cruise by May 1 and would begin selling tickets to Cuban-Americans. The company said that if Cuban-Americans were not allowed to join the cruise, it would be delayed.

Carnival has been sued by Cuban-Americans claiming discrimination and protesters have targeted its headquarters in Doral.

Source: CNBC



Sunday, September 27, 2015

8 Cuban Musicians Look Up To a Latin Grammy

Alain Perez, Alex Cuba, Rey Ruiz, Ivan "Melon" Lewis, Jalil War, Paquito D'Rivera and Sonlokos Septet Santiaguero, groups and Cuban musicians, will be hoping to Cuba in the sixteenth edition of the Latin Grammy Awards 2015, which He held on November 19 in Las Vegas (USA).

"We are very happy (...) the mere fact of being nominated is already the prize for us," the director of the Septet Santiaguero, Fernando Dewar, who aspires to Lauro Best Traditional Tropical Album for her album "I do not want tears told Efe. Tribute to Los Compadres "next to Jose Alberto" El Canario ".

To the members of the group founded in Santiago de Cuba (eastern Cuba), this volume is "a point of excellence" in a 20-year career in the genre of traditional Cuban music, which in the late 1990s He popularized worldwide through the "Buena Vista Social Club".

On the album, along with "El Canario", involved several international figures, including several nominees and winners in previous editions, such as Oscar D'Leon, Eliades Ochoa, Andy Montanez and Aymee Nuviola.

Septet for this nomination means a double celebration because the album itself is "very special", as "a tribute to the great masters who were Los Compadres" and have been released for the 500th anniversary of the city of Santiago.

In the same category coincides Alain Pérez, a member of the group of the late Spanish flamenco master Paco de Lucia, who returns to his roots with tropical praised "the soul of the Son.

Tribute to Matamoros "in tribute to the legendary Trio Matamoros. One of the revelations in these awards was Ivan "Melon" Lewis, considered one of the best pianists of the new generation of musicians on the island, who competes to be the Best New Artist and also aspires to win the award in the category of Best Latin Jazz Album with his album "Yesterday and Today".

Alex Cuba also won two nominations at this year's Latin Grammy, being chosen production "Healer" among the candidates for Best Singer-Songwriter Album, and his song "Ya began - in collaboration with Luis Enrique and Fernando Osorio placed in the race get the trophy in Best Tropical Song.

Which aims to take another two of the coveted golden gramophones is the composer and guitarist Jalil Guerra, who says he is "happy to receive this news in my country," he told the official Cuban newspaper Juventud Rebelde.

"I'm happy (...) to be able to celebrate with the ensemble Soloists of Havana, and its director Ivan Valiente, this blessing and success for all Cubans," said Guerra, who received two nominations for Best Classical Album and Best Classical Composition Contemporary for "Portrait of the pigeon".

State media in the obvious island in their reports about Latin Grammy nominations Cuban Rey Ruiz, Paquito D'Rivera and Sonlokos group, founded in Miami in 2012 by the Cuban timbales Raymer Olalde.

Ruiz, who emigrated abroad in 1980, competes in the category of Best Salsa Album "Seasons" while D'Rivera, live jazz legend, who won two Latin Grammy in 2014 and strong critic Cuban revolution, repeated nomination for Best Latin Jazz Album with his album "Jazz Meets The Classics".

To Sonlokos it is the first opportunity in the prestigious awards of the Latin Recording Academy, based in the United States, who aspire in the category of Best Traditional Tropical Album with "Wicked son".


The 16th edition of the awards will be broadcast live on the Univision Network from 20-00 ET US (00-00 GMT).

Taken and translated from here

Saturday, September 26, 2015

The Tampa-Cuban Connection

Sometimes they make the Tampa Bay Area a protagonist in various events. Whether tourist or business activities, it is important to develop in the tampeño market, the consequences are often echoed at the regional level. 

That kind of vision is needed when it comes to bring the Cuban consulate to Tampa area and there has been one since 1961. The city of Miami, for obvious reasons, was out of the competition. 

Tampa Bay is more than worthy of the position since approximately 90,000 people of Cuban origin residing here and there are direct flights available to Cuba from Tampa International Airport. 
The Cuban consulate accelerate trade and benefits would be created to accentuate the international profile of the Tampa Bay Area: the city deserves it. 

While we could continue discussing the area in which the Rays should be placed, in the case of the Cuban consulate we should agree to accept that it belongs to our city. The links between Cuba and Tampa are without a doubt and family history; the soul of this city's Ybor City whose roots come from Havana, the history of cigar manufacturing and readers. For some there was a ferry between Tampa and Havana. The links are many.

Tampa is the city that José Martí visited at least 20 times. There are more than a dozen monuments in honor of the revolutionary hero, who spoke from the steps of the Martinez-Ybor factory. There is a small path that is the real sovereign state of Cuba. 

But the proactive effort of the Tampa team unfortunately weakens thanks to Bob Buckhorn that does not participate in the action. The mayor of Tampa will not go where his counterpart from St. Petersburg, Rick Kriseman, has recently gone. To be fair to the mayor, we know respects to those who lost everything in the military revolution and those who traveled with him on missions Hermanos al Rescate (Brothers to the Rescue). We also know that cares about the poor democracy that still exists on the island. 


But the fundamental principle is this: the US foreign policy, from an economic and humanitarian perspective, can not be subject to personal agendas. Those for which Cuba Vietnam, Japan or Germany at any rate not allow more scope for the United States in terms of political priorities. The same goes for Buckhorn Mayor and Governor Rick Scott. What is best for Tampa should not depend on personal agendas and political leaders.

Taken and translated from here