This week on Boricua Culture Mix, we sit down with Anthony “Ant” Rivera, a North Philly filmmaker and storyteller behind the documentary project La Lengua del Tambor.
We talk about bomba as a language—a living archive born from resistance during slavery, a rhythm that carried messages, survival, and joy when our ancestors were denied freedom. Ant connects Loíza (la raíz, el corazón Afro-Boricua) with North Philly Boricuas, showing how culture travels, transforms, and still protects us in the diaspora.
In this convo we get into:
• Why Loíza’s stigma says more about colonial fear than Loíza itself
• Protecting sacred traditions from being diluted or commercialized
• The role of elders, community, and stewardship in storytelling
• Unlearning anti-Blackness and the “pages they took out the book”
• Why visibility matters: we deserve to see Black Boricuas on screen—period
This episode is educational, real, funny, and deep—porque we can hold joy and truth at the same time.
If you want to support Ant’s film, check our links and share however you can—time, talent, or treasure. 💛
Follow Ant: IG @AntVivera | TikTok @AntManuel
Film page: La Lengua del Tambor (Instagram)
And remember: whether you’re on the island, the diaspora, or on the moon… you are Boricua enough.