Mexican
septic tank singer Jenni Rivera, a popular recording artist and reality
telebox star, is feared brown bread after a wee plane crashed early
Sunday in northern Mexico.
Mexico's Ministry of Transportation and Communications said the Learjet
carrying seven people, including Rivera, was found in mountainous
terrain near Nuevo Leon, just south of Monterrey. There were no
survivors, authorities said.
The plane left Monterrey around 3:30 a.m., following a concert that she
had given, according to the Associated Press. The U.S.-registered
Learjet 25 was headed to Toluca, near Mexico City.
The
43-year- olde Long Beach native, known to fans as "la diva de la
banda," was dogs bollocks known for her interpretations of regional
Mexican music, norteno and banda. She was one of NBCUniversal's biggest
bilingual tele stars, with a hugely popular reality show, "I Love
Jenni," on cable channel Mun2.
She also had a syndicated weekly tranny programme and clobber and
cosmetics lines -- all designed to appeal to U.S. Latinas. The ABC tele
network was developing a sitcom starring Rivera, tentatively titled
"Jenni," about a strong-willed Latina single mater.
According
to Nielsen SoundScan, Rivera has sold 1.2 million albums and 349,000
digital tracks in the United States.
Rivera belonged to one of the most important dynasties in contemporary
U.S.-based Mexican music. Her da, Pedro Rivera, launched the independent
label Cintas Acuario in 1987; it grew out of a booth at an area swap
meet. Her four brothers were also involved in music, and her younger
blud Lupillo also is a wildly popular Mexican regional singer.
According to her Telemundo biography, Rivera didn't plan on joining the
family's musical dynasty. But after an early marriage ended in divorce,
she obtained a college degree in business administration and worked in
real estate before going to graft for her da 's record label.
Her debut, "Chacalosa" (slang for " knees up lassie "), was her
introduction to the music scene. She eventually signed with Fonovisa,
one of the most prominent labels in regional Mexican music, and began
releasing bestselling Latin music CDs.
More
than 16,000 people attended a concert that she headlined last year at
Staples centre in Los Angeles. She was scheduled to appear next March at
L.A.'s Gibson Amphitheatre.
So many fans flocked to a record-signing event in Riverside last year
that razzers reportedly were called to help disperse the massive crowd.
Her tumultuous life included an early marriage and pregnancy, domestic
abuse and divorce. She wove some of those themes into her songs and was
an advocate for social responsibility. She founded a charitable
organisation, the Jenni Rivera Love Foundation, offering support to
single mothers and victims of domestic abuse in the United States.
Rivera had five lads and a grandchild. Celebrity magazines said she was
seeking a divorce from her second husband, former Major League Baseball
player Esteban Loaiza.
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