This is a coca leaf. This is not cocaine. This represents the culture of indigenous people of the Andean region.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Coca-Cola is an American icon.
Yes, I'm proud to be indigenous. I'm half-Quechua-Huachipaeri from Peru.
The model of Coca-Cola is local, whether it's investing, partnering, sourcing, producing, or selling. We market and distribute locally; we pay taxes locally. And it works.
Everything that is really Mexican is either Aztec or Spanish.
The United States and Mexico are trapped - economically, culturally, politically and because of drug crime - in the same continent.
Panamanian boxing is unique - it's very musical. It's almost like a dance. It has a lot to do with being in the Caribbean and with salsa. When you see a Panamanian boxer, there's a style. There's a playfulness in the way you throw the punches.
It's also very important in Latin America. If we can deal with the drug problem there, some of their strife there, it's less likely we have immigration problems here.
Indians are numerous in the tropical regions; not so elsewhere.
Coca-Cola is the only business in the world where no matter which country or town or village you are in, if someone asks what do you do, and you say you work for Coca-Cola, you never have to answer the question, 'What is that?'
'Indigenous' is a bit of a gory thriller film that's centered around five best friends who take a vacation to Panama. They are enticed into the forbidden jungle by a local Panamanian and are being hunted by an indigenous creature - the legendary Chupacabra.