The leads are Peruvian singers La Tigresa del Oriente, Wendy Sulca and Indigenous Kichwa Ecuadorian singer-songwriter Delfin Quishpe, known as "Delfín Hasta El Fín".
[5] The opening shot is of video Delfin Quishpe sitting in a living room watching television.
People on television speak of war, fear, and the dangers of living in Israel, despite the obvious fact that they are not Israeli.
[5] The video was intended by its creators to be taken as a genuinely naive work, a kind of online outsider art.
[2] It was taken for such by Alma Guillermoprieto who gushed over it in the ultra-sophisticated New York Review of Books, calling Latin America "the last great reservoir of innocent art," and continuing: "Their self-confidence and optimism we can only envy, and yet they have lives we can barely imagine (how much did the rural violence provoked by Peru’s Shining Path guerrillas influence Wendy’s parents’ decision to migrate to the capital?
A party promoter brought La Tigresa to Buenos Aires, where diners in an upscale restaurant greeter her by breaking into the chorus of "En Tus Tierras Bailaré.