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Recently, it was announced that Amazon studios will be producing a movie based on the lives of groundbreaking Old Hollywood power couple Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. According to reports, Nicole Kidman is set to play Ball while Spanish actor Javier Bardem will be playing Arnaz.

Seeing as Arnaz is widely viewed as one of the first Latino actors to achieve mainstream success in the United States, this news was positive for many. But for others, the news was less than ideal.

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Some critics are lambasting the decision to cast Bardem as Arnaz, seeing that Bardem was born and raised in Spain, and is therefore not Latino.

One disgruntled Twitter user wrote: "I guess it's really hard to find a Cuban actor so you have to hire a Spaniard...Whitewashing can happen to Latinos too."

The criticism around Hollywood relying on Spanish actors and actresses to play Latino roles is not a new one. For years, Spanish actors like Antonio Banderas, Penelope Cruz, and Paz Vega have played Latino characters in American movies. The preponderance of this phenomenon have led some people to accuse Hollywood of "white washing" Latino characters by casting Spanish actors.

Antonio Banderas is one of the most famous examples of a Spanish actor who built his career off of playing Latinos.

He has played Latinos for so long that many people think he is, in fact, Latino. But when he was erroneously called a "person of color" by American publications when he was nominated for an Oscar in 2020, there was quiet the outcry in Spain.

Spanish publications condemned American media for having an "absurd obsession" with race, and not understanding that Spaniards are, in fact, white.

Publications wrote arguments like: "Banderas might pass as a Latino 'person of color,' to an Arkansas farmer, great-grandson of Germans, but never to a California delivery man born to Guatemalan immigrants."

To some observers, it seems that Hollywood prefers casting Europeans as Latinos because Hollywood sees Europe as more "sophisticated" than Latinidad.

25-year-old Spaniard Juan Pedro Sánchez, summed up the problem on Twitter, saying: "A lot of people in Spain are bothered if others confuse them for Latin American because Spaniards see Latinos as people of color, and they don't want to be associated with that."

He went on to say: "What bothers me is not being considered a person of color, but that people ignore that Spain was a colonizer country. It erases that history."

The bottom line is, fans are frustrated that Hollywood keeps looking to European actors to cast Latin American characters.

Study after study shows that there is still a stubborn lack of representation for Latinos onscreen. And when there is finally a role that puts a Latino character front and center, Hollywood prefers to hire a European actor over a Latino one.

Javier Bardem is an exceptionally talented actor and there's no doubt that he will tackle the role of Desi Arnaz with creativity and dedication--but fans' frustrations at the casting choice doesn't have to do with Bardem's acting capabilities. It has to do with the all of the ways that Latinos are discounted--including professionally.