

A Mexican journalist who uses television and radio to amplify youth voices and confront pressing social issues with unflinching clarity.
Ilana Sod built a career in Mexican media not as a detached observer, but as a conduit for stories that matter. Moving seamlessly between television and radio, she carved out a space for programming that spoke directly to younger audiences, often sidestepping sensationalism for substance. Her work as a presenter and producer consistently gravitated toward initiatives with a social conscience, tackling topics that ranged from human rights to everyday struggles. Sod’s approach combined journalistic rigor with a palpable empathy, making complex issues accessible and urgent. In a media landscape often dominated by established figures, she became a trusted voice for a generation, proving that impactful journalism could also be engaging and deeply human.
1965–1980
The latchkey kids. Raised during divorce, recession, and the end of the Cold War. Skeptical, self-reliant, media-literate. They invented indie culture, grunge, and the early internet — then watched the Boomers take credit.
Ilana was born in 1973, placing them squarely in the Generation X. The events that shaped this generation — economic uncertainty, the end of the Cold War, and the rise of personal computing — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1973
#1 Movie
The Exorcist
Best Picture
The Sting
#1 TV Show
All in the Family
The world at every milestone
US withdraws from Vietnam; Roe v. Wade decided
First test-tube baby born
Challenger disaster; Chernobyl nuclear meltdown
Berlin Wall falls; Tiananmen Square protests
Soviet Union dissolves; World Wide Web goes public
Nelson Mandela elected president of South Africa
US invades Iraq; Human Genome Project completed
Edward Snowden reveals NSA surveillance programs
ChatGPT goes mainstream; Israel-Hamas war begins
“My microphone is a bridge to the stories we need to hear.”