I've read through the replies and I wanna jump in and speak my piece as a Latino (Mexican, as in, born and lived in Mexico for 20+ years).

First of all, I'm sorry to the US Citizens of this forum, but growing up in the US and being part of an ethnic group doesn't automatically makes you a member of that culture, and it reflects how the US still tries to pretend it's a microcosm of the entire planet. If my neighbor John Smith was born in Mexico, raised in Mexico, and happens to be of Brittish Heritage, that doesn't make him Brittish if he only has a surface understanding of how Brittish culture is. Same thing, people of latino heritage born and raised in the US develop a completely different culture; for a good example, see the whole "Oye Primos!" controversy, on how poorly received it was by latin americans in general despite being made by a "latina" for "latin americans" when it was, in fact, made for people of latin american heritage RAISED in the US.

Wuk Lamat's VA is by all means, an American. Same with plenty of the voice actors. I'm honestly sick of this "ethnicity based voice casting" when in the end 90% of them will be Americans with a pallete swap. The people who made some of the voices seem to think we speak like Dora the Explorer. Wuk Lamat's VA DID NOT make a praise worthy job and that's not a subjective opinion, it's a fact. You can like what she did but it doesn't change the fact it's not a good job; I love the Venom movies and that doesn't automatically make them good, by all means, they're objectively bad films.

Also, the cultural research they did for the supposed "representation" of our cultures is surface level at best and "they did their homework, but did nothing with it" at worst. I mean, just look at the effing Taco, that's not even how authentic mexican tacos are.