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    Fixing Journalism

    Frontline Freelance Mexico´s

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    Raul

    Vania Pigeonutt

    Mexico’s criminal scene caught the attention of the foreign press during the six-year term of president Felipe Calderón Hinojosa — at the beginning of what he called “the war against drug trafficking.” Local journalists documented how the country became the place of massacres, drug tunnels, clandestine graves, forced disappearances, displacement, femicides, homicides, and other crimes against humanity.

    With the deployment of more than seven thousand soldiers in Michoacán to combat organized crime in December 2006, a journalistic endeavor that has been going on for 17 years began and in which more than 137 communicators have been murdered.

    Journalists, mostly foreign, became interested in covering the violence in Mexico and began hiring local reporters to be their fixers and guide them on the ground, helping explain the issues and providing context.

    Fixer is the title given to the person who coordinates the assignment, resolves, arranges, obtains access, schedules interviews with sources, sets guidelines for possible approaches, establishes limits and is in direct contact with characters of major international news stories and investigations. Most of the time fixers do not get any recognition when the works are published.

    These foreign journalists have wanted to report on the femicides in Ciudad Juárez, the kidnappings of migrants on their route to the United States and the forced disappearances carried out in collusion between authorities at all levels of government and criminal groups, as is the case of the kidnapping of the 43 students of Ayotzinapa that took place on September 26, 2014.

    Journalists from the United States, Europe and Asia have come to Mexico following reports of murders in the world-renowned tourist destination of Acapulco, Guerrero, clashes between rival criminal organizations, grim images of people torn to pieces, human heads thrown into nightclubs, men hanging from bridges or threats against local police officers left in crime scenes.

    Thus, the story of the Mexican fixer goes hand in hand with violence, job insecurity and the need to tell the outside world what is happening in a country in which dead and missing people pile up.

    Mexico is also the deadliest country for journalists in the world without being at war, and one where communicators work hard but earn little money.

    The term fixer had been used in war scenarios such as the Balkan war or in conflict zones such as the fight between gangs in Central America. Despite its complexity, there are no homogeneous rates established per day or per region for this work.

    According to the journalists that Frontline Freelance México interviewed, it was between 2006 and 2007 that the work of fixers emerged in the Mexican context: those who, for example, went in search of getting an interview with a masked hitman or those who were looking for farmers who would allow them to document the process of poppy cultivation. We must not forget that the fixer also works as a driver, logistics coordinator, permit and access processor, interpreter and many other things.

    The forerunners of this activity in Mexico work in places like Tijuana, Baja California; Matamoros, Tamaulipas; or Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, border cities where migration and violence blend together. Other veterans of the profession work in southern states like Guerrero, Oaxaca and Chiapas, entities that, in addition to having a high incidence of crime, share characteristics such as high levels of poverty and marginalization, as well as a large number of indigenous populations.

    The forerunners of this trade in Mexico work in Tijuana, Baja California; Matamoros, Tamaulipas, or Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, border cities where migration and violence blend together. Other veteran fixers work in the south of the country in Guerrero, Oaxaca and Chiapas, states that, in addition to having high crime rates, share characteristics such as a large indigenous population, high levels of poverty and marginalization.

    By 2008, in a country with soldiers in the streets, most major cities in the north of the country were experiencing different types of violence: extortions, kidnappings, femicides, intentional homicides, drug dealing and a war between rival drug trafficking groups. All of this occurred against a backdrop of impunity and political violence that later spread to the rest of the country.

    Journalists were not exempt from experiencing the consequences of this war against the population. We became news. Attacks on newsrooms, acts that state governments always blamed on organized crime, began to become more and more frequent.

    In Ciudad Juárez, violence against journalists claimed a victim on November 13, 2008. Early that day, Armando Rodríguez Carreón, “El Choco,” a renowned reporter covering the police beat for El Diario newspaper, was shot in his car as he was about to take his children to school.

    Article 19, an international organization that works to defend and promote freedom of expression and information worldwide, has documented the murder of 162 journalists in Mexico between 2000 and September 2023.

    We journalists have denounced that politicians have allied with criminals to attack us or that they are themselves members or leaders of criminal organizations. In a scenario in which interests mixed, the legal benefited from the illegal. A clear example can be seen in how politicians now use violence to gain territory and get their local councils and mayors elected into office.

    In 2010, an armed group fired on the facilities of the regional newspaper El Sur in Acapulco, where the war strategy led by the Army only caused more disappearances and acts of violence.

    The numbers of dead and missing are not the only metric to quantify attacks and harassment. There is also the frequency of violence against journalists.

    When Enrique Peña Nieto’s presidency ended in 2018, there were attacks against the press every 24 hours, according to Article 19. After the government change, the rate increased an attack against journalists every 14 hours, the organization’s most recent data shows (2021).

    Mexico was among the top 10 countries in the world with the most impunity for these crimes in the Committee to Protect Journalists’ (CPJ) 2022 Global Impunity Index. The committee highlighted that Mexico “is one of the most atrocious cases” given that the organization has documented “28 unsolved journalist murders there in the last 10 years, the most in any country on the index and the most dangerous in the Western Hemisphere for journalists.”

    CPJ explains that its Global Impunity Index calculates the number of unsolved murders of journalists as a percentage relative to each country’s population.

    In addition, the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated our colleagues’ precariousness: at least 32 journalists have died from the disease and many had their salaries cut.

    Ministry of the Interior figures show that between 2007 and 2022 more than 330,000 people were murdered throughout the country; the ministry also estimates that about 100,000 more people have been missing since 1964. In the last 15 years, journalistic work, whether for a local media or as a fixer for foreign productions, documented the discovery of clandestine graves and the forced disappearance of people as a terror strategy.

    While the official discourse established 15 years ago claimed that violence was due to the confrontation between the State and criminal groups, looking at the territory from a local perspective reveals that there are many more layers that must be delved into to understand the complexity of the country’s violence and how the people are governed. In the midst of all this we find journalists, fixers and local producers.

    For colleagues like Félix Márquez in Veracruz, Teresa Montaño in the State of Mexico, Luis Daniel Nava in Guerrero’s Lower Mountains (Montaña Baja) or Lenin Mosso in the indigenous region of that same state, doing journalism and working as a fixer for foreign journalists is walking on dangerous terrain. All of them assure that working for someone else doubles the risk because fixers live in the place where the story zeros in.

    In addition to this, these fixers have no say in the angle of the story, the words that will be printed in the newspaper or the images that the television station will broadcast. If a face or name is revealed, even when foreign reporters promise to respect anonymity, local reporters and fixers are the ones who will pay the consequences. The same goes if the sources don’t like the headlines or the overall narrative.

    Félix Márquez explains why it is more difficult to live in the territory. A colleague who more than a decade ago taught him how to cover the police beat had to go into exile after his family was murdered. Living in a region with high rates of violence spreads the risks to your loved ones, exposing people who have no idea how deeply involved you could be in certain issues. Félix himself even left the country for a time after the murder of his colleague photojournalist Rubén Espinosa in 2015.

    But he also believes that without local journalists the work of foreign colleagues would not have the same impact. “It wouldn’t be easy to report it in a state like Veracruz, with the violence, with the territory we have, with complicated terrain, with a lot of effervescence between municipality and municipality that can be five minutes from each other,” says Felíx. He also questions why, if his services are so key to the investigations, his name doesn’t show in the credits. “This knowledge must have authoral as well as economic recognition,” he says.

    ***

    Breaking down the fixer’s work

    In the words of Jorge Nieto, a journalist and field producer who started working as a fixer in 2007 in Tijuana, Baja California, the definition of the activity alludes to the senses: the fixer is sight, hearing, the intuition of experiencing the subject on the surface to offer outside journalists our context and access to a specific community or city.

    Jorge says: “a fixer is also in charge of helping to get accommodation, food, transportation; and he must have the ability to respond to technical problems; he must solve problems, have emergency contacts, security contacts, contacts of those in charge of certain areas, especially when you are working on safety issues.”

    This seasoned fixer also believes that when the journalist or local guide offers field knowledge, editorial suggestions, possible interviews, approaches to reporting, he goes from being “a fixer” to being a field producer or associate producer.

    A fixer repairs things, situations, problems and also seeks to prevent risks for foreign journalists. While a local field producer also actively contributes to the story that will be told.

    Jorge remembers that he began guiding foreign colleagues, most of them from the United States, in 2006. With the start of the war on drugs, the government deployed security programs such as Operation Chihuahua or, in his city, Operation Tijuana.

    Human rights violations increased soon after the military was deployed to the streets in 2006. In Tijuana, Jorge had to cover shootings in broad daylight, while convoys of police, soldiers, bodyguards of organized crime leaders and members of cartels roamed through the city brazenly carrying their weapons.

    “It seemed that there wasn’t any kind of control in Tijuana,” he says.

    That same violence attracted correspondents from abroad. But, in his opinion, those foreign journalists wanted to focus a lot on clichés because that is what sells the most.

    “Sometimes they think they are going to see children with machine guns on the corners; that’s the movie scene they imagine. And yes, Mexico and Tijuana have a serious context of violence, but that does not necessarily have to be told from the number of murders and executions; but also from the narrative and complexity of the large number of players involved; of the problems that arise due to the border’s interculturality mix, because it is a border crossing, because it has shallow roots; many more factors, and not just that there are armed people.”

    When he was asked to secure access to a drug tunnel, he refused, acknowledging the great risk this work presented. Instead, he was able to secure access to a shipment of 250 kilos of cocaine for an Australian production. Although for a moment he regretted it, because he came to think what would happen to him if something went wrong and the embassy of his foreign colleagues had to intervene to rescue its citizens but not him, who was the only Mexican in that dangerous production. Seeking some protection, he has sometimes asked not to be credited, putting aside his ego or reputation in the industry.

    His partner Mariana Martínez Esténs also works as a journalist and local field producer in the border region of Tijuana and San Diego. Like Jorge, she has more than 20 years of experience covering this binational area for various international outlets.

    Her book “Inside People: Stories from Prison” focuses on the work she has done inside Mexican prisons. It is one of the few documents exposing the precariousness we journalists face as we do our job and also addresses the conditions in which fixers work.

    Mariana writes that if the relationship between media outlets and fixers is not balanced and with clear parameters, they turn into colonial relationships that end up being more violent for local journalists. Mariana opposes practices that make the work of local journalists invisible once they are hired. It’s not fair, she says, because journalists who work for local media in almost any region of the country must also work in more than three places to make up a barely adequate income.

    While being a fixer offers the opportunity for a better pay—sometimes more than $200 a day—their work, which often involves risking their lives, also deserves recognition.

    Many times fixers have their hands on high-impact stories but lack sufficient time or resources to develop them. When foreign journalists want to investigate one of these topics, they collaborate with local journalists without giving them the recognition they deserve.

    With or without recognition, the lives of Mexican journalists are always at risk.

    The murder of the photojournalist and fixer Margarito Martínez Esquivel on January 10, 2021, in Tijuana illustrates the level of violence that journalists face. Known among his colleagues as 4×4 because colleagues considered him an “all-terrain” journalist given his intrepid nature, Margarito covered police and security issues.

    Margarito, who worked as a photojournalist and fixer for international media such as the BBC, The San Diego Union-Tribune and the Los Angeles Times, was shot dead outside his home despite filing reports of threats against him and having requested the government to include him in a protection program. But the government did not protect him.

    That is why the conditions of those of us who work as fixers must improve. Not only do we run the risk of being murdered, but the precariousness of our working conditions forces us to accept dangerous assignments for foreign media given the greater financial incentive that come with these jobs.

    Mariana points out that: “as things began to catch fire in Mexico, to become more dangerous, the international media only sent their correspondents if they had someone as a local journalist to be their guide; that’s when the term fixer was coined.”

    With violence escalating at the border between 2006 and 2008, international journalists in need of a fixer sought after local colleagues who collaborated for international news agencies such as the Associated Press or Reuters, or for important media in Mexico like Reforma or Semanario Zeta.

    “They invited us for a coffee: we, eager for attention, gave them contacts, told them how to do it, we were eager to help. But then it turned out that it was a job,” Mariana says.

    She feels lucky to have been a translator for journalists who had covered wars or worked in Central America, scenarios where it was important that the work of journalists be paid and recognized. She remembers that it was these foreign correspondents who told her that she should be paid for her work of advising and guiding other journalists. Hence, she is against the use of the term fixer, since a journalist in the field works too hard to facilitate the work of a colleague who only arrives for a few days as a “parachutist.”

    Mariana believes that the issue of colonial and vertical relationships that end up affecting fixers must be solved by everyone who at some point plans to hire a journalist or local guide. She also says that these foreign journalists must be aware of the context and place where they require help, that the people who help them live where their stories happen and that, with that help, their published work can earn them awards back home.

    Asymmetrical relationships

    In 2016, the Global Reporting Center published the study “‘Fixing’ the Journalist-Fixer Relationship: A Critical Look Towards Developing Best Practices In Global Reporting”, that elaborates on the relationship between foreign correspondents and fixers, who tend to be local journalists. 

    The document includes an anonymous survey of 450 people working in journalism in 71 countries. The survey shows that 60 percent of the participants have not been credited in the stories they worked as fixers, while 86 percent said they are interested in having their name appear in the published works.

    For our microsite, Fixing Journalism, we interviewed 35 colleagues from the states of Baja California, Chiapas, Chihuahua, Mexico City, Coahuila, State of Mexico, Guanajuato, Guerrero, Nuevo León, Oaxaca, San Luis Potosí, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, Veracruz and Yucatan; they all agreed that getting credited is important to do their job, unless the journalist opts for anonymity to protect his or her safety.

    All the respondents have worked as fixers to improve their income. They have earned from $75 to $500 USD a day. Journalists in Oaxaca, Chiapas and Guerrero earn the lowest salaries – in some cases $5 per day -, while in northern states such as Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Baja California daily salaries can reach $20.

    The founder of Frontline Freelance México, Andalusia K. Soloff, a multimedia journalist from the United States based in Mexico City who specializes in state violence, migration, indigenous land struggles and gender violence in Latin America, believes that the relationships between those who hire a fixer and the fixer must be balanced. In her experience she has learned positive things working as a fixer.

    “Being a fixer has been both good and bad. When you don’t have much experience being a journalist you can learn a lot from experienced journalists: angles, how they move, that because they work in media with a higher profile they can secure much more important interviews than when you work for unknown media,” she says.

    Although the term fixer is not degrading at all, it has sometimes been used to degrade the work fixers do in news or entertainment production. The term itself falls short because “it is not [a term] that encompasses all the work we do. It is a term that does not recognize our journalistic value,” the journalist says.

    Andalusia, who is co-coordinator of Fixing Journalism and has given workshops to journalists to instill the notion of fair payment for their work, says that not all media credit fixers. She says that for many media outlets the fixer is “the last link in the chain; we do not have much influence and we have only had to obey or (or) lose our job.”

    She points out that the unequal power relations arising in this context bring about several problems. What she has noticed is that international media traveling from all over the world to Mexico often fail to give fair recognition to those who facilitate their field work, fail to pay adequately or even endanger the journalists they hire.

    Fixers must also ensure that the stories coming out from their workplaces don’t get lost in the fantasies of foreign journalists, many of whom arrive with the impulse to address phenomena of violence or indigenous cultures as if they were exotic subjects. An example of this can be seen in the story angles that many foreigners have in mind when explaining a state. In Sinaloa, for instance, many journalists have only wanted to focus on the impact of the Sinaloa Cartel without truly going in and explaining that drug trafficking affects, in one way or another, the entire Mexican society.

    “One of the things that worries me a lot are the awards. It is one thing when you as a journalist do this work with passion, for social change, because with your work you spread important stories beyond the awards. However, the awards help to understand issues and make problems visible. Awards help a lot. They give high prestige to journalists, and it is very serious that when we are producers or fixers they do not include us in the awards,” Andalusia says.

    Alicia Fernández, who along with Andalusia is co-coordinator of Fixing Journalism, is a visual journalist and independent producer in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua. She used to work as a fixer. She now works as a field producer and collaborates with international media, independent journalists and researchers. Alicia is one of the pioneers of this profession in the Juárez – El Paso border.

    Becoming a fixer in 2009 represented growth; it took her out of a bleak environment that, at the time, had enveloped the journalism of her border region. In 2010, her job was to document “deaths and more deaths.” Her photographic work was immersed in the crime and violence that plagued her city. These were experiences that took her on a roller coaster of emotions, where adrenaline suddenly shot up as she delved deeper into the sadness and tragedy of covering the conflict in Ciudad Juárez. So learning about other journalistic perspectives expanded her horizons.

    Doing journalism and covering the crime beat in a place like Ciudad Juárez meant working at night, exposing herself to the dangers that this entails. The media have never invested in training their reporters to carry out this type of coverage. They have been the ones who, in a self-managed manner, have struggled to train themselves to cover shootings, to know how to protect their photographic equipment, and even to establish protocols on the streets so that the work will be accomplished in the safest way, despite the lack of conditions to actually do it.

    Alicia has worked with award-winning and world-renowned photographers—such as Ron Haviv—as well as productions focused on human rights. These experiences strengthened her photographic gaze and her evolution as a producer.

    “For me, it was an opportunity to learn from everyone because they were great people,” Alicia says.

    Alicia was already a journalist when she began working as a fixer, and she took advantage of the opportunity. For her it was not only about being able to work with great photographers, but also to make sure she was paid fairly. Furthermore, she asked them questions to be able to learn more, to know what her perspectives and methodologies were for working and traveling around the world.

    For her part, journalist Melva Frutos, dean of the profession in Monterrey, Nuevo León, points out that it is important to recognize that being a journalist, woman, mother and fixer adds levels of complexity to the profession. She, who has also been a fixer and has covered issues of security, migration, politics and freedom of expression, points out that payments should be better regulated and that ideally there should be a pay scale.

    She has worked as a fixer and independent journalist in many of the northern states, including Coahuila and Tamaulipas. Those jobs have included long road trips that made her think and worry about the additional risks of being a woman and a mother. She has developed her own security tools, “since I started doing it I have always had a monitoring system with other colleagues and I have always contacted colleagues in the city I go to to have an anchor there, so to speak,” Melva says.

    ***

    Colonial relations, indigenous land and security

    Lenin Mosso is a Mè’ phàà communicator who works in the indigenous region of the Montaña de Guerrero, a multicultural territory, where indigenous peoples such as the Ñuu Savi, Mè’ phàà and Ñomda’a coexist.

    Mosso says that both the cultural context and the security conditions in which local journalists work must be considered. Like many other colleagues in the rest of the country, Lenin has had bad experiences when he has been hired by foreign journalists: they have not paid him, they cover local traditions with a morbid interest or they ask him for interviews that put him and his family at risk in the city of Tlapa, where he lives. He started out as a fixer to spread his culture, but over time, after the forced disappearance of 43 students from the Ayotzinapa rural teacher’s college that took place in Iguala in 2014, everything focused on drug trafficking and violence.

    “Everyone started looking for me because of issues of violence, drugs and poppy. We even called it the ‘poppy tour’ because everyone came almost to sightsee,” Lenin recalls.

    The state of Guerrero is the largest poppy producer in Mexico, harvesting 44 percent of the national production. This also places Mexico as one of the most important opium producers worldwide, only after countries like Afghanistan and Myanmar.

    At first he liked that in one day he could make six or seven thousand pesos, something that would take him an entire month in other jobs. But little by little his work changed.

    “I became involved in the dangerous issues of crime and violence, which was no longer so cool because it can bring me problems, like my security and not living in peace. All this leaves you with post-traumatic stress. After each job it felt like I was going crazy, thinking about what could happen,” Lenin says.

    One of his bad experiences happened when doing a story in Filo de Caballos, a town in the Sierra de Guerrero known for forced internal displacement and poppy harvesting. The people interviewed asked to not show their faces, however their faces were shown in the final product.

    “The worst thing has been failing the families who trusted me and that trust was broken; because they did not blur their faces, their names and jeopardized their town. That is what hurts me the most, more than the problem of insecurity, but the issue of failing to fulfill my part of the agreement or keeping my word with that family weighs more,” says the Guerrero journalist.

    He once believed in the power of journalism to bring about social change, but little by little he lost that hope when he saw that many of the stories were more about adrenaline and a morbid interest. But that does not mean that Lenin has walked away from documenting the reality of the communities in the mountains of Guerrero; his work has simply been transformed. He now focuses more on being a documentary photographer instead of a fixer, taking advantage of what he has learned in all these years “fixing” stories for others.

    “I paid attention to their images, their angles, their framing, their way of weaving stories and that’s my most precious takeaway from that world,” he says.

    The fixers’ relationships with their clients must take into account the community’s context, especially if the fixers belong to the same indigenous community where the stories are produced. Roselia Chaca, a Zapotec journalist with more than 20 years of experience working in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, the most traditional and largest indigenous region in Oaxaca, says that on the rare occasions that she has served as a fixer, foreign journalists and producers have taken advantage of the community.

    In the Isthmus, there is a lot of interest in the Muxe people, who identify as a third gender. This culture has attracted the attention of documentary filmmakers and journalists from all over the world. Roselia started being a fixer 15 years ago without knowing that she should be paid for it. Many times foreign journalists promised to pay her, but that money never arrived, she says.

    Rosalia feels that the reality of her region and the people who live there is too complex to understand in two or three days, which is how long most foreign journalists stay in the Isthmus. She says that once some journalists posed as anthropologists in order to interview the Muxe people who had refused to give interviews to the media. That’s why she has already taken a stance.

    “I refuse to take them (with Muxe people) and, in some way, sell this issue. I feel like it’s like selling part of my culture just out of a morbid interest,” she says.

    She is also concerned that foreign productions extract her culture to replicate and sell it. Zapotec communities, for example, have a long tradition of weaving and embroidery, and there have already been cases in which high fashion brands have stolen designs from indigenous communities in Oaxaca, she says.

    “I have had bad experiences of cultural appropriation. I start to think about how much I expose people from the communities acting in good faith. Now I demand a document [from my clients] where they explain to me, there should be a contract where I can carefully review the scope of the project, the benefits for the people,” the Oaxacan journalist says. She also recognizes that sometimes productions pay to document Muxe people or weavers and, taking advantage of their economic need, they do what she calls “cultural and knowledge looting.”

    Like Lenin, the journalist from Guerrero, she is concerned in earning and keeping people’s trust because of her previous work, for speaking the same language and for belonging to the same indigenous people, and that foreign journalists come to take advantage of that trust and publish stories with a narrative that, to her, seems unfair.

    ***

    Conclusions

    All the journalists interviewed agree that since the work of fixers in Mexico goes hand in hand with precariousness, the stories presented here must vindicate journalism. How many of the accounts and stories that we see in different formats, television series or popular movies are owed to the work of fixer journalists?

    In this website we show a tour of the country through the work of colleagues who have covered, beyond their physical, mental and emotional health, under terrible working and salary conditions, the violent geography that Mexico has become. With you, the fixers.

    Vania Pigeounutt

    She wants to keep her identity secret and therefore we will call her Ana. She works in the border area of the state of Tamaulipas. She is a local fixer and field producer. She is usually credited for her collaborations, but for safety she sometimes prefers her name not to appear in the final products, as is the case this time.

    She began working as a fixer in 2018 covering migration for an international women’s organization. She worked in the border corridor between the cities of Piedras Negras and Ciudad Acuña, state of Coahuila, which is located right in the middle of the border that Mexico has with the state of Texas, in the United States. Her job was to make a story about the Kickapoo, an indigenous group that lives between the state of Kansas, in the U.S., and the northern states of Mexico.

    “I started earning what they offered me, 250 dollars a day; this was a 10-day project. I was very excited. Journalism here in Tamaulipas is very complicated, as it is throughout the country. But here, when I started, we started to see the murders, the disappearances, the hangings. At the border, endless things happened to me that were the red lights that made me stop,” Ana recalls.

    She says that migration has several aspects. She adds that when organized crime gets involved in moving people along with drugs, assignments become more dangerous. As she puts it, doing a job of this type is getting into issues of “those people, here we call them the actors, so as not to get into trouble.”

    He says that there’s an opportunity to negotiate a better rate with the media or the journalist when it comes to delving very deeply into issues of organized crime. For such a job, she earns at least $350 a day.

    “There are media that ask for something quite strong. My cap has been $500 a day,” she says.

    For an assignment, Ana was embedded in the operation to capture a hit man in Ciudad Juárez. She and the journalists she was leading donned bulletproof vests and other protective gear. The most shocking thing for Ana was that upon arriving at the place she witnessed the discovery of two clandestine graves, a situation that left her marked. That operation concluded with a house search and the subsequent seizure of narcotics.

    Ana had one of her riskiest days when she was working alongside a journalist from France on a story about COVID-19 in another part of the border. First, unknown subjects followed them. She was certain that they were criminals besieging the area who did not like their presence at all. Ana says that these actions are “like warnings, like scares.” The situation worsened when they were stopped by the National Guard. Her client did not speak Spanish well and this created confusion that escalated out of control. In the end, Ana had to get the French journalists out of that place.

    “The most dangerous thing was during those blocks they followed us, as if to tell us to get out of there,” she recalls..

    Her work is full of rough stories. One that she remembers a lot, and that she worked for a London media outlet, is that of “an immigrant girl who had been raped by 10 people in front of her three-year-old boy.” She remembers that the abused girl showed them the complaints she had. In this situation, her experience allowed her to direct the media’s coverage so that the issue was approached in a respectful manner and in a way that did not expose the young mother or the journalist.

    “She wasn’t going to be safe until she left the country,” she remembers telling the London reporters. “So we had to select the material, because this could put her and me at risk.”

    Camelia Muñoz, is a journalist based in Saltillo, Coahuila. She began her career in her native Monterrey, Nuevo León, in 1990. She covered the political beat. She later moved to the neighboring state of Coahuila to work on the border between the cities of Piedras Negras and Ciudad Acuña. She specialized in immigration issues. She says that the violence in the area is closely linked to immigration.

    It was only recently that she began to receive payment for her work as a fixer, despite the fact that she is an experienced journalist who has served as a guide for many journalists who come with her to work on their stories.

    She remembers that at the beginning there was a wave of disappearances. Despite the seriousness of the situation, nobody published anything about the problem. She says that the topic was banned from the local media agenda. But that did not stop the foreign media that, little by little, began to take an interest.

    She knew about the subject but did not know how to charge these international media for the services they required.

    “When I began to realize that you could charge for this service, it was like three or four years ago… …It’s not much, I never had an idea of how much [to charge]. I had worked in a digital medium in Guadalajara”, she says.

    She found support in the same director of the medium for which he worked. He insisted that he review all aspects when quoting an assignment. For example, he tells him how much time he would invest in obtaining and scheduling interviews in person or by phone. There were too many details to consider, she recalls.

    Initially they paid her 500 pesos a day, a very low rate. But over time she learned to collect and negotiate, putting a good price on her knowledge. It was thus that she came to charge 1,500 U.S. dollars a day for a Chinese production that went to do a story in Monclova county. It was a difficult topic about the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the pay they received was worth the risk she and the videographer she subcontracted took.

    Gabriela Martínez Córdova has been a journalist in Tijuana, Baja California, for 11 years. Tijuana is the furthest city from Mexico City. Her work on this distant border made her understand and specialize in issues such as high drug consumption and trafficking, the illegal movement of weapons, the criminality that these activities entail, and migration to the United States.

    “The United States is not the same as New York. It is not the same to understand Mexico City, Oaxaca, Guerrero, Veracruz as it is to understand California and Baja California. It is as if we were a space far removed from everything else in each of the countries, both the United States and Mexico, ”she says.

    Reporters in Tijuana have learned to walk that binational path in which they become experts on issues such as migration, security, human rights violations, the migration of retired Americans to Mexico or Mexicans with legal status who want to live in the United States. These are, she says, parallel lives.

    Her start as a fixer was not easy at all. She assures that in 2012 she “was taken advantage of” when she worked for an English media outlet that contacted her after seeing her work.

    She researched the case of a 13-year-old high school student. The minor tried to enter the United States through the pedestrian crossing carrying a water bottle. The immigration agents took him to secondary inspection, warning him that they suspected that he was trying to cross drugs in the bottle.

    “The little boy says ‘no, it’s not a drug’ and he takes a sip to show them that it wasn’t a drug. And it was liquid heroin. He has an overdose and dies right there,” she says.

    That story ran in Milenio, the first national media outlet for which Gaby was a correspondent. Gaby is currently a correspondent for El Universal.

    This story exposes that the border states, and especially cities like Tijuana, are places of drug trafficking such as heroin, which is obtained from the opium gum that is extracted from the poppy; and although this flower is planted in other states such as Guerrero, Sinaloa, Durango and Chihuahua, it is in Tijuana and the rest of the border cities where it is marketed.

    She got a call from an outlet in England. “The producer tells me: we just saw your story, we are doing the heroin route, we are working from Europe and now we want to follow the United States and the story of this guy, we would like to tell it to be able to finish.”

    They never asked her how much she charged. They only told her that they could “give her something.” As she was just starting, Gaby did not care much about the money, but the visibility that international media would give the child’s family, who was low-income, and that was what attracted her the most to decide to work with them.

    She spent a whole week returning to the family so they could give an interview to the English journalists.

    “I still remember what I thought: at least I’m going to ask them for gasoline, because I’ve already used up my tank. And yes, all those comings and goings, in the end they gave them an interview, I couldn’t get everything they wanted, not what I was able to get for myself, but I remember that we met at a hotel and they told ‘here you go’ and they gave me 50 dollars,” she remembers.

    A U.S. outlet pays for this type of work, at a minimum, a daily rate of $1,000 USD, according to several foreigners consulted. That is why Gaby thinks it is unjust that there is such a pay difference between colleagues from the United States and Europe with whom she has worked, and also that they do not consider remunerating fairly the journalist who will develop their story.

    Ciudad Juárez was one of the first cities in Mexico where fixer work began to explain femicides.

    Ciudad Juárez-born journalist Gabriela Minjares Baltazar has covered her city for 19 years. She began working as a fixer after getting fired from El Diario de Juárez and co-founding her own outlet La Verdad Juárez. She later realized that she had to be paid for the support she had provided for free to colleagues in the past.

    “In May of that year I went to Culiacán, Sinaloa, and spoke with Miguel Ángel Vega. They recommended him to me because they told me: he can help you, above all, with rates. And that, as a journalist and fixer, is where you don’t have the least bit of experience. From a city, let’s say, with many similarities in terms of violence, drug trafficking like Juárez,” she says.

    Miguel Ángel Vega, a journalist, social commentator, film director and author of the book “El Fixer”, has been an example and guide for journalists like Gabriela, but he’s also someone who distances himself from journalistic work. When working in between precariousness and constant danger, establishing connections with international media leads to better opportunities. Thanks to his specialization in a very difficult topic to cover, and also his talent and experience necessary to excel, he is one of the few who has been able to establish fair rates for his work.

    For Gabriela Minjares, being a fixer is clear proof that journalists must fight to improve their economic and working conditions. 

    “Suddenly you support and you do it out of solidarity, but you start to realize that they’re using your work and time indiscriminately. They are already looking for you to ask for free collaborations on radio, television from everywhere… from media outlets and from such large chains that you know they have a lot of money.”

    Melva Frutos is another fixer trailblazer. Her career as a journalist began in Monterrey, Nuevo León, in 1997. She has worked for several national and international media. Like her other colleagues, the violence in her area of work, which includes the states of Coahuila, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas, led her to guiding as well as writing.

    In May 2012, an image went around the world. Five men and four women were hanged on a bridge over the Monterrey-Nuevo Laredo highway. A message left at the scene linked these men  to the Gulf cartel, and blamed them for blowing up a car in front of the Ministry of Public Safety. 

    Nuevo León is flanked by Tamaulipas and Coahuila, states where warring cartels and corruption occupy the daily news work. Thanks to her coverage of the fights between criminals, she got his first job as a fixer in 2009.

    “When they first told me, I didn’t know what a fixer was. And then they explained it to me. I don’t remember how much they paid me, but we need to set the record straight. First, that here in Monterrey fixers are not as much in demand. It is not as much in demand because it is not like the border. It is not like Coahuila or Tamaulipas where there are cities that sit right on the border and foreigners go there all the time to cover immigration and insecurity, ” she says.

    Mexico’s northern border remains a point of interest for the international press and continues to be a challenge for the newswomen who work as fixers in this region.

    Vania Pigeonutt

    Félix Márquez, a photojournalist with 15 years of experience, has forged his career in local news programs that produce news in the midst of the continued violence that has taken over the state of Veracruz since 2000.

    For more than two decades, this violence has stalked Veracruz reporters who carry out their work in the deadliest state for journalists. Article 19, an organization defending and promoting press freedom, has recorded the murder of at least 33 journalists between 2000 and 2023. The group also reports eight journalists missing in the same period.

    The most recent Veracruz journalists murdered include José Luis Arenas Gamboa, Yessenia Mollinedo Falconi, Sheila Johana García Olivera and Pedro Pablo Kumul, all killed in 2022.

    With this violence as backdrop, photojournalist Félix Márquez has developed a 15-year career working as a fixer for mostly foreign journalists; he’s also worked as a local field producer for film productions.

    However, violence is not the only problem that Félix has had to deal with. He and his colleagues in other local media face the daily reality of low salaries.

    This job insecurity made Félix to focus more on his fixer work in the last five years. But this work has not kept him from his personal projects such as “Vestigios”, a compilation of portraits of objects recovered by the families of seven Veracruz journalists murdered in the last decade.

    Initially, Félix did not charge for his fixer services, but now he came up with fixed rates that vary depending on what the reporters who come to Veracruz are looking for. The topics that interest these journalists the most are insecurity, confrontations and the aftermaths of violence, but these subjects also present the highest risk because they involve entering dangerous areas.

    Félix did his first jobs as a fixer during the governorship of Javier Duarte de Ochoa, between 2010 and 2016, a period that, according to data from Article 19, was the deadliest for the press in Veracruz: 18 journalists murdered and four more missing.

    The list includes the murder of photojournalist Rubén Espinosa in Mexico City on July 31, 2015, just a few weeks after he fled the harassment he was experiencing in Veracruz.

    Duarte de Ochoa is now serving a nine-year sentence for the crimes of using funds from illegal sources and criminal association, but not for any of the 18 reporters murdered during his six-year term. This is despite the fact that all the violence that Duarte exercised against the press during his governorship is documented.

    According to an investigation by reporter Norma Trujillo, between 2010 and 2016, journalists from all over Veracruz filed 273 complaints for threats, theft, injuries, abuse of authority, disappearance of individuals, extortion, damages and defamation.

    Félix remembers that during those same years he did not charge for his services because he believed that this would help him make connections and create a network that could help him if he needed to collaborate as a photographer with other media.

    “I later realized that I was giving away my work, my knowledge, my experience. Besides, some media outlets have a budget for that,” he says.

    Without asking for any compensation, Félix coordinated assignments in dangerous areas – where there were violent confrontations – or at events of then-governor Javier Duarte de Ochoa in which he was questioned about crimes against the press in Veracruz.

    His first paid job was reporting on disappearances in the Santa Catalina hills, a subject he had already covered extensively as a photographer.

    “I remember an assignment I did as a fixer for [a French newspaper] on various issues in the state: violence, migration, ungovernability and politics. That coverage was one of the most difficult because managing five issues is much more complicated. Fortunately, the work went well and there was very good pay,” he says.

    Today, with more knowledge of the journalism industry, Félix earns between 100 and 400 dollars per day. He explains that his rate depends on what the reporters are looking for. However, his priority is to offer these correspondents his work as a photographer because he prefers to pursue his true passion behind the camera and not so much serve as a guide to other journalists.

    This has worked for him, since some foreign media have taken him up on his proposal.

    “I always offer packages when I am a fixer or producer. I offer the most basic thing which is to get contacts and be on the phone. For this, I try not to charge less than 150 per day. But many times because they are my contacts I cannot charge per day, so I connect with them and schedule their appointments for some money, depending on how many there are. If there are two or three, then I make it one day,” he says.

    Felix’s work as a fixer consists of making contact with sources, booking interviews, taking journalists to the locations, establishing security protocols, driving, doing prior reporting or even reporting the stories.

    Tamara Corro has worked 20 years as a reporter in one of the most violent regions of Veracruz: Coatzacoalcos. Despite her extensive experience, she has been a fixer on rare occasions.

    Understanding that they are quite similar jobs, Tamara is certain that in Veracruz both fixers and journalists are in a state of complete helplessness. She is sure that those who perform this kind of work face insecurity, constantly take risks and do not receive credit or a fair pay for their work.

    “One of the steps we take is that we do not want to be heroes. We go as far as it is safe for us. And yes, we like, as part of the job, to throw ourselves into everything, but it is necessary to have certain limits to avoid any problems,” she explains.

    Tamara says that her bad experiences as a fixer have happened because she didn’t known how to charge fairly for high-risk assignments in which she has had to go into places where femicides, intentional homicides, disappearances, kidnappings and armed attacks happen frequently.

    She says that one time reporters from a TV station in the United States that hired her to be their driver and schedule appointments, paid her less than $100 a day.

    Another U.S. media outlet contacted her seeking her help in securing an interview with the local boss for a criminal organization, an almost suicidal assignment due to the risk involved in being the local contact in this type of reporting.

    “I don’t really like getting into those topics. The further away I am the better for me, to keep my family safe,” she says.

    She did not know that by working in a dangerous area she should charge more. It was until she participated in a Frontline Freelance Mexico workshop—part of the Fixing Journalism project—that she understood how to get paid better, what to do if the assignment is in a conflict region, or considering whether she runs greater risks as a woman.

    Vania Pigeonutt

    Jesús Bustamante is an multimedia journalist specialized in organized crime issues in his native Culiacán, Sinaloa, birthplace of the cartel that bears the name of that state in northwest Mexico. Thanks to his fame and his work, he has been able to be a fixer for international productions, helping to elucidate emblematic criminal profiles or the struggle between criminal groups during the different stages of insecurity that the state has experienced.

    Figures such as the leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera, who some consider a legend for having been one of the most wanted fugitives in the world and having escaped twice from high security prisons in Mexico while controlling the powerful and bloodthirsty criminal group, have not only been international news but they’re also a product in high demand. Media from all over the world descended on Sinaloa hungry to know everything about the cartel.

    In 2007, during the “war on drugs” launched by then-president Felipe Calderón, the coverage that Jesús did for local media focused on the crime beat: security and violence. Having built nearly two decades of experience covering these topics, he has dedicated the last nine years to working as a fixer and helping other journalists obtain information in his area of expertise.

    “The war came to me. There was no need to go anywhere. The war touched my state. It was one violent event and then another. From one death you went to another and it was the same in the morning, at dawn, at whatever time and each time it escalated much more. Suddenly there were executions, bodies hanging from bridges, dismembered bodies,” he recalls.

    On February 22, 2014, Jesús worked as a correspondent for a national media outlet and covered the spectacular arrest of Joaquín Guzmán Loera in Mazatlán, Sinaloa. From that moment on, other media began to look for him, either to obtain images or to do stories from Sinaloa focused on violence and drug trafficking.

    “When I became a correspondent I became a fixer. The national media opened the door to other contacts for me,” he mentions.

    Jesús did not know what being a fixer was, much less that he could charge for those services. However, little by little he began to understand what this work entailed. He was soon able to collaborate with a renowned U.S. TV station that asked him to take a group of journalists to the town of La Tuna, in Badiraguato county, Guzmán Loera’s birthplace.

    He remembers that they only told him: “we need you to take us to this place, to send us images; we need this or that. It was something sporadic. It wasn’t even a contract. It was a verbal agreement.”

    They requested him to obtain access to document the Sinaloa cartel’s synthetic drug production process; to show the group’s warlike capacity, or find out what a hitman or Guzmán Loera’s relatives thought about the drug business.

    “Is there a chance that we could go to a fentanyl lab?”

    “Many, just like that, ask you for one thing, but when they show up here they ask you for more. They have a very strange view that everything is very simple. Suddenly they say: ‘We have a few free hours, is there a chance that we could go to a fentanyl lab?’’ And they think like: ‘ah ok, I’m going to take out the phone, I’m going to talk to someone and right now he’s going to open the lab door for me.’”

    On another occasion, a group of armed men detained him and a group of foreign journalists. The journalists insisted that they wanted to go up to the community of La Tuna, even though Jesús recommended not going since they did not have permission from the criminal group’s lieutenants.

    “I told them, ‘Okay, we are going to do it, but the moment we reach the checkpoint and a convoy comes out and stops us, we will turn back.’ They didn’t believe it would happen and it happened,” he recalls.

    He says that the armed men made comments such as: “it’s dangerous. Maybe down the road you won’t make it back.” Jesus is sure that the men were trying to frighten them. It was then that they decided to return.

    Jesús considers that the lack of decent wages in local media is one of the factors that forces reporters to work as fixers and take the great risks that this activity entails. He also says that there is no training to be a fixer in conflict zones, and that such work lacks any safety guarantees.

    He also says that work became even more complicated after the imprisonment of Guzmán Loera, which, incidentally, put his sons in charge of his criminal enterprise. It was then that violence against Sinaloan journalists broke out again. On May 15, 2017, journalist Javier Valdez, internationally awarded and recognized for being an expert on drug trafficking issues, was murdered in broad daylight a few blocks from the weekly Riodoce that he founded along with other reporters in 2003.

    Jesús acknowledges that this murder has made him reconsider the assignments and risks he runs when working covering these issues for international media.

    “We always tell ourselves that no assignment is worth more than our life. But, sometimes, the attack comes without having imagined it,” he says. 

    Filmmakers, rappers and journalists

    Miguel Ángel Vega, also from Sinaloa and author of the book “The Fixer,” says that much of his work involves documenting cartel violence according to society’s preconceived notions about how criminal groups operate and exert control.

    In his book he tells the story of how he went from being a journalist in his home state to working as a producer in a heavily armed state like Michoacán. Thanks to his experience he was able to collaborate on the documentary “Cartel Land.”

    Miguel Ángel describes himself as: “The journalist who serves as a link between foreign correspondents and the hell of the top brass of organized crime in Mexico.”

    He defines a fixer as “a journalist connected to cartel bosses, hitmen, drug dealers, drug cooks, federal agents, military and police officers. His job is to make way for reporters or documentary filmmakers from countries such as the United States, Germany, France, Holland, Russia and other parts of the world, so that they can carry out their work in the most violent places where organized crime operates in Mexico.”

    Miguel Ángel has also spoken about the pressure he feels to meet the demands of foreign crews and the difficulties of finding a balance between those demands and the reality of the criminal world.

    While working in Ciudad Juárez in 2019, Miguel Ángel brought a crew to record an interview with hitmen. For security reasons, the interview would take place during the day, but at the last minute the meeting was postponed to that afternoon. When they were conducting the interview, the hitmen were attacked by a rival group of hitmen and one of them died during the attack. “That was very traumatic and it was a defeat for me,” the journalist said in a forum.

    Emmanuel Massú is another fixer who came to the profession without realizing it. He is a rapper who, without journalistic training, guided a group of photographers to document music groups in Culiacán and show how they survive in the midst of violence and drug trafficking. He was paid well for his help—when he didn’t expect to receive any kind of remuneration. He was also told that he was very good with human connections and relationships and that he should think about helping other journalists.

    Some time later, Emmanuel began working as a fixer in Tijuana, in rough neighborhoods of Mexico City such as Iztapalapa and Tepito, in Ecatepec on the outskirts of the Mexican capital, in La Paz, Los Cabos and the Chihuahua canyons. He and another fixer colleague, Eduardo Giraldo, decided to join forces to direct and film the award-winning documentary “Los Plebes,” which allows us to see the private lives of hitmen.

    “I have experienced many things and I have learned from everything I have been through. It has cost me a lot of time, money (and) almost having my life taken away. It has been difficult for me to be in jail, in the hospital,” says Emmanuel. “I believe that the work of fixers is the artery at the heart of the news. We connect these arteries of the heart so that it can beat, so that the blood can get there.”

    Emmanuel agrees with Jesus that fixers can only work so far before risking their own lives. He has turned down jobs because he wants to live and raise his children.

    “The murders and violence here are fucked up; and for them to silence freedom of expression is really fucked up,” says Emmanuel about all the criminal activity he has witnessed. “No news story we publish is going to change the world, but much respect to those who [continue trying].”

    Marcos Vizcarra, another native of Sinaloa, started working as a journalist in 2011. It was seven years ago, in 2016, that he worked as a fixer for the first time without realizing it. He caught the eye of international media due to his stories about victims of disappearance and displacement, as well as organized crime, which were published in national and regional media. On one occasion, his editor-in-chief asked him to show his sources to a group of foreign journalists who were going to reproduce his story. He did so, but was disappointed when he was not credited as a contributor.

    “I didn’t receive a single payment for that because I didn’t know that that was also “fixing.” That work won an award and I didn’t even get credit,” he shares. Now he mainly tries to collaborate on projects where he is recognized and remunerated as a journalist.

    Vania Pigeounutt

    On the night of September 26, 2014, state security forces in collusion with organized crime attacked and kidnapped 43 students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers College in Iguala, Guerrero. Almost 10 years later, the tragic story of this forced disappearance has gone around the world. But before the international spotlight focused on Guerrero, it was local journalists who reported on what happened and, later, paved the way for journalists from abroad to understand the magnitude of this tragedy and the collusion between organized crime and all levels of government.

    Margena de la O is one of these local journalists. For the past 17 years, she has reported from Chilpancingo, Guerrero’s capital, and has specialized in human rights. Her reporting has focused on different events that have become international news. Guerrero, with a population that includes a large number of indigenous and Afro-descendant communities, has a long history of forced disappearances dating back to the 1960s when the army repressed guerrillas and social movements in the state. The Ayotzinapa case uncovered that sewer that seemed forgotten and exposed a state dotted with clandestine graves that contain the remains of thousands of people who have disappeared since the beginning of military repression.

    In her opinion, the disappearance of the 43 students from Ayotzinapa triggered the journalistic documentation in her state. As a result of this endeavor, the importance and value of the fixer’s work is revealed, says Margena.

    “I actually started consciously working as a fixer in 2017. That is, a very short time ago. Because whenever colleagues came from other places, particularly from Mexico City or from abroad, they always looked for us to find out about certain situations, especially with assignments during times of crisis,” she says.

    The experienced journalist says that there is a lot of camaraderie among the reporters working in Chilpancingo and other parts of Guerrero. She assures that she herself “was very helpful” with fellow journalists who came from other places, offering them contacts, explaining the situation, giving them an x-ray of certain areas, or detailing the context of certain topics.

    “This was filled with journalists from all over the world, not just from Mexico,” she remembers. “I realize that being a fixer is an additional professional job and adds to the precarious conditions in which journalists work and live, especially in marginalized areas.”

    Margena says that sometimes you learn to be a fixer by experiencing unfair practices from other journalists. She remembers that one time, while helping some foreign correspondents to obtain and do interviews about the Ayotzinapa students, she was subcontracted by another foreign fixer who, from Mexico City, used the contacts and field knowledge that she provided from Guerrero to take credit for that work.

    This taught her that there are foreigners working as fixers in Mexico who use the work of local fixers to earn money without sharing their profits with those who have helped them. There are also those who literally steal ideas and stories. On one occasion he took some journalists from a national media outlet and shared with them a very good story that she had not been able to do. Some time later, when she read the work that these journalists had published, she realized that many of the details in their story had been elements taken from that very good story she had shared with them.

    “If people knew that a large part (of the story) is mine, because it was my information, it was my knowledge… and it made me furious seeing that written piece because I said: ‘if I had that space in a national media outlet, that story would be there but with my name,’” she says.

    Margena understood that in times of crisis many took advantage of local journalists to do their work. She says that, in the end, all of these foreign journalists were in contact with journalists who covered the issue every day and knew the situation firsthand.

    “You gave them the context and told them ‘it’s not here, it’s there.’ All they did was shape the angle and, besides them coming from outside, they had spaces of greater privilege. I worked in a state media outlet. And although it had an important reach, it was still a state outlet, and I had the urgency for it to be known, for the information to go beyond Guerrero,” she says.

    Another journalist in Guerrero, who requests anonymity and that we call her Luisa, highlights the unequal relationships that are hidden in the fixer’s chain. She has worked with foreign colleagues, mostly from the United States and Europe, but only in very few cases has she received fair and timely payment. Luisa works in municipalities like Chilapa, one of the most dangerous in Guerrero where, according to the State Prosecutor’s Office, two criminal groups are fighting for control of the town, causing a marked increase in gender and political violence. The town also experienced a series of forced disappearances in 2015. Due to this context, her fixer services are highly sought after by journalists who want to produce stories there.

    She wishes she didn’t have to work on the same story many times, but guiding foreign colleagues she earns between $150 and $250 a day. In contrast, writing a story as a freelance contributor pays around $400. That is to say that, according to her, with only two or three days working as a fixer she earns the same as publishing an article that takes her more than a month to put together.

    Luisa points out that the Sierra de Guerrero is another high-risk area, where a large part of the low-income population works harvesting poppies. Going to that region to guide other journalists represents a challenge for Luisa. After numerous assignments in towns of this area, she is becoming more and more visible to local politicians and criminals.

    But it is not only about becoming more visible in a risk area; there are also the agreements she makes with the people she interviews. Luisa’s commitment is to the victims and their families when she helps other journalists cover a story. There have been times when they have complained about why a certain reporter or photographer didn’t keep his promise to return, jeopardizing her relationship with the sources she has cultivated throughout her journalistic career.

    “One doesn’t know how to get paid and doesn’t understand the dimensions of being a fixer. They are experiences that mark you and teach you more about the state, which is very rich in traditions, in gastronomy; Guerrero’s food is delicious. There is also mezcal. There are many untapped products like chilate,” she says.

    But apart from the bad experiences, she says that working as a fixer has also allowed her to analyze her state from the depths, looking closely at the roots and their connection to the corrupt and poor Mexico where impunity reigns. However, she questions above all how much fixers share with foreign correspondents.

    “It’s as if we were giving away all the knowledge we have acquired from Guerrero and our very specialized understanding,” she says.

    Luisa says that being a fixer is being connected to murderers, hitmen, drug traffickers and a reality that goes beyond them.

    “If we do not learn that this is the value that fixers or local producers bring, I think we are not only squandering our work, but we are also leaving a bad precedent in a criminal, social and political context with plenty of scarcity.”

    ***

    For Francisco Robles, who has worked as a fixer primarily in his base of operations in Acapulco, doing this job has brought him good and bad experiences. He shares with others the collective feeling that if he earned more as a photojournalist covering crime—his true passion—he wouldn’t have to work as a fixer. But he likes it and has learned a lot.

    “I started in 2014 helping a colleague who had been hired as a fixer. I started out as the liaison between the government and a journalist who came from the United States and wanted to make a story about the violence in Acapulco. Back then, we were experiencing a heightened crime rate with the criminal groups here in the port. The experience of being a fixer leaves good memories, but it also leaves some bad memories,” he says.

    Francisco has worked with many renowned international news outlets. “What they normally ask for are the issues of violence, drug trafficking, poppy harvest, community police and social movements. I receive very few requests on the topic of tourism, because Acapulco is not a trend abroad and tourism levels are very low. Currently, Mexicans are the bulk of tourism that visits the port. There is no longer tourism coming from abroad,” he says.

    He remembers when he worked for a big international media outlet covering a story about poppy plantations, and at the same time the news headlines focused on mass kidnappings and a local criminal boss from the Sierra de San Miguel Totolapan, a municipality located in the region known as Tierra Caliente.

    “Right after an outlet [from the United States] came. British news media also came. A television station came from the Netherlands, another from Italy. Then came a television station from Belgium. Thanks to this I have been able to heal my finances, because they pay in dollars and that gives you a guarantee, a profit, compared to what you earn here with a national media outlet,” he shares.

    In Acapulco, the largest city in Guerrero, his colleagues earn between 6,000 and 10,000 pesos a month.

    “From my point of view, they pay very little considering all the risks involved. It’s fine if you’re covering an issue like politics or entertainment, but when you have to cover violence, it means an extra expense or a cut in your paycheck because local media doesn’t cover your expenses if you have to take a bus or pay for gasoline if you use your car,” he says.

    Francisco is very focused on his work as a fixer. But when he’s hired by several media outlets at the same time, although an economic boon, it presents him with the problem of dividing himself into several ‘Franciscos’ in order to be able to work as a photojournalist for a national media outlet and also collaborate with international news agencies like Agence France-Presse (AFP).

    Francisco says that one of the dangers of being a fixer is losing control of the information that will get published, which presents security risks.

    “We asked the foreign journalist to cover some names and faces. But when the piece aired on TV, it turns out he didn’t (cover them). It leaves a bad taste in your mouth because you look bad with the source and then it can cause a conflict with them, with the sources, for putting them at risk,” he says.

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