{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Street Art Cities","provider_url":"https://streetartcities.com","title":"The Tamale Man by Ian the Painter","description":"In 2021, I Am An Immigrant asked Ian the Painter to honour Marino Escobar, a New Orleans icon known locally as The Tamale Man. Marino left Guatemala for California over twelve years ago and moved to New Orleans after spending a few months in the Golden State. His sales call — different combinations of “Hot tamales baybeee”, “I love you baybeee”, and “I love you all my life” —reverberates around the narrow crowded streets of the Quarter.","author_name":"Meghan","author_url":"https://streetartcities.com/users/949a2034-ea9e-4b21-a4b8-c5e97e3a9968","thumbnail_url":"https://streetart.media/2/284671e4-784f-4351-b542-a6243ca2f243/1024.jpg","thumbnail_width":1024,"width":480,"height":480,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://streetartcities.com/markers/bae6b335-73c4-4374-8c05-fc121d83d669/embed\" width=\"480\" height=\"480\" style=\"border:none;border-radius:12px;max-width:100%;\" loading=\"lazy\" allow=\"fullscreen; storage-access\" title=\"The Tamale Man by Ian the Painter\"></iframe>","cache_age":3600}