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Latin music star Jenni Rivera believed dead in plane crash

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Her path had not been easy, but rather than running from it, she wrote it into her music — domestic violence; struggles with weight; raising her children alone, or “sin capitan,” without a captain. She was known for marathon live shows that left audiences exhilarated and exhausted; by the fifth hour of one recent performance, she was drinking straight from a tequila bottle and launching into a cover of “I Will Survive.”

In a witty and sometimes baffling stew of Spanish and English, she sang about her three husbands, about drug traffickers, in tribute to her father, in tribute to her gynecologist.

She became, in a most unlikely way, a feminist hero among Latin women in Mexico and the United States and a powerful player in a genre of music dominated by men and machismo.

Regional Mexican music styles had long been seen as limiting to artists, but Rivera shrugged off the labels and brought traditional-laced music — some of which sounded perilously close to polka — to a massive pop audience.

“She was one of the people who led the movement, especially by bringing in a woman’s voice,” said Javier Gonzalez, 50, a clarinet player with the Banda Sinaloense Sangre Kaliente in Mexico City. “She held a very privileged place in the genre.”

Rivera had seven top 10 hits on the Latin charts and in September 2011 became the first female regional Mexican artist to sell out Staples Center in Los Angeles. In all, she sold more than 20 million albums and bought her seven-bedroom, 11-bathroom Encino estate in 2009 for $3.3 million.

Her business empire, meanwhile, was growing rapidly. She had a weekly radio program, had recently launched clothing and cosmetics lines and appeared poised to become a bilingual television and film star.

She was the executive producer of a reality show that centered largely on her eldest daughter. The show ran on Telemundo’s sister network, Mun2, and turned the Rivera family into something akin to the Kardashian clan. Three more reality shows followed, including “I Love Jenni,” which offered a glimpse into Rivera’s often chaotic life.

English-language broadcast television was next: ABC confirmed that it was developing a family comedy that would star Rivera.

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