Tribu al Extremo is a sports radio program in Oaxaca. Oax Sport collaborates with the show through “Jueves de Oax Sport,” a weekly segment that shares athlete stories, explains support needs, and turns radio interviews into public blog posts.
The segment gives athletes, families, coaches, and donors a clear place to talk about sport in Oaxaca. Each episode focuses on training, competition costs, family effort, fundraising, and the practical steps behind athlete support.
Project Snapshot
- Project: Tribu al Extremo / Tribalex
- Type: Media and athlete storytelling collaboration
- Platform: Tribu al Extremo, 106.1 FM
- Segment: Jueves de Oax Sport
- Schedule: Thursdays, 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Oaxaca time
- Oax Sport role: guest coordination, athlete storytelling, donor education, blog recaps, and campaign visibility
What This Collaboration Does
Every Thursday, Oax Sport joins Tribu al Extremo to talk about athletes, coaches, competitions, support needs, and the costs behind sport in Oaxaca.
After selected episodes, Oax Sport turns the conversation into a written blog post. Each recap includes episode details, the main topic, the athlete or guest, key facts, and the interview organized by theme.
This format makes the conversation easier to read, save, translate, and share. It also gives donors a public record of what athletes said, what they need, and how Oax Sport follows up.
Why This Project Matters
Many athletes in Oaxaca have strong results but limited public visibility. A radio segment gives them a public voice and gives families a way to explain what sport costs.
Through this collaboration, athletes can talk about training, travel, school, injuries, equipment, family costs, coaching, and competition goals in their own words.
The segment also gives Oax Sport a place to explain how support requests work. In Episode 0, Juan Victoria recommended that athletes ask for support 2 to 3 months before travel so Oax Sport has time to review the case, build a campaign, and prepare donor updates.
What Oax Sport Provides
- Episode planning and athlete topic selection
- Guest coordination with athletes, coaches, and families
- Interview preparation and support questions
- Blog recaps after selected episodes
- Links to fundraisers, donation pages, and contact pages
- Public explanations of athlete support, campaign rules, and donor reporting
- Multilingual posts when available
What Oax Sport Does Not Claim
Oax Sport does not own or operate Tribu al Extremo. The radio program has its own platform, audience, schedule, and editorial identity.
Oax Sport does not guarantee that every athlete, team, or request will appear on the show. Guests and topics depend on timing, relevance, availability, and the support work underway.
The public posts available do not report any Oax Sport payment for airtime, station fees, or production salaries tied to this collaboration.
Episodes and Support Topics
Episode 0: Segment Launch
The launch episode explained how Oax Sport supports athletes and how athletes can request help. Topics included travel, lodging, entry fees, shoes, gear, training equipment, campaign planning, and public reporting.
The episode also explained why Oaxaca needs more competition opportunities. Athletes need chances to test themselves against stronger fields before major events.
Read Episode 0: Segment Launch
Episode 1: Jasmín Carolina Cruz
Episode 1 featured Jasmín Carolina Cruz, her mother and guardian Alicia Carolina Ortiz Garzón, and coach Prof. Octaviano Robles.
The support focus was a pair of training shoes delivered in January 2026. The episode also covered youth sprinting, travel costs, starting blocks, training equipment, nutrition, physiotherapy, and family expenses.
Read Episode 1: Jasmín Carolina Cruz
Episode 2: Emily Sofía Barrera
Episode 2 featured Emily Sofía Barrera and Carlos Manuel Santiago Villar, known in sport as Randy Ortega.
The episode focused on an athlete fundraising campaign for a national martial arts competition in Mexico City. Emily explained how donor support reduced pressure around expenses and allowed her to focus on training.
The episode also covered MMA, school, training, sport psychology, running tours, and athlete participation during campaigns.
Read Episode 2: Emily Sofía Barrera
Episode 3: Shunca Biani Moya Santiago
Episode 3 featured Shunca Biani Moya Santiago from Titanes Sport Clinic.
The conversation focused on sprinting, CONADE, regional qualification, sport psychology, injury recovery, sponsorships, and student-athlete life. Shunca discussed the pressure of qualifying marks, the role of visualization, and the need for more support to compete outside Oaxaca.
Read Episode 3: Shunca Biani Moya Santiago
What These Episodes Teach Donors
Donors need context before they give. The Tribu al Extremo collaboration explains that context in a public and human way.
Across the first episodes, several themes appear again and again:
- Families often cover transportation, lodging, meals, gear, and event costs.
- Athletes need time to prepare a serious request.
- Campaigns work better when athletes share photos, videos, updates, and recaps.
- Support may cover shoes, travel, lodging, entry fees, training equipment, or competition costs.
- Some needs are urgent, but better planning creates better campaigns.
- Running tours can connect athletes with visitors who later become supporters.
How This Supports Athletes
The segment gives athletes more than a link to a campaign. It gives them a voice.
Jasmín explained how shoes wear out quickly while she is still growing. Emily explained how campaign participation made donor support feel personal. Shunca explained how sprinting depends on training, psychology, recovery, coaching, and the chance to compete outside Oaxaca.
These stories show donors what support changes. They also show athletes how to prepare better requests.
How Donations Are Tracked
Oax Sport uses the segment to explain donor rules and reporting practices.
When Oax Sport runs an athlete campaign, the campaign page states the need, the goal, what funds cover, what funds do not cover, and what follow-up will come next.
Oax Sport does not keep a fee from athlete campaigns unless a campaign page clearly says otherwise. For running tours with visitors, the model discussed on air splits the payment: 50% goes to the athlete and 50% goes to Oax Sport for a reserve that can support future athlete needs.
Current Needs
This collaboration needs steady preparation, editing, translation, publishing, and public sharing.
- Guest coordination
- Interview preparation
- Transcription and editing
- Translation into Spanish, English, and French when available
- Blog formatting and SEO
- Social media clips and episode promotion
- Follow-up donor updates after campaign episodes
What Oax Sport Will Publish Next
Oax Sport will continue publishing blog recaps for selected Jueves de Oax Sport episodes.
Each recap will include episode details, the athlete or topic, the support need when relevant, and links to donate, contact, or read more.
Support This Collaboration
You can support Oax Sport’s athlete storytelling, donor education, translation, and campaign reporting work.
If you want your donation to support this media collaboration, please write “Tribu” or “Tribalex” in the donation note when possible.
Transparency
Oax Sport Inc. is a U.S. 501(c)(3) public charity based in Austin, Texas. EIN: 86-3407818.
Oax Sport also works through Oax Sport A.C. in Oaxaca, Mexico. RFC: OSP-230216-SG0.
Tribu al Extremo / Tribalex is an independent media platform. Listing this collaboration on this page does not mean Oax Sport owns or operates the radio program.
Oax Sport uses this collaboration to share athlete stories, explain support needs, and publish follow-up blog posts for the public.
Explore More
- Episode 0: Segment Launch
- Episode 1: Jasmín Carolina Cruz
- Episode 2: Emily Sofía Barrera
- Episode 3: Shunca Biani Moya Santiago
- Tribu al Extremo on Facebook
- Active Oax Sport Fundraisers
- Donate to Oax Sport
- Meet the Oax Sport Team
- Read Oax Sport Stories and Reports
Get Involved
Tribu al Extremo gives Oax Sport a public space to talk about athletes, families, coaches, costs, and the support behind each result.
Which athlete story should we bring to the microphone next?