Jay B. | Documentando la vida a través del lente, la lírica y la lógica sagrada.

Soy un documentalista de la experiencia humana y un creador trilingüe que habla inglés, español y música. Con sede en Nueva York, mi trabajo fusiona disciplinas: desde el ojo analítico de la fotografía callejera hasta las composiciones de un músico y artista visual.

Como artista, me especializo en la Geometría Sagrada. Mi proceso es una disciplina de mente y cuerpo; utilizo una técnica de meditación yoga para calmar mi ritmo cardíaco, logrando la quietud necesaria para crear líneas perfectas y círculos concéntricos a mano, sin el uso de un compás. Mi estudio es un laboratorio de narrativa visual y sonora donde la energía de NYC se encuentra con la precisión del alma.

Gastronomy vs. Gaslighting: Why I’m Keeping the Score on the “TACO” Summer

(Jay)

As a writer, I’ve always believed that words are sacred. As a human being, I know for a fact that food is sacred. So, when Wall Street and the legacy media decided to spend the better part of 2025 turning a cultural staple into a political acronym for “cowardice,” I felt a deep, intellectual hesitation. I didn’t want to give it weight. I didn’t want to marinate our heritage in the toxic juices of the current administration. And I wasn’t the only one; I noticed people on Threads—other Mexicans, as well as Mexican-Americans, and even non-Mexicans or non-Latinos—speak out and defend our cultural heritage, particularly our gastronomy.

But as a documentarian, I have a duty. Discipline overrules hesitancy. We have to call balls and strikes because if we don’t keep the scorecard, they’ll tell us the game never happened.

The Pattern: The 2025 “Arsonist as Firefighter” Timeline

If you look back at the trail of breadcrumbs (or rather, discarded threats) from last year, the pattern is surgical. It wasn’t “negotiation,” as the 47th President claimed; it was a manufactured cycle of panic and “rescue.”

• May 2, 2025: The term is born. Financial Times columnist Robert Armstrong coins the T.A.C.O. acronym (Trump Always Chickens Out). Why? Because the markets realized the administration had zero tolerance for economic pain. Every time a threat caused a dip, a reversal followed.

• May 28, 2025: The President famously fumes at a reporter during a swearing-in ceremony, calling the “chicken” label a “nasty question.” He tries to rebrand the retreat as a “negotiation tactic.”

• July 12, 2025: The “Tariff War” goes nuclear. The administration threatens a 30% sweeping tariff on Mexico and the EU, citing national security and trade deficits. Markets thrash. International partners scramble.

• August 1, 2025: The “Killing Blow” to legacy media. After weeks of threatening to ruin the Mexican economy, the President signs an executive order that raises tariffs on Canada to 35% but—predictably—extends the deadline for Mexico by 90 days.

The Media Capitulation: Falling in Line

This is where the “intellectual digestion” gets sour. Once those tariffs were lifted or delayed in August, the airwaves changed overnight. Fox, MSNBC, and CNN—networks that are usually at each other’s throats—all began to capitulate.

Instead of reporting on the damage the threat did to supply chains, they began to praise the “stabilization.” They reported on the “resolution” of a crisis that the President himself had sparked with a Truth Social post. By late August, when punitive tariffs were slapped on India (moving from 25% to 50% in a single month), the media didn’t call it a trade war anymore; they called it “leverage.”

January 2026: The Scorecard

Here we are in the first week of January 2026, and we are still feeling the “stabilization” of markets that should never have been destabilized in the first place.

The public isn’t stupid. We see the “TACO” pattern for what it is: a game of chicken where the only person who doesn’t lose is the one holding the remote. My hesitancy to use the word “Taco” remains—because food is meant to nourish, not to describe a president who sets the house on fire just so he can be thanked for handing out the garden hose.

But the scorecard is marked. The dates are logged. And as a writer, I’m calling it: Strike Three.

Sources:

• Financial Times, “The TACO Trade,” Robert Armstrong (May 2025).

• AP News, “Trump defends ‘TACO’ approach but rejects ‘chickening out’” (May 28, 2025).

Restoring the Soul in a Digital World: Why Less is Still More

12/31/26

As a lifelong photographer here in New York City—a self-proclaimed “darkroom dinosaur”—I have sat in the perfect position to witness the evolution of the image. I have moved from the scent of chemicals in the darkroom to the glow of the monitor, navigating the shift from analog to digital over the last 20 years.

I have seen the industry grow, expand, and become ever more digitized. Now, with Artificial Intelligence (AI) leading the front, we are at a crossroads.

The Misconception: The Trap of “Over-Pixilation”

There is a common fear—and a valid one—that AI is here to erase the human element. We see it every day in what I call “Over-Pixelization.”

This is the new terminology for images that are completely removed from reality. It is when technology is used to distort, contort, and tweak a picture until the subject is no longer recognizable. It creates a plastic, “uncanny valley” look where the soul of the person is buried under layers of digital noise.

Many people think this is the only way AI works. They believe AI is strictly for creating the fake. But as a restoration artist and a retoucher who has been using Photoshop since its inception, I know that tools are only as good as the hands that wield them.

Taming the Beast: A Minimalist Approach

How do we control this powerful technology? How do we stop the digital world from swallowing us whole? The answer is Minimalism.

Minimalism is the approach this digital world needs to be tamed. It allows us to manage and control the force of AI for our benefit, rather than being controlled by it.

Our motto at J & V Future Ventures Co. is simple: Less is More.

Especially when it comes to digitization, we must resist the urge to add too much. My teachings and my method focus on returning the subject back to themselves. We turn the camera (and the computer) back on the subject, not the model. We use AI not to fake reality, but to structure a fantasy that feels grounded and real.

We balance the color. We respect the geometry. We do not distort; we enhance.

Introducing Our Online Fantasy Fashion Agency

I am thrilled to announce a new venture under the J & V Future Ventures Co. umbrella that bridges this gap.

We are launching an Online Fantasy Fashion Agency designed to give you the experience of being a model, without the impossible standards of the industry.

How It Works

I take your face—the real you—and using my background as a master retoucher, I blend it with AI-generated fashion and settings.

  • For the person who feels “too skinny” or “too fat”: The camera doesn’t judge here. We create the aesthetic you’ve always wanted to see yourself in.
  • For the “Old School” and the Modern: We combine the analog soul with digital precision.

You get to be a model for the day. You keep all the images. You get a wonderful, customized experience that celebrates you.

Who Is This For?

Everyone.

  • Men and Women
  • Young and Old (18+)
  • Even your pets! (Yes, we will dress them up too.)

The Service is Open for Business Now

We are ready to provide this service immediately. If you are tired of the fake, over-pixelated look of modern social media and want something that bridges the gap between high-art fantasy and your true self, this is for you.

Let me show you the power of minimalism. Let me show you how to use AI properly.

Contact me today to book your package. Jayom83@icloud, jayom88@Gmail.com