Griselda Blanco and the female drug barons of Latin America

The new Netflix series Griselda casts light on a lesser-known figure in drug trafficking, and is part of a growing awareness of the women who run drug cartels in Latin America.
"The only man I was ever afraid of was a woman named Griselda Blanco." This disquieting quote, which opens up Netflix's latest narco drama Griselda, allegedly comes from no other than the notorious Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar. It encapsulates the character of the woman who was the ruthless boss of a drug empire, indelibly involved in Miami's drug wars of the 1970s and 80s. She made tens of millions of dollars per month at the peak of her drug empire, which extended to New York and California, developing a reputation as "the Godmother of Cocaine".
Blanco is said to have had a net worth of billions before her arrest in February 1985 for manufacturing, importing and distributing cocaine to the US (she was released in 2004 and died in Colombia in 2012). Her story is the subject of the new six-part crime drama starring Sofía Vergara and created by Narcos and Narcos: Mexico showrunner Eric Newman and Narcos director Andrés Baiz.
Previously a lesser-known figure in mainstream culture, Blanco is now the focus of wider attention due to the rise of interest in drug lords including Escobar, Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán and Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo. The 2006 documentary film Cocaine Cowboys and its sequel, Cocaine Cowboys II: Hustlin' with the Godmother (2008), first introduced Blanco to English-speaking audiences. Since then, she's been featured in several documentaries, films and songs.

Griselda's timeline begins with Blanco and her sons fleeing Colombia in 1964 with no money and a kilo of cocaine hidden in one of their suitcases, and takes in her rise as a feared Queenpin. "She's largely credited with having been one of the main people to bring cocaine to Miami in the 70s and 80s. She recognised the market, saw a business opportunity and exploited it to the max," Deborah Bonello, the author of Narcas: The Secret Rise of Women in Latin America's Cartels, tells BBC Culture.
Blanco subverted social expectations by using women as drug mules, exploiting the fact that they appeared less suspicious to law enforcement. In the series, cocaine is sewn into bras worn by her drug mules, who smuggled it into the US undetected.
The show follows a similar format to the series Narcos and Narcos: Mexico, with flashbacks that focus on Blanco's psyche, offering an insight into the woman behind the powerful drug empire. We see Blanco hustling her way up, her success and subsequent fall.
Awards Watch
Sofia Vergara earned a Golden Globe nomination for playing the titular character in Netflix's Griselda. Vergara is nominated for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Limited Series, Anthology Series, or a Motion Picture Made for Television. She was nominated four times for her role on Modern Family. Click here for more on the TV shows getting awards buzz.
Vergara's role in Griselda is a departure from her more comedic ones like that in Modern Family. Here, she plays a chain-smoking, powerful woman who is not only smart, tough, intimidating and cold but who also displays vulnerability.
Also born in Colombia, the actor spent a long time preparing for the role and making sure her performance was authentic to the story. "Getting the look correct was very important to me because I needed to disappear. I wanted no one to think of me or my last role as [her Modern Family character] Gloria Pritchett. I wanted to get inside Griselda's head and really understand her mentality, where she was coming from," says Vergara in the production notes.

The series reveals the ruthlessness of the woman who was known as "the Black Widow" because of her alleged involvement in her three husbands' deaths. It also shows someone who was a devoted mother, resorting to crime and justifying her actions as a way of caring for her sons. According to Vergara, "In the world she came from, she did what she knew how to do. But the truth is, only the real Griselda could tell you why she did all that she did."
As a woman in a dangerous, male-dominated environment, Blanco defied stereotypes and social norms. She embraced her criminal persona, naming her youngest son Michael Corleone after the crime boss in the Godfather films. After an abusive, impoverished childhood, Blanco seemed to think that in order to survive a toxic, macho world, she had to be twice as harsh and tough as a man.
The women behind the drug empires
But Blanco wasn't alone – there are other women who took on high-ranking roles within drug cartels, even becoming bosses. Women such as Guadalupe Fernández Valencia, to date the highest-ranking woman in the Sinaloa Cartel to emerge into the public eye, who ran logistics and was a money launderer for El Chapo, and Marllory Chacon Rossell, a Guatemalan known as "Queen of the South" who ran one of the largest money laundering and drug trafficking organisations in Central America.
"Marllory is super interesting because she was educated," says Bonello. "She was beautiful, which in some ways fitted into that stereotype, but she was virtually unknown. And yet, at one point, the US Treasury Department said that she was one of the most prolific traffickers in Central America. How can that be? How is she so powerful and not known">window._taboola = window._taboola || []; _taboola.push({ mode: 'alternating-thumbnails-a', container: 'taboola-below-article', placement: 'Below Article', target_type: 'mix' });