His efforts have earned recognition, including a 2023 National Arts Award from Mexico’s Ministry of Culture. Still, Jiménez remains focused on the grassroots. "Every time a child in a suburb or a digital nomad in Tokyo laughs at a picarón , we win," he says. Jiménez envisions a global "picardía diaspora," where the art form becomes a universal tool for social commentary. His next project, Picardía x Robots , will feature AI puppets that adapt their performances based on audience reactions. Yet, for all the tech, he refuses to forget the roots. "At the heart of it, picardía is about resistance—resisting forgetting," he says.