Inside Chicano Culture - East LA

Inside Chicano Culture - East LA

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♪ hip hop ♪ [hydraulics] [siren] [music fades] Good morning, guys. Here in greater Los Angeles. One of the biggest cultural melting pots in the world. Today I have a very interesting story for you. We're going to go deep into East LA and meet up with a local who's going to show us Chicano culture. Should be fascinating. I'm excited for this one, let's do it.

♪ hip hop ♪ [music fades] -Andy? -Yeah, what's up, brother? -Nice to meet you. -Nice to meet you. [hydraulics] [hydraulics] How you doing? Nice to meet you, brother. -Thank you. -Yeah, absolutely man. -I appreciate it. -Absolutely. How much of life does this consume? Like, this car? Are you thinking about it all the time or? All day, every day.

-My first language is English. -Okay. I'm of a Mexican descent but both of my parents were born here in California. People will always call you Mexican though no matter what you tell them. Like, "Oh, no." you know? 'Cause technically we are all Americans, we're all born here. Yeah, yeah.

You can say whatever you want but at the end of the day you're gonna be considered Mexican. What do you want people to call you? No, I'm fine with Chicano. I will consider myself Chicano but my Spanish is very broken.

I could get by, I could translate and stuff like that but my Spanish is horrible. -What do we got here? -It's a pork tamale. Part of the Mexican culture right here. It's wrapped in a corn leaf. It's made out of corn and it has meat in the center of it. -It's just a burrito. -Burrito?

Yeah. Chicken taco. -He got a burrito over here. -Burrito happening. That's a beef tongue.

-Beef tongue? -Yeah. Now you gotta ask the people which do they prefer the green or the red sauce. You're gonna get people battle it out. Say the green is better or the red is better. -I'm a red sauce for life. -The green is a little more tangy.

I like 'em both. This is good though. [object drops off-camera] <Pass me a napkin please? -'64, '65, and a '61. -Yeah. So explain to us gringos that haven't spent any time in these neighborhoods like... Chicano means...

Chicano is basically somebody who was born of Mexican descent. So I'm Chicano. My grandparents, they came from Mexico and my parents were born here, I was born here. So I am of Mexican descent. The idea of identity for us here, what do we call ourselves if everyone in America is calling us Mexicans? When you see family in Mexico they're like, "You're American." Of course.

-Or Porcho. -Or Porcho, could be Porcho. And here, some people say you're Mexican? Well yeah. When I travel to places like, "Oh, he's Mexican."

Okay. I could have the same debate with a person of African American descent, right? Yeah. They could say, "Hey, Ronin my favorite Mexican." and I could say, "Hey, Joe, my favorite African." He's not really gonna like that too much because he's not from Africa.

He's an American born here of African descent. -Gotcha. -And the same thing goes for Chicanos. We're of Mexican descent born in America. That's kind of technical, but... -It makes sense. Can we walk down here? -Yeah, yeah, we can walk.

This is the street that I grew up on, this is 2400 block of Cincinnati Street. So I have it tattooed on my arm here too. Boyle Heights, 2400, Cincinnati.

And my family when they moved here in the early 1940's this was an all Jewish neighborhood and they were some of the first Mexicans to actually come in here. Wow. And over time in the 50s and the 60s the neighborhoods really changed and then they became more Spanish speaking. So what was it like growing up here? It was fun, I stood in this house.

I used to play here all the time. I have a friend that lived there. This is obviously like the gentrifying of the neighborhood, you know? That writing on the wall, that's the dominant gang in this neighborhood if you want to catch that on your camera. -See the black writing on the wall? -Okay. That stands for Krazy Ass Mexicans. So this is their neighborhood.

How many gangs are around here? On this side there's just one. There's that gang but as soon as we cross the main streets there's different gangs. On the other side of that street, that's another territory. -Just on the other side of that street? -Yeah, where that blue tent is. That's a whole 'nother territory.

On the other side of that main street it's another territory. It's a constant struggle for real estate here, you know? So how do you get real estate? You physically come into the street? You talking on a gang member? On the gangs, yeah. Well, yeah, they start showing tags in their neighborhood and they start pushing boundaries because they play a different game. -They battle it out with arms and money. -Yeah. The more arms you have, the more money you have the more power you have, the more you can push, push, push and eventually one stronger entity eats the weaker entity and then that's how they develop more power. Correct, yeah.

I wouldn't say it's a job, I think it's just influence but you can recruit. The younger people are gonna be the ones to recruit, right? Because they're the ones that are most influential. If I come around and I'm a guy and I'm older, and I have nice cars, and I have women, and I have jewelry and I dress nice, and you're poor, and you don't have none of that stuff you're gonna listen to me. I'm gonna have a lot of influence over you. Gonna be like, "Oh man, that guy, he's so cool. I want to be like him."

You know, so... -Let's keep walking, we'll walk around. -Yeah. I would say towards the end of elementary school into junior high. So probably as young as 10 to 12 people get into gangs. Down here... I don't want to go down there but there's a liquor store down there I had a couple friends over there get shot.

So even though that liquor store might be closer I'll always go to a liquor store that's further away because if I know that there's drama over there then I don't wanna. -You don't want to go down there now? -No, I don't. -Really? -I'm fine, yeah. It's a hot area, you know? I don't... So you feel it block-by-block pretty much? From out of maturity, I can foresee consequences that people can't see and I already know all the bad stuff that happens over there. -I'm just gonna stay away. -Gotcha, gotcha.

I respect those guys and what they do, I just don't need to be in the mix. Gotcha, a lot of it is about respect, right? -All about respect. -Everything? I think that in most impoverished neighborhoods people don't have a lot of money they don't have items, materialistic things. All they have is their respect. All they have is their reputation.

-Right. -So it's a big part of the community. This is impoverished you're saying but I haven't seen from driving in here just the little walk we've done I haven't seen one homeless person. Well, this is an interesting thing. Currently, right now I live in the jungles in the Crenshaw District, right? Okay. The homeless people hang out where they have the opportunity to beg and get money. Watchu gonna get here? What are you gonna get from these people? Right.

They're not gonna be here, that's why there's no homeless people. Right. This is it. You were saying too in the restaurant you were saying something. For the most part, I mean just look around.

You won't see really Mexicans begging. You won't see them... -You're gonna see them working. -Yeah, they’re good to work.

Clean your windows, sweep your driveway. You won't see them beg, that's one thing that you won't do. I mean look around.

You got someone there. Yeah, so in Santa Monica there most likely would be some sleeping bag or someone going horizontal. There's probably a few homeless people here. I've had people who lived in my alley when I lived here. The energy is like, "Get out and hustle."

Find something to do, get some money, go collect cans go sell something, you know? -They're selling clothes, you know? -Okay. If used or not, they’re selling clothes. This lady's selling chips. -So everybody's doing something. -They're all hustling.

Doing what they can. Even over there, there's a lady over there on that corner, look. Right.

She's got some churros over there. So I don't know if it's a pride thing. We just don't ask for a handout, you know? We don't do that, you know? You work for your money.

Hot dogs. Hot dogs, yeah. The LA dog. LA dog with bacon. Right. -There we go. -See the flowers?

-Guadalupe? -Yeah. I got the Mexican flag and the American flag. Oh, wow.

And the Guadalupe. That's my grandfather and them working in the fields. [clear throat] And my pops, he was in Vietnam. That's the blend of the culture. Wow, so even in your tat you have it like 50/50 there.

The story, yeah. See that KAM? -KAM. -Yeah. The tags are like Chicano hieroglyphics, you know? You gotta know how to read them to know where you are. Of course to you they mean nothing but to us that grew up here... So what does that mean when you see KAM? It's a gang.

Okay, it means don’t go over there or? They're letting you know where you're at. The macho way too though is always to be showing strength, you know? You always have to... It's like the dominant gorilla or the dominant tiger. It's like, "Get out of my way." You know, my wife and I haven't gotten married yet.

We've gotten married yet by the government but we haven't had our actual wedding 'cause the pandemic started. Maybe you could come here. Here we go. -Come here, man. -I'll be your witness.

Terra Santa You got some cool old buildings here. [muffled] The symbol of the two-headed serpent, the mother goddess. Yep.

That's a dope building, I love this old 50s style where they go glass and like, curve it. So tell me about the street art, guys. Big thing in Chicano culture or just being in East LA, or what's the story there? I think that we've always been artistic, creative people. How many museums are in Mexico, how much art, you know? Right.

So this looks like a... So people sell everything. Everything and anything. [man speaking Spanish] A lot of people they have their disagreements with gentrification, right? But when we were out here hustling, doing illegal stuff or doing legal stuff and we had the opportunity with a bunch of money, we should have bought the land.

We should have bought the land when we had the opportunity, you know? The tension is gonna come when the residents of a different cultural background move in and they don't assimilate or understand this culture. Right, but that's always happened, right? That's always gonna happen. It was Jews, Russians... It evolves, yeah. Changes.

-Japanese... -Mexican. Mexican and something will be next, it's just a matter of time, right? Yeah, something will be next. I hope that if that is true then that shows that the Los Angeles Mexican community is showing progression and evolution and that we're going to better places. We deserve that for ourselves too. We've been here 50 years or whatever, you know? All right guys, we gonna cruise? Take a little ride right now.

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Again, that's Cuts.team/Peter for 15% off. Now back to the video. All right, we're going in for a cruise, guys. Oh, that's comfortable.

Just please be careful with the seat belts. -Try not to sit on them. -Yep. Should I put 'em on? That's optional. [door closes] I'm not going to be speeding or anything but as long as you don't sit on the buckles. Oh, there we go.

Lifting of the back-end. Oh, look at that, beautiful murals. ♪ hip hop ♪ Synagogue.

It's not in use anymore, huh? Look at this. Go right over to this house. This would be old, right? 20s maybe 30s and then the beauty of California.

Look at that tree. [pressing buttons] Oh, okay, we're going up. Okay.

Don't know if you guys can see it on the video but he's lowering, raising the back, the front. You can do separate wheels, right? Yeah, I got front, back, side to side. Here we go. [hydraulics] What's a kit like this cost to do all the hydraulics? -Well, this is airbags. -Okay, airbags.

So at the end of the day I spent about $5,000. Oh, that's not too crazy. It's not, I did go crazy and buy a lot of upgrades. This is the police station over here to your right.

Okay, talk about those relations. How are they right now? -Between? -Cops and the people. You know... LAPD is just trying to do their job too, you know? But the criminals are trying to do their job too. So you have that conflict.

Right. The criminals here, they're nothing to mess with but the cops are nothing to mess with either. They're tough cops too, you know? They haven't gone soft? [chuckles] I don't think so, no. [man yelling from sidewalk] [Peter chuckling] That police station right there, the Hobart Police Station is where they captured Richard Ramirez the Nightstalker serial killer.

Where he made the worst mistake of his life by coming to Boyle Heights, East LA and then the neighborhood just captured him. -Early 80s? <Yeah. Okay. I was a kid back then but he was over here terrorizing... -This is like a... -Oh this is beautiful, man. Yeah man, it's a cool city.

It's plush, it's... Okay. It's plush, it's thick foam, lot's of springs. It's a comfortable experience. They don't make those anymore, huh? [door closes] -The seats like that? -No. When I was a teenager I used to hang out in front of my house and there was this dope dealer who used to pass by my house all the time and he had a '65 convertible and every time he would pass by I would stare at his tail lights.

That's what made me fall in love with this year. It's the '65 tail lights. Okay, '66 were different? The '66 have... Yes, they're different. They have square lights in the back. So you knew from a kid, on, you wanted a '65? '65 was my favorite. Had to get a '65.

You take the body off the frame and you redo everything. Remove all the rust, change all the bolts. Clean it up basically from scratch. Do non-Chicanos roll in these? Yes.

-Russians... -It's the culture, there's people... There's white people, there's a lot of brothers, black guys that do it, Asians. It's world wide now.

So when you guys all get together, say the Asians and you. You got the car, you got that connection and it's all brotherhood, right? It's like Harleys maybe? Yeah, exactly like Harleys, yeah. -Okay. -You go to... What they say, if you're feeling lonely go to those places where you have things in common with people and then you come and cars are what you have in common. So regardless of your ethnic background if you meet some other guy and he's from Russia, and he has a '65 Impala too they're gonna bond on that right away.

They're brothers instantly? Automatic connection. and then politics, religion, none of that matters, right? None of that, exactly. What would you guys say the biggest challenges are now? Say in East LA? What he was talking about, gentrification. I just think people preserving the culture here. Right. I've already been to Echo Park, I've been to Northeast LA and it's already changing a lot.

I think people here want to preserve what they have. What's really important too is to also... What helps with videographers like yourself, right? Is that you're showcasing a different side of culture. Showing that the people are artistic, they're intelligent they like to do performing arts. This is artwork too this is not just a car. This is artwork, you know? 'Cause a lot of times, stereotypically in movies with me working as an actor it's drug dealer, cartel member, prisoner number one or gang member, thug.

So the stereotypical image of people around the world that's what they think. Yeah. You know? But people love Mexican culture, you know? I remember when I was in South Africa and the guy, he was looking at my tattoos and he's like "Hey man, where you from?" and I told him I'm from Boyle Heights, I'm Chicano. He's like, "Chicano, like Carlos Santana." you know? I like that he had a positive perspective on that, you know? Santana is one of the best representatives, huh? Yeah, he's a good representation.

You see the lights in the back? '65. [woman blows kiss] <Thank you. -You get that all day? -Yes, sir.

The reason I love doing this is every culture I go into I learn something. Yes. I can learn something from everyone.

It doesn't matter how... What background, where from, any of that. I'll learn something today that will add to me. And that's the great thing about the internet too because you're not only learning but you're teaching your viewers. Yes. Or your subscribers, they're becoming multi-cultured by watching your videos.

Thanks guys, for watching 'cause then I can do this. -Comment, like, and subscribe. -[chuckles] I never say that to be honest.

I feel like if someone likes it they'll do it. Yeah, they will. -Let's walk up on top here. -This is cool You can see all these guys and we'll talk about it up here. -This is really cool. -This is a typical style...

-Like plaza you'd see in Mexico. -Okay. In the center of any small town or even large town you see plazas all in different parts of Mexico. I'd come down here when I was a kid but it was a lot more different when I was a child here. -So it's gotten safer since you were a kid? -Much safer. And here you can see all the mariachis here.

They're here for hire, they're here for work. They're taking a break right now or they're actually gonna do... Are you gonna have a wedding at this chapel and you want to have some live music in your back yard. You can come talk to them and negotiate with them and see if they're available that day, that time.

In a way, it's a bit old school here. You don't go online, you actually just walk down to the plaza. Exactly. Mariachi performers, musicians. Taking a break and for hire.

Taking a break right now, eating before we go to play, yeah. Very cool, very cool. -Hasta la huego. -Okay. You know give them a ride from the house to the church and so when the lady gets into the back seat she goes, "I remember the back seat we used to come back here when we were teenagers." [all laughing] Holy sh*t, older lady. She said it in Spanish. That's funny.

And then you're basically downtown, right? Very fascinating sliver of Los Angeles I've never seen at all. It obviously feels like the US but it feels like another country at the same time and very colorful very distinct very flavor... Like, there's a very strong identity you can feel here that I respect, those places. Because the people that hold their cultures aren't pushed over easily and I always respect that. Some places fold easily others stay strong and this is one of those places that has that feeling of just like it knows what it is, it knows who it is and I've only been here for a few hours. So I can't speak like I'm any expert but there's a foundation let's say.

It's very cool. That's the vibe I get from here so far. I got some good looking women and then I get some okay looking women doing photo shoots in my car and she gets mad. -Your wife? -Yeah.

I missed it with the camera but we've had quite a few ladies screaming out. So the car is basically like a Tinder device. [chuckles] Tinder device. -Right? -Yep. It's your calling card. That beautiful row of palms.

So Southern California. So what happens when someone gives you a door ding? [chuckles] The off-video conversation. This is the freeway, Boro Heights is... -Oh, right up there? -Yeah.

Boro Heights itself is a unique part of the city because it's surrounded by the 60, the 5, the 10, and the 101 Freeway. So it's a part of the city but it's kind of disconnected from the city as well. So that's what makes it unique because it's surrounded by freeways. So it's an island surrounded by freeways.

So nobody really comes to the island from the outside? I haven't seen one tourist in here really. That might be true, yeah. Usually it's just people that are locals. People that have lived here before, you know? Right.

Ernie's parents, somewhere in the concrete. As in their signatures. They had a lot back in my parent's days right there. What do you got there, Andy? We're not too far from there but this is where we're gonna... [phone playing] -Sean Penn? -Yeah, Sean Penn and... -What movie is this? -This is Colors.

You see the arches? We're gonna pass by, we're not too far from there. White Fence is a gang... Is that one of the big ones? It's one of the older ones. Yeah, probably from the 20s or the 30s. So why did you guys never get into this? I mean there's so much gang culture around here, there's...

You don't have to answer this but... I never joined a gang because my father, he went to Vietnam and he said, "I didn't have to join a gang to see what it was like to stab someone with my bayonet." Is that the big challenge growing up out here? Like how to avoid the gang or? I think the lack of a male figure in the household.

If you don't have a male figure in the household joining the gang is very inviting because you're meeting somebody who's older than you who's a figure that you want to identify with. 'Cause all boys are looking for someone to identify with. But it's that simple, if you have a strong father figure then it's... your chances of joining a gang are much lower? If you have a strong positive male role model I think that makes a big difference, you know? So it matters, you know? A lot of people, you know, it's just from the generations. Like their father's father was from a gang it just trickles down into the kids.

But that has to do with the positive role model too 'cause if your grandfather was in a gang and your father was in a gang then maybe somehow you feel inclined to join the gang because it feels almost like a tradition. Okay. So the movie business what? The movie business became an option for me after I had got caught up in the drug business.

Okay. So I was involved in that when I was younger and I realized that it's true what they say "You got death or prison." Most of my friends that I grew up with they're no longer living and a few of them are never getting out of jail. Okay. So I had to make that choice myself and... What age did you make that choice? I was probably about 24.

-Okay. -And I was facing 20 years in jail. -Oh wow! -So I chose to make a change, you know? I got really lucky, I had a really great lawyer. I saved a lot of my money and I was able to buy a good lawyer.

But in that moment I had to make a choice "Is this what I wanna do or do I wanna change?" Okay. And I got the option to start in the motion picture business. I started working for the writer, director Mark Brown. He gave me an opportunity, I worked for him as an intern. Then I started doing background. The first movie I did was Hancock with Will Smith.

Okay. And... I did like assistant camera, I was a production assistant for two years for Judge Judy and Judge Joe Brown at KTLA.

Okay. And I did Insurgent, Divergent, Alegiant, Alvin and the Chipmunks, Black Panther. Acting is what I enjoy doing the most though.

Okay. In July, I was fortunate to book a pilot and made more money than I've ever made in my life. -So I'm gonna reinvest that. -Good for you.

-And do more acting. -Cool. It's easy to go back and do the same thing. It's hard to do something that you've never done before. Yeah.

It's hard to... It's scary. But you just gotta have faith and trust.

Was your dad supporting you then when you made that transition? Was he there? Yeah, he was proud of me. They didn't really understand what I was doing in the movie business in the beginning but... A good parent is never gonna want that kind of life for their child. Right, right.

And he knew what I was doing when I was doing negative stuff and he would have serious conversations with me like, "Hey man, you gotta watch out, look out." Give me... It's like he knew I was gonna do the bad anyway so he tried to be supportive of the bad also. -It's kind of interesting. -Interesting psychology. If he was super-hard on you maybe you would have gotten worse. Well then if he was super-hard I probably wouldn't have been so transparent with it.

It was better for me to be transparent with him and him give me information that was gonna allow me to succeed. Than for me to act like nothing was happening and he knew something was happening. Gotcha.

It was a better relationship and it was like that with my mother as well too. At the end of the day, at the end of the story they're happy that I changed my life. I'm happy that I changed my life. Yeah. I think that it's a good example because there's other kids that come from this community and you can evolve, you know? You can teach yourself.

So you think there's a lot of opportunity for kids if they're into drugs and selling drugs right now? You think there's a possibility? Like there is opportunity? Yeah, there's just a lack of education. I would say that you have a better shot of being successful long-term if you try to apply yourself to be a pharmacist. Okay. Than to be a drug dealer.

'Cause a pharmacist is technically a legal drug dealer, right? Yeah, sure. And now if you're a pharmacist you're providing... You're doing... Less stressful.

You're just not gonna have that conflict with the law, you know? Breaking the law is... there's a lot of people that do it but that's not the only way. Sometimes you just need to be shown that there's other ways. All my bills are paid for from working in the entertainment business. So am I a success? I don't do nothing. I don't have to do anything like I used to do in the past.

So to me, that's success. Now the level of success is gonna change of course. Right. We're always gonna be striving for more.

If you're a person with ambition. Yeah. You don't want to pay rent forever, obviously you wanna own. You just wanna live the kind of life that you want but that's what success is.

That's what I try to tell them. Success is subjective, it's not really the big car -or the big house, you know? -Yeah, I agree. For me, it was getting as much experience before the age of 40 that I could. Way before the material.

-Like to see as many countries... -Travel. To live in different places and there were sacrifices involved. -Nobody gave it to me. -Yes.

But that was like, "Okay, by 40 I have to have that in and then I felt success there." Now I feel success doing this and it will be something down the road. Of course, it's always changing.

I think giving... I don't know if I'm gonna put this on camera or not but giving... Raising frequency in society instead of deteriorating it. -Instead of pulling it down. -Yeah. You know what I mean? Like adding to someone.

Which therefore adds to their life, they add to other people's lives. [car starts and revs] This is a hot area 'cause right here you have Evergreen. Which is an old neighborhood too and then on this side you have the guys from White Fence.

So this street right here, 4th Street, you have a lot of... A lot of conflict right here. I've seen a lot of helicopters today.

-Police helicopters? -Oh yeah. They're always scanning the area over here and letting their presence be known too. They've been doing that for years. Okay, so are they primarily getting, like, people that out-sped the cops? They're just surveying the area all the time and letting their presence be known. -Patrolling by air. -Yeah, patrolling by air.

We kind of got used to it. So when we would hear like at 10:00, 11:00 at night almost every single night. It would actually put us to sleep. So we got used to it.

No, it's weird, yeah. -So here's under the bridge. -Okay. I was showing you. Okay. You can see a lot of the graffiti has been covered up. Right.

They covered it up. ♪ hip hop on the radio ♪ And that's East Los Angeles and this is Boyle Heights this side. That's the difference, Indiana splits the two sides of the neighborhood. Ernie, you ever let anyone else drive this car? Not even my girlfriend.

Never. -Not happening, huh? -But you know what? I made a mistake one time. I was doing a music video and the girl, they asked me to let her drive and my wife didn't like it.

As she should, you know? She got mad at me. But I made that mistake once. Never make the same mistake twice. All right, little pit stop here.

This is my friend Armondo. He owns and operates this shop, National Garage #2 right here on the corner of Rosyln and East Street in Boyle Heights. Quality auto repair, very competitive pricing. Yeah.

National Garage Auto, yo. You're a trustworthy auto mechanic? Yes. I got roped into a promotional video but I'm gonna go with it. You need a good mechanic, a good lawyer, and a good doctor. What about a wife? A wife too. [chuckles] At National Garage, they actually have a new restroom.

I don't think that's ever happened at an auto shop in history. Ladies are welcome. Okay, now everyone needs to come. [chuckles] Look at that, wow. Okay, this is trustworthy.

I'm in. Our mechanic will listen to the engine and he'll tell you exactly what's wrong with it. Gracias. Thank you. And this is East LA, they love lowriders everywhere you go, you know? I gotta say it's fun, I'm enjoying this.

Just cruising, it's not like you're driving. You're just sort of floating through the streets with your buddies type thing. Yeah, that's the culture. I get it now, I get it.

[sirens] 'Dem boys. [police car speeds past] ♪ hip hop on radio ♪ Taco truck? Taco truck. So for those of you who've never been to LA it's all about the taco truck. People know when a lowrider's coming in. [door closes] It's like a plane landing, right? [chuckles] Yo quero dos tacos pollo. -No pollo. -No pollo?

-Carne? -Asada, pastor, cabeza. Pastor. Pastor? Dos. Dos tacos, cilantro, cebolla chile? Chile, si.

[man calling out order] Okay, here we go. Fantastic food truck culture. These guys are awesome. We got all this food here.

This was like $14.00 Dollar tacos, unbelievable. I got three tacos and horchata, $5.00 that's pretty good. Unbelievable. Street fine dining, yeah.

[chuckles] The other place was good but this might be next level. This is straight to the street right here, you know? Right. They got the Instagram right there Los Tacos El Pecas. This is great. This is the perfect plate right here. It's the perfect plate.

Fantastico, muchos gracias. A lot of color, lot of creativity. A lot of good food. This is a very interesting neighborhood I gotta say.

And doing it in the lowrider that's a first. I never understood it really it just looked like people hanging out in a car now I get it, it's an experience, it's not driving around. It's like a good bonding, fun, unique experience. I was just saying, "I bet nobody wears a hockey hat in East LA." and this guy, Los Angeles Kings, yeah? No, Rams bro.

Wearing a Kings hat, I think he's just liking the hat. When I grew up right here you had to be careful what team you wear because... So I'm from Cincinnati Street, you have guys from Michigan Street you got guys from Chicago Street. So we would identify each other by different sections.

By the teams and sports jerseys that you wear. So what if you come in with a Florida Panthers hat? Well it depends what... That's ambiguous here. It's like it doesn't make no sense but if you're wearing something that's common like Chicago or Michigan.. And we have streets named after that then they're gonna recognize.

Can I ask what's the neck tattoo here? It's my dad. We did about seven, eight hours on this on my neck, man. Takes me home, we still have him. ♪ hip hop ♪ Cameras, on cameras, on cameras. [music continues] But it's just a cool, like, communal get together with friend type thing? Pretty much what it is.

Nice. Like I said, you got kids here. You know, you got the families here.

[crowd yelling] [men chattering] Grasshopper. [hip hop from radio] Yeah, that thing is sweet. Beautiful, right? Beautiful. There's a lot of work in this paint job, huh? That's what it's all about is what sets your car apart from the next person's car, you know? So this looks like it's a tribute to... A mural, yeah.

Look at that one, it's right on the ground. [hydraulics] -He's hoppin' around. -Hydraulics. [women chattering] [R&B from passing car] [engine idling] [hip hop from car] Cops are coming through. Nice rims. Make it bounce, make it bounce. They just come in, make sure there's nothing bad happening? There's not... I mean do you feel threatened?

No, zero. [R&B from passing car] [man on bullhorn] [car hydraulics bouncing] -He's got the whole family out. -Yeah. [muffled speech] [engine revving] You'll catch everybody here, you know? You'll catch Samoans, Cambodians, I've seen Cambodians in here. Brothers will be up in here.

You'll catch everybody in here. I mean I mean we don't... We don't discriminate when it comes to this culture right here. We're all part of it, you know? They're a part of the West Coast culture. They try to recreate it other places though, right? They do, and they know how to do it as well. Las Vegas does it.

Arizona does it, Texas does it. They do it in other places but I mean, I think... and people will argue.

-This is where it was born, you know? -Yeah. -It's the biggest culture, right? -Yeah. I think San Diego also.

-I think it originated down there as well. -Okay. [hip hop from car] This lady's just out for a cruise. Thank you. When you hear the Spanish music, like for example this right here. Yeah. That's called corridos.

Corridos are basically, it's a drug ballad. -A drug ballad? -Yeah. They're probably singing about a drug dealer or drug dealer situation or someone big in that business. You know what I mean? -Do the dealers pay for the song? -Sometimes, yeah.

For the most part, yeah. They do pay for the song. There's some where the groups will just make it for them. Like as...

-Like commemorating them or... -Okay. So if you hear a lot of Spanish music here in this scene that's also street music but it's Spanish. It's like, you could say it's rap. What the rap music's talking about here, it's in Spanish. And them some of them are just about love.

Not only drug dealers, we're also lovers. [chuckles] -A lot of emotion? -Yeah. We're passionate about everything we do.

[car idling] So guys, we had to get away from the noise to get some audio here. There's been more peace in between the gangs. I think there's been more peace. Right here, you don't have anybody asking anybody else where they're from. Which was the question back in the day, "Where you from?" Meaning, "What gang are you associated with?" So that's not happening here. So they'd get pretty violent before? So back in the day, you know, in the 90s we used to go cruising in the early 2000s you could not cross paths with somebody else, you know? Okay.

And that's not me, it's just friends that I had that had those situations or if I was with them and they didn't like that neighborhood there'd be shootings and you couldn't cruise like this anymore. I think there's been more peace in between... I mean if you notice, there's families here. So they're not gonna... You're not gonna see anybody

asking each other where they’re from, what gang they're from or worried about anything. They're here for the car culture and that's all it is. So when you have unity, this is what you see, you know? You're not from here, you don't look like us but did you ever feel threatened? -Zero. -Right?

Everyone was cool. So that's what it's all about. This is embedded in LA culture. This is embedded. This isn't going anywhere.

Right. As long as there's peace. You know what I mean? So that's what I've noticed. Thank you, guys. That was awesome.

Thanks for coming and checking out the neighborhood with us. Yeah, man. Actually, I wanna drop a few takeaways.

One, cruising around in a lowrider is a lot of fun. I never thought anything of it looking at it from afar but now I'm like, that's fun. Secondly... [loud horn] That. -People have fun together. -Yeah.

I didn't feel much fear today in the neighborhood. I'm saying with the pandemic probably. People had masks but I just feel like life is sort of normal in your culture from what I've felt. People want to feel normal. People want to do normal things, you know? To get them away from thinking that there's a pandemic going on. So people want to do stuff that makes them feel normal, you know? As you can tell here.

I'm gonna leave both your guy's Instagrams down below. You're both doing cool stuff. Your photography... I'm a photographer, yeah. This is one thing that I like shooting.

I like just shooting Southern California. But your shots, I would say more than this, your photos have a real feel to them and like they always say, "A thousand words" right? A picture is a thousand words but there's like a soul. I think you're more than just cars. You're like, get the feel of a place... The people, you know? You can get the pictures of cars but the people that built them are the culture around it. The people that make up this culture.

They're beautiful people, you know? You just gotta know how to capture it. Yeah, the people is what makes my shots. Not so much the cars, I like the people. Yeah. To Ronin, Ernie, and Andy. Ernie's the man.

All right, guys. Thanks for coming along. Just a little peak into a culture most of us don't have much of an understanding about. And what I love the most is well-connected. It just feels like a family, like a tribe. It's festive, it's very unique.

Loved it. Now the light is pretty much gone. So I'm gonna end this video. Thanks for coming along. Until the next one.

♪ hip hop ♪

2022-02-11 01:50

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