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Gustavo Arellano here!

If I speak long enough and loud enough anywhere in Southern California, the following conversation between a stranger and yours truly is inevitable:

Stranger: Are you Gustavo Arellano?

Me: Yep!

Stranger: Oh, I’m such a fan! I love to hear you on KCRW!

Me:Hola, Steve.”

Stranger: “YES!!!”

It doesn’t matter if I’m in Ventura or Orange County, downtown or the San Fernando Valley: it happens. And if you're new to these public radio parts, what is that “it?”

It’s the greeting I offer All Things Considered host Steve Chiotakis for my “Orange County Line” commentary every week, which usually airs Mondays. The topic can be serious, funny, wonky; it doesn’t matter — I will say “Hola, Steve” or offer an “hola” to the guest host if Steve is on vacation. It’s now as much a part of my resumé as my glasses, my Pulitzer Prize finalist nod this year for the L.A. Times, or my (rightful) stance that In-N-Out is overrated.

Sometimes, the stranger/fan asks me why I greet Steve the way I do, and I love to tell the story:

I was already a regular on KCRW by the time we started “Orange County Line” in 2012. The segment came about after I had originally pitched a weekly commentary on Latino life to…someone…at the station. That someone rejected the idea because they felt I was more than my Latinidad — words that were a powerful affirmation of who I was and am, even if I didn’t recognize it at first — and suggested I talk about what was going on in O.C. instead.

I loved the idea, but I still wanted listeners to know that my ethnic roots were (and are) important to me, no matter what I talk about.

So at some point in the early days of “Orange County Line” — if not the very first one — Steve greeted me, and I responded, “Hola, Steve.” Nothing too showy, something anyone in Southern California could understand — but 1,000% raza.

Steve didn’t laugh at my Spanglish, the editors didn’t cut it out, or the “gracias” with which I ended our chat — and the rest, as the gods of clichés would have it, is history.

And this is why I’m so honored to continue to be a part of KCRW, 21 years after la mera mera Jennifer Ferro called me up when she was the producer for Good Food with Evan Kleiman and asked if I wanted to be in a segment in a show I had never heard of, on a radio station I had never listened to. It’s the type of station that not only isn't afraid to show off the multicultural reality of Southern California, but it also embraces it. The type of place that allows its voices to express their quirks and that seeks new ones all the time. That’s why I’m always thrilled to join Steve during KCRW fundraising drives so we can “hola” throughout All Things Considered instead of our usual four minutes of OC LYFE.

I don’t have to remind ustedes that public radio is facing challenges like never before — oops, I just did! But all I’ll say about that right now goes back to the thrill — and promise — I feel every time someone recognizes my voice in public and smiles when I tell them, “Hola, Steve.” 

That means that not only are folks listening to KCRW, but they also care about what goes on with us. It brings them joy at a time when joy is more needed than ever.

So if you ever see me out there in the wilderness, please do say “hola” to me. You know how I’ll respond. Gracias.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and LA28 Chairman Casey Wasserman return the official Olympic flag to Los Angeles - Photo by Carlin StiehlReuters

Nolympics in LA?

In my day job as a columnista for the L.A. Times (there’s the subtle assertion of my Mexicanness again!), I’ve been covering the fallout of the city’s long deportation summer… well, all summer. Part of that was a columna I wrote last week about why I think L.A. should walk away from hosting the 2028 Olympics. In my latest “Orange County Line,” I explain my thinking. Come for the “Hola, Steve,” stay for the John Williams!

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