Los Angeles Times Profile picture
May 10, 2021 28 tweets 14 min read Read on X
Hi everyone! I’m @GustavoArellano a columnist for the LA Times and host of our new podcast “The Times: Daily news from the L.A. Times”! For the next hour, I’m taking over this account to talk about the podcast, take your questions, and have FUN!
Every weekday, “The Times” offers you the world through the eyes of the West Coast, specifically through California. We believe in the bold proposition that you can’t understand what’s going on in life without understanding the Golden State: politics, culture, food, EVERYTHING
So because of that, we decided to do this here podcast thing—about a half-hour each day. Follow us on @ApplePodcasts here: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…
Can you find us on other podcast platforms as well?
We just finished Week 1, and it’s a great preview of what you can expect from us. The inaugural episode featured LAT housing reporter @boreskes and homeless advocate @abales about a federal judge who told Los Angeles: House your homeless, or else open.spotify.com/episode/169yQ5…
Ep. 2 of “The Times” focused on China’s persecution of its Uyghur minority, and how it hits California. For that, we featured a Uyghur restaurant in Alhambra and spoke with LT business reporter @JMBooyah open.spotify.com/episode/4eSDz0…
*LAT aka LA Times, of course!
Next, our host @GustavoArellano had a chat with Axios justice and race reporter @RussContreras about forgotten, radical roots of Cinco de Mayo open.spotify.com/episode/6sjadX…
Ep. 4 featured our LA Times film industry experts @StacyPerman and @joshrottenberg about the the final reckoning for the Golden Globes caused by their reporting open.spotify.com/episode/7z6cSq…
We concluded Week 1 with a delightful feature by our science reporter @DeborahNetburn on how she learned to stop worrying and love video games during the pandemic open.spotify.com/episode/7KFVDP…
It was a companion piece to her Column One on the same subject latimes.com/science/story/…
Today’s episode of “The Times” has host @GustavoArellano focus in origins of California's recall fever with Recall Gavin 2020 senior advisor Randy @EconomyRadio and LAT politics columnist @markzbarabak open.spotify.com/episode/2fSKqS…
So who are the people behind “The Times”? Let’s meet them!
The host is LA Times California columnist @GustavoArellano, seen here doing an interview out in the field:
The head producer is @DGJourno seen here putting an episode together
Next up is @LinshannonLin who’s originally from the Bay Area and was a GREAT get for us
Coming in right on time is another Bay Area native @scuevasradio_66 who’s a familiar voice in SoCal radio. This is footage of his first day in the middle of the podcast launching
Engineering all of this is @mustangmario who makes me @GustavoArellano have a dulcet tone ala Bing Crosby
Our boss is LA Times podcast jefa @dearabbie who holds monthly happy hours for us via Zoom because she’s cool like that
And we can’t wait to welcome incoming executive editor @meridak and tell him all of this again!
If you have any questions—topics you want us to cover, for instance—start lining them up NOW
One more time, first: follow “The Times” podcast on @ApplePodcasts here podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…
And find is ANYWHERE you get your podcasts from—but DO IT DO IT DO IT!!!
Station ID: I’m @GustavoArellano columnist for the LA Times and host of our new podcast “The Times: Daily news from the LA Times”. I’ve taken over this here @latimes Twitter account for this hour to take your questions about the pod and perhaps more! Now, let’s get them!
Got 10 more minutes to ask me questions about “The Times” podcast, folks! I’ve got some in the cue, but can always use more!
Question via email: “Will @LATstevelopez or @Patt_Morrison appear on your podcast?” My response:

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More from @latimes

May 14
For decades, the Stauffer Chemical Co. disposed of thousands of tons of industrial waste near its factory grounds along Richmond’s southeast shoreline.

But the barbed-wire-ringed Richmond site wasn’t Stauffer’s only dumping ground.

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Revelations of possible radioactive dumping around the Bay Area trigger new testing at parks
Warning signs along the Richmond, Calif., site’s perimeter attempt to discourage trespassers from breaching the locked gates, where soil testing has detected cancer-causing gamma radiation more than 60 times higher than background levels in some places.

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In the last two decades, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control has overseen the investigation into the extent of contamination, revealing elevated radioactivity underground and at the surface. latimes.com/environment/st…
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Aug 24, 2023
South Korea currently recycles close to 100% of its food waste, a remarkable jump from just 2.6% in 1996.

So, how did the nation's composting system become a model for the world?

Let's take a journey!

Thread ⬇️ South Koreans have been required to use food waste bags, seen at top in translucent yellow, for throwing out their uneaten food since 2013. (Jean Chung / For the Times)
The food waste that ends up at Nanji Sewage Treatment Center starts out in a translucent yellow bag, which South Koreans have been required to use for throwing out their uneaten food since 2013. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
South Koreans have been required to use food waste bags, seen at top in translucent yellow, for throwing out their uneaten food since 2013. (Jean Chung / For the Times)
By purchasing them, which are priced at around 70 cents per liter and sold at any convenience or grocery store, residents effectively pay a tax on the food that they are throwing away. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Read 12 tweets
Apr 24, 2023
The decision to fire Tucker Carlson came straight from Fox Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch, according to people familiar with the situation who were not authorized to comment. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Murdoch is said to be concerned over Carlson’s coverage of the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the Capitol, where the host has promoted the conspiracy theory that it was provoked by government agents. latimes.com/entertainment-…
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Apr 24, 2023
Tucker Carlson is leaving Fox News. The network announced the departure of its top rated and most provocative conservative host Monday with no explanation. His last show was Friday. latimes.com/entertainment-…
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Read 4 tweets
Apr 24, 2023
For four decades, Choi Byung-moon blamed himself for a young girl's murder.

But in the winter of 2020, the truth finally began to emerge.

“I think before, I’d lived with something like a knot in my heart,” he told Seoul correspondent @maxsoeunkim. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
It was May 1980, and Gwangju was under siege.

The junta, which would go on to rule South Korea as a dictatorship for the next eight years, sent about 3,000 elite paratroopers — including Choi Byung-moon — to crush demonstrations.

📷: Sadayuki Mikami/AP
latimes.com/world-nation/s… South Korean martial law tr...
For 10 days straight, the commandos went on a campaign of terror.

At least 165 people were killed – including, Choi suspected, a young girl he handed off to fellow soldiers following a bloody minibus attack. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Read 5 tweets
Apr 23, 2023
Affluent communities with little low-income housing have been among those most targeted by state legislators who have strengthened half-century-old laws requiring cities to plan for growth.

Thread ⬇️ latimes.com/homeless-housi…
In the past, Coronado only had to set aside land for 50 homes to meet state requirements. But this time, it is responsible for 912, 70% of which should be affordable to low- and middle-income residents.
latimes.com/homeless-housi…
The allocation derives from a complex formula based on projected population increases and proximity to jobs and mass transit, among other factors. The law doesn’t mandate that cities build or approve new housing, just that they zone for it. latimes.com/homeless-housi…
Read 8 tweets

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