Gustavo Arellano takes a road trip to learn the stories of Latinos: resilient, independent and focused on fixing what's in ...
What's better than a road trip to show what I’ve known forever but that many Americans won't consider: Latinos are as American as anyone else, if not more so.
Agriculture, which intersects with key issues — the economy, climate change and immigration — is a barometer of where a region and its people are heading.
Gustavo Arellano’s dispatch from “America’s unofficial Chile Highway.” Cooking for Día de Muertos. A giant corn maze. And big kids sucking on baby food-style pouches — will it change ...
Gustavo Arellano is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times, covering Southern California everything and a bunch of the West and beyond. He previously worked at OC Weekly, where he was an ...
Gustavo Arellano is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. His previous article was “When I heard the Uvalde killer's name, my stomach dropped.” ...
A politician who admitted he royally messed up — what a concept! If only Newsom, McKinnor and everyone else would do the same. (Gustavo Arellano is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.) ...
To the editor: Gustavo Arellano extols the virtues of a country that actually had 37 candidates assassinated this election cycle, a beautiful country that many Californians will not even drive ...
Jess and Rich Fierro might not like to be called heroes, but they gladly wear the label of leaders — and they want to inspire other Latinos to do the same.
Seven days. Seven states. Nearly 3,000 miles. Gustavo Arellano talks to Latinos across the Southwest about their hopes, fears and dreams in this election year.
Anyone who says the journey is the best part, not the destination, could have been talking about the American Southwest.
La Mutua, the nation's oldest Latino civil rights group is down to about 200 members, some middle-aged, but a new generation ...