Live Breaking News & Updates on Go On The Other Side
Stay updated with breaking news from Go on the other side. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Few things embody that particularly southern california latino street culture more than low-riding. estevan oriol is a photographer. estevan: go on the other side of that pole. anthony: chronicler of everything iconic at the crossroads of hip-hop, design, tattooing, fashion, and low-riding. estevan: the old timers, they used to cut the coils or put bricks or sandbags in their trunk to make them lower. and then around the 70s is when it got popular. anthony: why these particular models of cars? estevan: it s pretty much always been, uh, late 50s, all the way through the 60s, and into the 70s. and then the 80s came up. they started bringing in the cadillacs and the regals. the most classic, well-known car for low-riding probably is the 64 impala. anthony: how many korean low-riders are there? ....
Mexican street culture. few things embody that particularly southern california latino street culture more than low-riding. estevan oriol is a photographer. estevan: go on the other side of that pole. anthony: chronicler of everything iconic at the crossroads of hip-hop, design, tattooing, fashion, and low-riding. estevan: the old timers, they used to cut the coils or put bricks or sandbags in their trunk to make them lower. and then around the 70s is when it got popular. anthony: why these particular models of cars? estevan: it s pretty much always been, uh, late 50s, all the way through the 60s, and into the 70s. and then the 80s came up. they started bringing in the cadillacs and the regals. the most classic, well-known car for low-riding probably is the 64 impala. ....
anthony: something dave cho and roy choi have in common is that, they may be korean american, but they are also very much creatures of l.a. and what is l.a.? l.a. is mexican, central american, filipino, vietnamese, thai, samoan, bangladeshi. everybody who s left their mark continues to shape the town, determine its character. k-town exists right upside its latino neighbors, and i guess it s natural that both cho and choi identify very much with mexican street culture. few things embody that particularly southern california latino street culture more than low-riding. estevan oriol is a photographer. estevan: go on the other side of that pole. anthony: chronicler of everything iconic at the crossroads of hip-hop, design, tattooing, fashion, and ....
Latino street culture more than low-riding. estevan oriol is a photographer. estevan: go on the other side of that pole. anthony: chronicler of everything iconic at the crossroads of hip-hop, design, tattooing, fashion, and low-riding. estevan: the old timers, they used to cut the coils or put bricks or sandbags in their trunk to make them lower. and then around the 70s is when it got popular. anthony: why these particular models of cars? estevan: it s pretty much always been, uh, late 50s, all the way through the 60s, and into the 70s. and then the 80s came up. they started bringing in the cadillacs and the regals. the most classic, well-known car for low-riding probably is the 64 impala. anthony: how many korean low-riders are there? ....
Estevan oriol is a photographer. estevan: go on the other side of that pole. anthony: chronicler of everything iconic at the crossroads of hip-hop, design, tattooing, fashion, and low-riding. estevan: the old timers, they used to cut the coils or put bricks or sandbags in their trunk to make them lower. and then around the 70s is when it got popular. anthony: why these particular models of cars? estevan: it s pretty much always been, uh, late 50s, all the way through the 60s, and into the 70s. and then the 80s came up. they started bringing in the cadillacs and the regals. the most classic, well-known car for low-riding probably is the 64 impala. anthony: how many korean low-riders are there? estevan: there s a few asian ones sprinkled in the other clubs. anthony: more asians, more, more koreans than 15 years ago? we re seeing a crossover with the food. david: right. anthony: uh david: for the most part, things are starting to get a lot more open. ....