The Times podcast: Phone trees, Laotian immigrants and COVID-19
- Share via
Listen to this episode of The Times: Apple | Spotify | Stitcher | Google
The Laotian community in California is not large enough to support newspapers or television news programs in Lao, leaving monolingual immigrants especially isolated. So these immigrants have created elaborate phone trees with designated leaders that can spread important information to thousands of people within an hour.
In sprawling California suburbs, the phone trees are an attempt to re-create village networks from back home. And it’s a crucial service — one that’s especially important because there are not enough Lao speakers for government agencies to translate fliers, as is often done in Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean. For instance, some Laotians did not know a COVID-19 vaccine existed until they received a call from the phone tree. On today’s episode, our host is L.A. Times entertainment reporter Tracy Brown, and our guest is Times Metro reporter Anh Do.
Host: L.A. Times entertainment reporter Tracy Brown
Guest: L.A. Times Metro reporter Anh Do
More reading:
Elaborate phone tree links Laotian immigrants to COVID info, one another
Column: Laotian Americans’ stories are obscured by history. That’s why we need ethnic studies
San Diego’s Laotian community pushes for a place in California history books
Listen to more episodes of The Times here
More to Read
About The Times