The a16z Show - a16z Podcast: Code and Culture in South Central Los Angeles
Episode Date: September 7, 2015South Central Los Angeles -- which includes Watts and Compton -- in many ways still hasn’t recovered from the Rodney King riots of 1992. In South Central L.A. there isn’t the same opportunity foun...d elsewhere in L.A. When Oscar Menjivar returned as an adult to his South Central community, what he found were too many teens facing options that went from bad to worse. He decided to attack the lack of possibilities through coding. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Welcome to the A16Z podcast. I'm Michael Copeland.
South Central Los Angeles, which includes Watson Compton, in many ways still hasn't recovered from the Rodney King riots of 1992.
In South Central L.A., there isn't the same opportunity found elsewhere in L.A.
When Oscar Menhivar returned as an adult to his South Central community, what he found were too many teens facing options that went from bad to worse.
We saw lots of teens, especially young men that were dropping out of high school,
but I were incarcerated.
I personally had friends that either not doing lifetime or are dead because of gangs,
because of the situations in South Central.
So we ask ourselves, how do we solve that issue, that problem,
how do we engage these teens academically?
We decided to use coding.
Menjivar started the nonprofit Teens Exploring Technology, TXT for short.
Two, in practical terms, teach coding.
But his ultimate goal is far more profound.
Through coding, Menjeevar aims to change the outlook of teens,
to use the opportunity that technology affords to expand their notion of what is possible
and ultimately change the economic and social fortune of South L.A.
By building a local tech ecosystem from the ground up.
We are in a very critical time right now with technology and people of color
and being able to get involved in that intersection.
We have lots of talent in South Delhi.
We have young boys who understand, you know, what a tech startup is,
who understand how to hustle, who want to work really hard,
but they don't have the tools necessary to get them started.
TXT offers those tools year-round to classes of primarily young, Latino, and black men.
As in any startup, participants learn the fundamentals of working in teams
to design, build, and launch software products
that are often informed by the world that these young men inhabit.
One of the ideas was called the SAT fighters.
So it's a ninja game that teaches kids how to study for the SAT.
So what that came about was because kids are always told in their cities
go and study for the SAT and you'll do well and you're going to go to college.
But the question that they had is where do we study for the SAT?
How do we get books?
How do we – our schools don't have a class just for SAT.
So they said it's a start an SAT app.
There have been numerous other apps built,
including a sort of local community organizing app
where residents can vote up or vote down the issues
they find most pressing in their neighborhood,
sending their sentiment directly to a local politician or agency.
Ideally, these apps become the next tech rocket ship.
But Menjivar always keeps his eye on the ultimate, more subtle goal,
changing the mindset in South L.A.,
so that people think of success in the tech world
as natural and obtainable.
And that is a much tougher problem to solve.
We just had a big hackathon in Watts.
So in the Nickerson Gardens,
we talked to over 140 kits
to come to our hackathon in that area.
And probably 140 kits,
maybe 10 knew what 10 actually knew
that they can create something weak code,
that they can create something with HTML, CSS, or JavaScript.
When we said to them, we're going to teach you how to code.
They were thinking more, oh, you're going to give me a code and put it on my phone so I can create something.
So that's the gap.
That's huge.
I would say only about 5% or less than that I actually know that they can create apps, that they can create companies.
Talk to any of the TXT participants, and it's clear that they want and believe that their efforts will explode into full-fledged companies.
Some likely will.
The Watts Hackathon dubbed Hustle and Code.
showed that, yes, there is a huge educational gap to cross,
but it also showed something else.
The other part that came out of it was a sense of unity,
a sense that blacks and browns together can create this new technology,
innovative community in South delay, and in Watts.
It was nice to see kids that, you know, one, didn't have a laptop,
were motivated to say, I'm going to learn this,
and I can get a laptop to continue doing this,
to continue doing the projects that I want to build on.
Over the past five years, TXT has been very successful at, if not launching fast-growing companies,
launching its kids into some of the best universities across the country, with a 100% graduation rate.
And these young technologists almost always want to return to South Central L.A.
to help the next crop of coding kids and to carry the following message to their peers.
We're building one a new culture among Black and Browns in South Delaide,
A culture that says nothing is impossible for me if I learn the skills.
A culture that says I am already innovative, first of all,
and I can apply it to different areas in technology.
And a culture that says let's support each other to help each other succeed.
Will success come fast or easy?
Of course not.
But never count South Central L.A. out.
It's always been selling innovation, Menhivar says.
Go back to think about the music industry,
how the music industry got started with hip-hop or in sports and lots of the innovators
of came from the Watts, came from content during those times.
So now we're starting to see that intersection that as soon as we put these tools in kids' hands
and they learn how to hack and they learn how to develop and they come up with ideas,
they're going to start pushing tools forward, pushing ideas forward, and just products
that we don't know where it's going to take us in the future.
The young men up next don't have an exact map to the future, but they do know the direction
they themselves are headed.
They're all from the summer 2015 TXT class.
Here are some of the key things they learned
and the tools they now carry with them.
My name's Bill Yertes.
I'm the U.S. designer, Romulus.
I learned about resilience.
Like the resilience to keep going,
to devote hours and hours
into developing a project that we were really passionate about
and what we really love.
And even though it might have been strenuous at times
and, like, heartbreaking.
Hello, my name is Jesse Garcia.
I'm 16 years old.
Ask for help.
Be able to use your resources
because the worst thing they could say it's no,
and all you have to do is just thank you for your time
and continue, move on.
My name is Brett Strickland.
I'm 13 years old.
Faith in your team.
I say this because when my developer
volunteered to be a developer,
I thought it was kind of shaky
because he didn't seem like the person
actually put in the work,
but he shocked me when he came in at 8
and left at 8 every day.
Hello.
My name is Ken Privatto. I'm 16 years old.
Everyone is bound for success.
It just depends on how much work you put in, how much you're willing to sacrifice yourself.
My name is Brandon Lockhart. I'm 12 years old.
Feel fast.
Because if you feel fast, you can learn from your mistakes.
Hello, my name is Adora Rez. I'm 15 years old.
Having a positive mindset will always help you all in life.
If you always stay positive, you always be able to come at your goals,
no matter what obstacles are you going through.
My name is Angel Maseas. I'm 17 years old.
just really working hard and really pushing myself.
And if you put in the work, you know, you'll be able to get done what you want
and all that sleep I lost isn't going to waste.
Like, I've finished what I wanted and I've gotten what I wanted.
Thanks for listening.
