Episodi

  • Why California Is Losing Its Avocado Industry
    May 3 2026

    The avocado most people buy at the grocery store was born in a Southern California backyard a hundred years ago. The industry that grew around it may not survive there much longer.

    California avocados are losing ground to imports from Michoacán, Mexico, where cartel organizations have moved beyond extorting farmers to seizing their land outright. For California growers already competing against lower labor and environmental costs, the pressure has no simple answer.

    In this episode, Gary Gragg, president of Golden Gate Palms & Exotics Inc., and Katarina Szulc, LATAM freelance reporter, examine how the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) opened California’s avocado market to foreign competition it was never built to absorb, and what that has meant for local growers trying to stay in business under some of the most demanding farming regulations in the country.

    *Views expressed in this video/article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    32 min
  • Killed to Order | The China Conversation California Isn’t Having | Jan Jekielek
    May 1 2026

    A transplant surgeon in China can source a matching heart in two weeks. In ethical medicine, how is that possible? Jan Jekielek, senior editor at Epoch Times and author of a recent bestseller on the subject, walks through what researchers, whistleblower testimony, and peer-reviewed literature have collectively documented about China's transplant system and its relationship with Western medical institutions. Six states have passed legislation restricting insurance coverage for transplants performed in China. California has not yet taken that step.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    37 min
  • What’s Really Happening Inside Iran Right Now | Siyamak Khorrami
    Apr 30 2026

    The conflict in Iran reads very differently up close than it does from a distance. For most people watching from the outside, the story is incomplete.

    “California Insider” host Siyamak Khorrami grew up in Iran and has direct contact with people there right now. What emerges is a portrait of a country where the tension between the government and the people it governs has been building for decades.

    In this conversation, he walks through what that tension looks like from the inside and who actually holds the power to change it.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    36 min
  • California Ballot Measures: What Voters Can and Can’t Hold Them To | Matt Klink
    Apr 29 2026

    California’s ballot is filling up with new tax measures this year, and many voters won’t know what they’re agreeing to until after they’ve voted.

    Some of these measures are framed as temporary or targeted, but the legal fine print tells a different story. When a ballot measure promises to fund a specific cause, how do you know the money goes there?

    In this episode, Matt Klink, president of Klink Campaigns and veteran Los Angeles political consultant, walks through what voters will be presented with in November and the framework they need to evaluate any measure before casting a ballot.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    36 min
  • Behind the Alleged Ballot Petition Fraud in California
    Apr 28 2026

    Paid signature gatherers are operating inside homeless encampments in San Francisco to collect ballot petition signatures for California’s November 2026 propositions. Video evidence captured on the street shows signers being offered payment and instructed by gatherers to use other people’s names and addresses, and the operation was still running the next day at a different location. When something goes wrong at street level, who is actually responsible?

    In this episode, we sit down with JJ Smith, the San Francisco videographer who filmed the operation firsthand; James A. Kus, Fresno County clerk and registrar of voters; and Susan Shelley, editorial writer at the Southern California News Group, to examine how the legal market for paid signature gathering creates the economic conditions for this kind of fraud. They break down the per-signature price spike driven by the November ballot deadline and why the subcontractor chain behind commercial signature gathering makes accountability difficult to trace.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    33 min
  • LAPD Commander on What Keeps LA’s Homelessness Problem Going | Blake Chow
    Apr 27 2026

    A large share of police calls in Los Angeles can be traced back to homelessness, at a time when departments are already short on officers. Behind each call is a mix of mental health crises, addiction, and conditions that rarely change after a single intervention. Why do so many people return to the same situation, even after contact with outside services?

    In this episode, LAPD Commander Blake Chow talks about his decades of experience on the ground and what he learned about why these situations persist and what begins to shift when the response moves beyond isolated fixes.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    38 min
  • California’s Land, Water, and Fire: What’s Really Driving the Decisions
    Apr 26 2026

    California’s water, land, and fire systems are, in many cases, driven by federal court orders from litigation decided decades ago, before current conditions existed. That distance between today’s challenges and the decisions governing them may explain more about California’s long-term planning struggles than most coverage admits.

    In this episode, Wade Crowfoot, California’s secretary of Natural Resources, sits down to discuss what the state is doing to change that, its conservation plan, its water infrastructure, and the conditions behind the Los Angeles fires.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    40 min
  • California’s Oil Problem Is Bigger Than California
    Apr 24 2026

    California’s push to phase out fossil fuels has accelerated the closure of the refineries that still supply fuel to its military bases, airports, and 40 million drivers. If the plan is to move away from oil, what happens to everything that gets made from it before it ever reaches a gas pump?

    In this episode, Ronald Stein, author, columnist, and founder of PTS Advance, and Deborah Sivas, Luke W. Cole professor of Environmental Law at Stanford, examine what refinery closures actually mean for California’s fuel supply and whether the transition plan accounts for all the oil produced beyond gasoline.

    *Views expressed in this video are the opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of California Insider.

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    38 min