¶ Intro / Opening
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¶ Molar City: A Dental Tourism Mecca
This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars. The walk begins at the parking lot at the end of the road. The site isn't much to speak of, just a sprawling expanse of asphalt peppered with cars. Over a million people come here every year to embark on a kind of pilgrimage. They're here to cross the border. We are getting ready to go to Mexico this morning. Yes, one more time, so we shall see what the rest of the day holds.
There are hundreds of videos online documenting this experience. Watch as many as I did, and they all start to meld together. That's 99 PI producer Bashima Don. Some people seem nervous in the videos. Others are more excited. Many will turn to their imagined audience behind the camera and speak in a reassuring tone. You see that American flag up there, y'all? This is one of the safest crossings there is. And it's not scary. I promise you. It is not scary. Everyone here is headed to the same
In Mexico. It's called Los Algedones, and it's a place where, for decades, Americans have roamed the streets. They come here in desperate search of something they need, something that's almost impossible to find where they live. They're looking for a dentist, one that they can afford. Every day, thousands of people, mostly American, mostly white, and mostly retired, come to this town looking for relief from the turmoil in their mouths.
Here, dental care costs up to eighty percent less than what it might cost in the US. Dental tourism to Los Algodones is so common that many call this place Molar City. Today, there are nearly a thousand dentists in this 7,000 person town, and ninety-eight percent of those in the patient's chair traveled here from outside Mexico. Lasha is going to take it from here.
¶ The Dynamic World of Street Promoters
Watch any one of these YouTube videos and you'll see how a trip to Molar City is made. for an American. For decades, this crossing didn't even require a passport. In one video, a retired couple arrives at Arizona's Edge. They do a 360, displaying the massive lock. just parked. We love Mexico, they say and feel like we're going to be able to The camera then pans to show the rust colored border wall in front of the city. Monstrosity. They marvel. Then a U.S. border.
On guard, it seems, for anyone trying to cross in the opposite direction. To this, the camera woman speaks again, as if she's talking directly to Boris. she says. Then they begin their walk into Mexico. In Los Algodones, there are dense clusters of medical offices and a canopy of billboards above them. Vendors are set up on sidewalks where they sell handmade goods and kitschy souvenirs, like this one graphic T that says, keep calm. You're on the fun side of Trump's wall.
And then there are the street promoters, people who are stationed at almost every street corner, each of them competing for superlatives, the best deal, the quickest appointment, the most popular clinic in town. In molar city, a street promoter is the first person a tourist will encounter. Promo anybody, what is it? Dental, pharmacy, glasses? Some promoters try to lure people in with discounts.
Others vie for attention in more creative ways, like dressing up in a full body tooth costume and waving a sign. Then there's Alberto, a street promoter who takes a different approach altogether. He tries to attract customers with humor. I'm always trying to make stuff fun, you know? Make them laugh like a comedian almost.
Make them relax just for that second? Alberto is employed by a couple clinics in town. He's assigned to a specific street corner where he stands all day and tries to make his commissions. I have a lot of people that pass by. So I talk to everybody.
Eight hours after I'm over promoting the morning I'm talking and talking and talking talking all day. He told me that street promoters can also get a little territorial with each other because they're all vying for the attention of the same Americans who walk into town. You don't need poyment, my doctor's open right now. You get that service right away. You we're not working with poyment. And I still have energy left. Alberto loves to talk.
When I told him I wanted to talk about Molar City, he was like, How much time do you have? He told me how one time he was on the phone with a girlfriend for a whole 24 hours, standing at a payphone for an entire day. Just Talking. From this anecdote alone, I got the impression that Alberto was probably good at his job, or at least that he had the stamina to endure it.
¶ From Cotton Fields to Border Bars
Well maybe let's not aim for twenty four hours, but I'd love to chat a little bit. Alberto grew up nearby and over the course of his life he's seen how Los Algadones transformed into molar city. America's very influential. America really affects everything that happens to to the people right here. Los algodones And the town has become wildly successful in this goal. But Algadonis went through many reinventions before it became Molar City. And I wanted to understand how it all happened and why.
Los algodones means cotton in plural. And that's because commercial cotton farming is what this land was once. Then a series of policy changes depleted the soil and dammed the flow of the Colorado River into Mexico. By the sixties, riverbeds were drying up and crops But many Mexican border towns have long had another thriving business, booze.
And after the farming industry crumbled, that's what Los Algedones relied on. At one point, the town had 48 bars. American soldiers living on military bases in Yuma, Arizona were regulars. Alberto spent his childhood in Yuma too. Yeah, we go to Agadon to get drunk. But yeah, I just uh that's what Agadonis. In the beginning, it was this little town. Algodones was a very small town with lots of cantina. And used to come people from Yuma to dance in the cantinas or drink.
¶ The Founding Dentists' Vision
This is Dr. Jesus Medina. He moved to town fresh out of med school in 1973, and he's been working here as a doctor ever since, although he seems to be perpetually on the brink of retirement. I think one day I have to retire. And my sons tell me, when you gonna retire? Why? Is I'm too young to retire.
Doctor Medina first learned about Los Algodones from his brother in law, Doctor Bernardo Magania, who's often described as the godfather of molar city. He was the first dentist from this town, you know. Magania's now in his 80s. He is retired and didn't want to be interviewed. But Medina told me about how his brother-in-law Magania first had this vision to transform the town into a dental Mecca. Back in the 60s, Magania and Medina were living together in a city about
25 miles from Algadonis. Magania was a young dentist looking for a place to set up his private practice. At the time, he was working for someone who already had a few American patients, patients who likely lived in the South and would cross into Mexico. Mexico to take advantage of lower prices. Glossom start to tell about algodones. Says why you don't move to algodones because algodones is four minutes from Yuma.
If you go there, you're gonna have a lot of more patience. At first, Magania was skeptical. He paid Los Agodonis a visit and it was a lot like he expected. A sleepy little place with a lot of mostly drunk people. But many of those drunk people were Americans. Proximity to the border meant there was already a culture of coming and going.
He saw the Americans spending their money at the bars and thought maybe they'd spend money on dentistry too. Magania knew he could offer them a price lower than what they could get. And my brother-in-law, he got the idea. He says, I'm going to put an office in Algodones. And he put the office and he grows so fast. And he has so many patients, so many patients.
Magania set up his clinic right across the street from the border crossing. On his first day, he saw nine patients. And for the first three years, he was the town's only dentist, sometimes working from six in the morning until eleven at night. The demand for health services ended up being so much more than he could handle on his own. So he started asking others to come set up shop, including doctor Medina.
And then I have the idea to come and and and practice right here. Magania helped Medina acquire a small office for his practice. He gave me a key. He says, take this. What? Go to my office and see. And then I come and see he made me a very small office, you know, two rooms, one room and uh the office to give attention. a table or desk and that was my first my first uh practice uh office I have, you know.
Medina remembers those early days with amazement. Once he stepped out of his office to see a line of people, Americans, all waiting for an appointment with him. He wasn't even taking appointments. He says the demand was immediate. And I start to work and I start to see American people, you know, hard time because I don't speak too much English but uh we no I don't kill nobody, you know. Magania and Medina were treating patients who would talk about their struggles with health.
¶ America's Broken Dental Care System
For most Americans, dental care has always been out of reach. Dental work was performed by barbers and blacksmiths. People who were considered quacks by the larger medical field. And ever since then, dentistry and general medicine have fought hard to keep themselves separate. Cut to today, and dental and health care are still separated. They have separate insurances, separate teaching schools, separate medical records even. It's as if matters of the mouth are separate from the body.
But of course, they're not. Every year, hundreds of thousands of Americans end up in emergency rooms for something like a two-year-old. Something that could have been treated in a dental office. But most ERs don't have on call. So often these patients are sent home with painkillers and are told to go visit their doctors. But a lot of these people don't have dentists, or if they do, the cost for a visit is impossibly high.
And yet, people are held personally accountable for the state of their in ways that they're not held accountable for many other health conditions. Poor dental care can be both life-threatening and humiliating, as if unhealthy teeth are a failure of individual responsibility rather than the symptom of a broken system.
¶ Civic Transformation and Tourist Parties
In Algadonis, Dr. Magaña saw the state of dental care in America as an opportunity to turn this small Mexican border town into a place full of dental services catered to desperate Americans and Canadians looking for deep discounts. But the town was still mostly strip clubs and bars, and he felt like that was holding them back. So in 1980, Magania became mayor, although the technically accurate term is municipal delegate.
As municipal delegate, Magania shuddered most of the cantinas. It was his first major step in transforming Algadonis into molar city. Year after year, the same buildings that housed those cantinas gave way to more clinics and pharmacies. and cantinas i don't have there no more only one or two and i'll go honest you know and but then they disappear almost you know yeah we drink we drink at home
We'll continue our dental offices now. Magania helped transform the town in other ways too. He opened a middle school, a high school, and a dental school. And Dr. Medina, like his brother-in-law, also got involved in town leadership. He coached the local sports teams, and he became the town's first official delegate of tourism. And when I come, we make the revolution right here, you know?
More and more healthcare professionals were migrating to Algadonis, and among Americans, knowledge of the town's services was spreading, although mostly by word of mouth. Still, Dr. Medina was looking for a way to take Algadonis to the next level. And so he decided to attract people to their reformed party town by throwing a giant party. A party specifically for snowbirds, a term for retired Americans and Canadians who migrate south every year following the sun.
Come on over, Medina advertised. We'll have free margaritas, free Viagra, discounted route canals. Wait me a minute because I forg right here is when they uh give me the the positions, you know, in the newspaper of Mexicali. Dr. Medina is sitting in his office, flipping through an old photo album that he's holding up to our Zoom screen. It's full of newspaper clippings and pictures of all the parties he threw over the years.
His first one was in 1987. 7,000 tourists showed up. In the photos, they're all crammed into the town's four square blocks. Many are holding red solo cups. This was my first party. Look at American people. How I doing just in the street, you know I don't have places to do it. Medina flips through the book fondly, as if he's cooing at baby photos. And that's the way algodones start, you know, with that.
And like this you can see all my book is full of parties, you know, tell two I go and everything, you know. Well, I is it's all my life in this book, you know. Parties. He convinced his neighbors to cook enough food. He hired a mariachi band and converted an old Yeah. And the Americans. had a great time. Medina made sure the margaritas were strong. And they was wrong like crazy, you know, the the American customs told me, Dr. Medina, why you give to those guys?
Why? They cross right here, they don't wanna show the papers, they tell us son of a bitch and go. I was very drunk. Year after year, Los Algodones would continue to throw parties like that first one. Americans would return home, talk of the tacos, the town, their teeth. What was once a town of about 750 when Megania first arrived is now crammed with clinics, hotels, restaurants, and pharmacies. Today, young dentists and souvenir vendors
From all over Mexico continue to migrate to town in hopes of finding stable work. And the tourists keep coming in droves. And they make lines. And that's the uncomfortable for them, but they don't care. They make them. in the in this still coming because they find dental services good, a good price and everything, and very handsome doctors. Yeah. We live from the tourist, you know. We live from the Taurus.
¶ The Unequal Prosperity of Molar City
It's a sentiment I heard from everyone in town. Teenagers will run to the border after school to sell trinkets to people waiting in line to go home. Women will walk up and down the line selling handmade sweaters and hot meals. And on the American side, the Quitsan tribe manages a casino resort. It's a popular spot for dental tourists who try their hand at the slot machines in between appointments.
I think I could donate this is a good town. It's become a better town than it was before. You know, we really don't have a lot of like Serenic views or like anything touristic, but the people really like They're really like hard working people and and they're also they like to party, you know, they like to have good times also. Street promoter Alberto moved back to the area eight years ago, in part to be closer to his family after a road accident in Cancun made it difficult for him to walk.
He told me he gets discounted dental care from the clinics that employ him, but he's been putting off amputating his leg for years because of the cost of surgery. Promoters we vary anywhere from a hundred and twenty dollars. So some of us some of us are making like uh five or eight hundred dollars a week. I asked Alberto what he thought about the town's transformation into molar city. I think Dano has helped Algados a lot, but
I think uh people just make their money and they they they they go somewhere else, you know. They go live it up somewhere else. 'Cause a lot of doctors have been become millionaires. Many of those original dentists live in mansions, complete with indoor courtyards and pools. In addition to their dental practice, certain families in town own many of the hotels, restaurants, and pharmacies here. But zoom out of the town's center and you'll see mostly unpaved roads and humble homes.
¶ Patient Stories: Affordable Care vs. US Costs
There's this 18th century paleontologist, Georges Cuvier. He has this famous quote about teeth. Show me your teeth, he said, and I will tell you who you are. It's true that from teeth alone, a dental anthropologist can gather all sorts of information. Migration patterns and cultural norms. They can tell if you ate with your fingers or if you endured famine. Our teeth are biographies. They hold facts about ourselves, facts we may not even recognize while we're alive.
I'm curious how you would describe your relationship to your teeth. Yeah, my relationship with my two with my teeth was, you know, I didn't really take the time on being big. to have good to health care. Um, I haven't truly smiled in probably 10 years. This is Jeff Jackson. He's a retired veteran in his 60s.
Jeff and his wife live in their RV, which is parked in Nevada for most of the year. Over the last couple years, Jeff started losing more and more teeth. By the time he made the decision for implants, he had 13 teeth left. Both my my wife and I are both waiting to get those permanent teeth in. Yeah, it's just it's it's gonna be a fun time. Go down and get them in and be able to enjoy it. I spoke to Jeff after his second trip to Molar City.
He was planning to go back a third time to complete what's called a full mouth restoration, which is one of the more popular treatments in town. Yeah you understand why people go through it. I was like, you know, I'm just being gonna be an ugly old dude anyway. But the confidence booster. And not having to sell my house to do it.
Jeff isn't eligible for Medicare. He makes too much money for Medicaid, and he couldn't find a private insurance plan with a premium he could afford. A dentist in Nevada put together a price tag of about$50,000. In Los Algodones, he found the same treatment for less than$20,000. On top of the implants themselves, that price included getting his remaining teeth pulled, the cost of his pain medication, and his hotel stay.
Mexican dental work is less expensive for a couple reasons. Labor and real estate in Mexico costs a lot less than in the U.S. And dental school is heavily subsidized, meaning fewer dentists graduate school with the kind of colossal debt that's rampant in the US. And in Mexico, dentists don't need to get malpractice insurance. Still, it's not as though Mexican dentistry is affordable to all Mexicans. Only 48% of Mexicans nationwide who are in need of oral health care.
Are able to receive it. But to the average American, it's a discount worth traveling for. And this trend might increase. By 2060, the number of Americans over 65 will practically double. And the US will see an exploding need for all kinds of healthcare services in a system that won't be able to support all of its people.
¶ Molar City: Solution or Systemic Symptom?
like Jeff. I'm just curious if you have any if you have any thoughts or opinions on healthcare, access to healthcare in in the US that you know. From your from your perspective, um I mean there's clearly a problem, right? Um I am a dive in the little capitalist kind of guy. Oh and so I don't really buy off on socialized medicine, but We have to bring down costs on it. You have, you know, millions of people who can't afford health insurance.
To Jeff, Molar City might be a solution. But dental tourism is also a measurement of the problem. It shows us the lengths people must go to seek an end to their pain. More with Lasha after the break. Hej du företagare som vill köra helt elektriskt. Det finns du åtta professional för. Nu har vi i kampanj på våra nya elektriska ProWace-modeller, som till exempel Proy City Electric med leasing från 3 899 kr månaden. Med service och garanterat restvär för extra trygghet.
Kolla in till 8.se- transportbilar.
¶ Building Community and Trust in Dental Care
We're back with Lasha Madon. On a typical day, dentist Myra Jimenez is buzzing around her clinic. Myra moved to Algadonis from Guadalajara two decades ago. She says her early memories there are a blur, mostly because she was so busy working. I mean, skipping meals, skipping everything. I mean, there were so many people. I did up to a hundred crowns in a single day. I was the machine.
Myra told me that in those days the streets were so packed with Americans that you couldn't get through. She was always working, all day. I'm telling you, from eight in the morning to 10 PM. This is Myra's daughter, Rennie, who works in her mom's clinic. Rennie grew up in this clinic. She uses the words waiting room and living room interchangeably. Like living rooms, like the waiting areas would be packed with people just packed. And I remember I had a ride that would drop me off at the border.
And one of my mom's workers would pick me up walking. So I'd come back walking to the office and I remember my mom didn't know how to speak English and So I remember sitting in the living room in the waiting area with patients from Canada, from Utah, from Texas, from California, and all patients helping me do my homework every single day. Myra never expected to move up to Los Algodones to raise her kids on the border. Her first impression was that the town was arid and boring.
But Myra likes having Americans as patients. She says that they're especially grateful. Before moving to town, Myra had never met people so excited to be seeing a dentist. And what I love most is that the Americans always treated us very well. They were very grateful patients and you became friends with them. I love it. I remember being a little kid and my mom would come home with patience to my house. Oh this is so and so and they're gonna be eating dinner with us.
And I'm like, who are these people? Myra and Rennie talked a lot about this sense of community fostered between dentist and patient.
¶ Combating Negative Stereotypes & Tourist Security
But Myra also has concerns about the industry. In fact, there's one thing that it seems like almost everyone is constantly worried about: that the town stays safe. And more importantly, that the town is perceived as safe. Violence and organized crime is a real problem in the Mexican borderlands, but medical tourists are rarely targeted.
Still, one dental coordinator told me that trying to quell concerns about safety is a major part of her job. She told me that her American clients bring it up all the time. I think because Mexico has a you know a bad reputation in the US and everybody thinking coming into Mexico is dangerous. I've had people thinking that oh we're gonna come to Mexico and we're gonna be waiting here with guns and stuff like that. But
Yeah, they're like, Oh, I thought it was gonna be the cartel outside and I'm like no, it's very safe and they're very scared. Um but I think it's more because of the news. More than real incidents of violence and crime, people working in Algadonis are concerned about how Mexico is portrayed in American media. que, que la balacera
The news comes out that there's going to be a shootout, that they're going to kidnap you, that if you cross to Mexico you're in danger, that your life is in danger. Yes. I think that affects us. I think most people they're a little scared to come to Mexico because the histories they hear in the United States, you know, who's they can stool them right here or they can do something, shotguns and things like that, mafia guys, whatever.
Los Algodones itself is actually a pretty safe place to visit, but still, the town works so hard to correct the narrative that many Americans have about Mexico. Their livelihoods depend on it. The industry is having to put a lot of effort and spend a lot of money and make lower profits than they might otherwise if they didn't have to put so much effort into
dealing with that narrative or those prejudice assumptions about Mexico. This is Christina Adams. Cristina's a public health researcher who studied the ethics of dental tourism in Los Algodones. She wanted to know how the industry might be affecting locals. I think it's completely normal for someone leaving their home country and accessing healthcare to be questioning, you know, is this, is this safe? What are the standards of care in this different country?
And then I think there's another layer on top of that, where I think they're also trying to combat really prejudiced assumptions about Mexico as much as possible, that it's, you know, a country from the global south, that it's underdeveloped or even undeveloped, that There's no way the standards could be as high of quality in a place like Mexico. Christina says that clinics in Algadonis employ certain strategies to maintain a positive reputation with tourists.
Some clinics will pay medical tourism companies in other countries to act as a middleman between patient and clinic. Many of these companies are based in Europe, and they'll put Mexican clinics through a vetting process to prove their legitimacy to a non-Mexican clientele. When making interior design choices, clinics might consider an American aesthetic, whatever that means.
The goal is to make sure the image of Mexican dental care is squeaky clean. Sometimes, quite literally, Christina remembers being hit by the intense smell of sanitizer when she walked into the many clinics in town.
It was overwhelming sometimes walking into a dental clinic, just the smell of sanitization. Like it feels like above and beyond anything I'd ever experienced myself walking into healthcare spaces. Like they're really trying to make sure you smell and notice right away, like this is clean. All this effort is to make Los Algodones feel safe and comfortable, relatable even. And so there are ways in which the town has worked to play up its Americanness by minimizing its Mexicann-ness.
But I definitely remember this sense of like Um, staff being told to minimize their Mexican accents um because that would help people tourists feel more comfortable. Christina's research also found that some clinics would hire someone who speaks American English to just sit in the waiting room, the idea being that their presence might help nervous Americans feel more at ease. It seems like everyone who lives and works in town has their own strategy to calm anxious American nerves.
One local dental tourism company uses a camera to occasionally livestream the border crossing from a bird's eye view. These videos exist almost as if to say, see, it's so uneventful here. Boring, in fact.
¶ Controlled Environment: Local vs. Tourist Experience
Safe. Back when Dr. Jesus Medina was head of the tourism department in the 80s, he developed his own strategy to make skeptical US tourists feel comfortable in a Mexican dental clinic. He created a complaint office, a place tourists could go if they felt like they were being scammed. He called it the Office of Defense of the Tourists. That way if one Mexican doctor do
uh a bad job to to one of the patients, they can go to that office, you know? And then we call the doctor and we make them give the money back to the patients, you know. The office functioned like an amateur courtroom, and Medina enlisted Dr. Magania as the judge. Magania would inspect the dental work of other Mexican dentists, occasionally calling the police in for backup. It was very hard, you know. We see the police and comes there.
Police in Los Algodones exist to protect the industry and to make tourists feel safe. There's an old promotional video for Molar City still up on YouTube. It's from 12 years ago and it's less than a minute long. In the clip, a police officer does a salsa twirl with an elderly white woman. The video is titled, All Tourists Are Safe and Fun in Los Algodones.
There's parties, there's fun, there's bars, there's cheap food and drinks, there's dental care, there's a ton of pharmaceuticals, and the police are are watching. If there's any sense of like any trouble brewing, police will be very much on it. Police might help tourists feel safe, but for locals, especially low-wage workers like street vendors and promoters, the police ensure that their movements are more tightly controlled.
Remember those famous welcome parties, the ones that Dr. Medina started in the 80s? A lot of locals aren't invited. In fact, they're explicitly told to stay away. A lot of expectations around where people are allowed to be on those days. Like, you know, definitely.
do not show up at the party um unless you're helping to work there. And so on a day like the welcome party, that involves sort of restricting the movement of other folks who live there and making sure that, you know, they're Only seeing and experiencing what the sort of town elites want them to see and experience to ensure that the reputation of the tourist industry is upheld.
¶ Dual Realities: Border Life and Deportation
Despite all this effort towards safety, whenever violence does occur anywhere in the border region, it can have major ripple effects on medical tourists. I spoke to someone named David VQist, a medical tourism researcher who conducted a bunch of surveys on America. After an incident in 2023, when four American medical tourists were ambushed by a drug cartel, and only two of them survived. David was curious about Americans' perceived identity.
medical tourism there. On one of his surveys, he asked Americans, would you feel safe going to Mexico? And then another question. Would you feel safe going to Cancun? David's research suggested that Americans perceive Mexico and Cancun as two separate places. Cancun is safe. Mexico is not. In a way, I think Los Agodones has achieved that Cancun status. Molar City can exist as a performance for American consumers, disembodied from the forces that created it.
And about how many People do you think in town have the same kind of job that you do? Oh, my competitions. Does it feel like competitions? Well I got them all. You know, I got them all. I gotta report on every single one of them. Which one would you want me to start with? I got clop my competition is everywhere. Everybody's my competition.
There are dozens of street promoters like Alberto, and because there are so many of them, all working on commission, Alberto's success depends on his charisma. He has to give the best performance. And so Alberto has his own strategies to try to stand out and make a good impression. Besides workshopping comedic material on the job, he told me this one other thing. He tends to play up how Americans.
It's not a hard thing for him to do, because like many people who grew up along the border, Alberto traveled back and forth a lot. He lived in Arizona but crossed the border weekly. His English is good. He describes himself as a from the border. So I grew up you know going to school and then coming down the weekends down to That's stuff and a lot of kids grow up like that. Because there's a lot of people in Avedonis who were uh oh I forgot to mention this. I I I was deported.
Alberto was deported to Mexico in 2010. In fact, I learned that almost all of Molar City's street promoters are deportees. It is in fact their Americanness, their American English that makes them ideal candidates for this role. bond with people. Mm. Right away they can tell that I lived in America. Oh, they bring it up. Yeah, they'll say it like that. They'll be like, Oh, I can hear you all, yeah. You you you live in the States, huh? Be like, Yes. Got me a little agent Macasian over there.
Mm so it makes them makes me relate to them more and feel more relaxed. Alberto tells me he'll recognize familiar faces crossing into Mexico from time to time, so and so from high school, his friend's uncle, but he doesn't get to see his family so often. They all live in Arizona and don't like to come visit. They really they really only come when they have to. Yeah. The reason they uh they don't like it is because of uh the immigration, the the the the way they treat them.
When they're crossing, they always get harassed. Yeah, when they're going back to America, they get harassed. So they get tired of that. Los Algodones has long been set up for the benefit of Americans, and the journey Americans take to cross into Molar City has always been a simple one. But of course, the journey in the opposite direction is much more complicated.
Can I ask you a question that might sound I don't know I don't know how you'll take it, but I I'll ask it anyway and you can tell me how you sure react to it. I've heard from
Americans and Canadians, like people describing what it's like to go down to Los Algodones and people describe just walking freely through the border like just five minutes, no no need to even show a passport. And I I'm just curious what that's like for you on your end, knowing that y you were kicked out and yet part of your job is to interact daily with I don't know, maybe hundreds of people who just walk so freely across this border, you know? The way I see it is like this.
since I am from the border. And we lived in America. We went to school in America. What happens is that uh when I see people come from America and I see myself that I can't go back, which is like literally right there, I can see my mom's house from right here. Oh wow. That's the hardest thing to see. Yeah, I see my house. Look at the Colorado River and I can literally see the water tank at the reservation.
And then I can see uh all the way to uh Uma medical uh the hospital on twenty fourth street. And then I kinda know more or less where my mom my mom's house is over here. If I had a drone I could fly it over there and and look at look out. Yeah. Very hard. For me. It's 5 a.m. in Algadones. The sky is still dark, not quite sunrise.
And Alberto is shuffling around the house, getting ready for work. The streets are mostly quiet at this hour. Just the sound of other promoters and vendors setting up, setting the stage for Molar City. By 6 a.m., he's at his post. The border opens and the Americans descend. They walk in the shadow of the thirty foot wall that divides them, crossing the very threshold, Alberto.
99% of Viswell was reported and produced by Lasha Madon and edited by Emmett Fitzgerald and Delaney Hall. Mixed by Martin Gonzalez. Music by Swan Real. Voice over and translation support by Laura Ubate. Fact checking by Graham Haysha. Special thanks this week to Gabby Martinez and Grisel Castaneda.
Kathy too is our executive producer, Kurt Colstead is the digital director. The rest of the team includes Chris Berube, Jason DeLeon, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Leigh, Joe Rosenberg, Kelly Prime, Jacob Medina Gleason, Talon and Rain Stradley. and me Roman Mars. The ninety nine percent of visible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence. We are part of the Sirius XM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north, in the Pandora building. And beautiful.
Uptown, Oakland, California. You can find us on all the usual social media sites as well as our new Discord server, there's a link to that, as well as every past episode of ninety nine PI at ninety nine PI dot org. Hej du företagare som vill köra helt elektriskt. Dej finns du åtta professional för.
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