Los Angeles Times

A COOLER COUNTY FAIR?

Officials hope to draw millennial­s with indie music and Latino flair

- By Hugo Martin

Months before Miguel Santana began his new job as the president and chief executive of the Los Angeles County Fair Assn., he asked his four daughters, ages 19 to 29, to visit the fair with him.

They all rejected the offer, saying basically: Been there, done that.

Santana, who until recently was Los Angeles’ city administra­tive officer, said he realized that if the fair can’t attract teenagers and millennial­s, it is doomed.

For that reason, he has made it his goal to inject a hip, cool vibe into the Los Angeles County Fair, which begins Sept. 1, creating the kind of atmosphere that he hopes will draw those key demographi­c groups to boost attendance and increase revenue.

But Santana, a 48-year-old career bureaucrat who began his new job in January, acknowledg­es he is not steeped in coolness. That is why he has assembled a team of music and festival organizers with a track record of tapping into the millennial crowd.

“I’m the last person to tell you what is cool,” Santana quipped.

A lot is at stake in this year’s fair. It will be the first since Santana replaced former fair administra­tor James Henwood Jr., who resigned after a Los Angeles Times investigat­ion that found that he and his vice presidents received corporate-size salaries and bonuses even as the associatio­n reported years of financial losses.

State and county audits also found that the private nonprofit associatio­n owed the county millions in rent on land developed by the associ-

ation but owned by the county.

Fair officials are meeting regularly with county officials to address the back rent, Santana said, and the compensati­on package for his vice presidents has been cut, though he declined to disclose specific numbers. Santana is paid about half the more than $1 million a year that Henwood received in total compensati­on for 2014 — a lucrative pay package well above that of other fair executives in the state.

For now, Santana said, he is focusing on overhaulin­g the fair to draw in older teenagers and millennial­s, who represent the largest demographi­c group in the country. In Southern California, that means targeting young Latinos.

It’s not a challenge unique to the Los Angeles County Fair. Operators of fairs throughout the country also are making efforts to attract millennial­s and teens, said Stephen Chambers, executive director of the Western Fairs Assn., a trade group that represents 150 fairs in the U.S. and Canada.

The keynote speaker for the trade group’s convention in January is Rita Murray, a generation­al expert who will discuss how to reach young fairgoers, Chambers said.

Among other efforts to attract fresh customers, Chambers pointed to the Napa Town & Country Fair in Napa, Calif., where visitors who took a photo with their smartphone and added #NapaFair20­17 got the picture posted on a giant screen over the main exhibit hall.

“That’s always a challenge,” he said. “How do we get the next generation involved?”

To help meet the challenge in Los Angeles, Santana recruited Lucas Rivera, the former director of Grand Park. Rivera organized festivals and celebratio­ns that drew tens of thousands of people to the 12-acre park in downtown Los Angeles. Rivera is now a senior vice president at the associatio­n.

“We have a bigger playground to play with,” Rivera said of the fairground’s 543 acres.

Among other efforts, Santana and Rivera are planning to create a venue at the fair where visitors can order locally made food and drinks and listen to live music from Southern California musicians while taking in exhibits of nearby artists. The venue is called Mi Poco LA.

The venue will feature freshly brewed coffee from Mi Cafecito, a tiny Latinostyl­ed coffee shop in downtown Pomona, and food from Dia De Los Puercos, a Mexican eatery in West Covina. During the fair, the art exhibit will display work by Los Angeles-based Chicana artists Patssi Valdez and Judithe Hernandez.

To book the bands at Mi Poco LA, Santana recruited Rene Contreras, the founder of Viva! Pomona, an indie music festival in downtown Pomona.

Contreras, who as a kid visited the Los Angeles County Fair with his parents, said most young people feel that the fair is not cool if their parents like it. His charge, he said, is to inject the venue with an eclectic mix of indie and fusion music that will appeal to young people.

“I want to bring that flavor to the fair so that there is a place where music lovers can come and hang out,” he said.

The fair this year also will feature an area where artisans can sell handmade creations such as jewelry, candles and clothing. The fair will add more old-school contests that award blue ribbons to fairgoers for bubble gum blowing, hula hoop swinging and other off-beat skills.

The fair will continue to set aside a large space for full-time vendors who peddle hot tubs, outdoor kitchens, cookware and jet skis.

And, of course, the fair’s outrageous­ly decadent food, such as funnel cake and deep-fried hot sauce, will still be on the menu.

The annual fair is one of 350 events held each year at the Fairplex in Pomona. The Los Angeles County Fair Assn. oversees operation of the entire facility with a budget of more than $74 million.

The television ad to promote this year’s fair also targets young Southern California­ns. It shows four youngsters eating, playing carnival games and dancing to the sounds of Ozomatli, a Los Angeles band that plays upbeat Latin, hip-hop and rock music.

Most of the additions made to the fair this year bring a Latino flavor to the event because the target audience is young Latinos.

“We are speaking to the population of Los Angeles County,” Santana said.

Tax reports show that the nonprofit has operated in the red since 2010, reporting a $2.1-million deficit for 2015, compared with a $3.4million deficit in 2014. The financial report filed with the Internal Revenue Service containing 2016 data isn’t available yet.

But Santana said he considers the Fairplex profitable because he judges its financial strength by operating earnings before taxes, interest and depreciati­on. By that standard, the fair generated $6.8 million in 2015, up from $6.5 million the previous year, according to the organizati­on’s annual report.

Attendance at the fair was 1.32 million last year, up from 1.28 million in 2015.

Santana said he hopes his changes will boost revenue and attendance but he is most focused on the overall economic impact the Fairplex has on the surroundin­g region.

“The bigger challenge for me and for the community,” he said, “is asking ourselves what role does this campus play in strengthen­ing the economy and creating more quality jobs and increasing the tax base at all levels.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? MIGUEL SANTANA of the L.A. County Fair Assn., right, recruited Lucas Rivera, former director of Grand Park, to attract young people. “We are speaking to the population of Los Angeles County,” he said.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times MIGUEL SANTANA of the L.A. County Fair Assn., right, recruited Lucas Rivera, former director of Grand Park, to attract young people. “We are speaking to the population of Los Angeles County,” he said.
 ?? Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? LUCAS RIVERA, a senior vice president for the fair group, helped draw big crowds to Grand Park events.
Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times LUCAS RIVERA, a senior vice president for the fair group, helped draw big crowds to Grand Park events.
 ??  ?? THIS YEAR’S fair is the first under Miguel Santana, whose predecesso­r resigned amid scandal.
THIS YEAR’S fair is the first under Miguel Santana, whose predecesso­r resigned amid scandal.

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