Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

For director Eva Longoria, ‘Flamin’ Hot’ is bigger than Cheetos origin story

- Los Angeles Times

The new movie “Flamin’ Hot,” which premiered over the weekend in Austin, Texas, tells the story of Richard Montañez, who rose from janitor to executive at Frito-Lay and has long claimed to have invented the wildly popular Flamin’ Hot Cheetos flavor of spicy snacks.

The film is the fiction directing debut from Eva Longoria and will begin streaming June 9 on Hulu.

Starring Jesse Garcia as Montañez, the film follows its protagonis­t from his early days as a petty criminal to his low-level job at a California Frito-Lay plant, where he eventually places a fateful phone call to the CEO of parent company PepsiCo Roger Enrico (Tony Shalhoub). Also starring Annie Gonzalez as Montañez’s wife, Judy, with Dennis Haysbert and

Matt Walsh as fellow factory workers, the film is an energetic and lively modern fable of perseveran­ce, selfbelief and overcoming the odds.

It’s also been shadowed by a blockbuste­r Times story disproving Montañez’s account of his role in the origin of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, published in 2021 when the film was already in developmen­t. Neverthele­ss, the project moved forward.

“That story never affected us,” Longoria said in a recent phone interview. “Feels like L.A. Times would have better resources dedicated to more important things.

“We never set out to tell the history of the Cheeto,” she contended. “We are telling Richard Montañez’s story and we’re telling his truth.”

As a Frito-Lay company investigat­ion quoted in The Times story concluded, however, “We value Richard’s many contributi­ons to our company, especially his insights into Hispanic consumers, but we do not credit the creation of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos or any Flamin’ Hot products to him.”

In particular, Longoria cited as evidence of Montañez’s involvemen­t a PepsiCo statement released after the publicatio­n of The Times story in which the company responded to public outcry over its initial descriptio­n of the tale as an “urban legend.”

But the statement, though it affirmed Montañez’s other contributi­ons to the company, did not dispute The Times’ reporting, reiteratin­g that PepsiCo could not “draw a clear link” between Montañez’s story and the team whose “spicy product offering” was “tested in market and found [its] way into permanent products on store shelves, including Flamin’

Hot Cheetos.”

Asked for further comment on Longoria’s unsubstant­iated assertions about Montañez’s version of the story and PepsiCo’s response, a representa­tive for Searchligh­t Pictures, which produced the film, referred The Times to an interview with Longoria published by People magazine in January in which she also stated, “We were never telling the history of the Cheeto.”

Longoria prefers to focus on the undisputed fact of Montañez’s rise through the company’s ranks and his role in developing marketing targeted specifical­ly to Latino consumers: “His genius was the fact that he knew the Hispanic market and he knew how to mobilize them.”

“Richard’s story is our story. We are all Richard Montañez,” she said. “There’s been a time in our lives where somebody said, ‘No, no, no. Ideas don’t come from people like you.’ ‘No, no, no. That job isn’t for somebody who looks like you.’ ‘No, no, no. I don’t think you’re quite qualified for that.’ And so I think we all are going to relate to his perseveran­ce and his belief in himself. How he just was like, ‘Why not?’ He dared to ask, ‘But why not me?’”

The project originated around 2017, when producer DeVon Franklin was introduced to Montañez and committed to bringing his story to the screen. The project was set up at Searchligh­t with a draft of a script written by Lewis Colick. With dozens of directors vying for the project, Longoria eventually won the job. Writer Linda Yvette Chávez, whose credits include the series “Gentefied” and the upcoming adaptation of “I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter,” was brought on to revise the screenplay.

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