Hazel Villareal looked out
the car window, spotted her target, and pressed the megaphone to her lips.
“Excuse me,” she said, as
the man on the Dallas Street corner turned to face her. “I just want to say
you’re beautiful.”
اضافة اعلان
The man smiled. Another man,
standing to his side, placed his palms on his chin as his jaw dropped. “You are
the most beautiful
— thank you!” the first man replied. Villareal thanked him back and, as the car
drove away, left him with another message: “I love you!”
A video of the interaction,
the first installment of La La Land Kind Cafe’s “Drive-By Kindness” series,
uploaded to TikTok in November 2020, has racked up more than 5 million views.
La La Land, a coffee shop chain, has posted more than 80 installments of the
series in the years since — building its TikTok following to over 6.6 million
in the process, and building on what its employees refer to as the company’s
“kindness mission.”
Though giving random
compliments to strangers might seem odd, or even creepy, it is impossible to
argue with the reactions from those receiving them: “You just made my whole
life,” one woman said. And after being told he looked handsome, a man
responded, “We need to spread some more kindness and love.”
“It proves how powerful
simple acts of kindness are,” said Francois Reihani, La La Land’s founder and
CEO. “You don’t need to do the biggest thing in the world. It’s as simple as
complimenting someone.”
La La Land’s first cafe
opened in 2019 in the Lower Greenville area of Dallas, employing 10 young people
who had aged out of the foster care system and might otherwise have had a
difficult time finding work. These days, foster youths make up a smaller
portion of the staff across the 11 cafes — eight in Texas, three in California
— though they still represent a key part of the company’s ethos.
Reihani, 27, grew up in
Rosarito, Mexico, with parents who frequently reminded him and his two sisters
that they were loved. He started the coffee chain with a goal to spread those
values in an increasingly polarized society. Those divisions became
increasingly stark during the pandemic, he noticed, and with fewer customers
because of COVID restrictions, La La Land had fewer opportunities to spread
kindness.
“For us, it has always been
about kindness first, coffee second,” said Villareal, La La Land’s lead
creative designer.
A to-go cup at La La Land Kind Cafe in Dallas,
July 19, 2023. La La Land’s TikTok videos started as an extension of the
company’s “kindness mission” — the company has built a following of 6.6
million, showing “how powerful simple acts of kindness are.”
So one afternoon, Reihani,
Villareal and Jeremiah Sabado, the company’s content creator who was working as
an intern at the time, hopped in Sabado’s gray Subaru Forester and dished out
compliments to pedestrians. Sabado, who is keen on documenting
behind-the-scenes company moments, started to record.
It was a difficult time for
Villareal, now 30. A random driver had recently told her to “go back to China.”
(Villareal is of Filipino descent.) She was also new to the company and still
adjusting to Reihani’s style. When he would tell Villareal that he loved her at
the end of the day, she would simply reply: “All right, see you.”
But on the day of that
first video, with the megaphone amplifying her voice, something shifted.
“La La Land changed my
perspective of not being scared anymore,” Villareal said. “Whenever I do see
someone who looks like me, I tell them they’re beautiful.”
Though the videos bring in
revenue through collaborations with sponsors, like Sam’s Club and Fossil, the
“Drive-By Kindness” videos are not framed as explicit advertisements for the
coffee shops: La La Land is never mentioned as part of the compliments or
included in the video captions — a deliberate choice, Villareal said.
“I love the fact that we’re
not throwing a product into your face,” she said. “We’re doing this just to
generally make people’s day.”
Reihani noted that karma
was a big part of the company ethos: “When you do the right thing, magic
happens.”
Sabado, who is responsible
for filming, editing, and posting the videos, grew up in an environment similar
to that of Reihani. His father worked as an auditor, so the family moved around
a lot, from the Philippines to Saudi Arabia, and then to the United States.
Love was a sustaining force amid the uncertainty, appearing in words, hugs and
authentic Filipino food.
When he got older, he
realized that not everyone grew up in a family like his. Some people never
heard “I love you” from their parents. With “Drive-By Kindness,” Sabado
believes La La Land can create a ripple effect with far-reaching consequences.
“It’s important for people
to know they are loved,” he said.
At the bright and airy
cafes, incoming customers are treated to a custom compliment and an “I love
you” after completing their order. Even departing customers are left with the
message: The shops’ bright yellow to-go cups carry messages of positivity,
including “be kind,” “just be nice” and, of course, “love you.”
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