Skip to content
Sponsored

Thanks to our advertising sponsor

Transit YouTuber Rides Forty L.A. County Bus Systems in Three Days

Boston-based transit YouTuber: "overall L.A.'s transit is genuinely good... Metro's frequent network is really impressive, and at least in my experience, their buses tended to run remarkably on time"
Transit YouTuber Rides Forty L.A. County Bus Systems in Three Days

Boston-based Miles in Transit (YouTube, Twitter) touched down at LAX early Friday morning, then spent three days riding as many different L.A. County transit systems as possible before flying out late Sunday.

Miles aimed to ride 45 different bus systems, and he managed 40. He attempted to ride all the transit operators shown on Metro’s transit map – from Metro to Antelope Valley Transit to Palos Verdes Peninsula Transit to Foothill Transit to Cudahy Area Rapid Transit – and everything in between.

L.A. transit nerds will probably enjoy spending some time reading through the visitor’s lengthy live Twitter thread recapping three days of made and missed connections. Below are a couple highlights.

✅
✅
✅

SBLA messaged with Miles in Transit today. While he expressed quite a few criticisms of various corners of L.A. County transit, his broad assessment was positive:

Overall L.A.’s transit is genuinely good, especially for a city with such tough geography for transit! L.A. Metro’s frequent network is really impressive, and at least in my experience, their buses tended to run remarkably on time given how long and trafficked the the routes are!

SBLA looks forward to watching and sharing the full video when Miles in Transit posts it.

The post Transit YouTuber Rides Forty L.A. County Bus Systems in Three Days appeared first on Streetsblog Los Angeles.

Streetsblog has migrated to a new comment system. New commenters can register directly in the comments section of any article. Returning commenters: your previous comments and display name have been preserved, but you'll need to reclaim your account by clicking "Forgot your password?" on the sign-in form, entering your email, and following the verification link to set a new password — this is required because passwords could not be carried over during the migration. For questions, contact tips@streetsblog.org.

More from Streetsblog California

Thursday’s Headlines

April 30, 2026

Media Fact Check: No, the Budget for California High-Speed Rail Didn’t Just Grow by $100 Billion

April 29, 2026

Wednesday’s Headlines

April 29, 2026

The End of Gas Pain? Oregon Launches Nation’s First Road-User Charge

April 28, 2026

Metrolink Cut Service; Budget Pressure Could Mean More Cuts, Fare Increases

April 28, 2026
See all posts