[3] In 2018, Trevino and Medina founded California's first Indigenous restaurant as a pop-up in the courtyard of the University Press Bookstore in Berkeley.
[3] In a 2019 interview with KQED, Trevino noted that his work at Cafe Ohlone highlighted the legacy of colonialism in California, stating, "We’re making people responsible for what they know, where they live, and what they’re implicated in by their presence here.
"[4] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the University Press Bookstore closed in 2020, and Cafe Ohlone transitioned to a monthly meal kit program.
[11] Trevino is involved in the revitalization of the Rumsen language and teaches it through mak-‘amham, an Ohlone cultural organization he co-founded with Medina in 2017.
"[14] Departures Magazine noted that Trevino's work goes "beyond revival" by reflecting "the vibrant, living, evolving Ohlone culture that is here now, that has been here for centuries.