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Pepperdine’s Dunphy coaching for gold in Olympics

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Six other Pepperdine former athletes and current coaches are competing in the Paris Olympics

Pepperdine Waves volleyball legend Marv Dunphy is representing the red, white, and blue in the Summer Olympics for the ninth time in his Hall of Fame career. 

Dunphy, who coached the USA men’s volleyball team to a gold medal in 1988, is a consultant coach for the U.S. women’s volleyball team for this summer’s Olympics in Paris. 

Dunphy said participating in the quadrennial sports spectacle is wonderful.

“I don’t think there are too many things like this in the world today,” he said. “You know it’s the best of the best in sport. It’s an honor.” 

Dunphy, the Waves men’s volleyball head coach for 34 seasons and the current head coach emeritus, has been a consultant coach for the American women’s team for four straight Olympics. The squad won the gold medal three years ago at the games in Tokyo. 

In his role, Dunphy scouts Team USA’s upcoming opponents. Also, during matches, he sits high above the playing court, dons a headset, and offers insights about the contest to his fellow coaches on the bench including USA head coach Karch Kiraly, whom Dunphy coached when Kiraly was one of the best players in the world and he was the U.S. men’s national team’s head coach. 

The women’s national team had their first match on Monday against China. The Americans are also competing against Serbia and France in their pool.

Dunphy said the U.S. is a balanced crew with good depth and experience. 

“We are going to have to out-team some teams,” he said. “We are going to have to outsmart them and out-team them.”

Six other Pepperdine former athletes and current coaches are competing in the Paris Olympics, which began on July 26 and lasts until Aug. 11. The others are soccer player Lynn Williams, tennis players Mayar Sherif and Luisa Stefani, beach volleyball coach Marcio Sicoli, and basketball coach Bria Goorjian.

Williams, a 2015 Pepperdine graduate, is a forward on the U.S. women’s soccer team. Sheriff, a 2018 Pepperdine graduate, is the first Egyptian to play in women’s tennis in multiple Olympics. Stefini, who played at Pepperdine from 2016-18, is part of the Brazilian contingent and has took the court in her second Olympics. She and her doubles partner Laura Pigossi won the bronze medal in 2021. 

Sicoli, the Waves women’s beach volleyball coach, is participating in his third Olympics — this time as the coach of Canadians Melissa Humana-Parades and Brandi Wilkerson. He coached Americans Kerri Walsh Jennings and April Ross to a bronze medal in 2016 and Walsh Jennings and Misty May-Treanor to a gold medal four years earlier. He was an assistant coach with the Brazilian women’s beach volleyball team that had a duo win the silver medal in 2004.

Goojiian, a 1976 Pepperdine graduate, is the head coach of the Australian men’s basketball team in the Olympics for the fourth time. 

In addition to coaching the men’s team to a gold medal, the legendary coach has served as an assistant coach, consultant coach, or scouting coach in more Olympics since the 1980s for either the U.S. women’s or men’s teams. Those teams have collected one bronze, one silver, and two gold medals.

Dunphy noted that the competition is stiff for the U.S. women’s volleyball team.

“The rest of the world has gotten better,” he said. “We won it in Tokyo, and we are still pretty good. It is going to be a challenge. We’ll see what they are made of.”

Dunphy said his love for the Olympics began when he was a player at Pepperdine in the 1960s.

“The best athletes in each sport are getting together on the world stage,” he said. “Everything about it, I still enjoy. It is still the same for me. I get goosebumps during the opening ceremony and when they play the anthem. Its pretty neat.”

Malibu is a little town with a heart

Malibu Foundation’s Denise De Garmo celebrated for caring for her horses

By Barbara Burke

Special to The Malibu Times

It was torrentially pouring rain as it had been for many days when Malibu firefighters responded to a desperate call in January 2023. A very injured horse named Jane was in life-threatening peril in West Malibu.

“She was stuck within the panels of the stables,” her owner Denise DeGarmo tearfully recalled. “She was losing blood at a disastrous rate when they found her!”

Jane had slipped and fallen in the mud, severely injuring herself. She panicked and became seriously entangled in her stable’s panels, exacerbating her injuries. 

Jane was alone and at risk of soon dying from her profuse bleeding. Someone finally came upon her and desperately called for help.

When they arrived, the firefighters did not have a harness or sling to transport Jane to the engine and evacuate her safely to a veterinary surgeon. 

Equine veterinarian Dr. Katie Nenneker came to the rescue. 

“Jane’s life-threatening scenario is an example of how our team came together in a coordinated effort with the local fire department to save an animal in dire need.” Nenneker said. “At Nenn Equine, we embody the mantra of ‘pride, passion and professionalism,’ and all of those qualities were on display as we came to help Jane that night — we were able to provide her with a calming sedative so that everyone could work safely around her to remove the panels that were severely traumatizing her leg. We stabilized her wounds and readied her for transport to the equine hospital.”

Then, lacking a proper harness or sling, firefighters had to quickly improvise.

“We lifted her with a tractor and slid hay bales under her, first brought her to sit sideways and then, we carefully brought Jane to her feet,” explained Jeff Harms, a Los Angeles County Fire Department battalion chief.

Then, it took several men to carefully carry her to the firetruck.

“The firemen are locals,” said Sherman Baylin, Malibu’s perennial go-to source for locals when their animals are in dire straits. “They truly care about our large animals and they saved Jane that day!”

Nenneker described Jane’s arduous course of treatment. 

“Dr. Kent Sullivan of West Coast Equine Hospital performed multiple surgical procedures on Jane’s limb and he was very integral to her healing process,” Nenneker said. “The healing process was an incredible story involving a field rescue, multiple doctors, long hospital stays, and many rehabilitation treatments, culminating in a happy ending for Jane when she was able to leave the hospital and be reunited with her partner, Gidget.”

Transforming a tragedy into solutions

Jane had a very close call and evacuating her was tricky and challenging, the responding firemen recounted as they gathered, with a now-healed Jane, a stunningly gorgeous thoroughbred, a relieved and very determined DeGarmo, two Malibu City Councilmembers and two representatives from Supervisor Lindsay Horvath’s office. 

They all assembled near the horse stables at Brian Boudreau’s Malibu Valley Stables on the afternoon of July 25.

The occasion — DeGarmo’s presentation of a large animal sling to the Los Angeles County Fire Department overseeing animal rescues in and near Malibu. The sling will be housed at the Point Dume fire station.

You see, after Jane got surgery and started her lengthy rehabilitation, DeGarmo did not just think, “Boy, did I and Jane get lucky! I’m so glad the firefighters found a workaround since they didn’t have a large animal sling!”

No! You see, DeGarmo’s one of those old time Malibu locals — the kind that get determined and don’t take no for an answer. The kind that will dedicate time and effort to find a “yes” answer. The kind that built Malibu. 

Resolved that no other horse or other large animal injured and in need of transport in or near Malibu would face first responders without a proper harness, DeGarmo, in coordination with the Malibu Foundation for which she works, began seeking grants to help fund the purchase of a large animal harness. 

The Malibu Foundation applied for — and received — a grant from the City of Malibu. The sling will be used for large animal emergencies of all types and can even be used in airlift rescues.

“Having this sling provides us with having every option on the table when we face an emergency and have to extract a large animal,” Assistant Chief Drew Smith of the Los Angeles Fire Department said.  

“This is what Malibu is all about! We have horses who are also residents of Malibu.” said Malibu City Councilmember Steve Uhring, a member of the city’s Administrative Finance Committee that reviewed the grant application.

“Malibu has a $200,000 pool of money set aside for various causes,” Councilmember Bruce Silverstein explained. “We want to give grants that benefit the residents — this was a very easy decision for the council which easily approved the grant request.” 

Horvath’s representative, Sophia Sudani, noted, “We have to be responsive to all of our constituents and be aware that areas near Malibu are horse country and we need to have all the tools available in animal rescue operations.”

The takeaway

This is not just a story about a horse that got really lucky, her loyal owner, some quick-thinking firefighters who saved her, and some very talented large animal doctors who operated on her and shepherded her through a long recovery.

No! Rather, this story also evinces that DeGarmo’s tireless efforts through the Malibu Foundation seeking a grant to purchase the large animal sling makes for a different and equally great story — a story about how grants available in the nonprofit sector can help supplement publicly funded organizations to ensure that residents — and their animals — can receive emergency services or can fill any of a myriad of needs that are not completely publicly funded.  

Beautifully, it is a story of how a gorgeous horse named Jane and her indefatigable owner demonstrated that it’s really worth it to assiduously apply for grants — again and again — until funding is acquired.

“It’s great to tell a story that we’re a little town that can come together for this horse and our fire department,” DeGarmo said. “It just proves that Malibu is a city with a heart!”

Malibu native wins Miss California United States

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Rachel DeAngelis to make appearance at Malibu’s Chili Cook-Off

A young Malibu woman has just won the title of Miss California United States. Rachel DeAngelis will now go on to represent California at this year’s Miss United States pageant in October.

The 21-year-old, who was a student at Our Lady of Malibu, decided to be home schooled for high school “but it worked out for the best,” she said, “because I got to live in Malibu and travel,” booking jobs as an actress and model. Now a graduate of Washington State University, DeAngelis is using her journalism degree as a television news anchor on Nonstop Local KTMF in Montana, where she now lives, although Malibu, she says, will always be her home. 

As a teen DeAngelis served on the Harry Barovsky Youth Commission, where she advocated for teens to live a heart-healthy life. She took up the cause after a beloved Malibu uncle died from heart disease at only 37. She’s partnered with the American Heart Association as a spokesperson and promotes heart health in her platform while competing in pageants. 

“Family is really important to me,” DeAngelis said. “That’s why I decided to be a part of the youth commission and also to create change.”

Along with competing in pageants, the newly crowned Miss California United States has been working for nearly a decade as a model and actress. She’s been featured in Target and Macy’s ads, and booked television commercials too. She’s walked the runways for LA Fashion Week, Metropolitan Fashion Week in Seattle, as well as international modeling since the age of 15. Now that’s she’s living in Montana, she’s appeared as a featured extra on the hit TV show“Yellowstone,” which films there.

While modeling and acting, though, DeAngelis was also competing in pageants. From age 12, when she entered her first competition, she found it exciting. She became Miss Pre-Teen Malibu United States. 

“It was not something I anticipated doing,” she said. “It was not something my family did at all, but I gave it a shot and absolutely fell in love with it.” 

She now has eight titles, including her recent win as Miss California United States. DeAngelis intends on taking the next step, competing for Miss United States in October in Memphis, Tennessee. She’ll face competition from all the other states for the crown. 

“The Miss United States pageant consists of swimsuit, evening gown, and interviews. Public speaking is a huge part of Miss United States,” DeAngelis said. “We have a platform presentation to judges and audiences.” 

DeAngelis’ presentation will focus on her passion, heart health awareness. She’ll discuss the American Heart Association and her work to help pass California Bill AB-1719. The bill makes CPR training a high school requirement, something the pageant winner is very proud of. DeAngelis also personally raised over $5,000 for the cause and created her own campaign called “Healthy Heart, Healthy Life.”

The Malibu native says she enjoys the competition and likens it “to a sport. It’s the most competitive thing that I’veever done. When you step on that stage, some girls like to compare themselves to others, but competing for the past almost 10 years, I’ve competed against thousands of girls and the biggest piece of advice I give to myself and other girls is to not compare yourself against other girls because I think everyone is unique in their own way and they all have assets to show the judges. That goes through my mind when I’m competing. When you win it’s one of the things whereI feel so grateful to have the opportunity to make change. It’s also so humbling too at the same time.”

When people ask DeAngelis why she represents California while now living in Montana, she tells them California will always be her home. 

“I actually come back home about every month,” she said. “Any opportunity I get to go back home I take. Growing up in Malibu I was always that surfer kid. The beach is my life.”  But it’s her family in Malibu she says is most important and what she misses most.

DeAngelis will be back home soon. She plans on attending the Chili Cook-Off, where in past years she’s volunteered for Our Lady of Malibu. “It’s one of my most favorite memories of growing up in Malibu,” she said. 

Look for the pageant winner in her crown and sash Labor Day weekend at the event. She’ll be volunteering again and hopes people will stop by and say hello.

Topanga Lagoon Restoration Project public meeting set for Aug. 5

Members of the public can review the proposed Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) for the Topanga Lagoon Restoration Project from July 15 through Aug. 13. The proposed FEIR identifies the range of closely related alternatives considered for the project, as well as the preferred alternative. 

The preferred alternative, which was selected after receipt of extensive public, agency, and land manager feedback, calls for the restoration of Topanga Lagoon and up to 15 units of the historic Topanga Ranch Motel. The project will not onlyprotect two critically endangered fish and associated habitats but will improve coastal access and visitor services, while providing for more resilient beach areas. 

Join The Virtual Meeting on Aug. 5, 6 p.m.

This restoration project seeks to preserve and expand the unique biological, cultural and recreational resources of Topanga Lagoon. The lagoon is a natural filtration system and stormwater buffer, and hosts rare and endangered species. The project also aims to create an integrated program for coastal access, emergency response and interpretation, andproactively address the effects of sea level rise.

To learn more about the project and for updates on how you can participate, please visit topangalagoonrestoration.org.

Lee D. Hines 1946-2024

After a long struggle with Alzheimer’s, Lee Hines passed away surrounded by his family in the Malibu house that he lived in and cherished for more than 40 years. 

The skinny teenager from Hackensack, New Jersey, who had one of the first “garage” rock and roll bands at Oradell High School, went on to earn a bachelor’s degree at Pace University while working as a loan officer for the Chase Manhattan Bank. His successful 4-decade career in business and finance included positions as CFO for several publicly traded companies, including Applause and Central Garden and Pet.  
      
But his proudest accomplishments involved raising his children in Malibu; he coached his son’s sports teams and his daughter’s soccer teams, chaperoned school field trips, sold hot dogs at the Chili Cook-Off, and set up countless school fundraisers and art shows for his wife’s art classroom.
   
Music was always an important theme in his life. He played both classical and jazz guitar and compiled an impressive collection of vinyl LPs of great jazz artists from the 50s and 60s. And when he wasn’t enjoying music, he was always “tinkering,” from rebuilding an old Mercedes engine to installing an ersatz sprinkler system to repairing electrical appliances. A fan of classical films, he enjoyed the fellowship of the homegrown Ferris Movie Cub for over 20 years.

Lee is survived by his sister Pat Dizenzo, doting daughter, Meredith; loyal son, Warren; and loving wife of 50 years, Diane. And the music goes on always and in all ways.

FROM THE LEFT: Is SAVE Act meant to protect or suppress election integrity?

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By Lance Simmens

It is no revelation that legislatures in many states contrive all sorts of obstacles to keep certain constituencies from voting. In particular, minorities are targeted in order to keep from casting ballots in many jurisdictions through suppression and intimidation. 

The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, or SAVE, in a strictly partisan vote of 221-198. The only thing it attempts to save is a crooked partisan attempt to limit minorities and the poor from casting votes for the perpetuation of democracy. According to a response from the Executive Office of the President, “This bill would do nothing to safeguard our elections, but it would make it much harder for all eligible Americans to register to vote and increase the risk that eligible voters are purged from voter rolls.”

The legislation requires “individuals registering to vote to provide proof of citizenship to participate in federal elections,” according to Lia Chien of the Missouri Independent. In addition, Chien adds, the legislation would “require most individuals to have a passport to register to vote… only about 48 percent of US citizens have a passport, according to State Department data.” It is a solution in search of a problem that does not exist. It gives new meaning to the idiom “tilting at windmills.”

According to the Associated Press, “States such as North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, California, and Texas reviewed their voter rolls between 2016 and 2022 …these audits found that fewer than 50 noncitizens in each state had voted in recent elections, out of upwards of 23 million total votes per state.” Once again this is much ado about nothing; the audits proved to be unfounded. It is indicative of the degree to which mis-and disinformation is falsely spewed forth to intimidate some and confuse others.

Sean Morales-Doyle from the Brennan Center for Justice offers “the bill plays into greater themes of racism and xenophobia … it’s also a very damaging lie with an ulterior motive: to lay the groundwork for challenging legitimate election results down the road.”

Leslie Proll, senior director for voting rights at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights offered, “for our democracy to work, it must include all of our voices. The SAVE Act represents a dangerous attempt to intimidate voters of color, impose onerous burdens on their political participation, and sow doubt about the legitimacy of our electoral process. Instead of promoting fear and division, Congress must focus on passing laws that protect and expand the right to vote.”

The Carnegie Corporation of New York has put together a list of impediments that directly limit attempts to expand voting rights in America today, they include:

  • Election officials use false claims of rampant voter fraud to justify strict requirements like a photo ID, often aimed at suppressing the votes of people of color and younger voters;
  • Local jurisdictions are not translating materials or offering language assistance as required by law, proving a persistent barrier to increased voting among language minorities in the Asian American and Latino communities;
  • Under the guise of reviewing voter rolls to remove duplicate names, the names of deceased individuals, or those with standing felony conviction, officials have undertaken to purge voter lists, deleting millions of eligible voters’ names, often with a disproportionate impact on communities of color;
  • Election officials have closed thousands of polling places, largely affecting communities of color;
  • Lack of funding inhibits the ability of localities to manage elections that ensure everyone’s vote counts equally;
  • Federal law allows voters whose eligibility is in question to use a provisional ballot to be counted once the voter is confirmed. However localities set their own rules in how many provisional ballots to print and training poll workers on processing them, resulting in eligible voters bring turned away or their ballots discounted;
  • States and localities have long used early voting to reduce Election Day crunch and open up the process to prospective voters bound by work or other commitments.  Faith-based groups have also used early voting for nonpartisan get-out-the-vote efforts. Officials across the nation have curtailed early voting, largely hitting communities of color;
  • Reducing voting hours can make voting less convenient, and even impossible, for many voters. Low-income and working-class people often have less freedom to arrive late or leave early from work, or take a break from their shifts in the middle of the day. Parents with inflexible childcare arrangements can be similarly impacted;
  • Poll workers constrained by lack of funding for good training means poll workers are poorly equipped to do their jobs;
  • Our highly decentralized election system hands the responsibility for managing elections to state and local administrators, some of them partisan officials with a clear interest in election outcomes favorable to their parties and candidates.  Too often, this results in efforts to suppress the votes of groups that might be viewed as opponents; 
  • Creation of at-large local offices to dilute minority vote. An at-large election covers voters across a city or county, in contrast to smaller district elections, which can often result in higher representation for people of color since votes are not diluted by an area-win population. As a result, some officials create at-large districts to limit the influence of minority communities.

The foregoing represents real problems that require serious actions.

FROM THE RIGHT: Is SAVE Act meant to protect or suppress election integrity?

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By Don Schmitz

The House has passed a bill requiring proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote, called the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act. In the final vote, 216 Republicans voted for the bill, with only five Democrats crossing party lines, and 198 Democrats voting in opposition.

Republicans have theorized for years that the Democrats’ open border policies were designed to import millions of future votes to bolster their party, which increasingly is a minority, in registration. At least 6.4 million illegal migrants entered the country during the Biden/Harris administration, despite the admonishment from border Czar Kamala Harris saying, “Don’t come.” 

Our government transported them to sanctuary cities and states around the country, put them up in hotels and schools, fed and clothed them, and enrolled their children into our schools. In sanctuary states like California, they also receive free medical care on the taxpayer’s dime, and their children pay in-state tuition for college, whereas an American kid from, say, Utah must pay out-of-state tuition. Of course, they know who their benefactors are, and of course they willreward them by voting to keep them in office given the chance.

A Yale study in 2018 estimated that there were 22.1 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. Add the Biden/Harris surge, and the numbers are staggering. That is more people than the states of Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska, North and South Dakota, Delaware, Rhode Island, Montana, Maine, New Hampshire, Hawaii, West Virginia, Idaho, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Mississippi COMBINED. Polling consistently shows that immigration is the top concern of Americans in the upcoming election, but only 37 percent of Americans are confident that the upcoming election will be honest and open. Some states like Ohio and Tennessee are working to restore voter confidence, and SAVE is a federal effort to assuage Americans’ concerns. Suspiciously Democrats are fighting the effort, with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) calling the bill an “extreme MAGA Republican voter suppression bill,” while the White House promised a veto. It is already illegal for non-U.S. citizens to vote in federal elections, but federal investigations have shown that thousands have tried. A growing trend of allowing non-citizens to vote in local elections increases the risk to our national sovereignty. 

Non-citizens can vote in certain elections in San Francisco, nine Maryland cities, and several cities in Vermont. Lawmakers in Washington, D.C., and New York City have considered legislation allowing non-citizens to vote. California has a “motor voter” law which allows someone to sign up to vote when they get a driver’s license. Illegal immigrants are allowed to obtain driver’s licenses in California by law, along with 18 other states. Homeland Security has an E-Verify system for employers to check on workers’ status, but a 2009 Westat audit found  that 54 percent of undocumented workers skirt the regulation by simply submitting another person’s documentation, with some borrowing or stealing IDs. 

Naturally, Americans are jumpy about election integrity. Deliberating on the bill, House Speaker Mike Johnson rightfully pointed out, “We have so many non-citizens in the country right now that if only one out of 100 of those illegal aliens voted, you’re talking about hundreds of thousands of votes being cast,” adding that the number could“determine the future of this great Republic.” 

In a 2014 electoral study by Science Direct utilizing representative sampling to measure non-citizen voting, it concluded, “We find that some non-citizens participate in U.S. elections, and that this participation has been large enough to change meaningful election outcomes including Electoral College votes, and Congressional elections.” Hans von Spakovsky, a former member of the Federal Election Commission stated it was “difficult to predict the actual numbers of aliens that may vote because so many states do absolutely nothing to verify the citizenship of registered voters.”

SAVE would require the states to clean up voter rolls by verifying citizenship through federal databases at the Social Security Administration and Department of Homeland Security. Irresponsibly, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has declined to call SAVE to a vote, and he probably won’t. Classic. 

The more Democrat leadership drags its feet on reassuring the American people that our elections are fair and honest,and that only Americans are voting, the more they generate suspicion and distrust. These are the same folks that positedrequiring ID to vote was racist. Apparently, Democrat leadership believes that blacks and Latinos who show ID to open a bank account, buy an airline ticket, take out a loan, buy alcohol or cigarettes, apply for a job or unemployment, buy or rent a car, adopt a pet, get married, or rent a hotel room, would be intimidated by showing ID to vote. 

How condescending and inane. The more they sandbag us, the more they garner distrust, which is very, very dangerous.SAVE would restore electoral faith and should become law. Democracy is indeed on the ballot. 

Calendar for the week of August 1

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TUES, AUG. 6

SENIOR EXCURSION AT THE VENTURA COUNTY FAIR

Spend the day at the Ventura County Fair on Tuesday, Aug. 6, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The fair offers music, shopping, art exhibits, livestock, carnival games, food and so much more! Join your Malibu Senior Center friends to explore the fair and all the amazing exhibits it has to offer. Contact (310) 456-2489, ext. 357. Cost is $35 per person, pre-registration is required. 

MON, AUG. 12

BALLROOM DANCING WORKSHOP

Learn the fundamentals of swing, ballroom, and salsa on Monday, Aug. 12, from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. at the Michael Landon Community Center. During these workshops, easy-to-learn dance techniques will be taught, including lead, follow, rhythm, and timing. Instructed by MC Callaghan. For ages 18 and above. Cost is $25. To register, visit MalibuCity.org/Register.

WED, AUG 14

LEGACY PARK NATURE WALK AND STORYTIME

Spend the morning in nature with your little one. Participants will begin at the Malibu Library and enjoy a walk around Legacy Park with park educators on Wednesday, Aug. 14, from 10 to 11 a.m. Participants will take their time exploring bird, bugs, and flowers of the season. The walk will culminate with Storytime at the amphitheater. Children must be accompanied by an adult. Meet at the Malibu Library. Cost is free. To register, visit parksrecreation.ci.malibu.ca.us/CourseActivities.aspx?id=18.

THURS, AUG 15

MALIBU FILM SOCIETY FILM SCREENINGS

The Malibu Film Society and the City of Malibu will be bringing three special events to Malibu this summer, with 50 free seats reserved for local residents. All three events will be held in the Malibu Civic Theater at City Hall, located at 23825 Stuart Ranch Road. Showtimes will be 7:30 p.m. each night, with doors opening at 7 p.m. for the free pre-show reception, including wine, snacks, and soft drinks for all guests. The next film screening is on Thursday, Aug. 15, for the film “Buster Keaton — America’s Avant-Garde Auteur.” One of the greatest comic actors of all time, Buster Keaton influenced Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, W.C. Fields, Abbott and Costello, Sid Caesar, Lucille Ball, Jerry Lewis, and Bill Murray. His influence as a director has been just as profound, an unconventional and surreal style that’s since shown up in films by Orson Welles, Billy Wilder, Roman Polanski, Woody Allen, Mel Brooks, Martin Scorsese, Wes Anderson, and more. Hollywood historian, producer, and screenwriter David Weddle (“Battlestar Galactica,” “For All Mankind”) will join us for an evening of film clips and conversation about why Keaton remains such a powerful, indelible presence. Weddle will also stay with us after the show to answer questions.

FRI, AUG 15

CHARMLEE WILDERNESS PARK SUNSET HIKE

Discover Charmlee Wilderness Park after hours in the beautiful light of the setting sun on Friday, Aug. 15, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Experience one of Malibu’s best hiking venues and learn all about the natural surroundings. Participants should feel comfortable walking on uneven terrain for 90 minutes. Hiking boots or sturdy closed-toe shoes are recommended. Bring water and dress in layers. 

SAT, AUG 17

HHW/E-WASTE COLLECTION

Properly dispose of certain types of household hazardous waste (HHW) and electronic waste at Malibu City Hall from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. All containers must be clearly labeled to identify the contents. Maximum amount of paint/motor oil accepted is 15 gallons or 125 pounds per trip. Participants are strongly encouraged to remain in their vehicles. 

Accepted materials list:

  • Paint (water-based only)
  • Used motor oil
  • Anti-freeze
  • Automotive and household batteries
  • Compact fluorescent bulbs (unbroken)
  • Electronics

The city schedules its events on the third Saturday in February, April, June, August, and October. Rain cancels event. Visit www.888CleanLA.com for information about the County’s HHW events.

SAT, AUG 17

CINEMALIBU: ‘TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES,’ 1990 PG

The City of Malibu’s CineMalibu™ series has presented free outdoor movie screenings for the community since 2005. No RSVPs or seat reservations are needed; seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Free admission; bring blankets and chairs. Attendees may bring in outside food. No alcohol is allowed at Malibu Bluffs Park. The next film sceening will show the 1990 film “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.” Event begins at 6 p.m. Movie begins at sunset.

THURS, AUG 22

‘SIP & SHOP’ AND MEET THE MAKERS AT THIRD SPACE

Community members can come to Third Space Malibu from 5 to 7 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 22, to enjoy complimentary champagne and shop for local, handmade, and sustainable products while getting to know local creatives and the story behind their brands.

SUN., AUG 25

JEWELRY-MAKING EXPERIENCE AT THIRD SPACE MALIBU 

The community is invited to join Third Space Malibu’s Kidd’s Jewelry Heist “Jewelry-Making Experience” on Sunday, Aug. 25, from 12 to 5 p.m. Those who attend can create their own necklaces, bracelets, keychains, and earrings during an hour-long session with the help of a mentor. Participants can take home two unique pieces of jewelry each. 

WED, AUG. 28

CALTRANS IN-PERSON MEETING

All community members are invited to attend workshops to learn about and give input to Caltrans’ PCH Master Plan Feasibility Study in person at Malibu City Hall, Council Chambers, on Wednesday, Aug. 28, from 6 to 8 p.m. at Malibu City Hall. This meeting will not be broadcast or live streamed. The study aims to identify safety and multimodal travel improvements for all users of PCH in Malibu, including options for pedestrians and bicyclists, as well as enhancing transit opportunities on Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) in Malibu. For further questions, please contact D7.System.Planning@dot.ca.gov.

ONGOING

FARMERS MARKET

The Malibu Farmers Market returns to the Library Plaza on Sundays from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., located at 23555 Civic Center Way, adjacent to the library. For updates, follow up on instagram@malibufarmersmarket.

WEEDING EVENT AT POINT DUME

Join fellow preservationists the second Wednesday of the month from 9 a.m. to noon at the Point Dume Preserve at Birdview and Cliffside Drive to keep the headlands poison-free. Please bring gardening gloves and be prepared to do some hand weeding with some of your wonderful neighbors. Parking is available at Westward Beach. 

MEET THE MAKERS: SIP & SHOP AT THIRD SPACE

Shop our local, handmade, and sustainable products while getting to know our local creatives and the story behind their brands at Third Space every third Sunday of the month. The next one is on Thursday, Aug. 22, from 5 to 7 p.m. in partnership with Malibu Village Books. 

TRANCAS SUMMER NIGHTS 

Trancas Summer Night Concerts have returned for the summer every Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. until Aug. 30.

KNITTING

Join the City of Malibu’s Community Service Department and Sheila Rosenthal for a knitting workshop that takes place on Mondays and Fridays at 10:30 a.m. This program is a welcoming gathering space for fiber artists that fosters community through open stitch. Make a scarf, hat, blanket, or homemade gift. No experience necessary. Please bring size 8 needles and one skein of yarn. This is an ongoing, drop-in program. Instructed by Sheila Rosenthal.  

RELAXING THROUGH COLORING

The art of coloring activates different areas of the brain, using logic, forming colors, and creativity. Join this free, unstructured program. Instructed by Judy Merrick. Complimentary program. Visit malibucity.org for dates and times. 

STRETCH AND STRENGTH

Participants will focus on increasing flexibility, balance, circulation, and muscle tone while learning to relax through breathing techniques. Bring yoga blocks and a mat. Instructed by Marsha Cooper. $5 per class. Visit malibucity.org for dates and times. 

Fred Segal permanently shuts its doors in Malibu

California cool fashion retailer Fred Segal has permanently shut its doors in Malibu. The store in the heart of Malibu’s shopping district is completely bare of the trendy styles it purveyed to customers seeking the latest chic, casual wear. The Malibu location was one of just a handful of Fred Segal locations left in Southern California. The flagship Melrose location closed in 2023, the Santa Monica complex closed in 2016 before the pandemic battered brick and mortar stores, and their Sunset Boulevard boutique is also reported permanently closed. Even the FredSegal.com website is not operational. 

Segal’s nephew Ron Herman, who operated boutiques inside Fred Segal, closed the last of his stand-alone locations, including in Malibu, last year. 

Segal developed the Malibu Country Mart in 1975. He’s credited with innovating the designer jeans craze as one of the first to charge higher prices and turn the workwear pants into a casual-luxe wardrobe essential.

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