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‘Jimmy Dunne Says’

Photo courtesy of Jimmy Dunne

Thoughts from the Back of a Napkin

I’ve always loved quotes. They’re poetry that got tired of dress shoes and slipped on some flip-flops. A good quote is like a good biscuit—small, warm and says a lot without trying too hard. No rules, no meter, no fancy footwork—just a gut-punch of truth, if they’re worth their salt.

Here are a few of mine over the years from various writings about a little bit of this and that …

“Some chase fame, some chase fortune. The lucky ones chase their kids down a Palisades sidewalk.”

“A family dinner table. Where time slows down, laughter lingers and love gets passed around like the mashed potatoes.”

“If someone knows all your stories and still answers your calls—that’s not just a friend, that’s a miracle.”

“You wash your car, shine your shoes, clean your kitchen. Maybe give that head of yours a little sweepin‘ too.”

“Pacific Palisades. You’ve got the mountains on one side, the ocean on the other and the best folks you’ll ever meet smack in the middle. That’s what I call good real estate.”

“Hope’s like a rocking chair. Gives you somethin‘ to do—but it won’t get you off the porch.”

“Mother nature didn’t build junk. Your body is a masterpiece on a 99-year land lease.”

“If you carry around a three-pound weight long enough in your hand, it’s going to start feeling heavier than a bowling ball. Set the thing down.”

“Oscar Hammerstein said, ‘Life is a carousel, my friend; life is a carousel.’ So true. The ride is so much fun if it’s at the right speed—and lasts the right amount of time. But it’s no fun if it’s spinning too fast—and you can’t get off.”

“In the Palisades, family isn’t just who you live with—it’s who you live near.”

“Happiness isn’t a destination stamped on your passport. It’s a treasure that seeps through in the middle of your everyday life—right there between the dishes, and the dog hair, and the people you love.”

“Life. Kind of like a borrowed coat. So warm and comfy for a while—but you gotta give it back.”

“A good friend is like a porch light. They’ll guide you home, and flash twice when you’re talkin‘ crazy.”

“It’s funny how far you can get with a little grace, a lot of grit and the kind of hope that doesn’t mind swimming upstream.”

“You can’t steer forward when you keep peeking in the rearview mirror.”

“Pacific Palisades. It’s the kind of town where the mailman gets more waves than a movie star.”

“When I cross the finish line, I want to be dancing through it.”

“As a kid, there was a trendy brand of shoes everyone wore in our town. Called ‘gym shoes.’”

“There’s nothing wrong with growing older. There’s only something wrong with pretending you didn’t.”

“Funny how we’ll change the oil every 3,000 miles, but we won’t check in on the engine upstairs ’til it’s smokin‘.”

“Gratitude’s a lot like gravy. Makes everything taste a little better.”

“You can’t write a fabulous new chapter to your story if you’re still readin‘ the last one out loud.”

“The first jackpot I hit was nine months before I was born. In a short swimming race against 100 million other fine competitors.”

“I love that moment when the sun says hello. Where the sky’s still honest, and the day hasn’t asked anything of you yet.”

“If you don’t get rid of the weeds in your garden, they’re gonna start sproutin‘ up in your kid’s gardens, too.”

“In Pacific Palisades, the sun’s not the only thing that rises with a smile.”

“The only thing wrong with nine holes of golf? Three holes too many.”

“We weren’t born with a right to be happy—we were born with a chance. And what a beautiful, wild, sacred chance it is.”

“A front porch swing. Best enjoyed slow, with a breeze, and next to somebody who still thinks your jokes are funny.”

“The good stuff in life doesn’t shout. It whispers. The trick is being still enough to hear it.”

“There isn’t a pill on God’s green earth that can do what sittin‘ under a tree’ll do.”

“Keep the Botox in the drawer. You know what beauty really is? Laugh lines that say you didn’t waste the years.”

“The beauty of life isn’t in how long it lasts. It’s in how deeply we feel it while it’s here.”

“In the Palisades, you don’t just live between the mountains and the big, blue sea—you live between gratitude and grace.”


Jimmy Dunne is a modern-day Renaissance Man; a hit songwriter (28 million hit records), screenwriter/producer of hit television series, award-winning author, an entrepreneur—and a Palisadian “Citizen of the Year.” You can reach him at j@jimmydunne.com or jimmydunne.substack.com.

Your Two Cents’ Worth

Getty Center

Thank you, Getty Center. The experts at your free Conservation Clinic on June 14 gave me invaluable advice for saving all of my types of artwork.

Theatre Palisades

It was SO nice to see a Theatre Palisades show. Missing Pierson Playhouse, but I love that the show went on. Bravo to all involved.

Lucky

Hip, hip hurray to one of the greatest treasures of our town, Maryam Zar. Selflessly giving at least a billion hours of her talent, her leadership, and her passionate heart to the greatest place. Lucky, lucky us.

Graduates

I loved seeing the Pali High graduation photos in last week’s paper. Having a ceremony at Hollywood Bowl is unforgettable.

Businesses

Please continue to patronize our local businesses whenever possible.


Got something to say? Call 310-454-1321 or email 2cents@palipost.com and get those kudos or concerns off your chest. Names will not be used.

Objects of Affection

Goldberg, Madden and Washburn
Photos by Chase Hirt/Imaginaire Media

Three Palisadians Host Fundraising Event, Commemorative Art Exhibit

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

At the end of 2024, lifelong Palisadian Kristen Goldberg was at the airport with her family, waiting to go on vacation, when she posed the question: “What objects are super dear to you, and what would you take if our house was about to burn down?”

Goldberg, who lost her Alphabet Streets home in the Palisades fire less than two weeks later, described asking that question as “the eeriest thing of all time.”

“For me, it was my stuffed animal, Mr. Bunny, and we’re just talking about it,” Goldberg said. “Then, we lost our home, and it was just so eerie.”

At the time, the question came from a project Goldberg was embarking on to get back into painting, centered on a series of meaningful objects to people—starting with her friend, Liz Madden, who had just moved into a new apartment and requested a piece from Goldberg. Madden suggested Goldberg call the series “Objects of Affection.”

The project took on a new meaning after the fire, shifting into a fundraising event that took place on June 1 to support Together Palisades, put on by Goldberg, Madden and Josie Washburn—a trio of friends who originally met while attending St. Matthew’s Parish School.

Washburn, who was living in the Palisades at the time of the fire, and Madden, who grew up in the community but had moved out of it, did not lose their family homes, but described the collective experience of “so many people we love and grew up with.”

“It was just such a devastating event,” Madden said, “and we were also just gobsmacked.”

So at the end of January, when the idea of Objects of Affection resurfaced, Goldberg wanted to make it into a fire fundraiser.

“This is the time to do it,” Goldberg recalled thinking. “I feel like it wasn’t meant to happen at the end of [last] year, because it was meant to happen post fires.”

Put on to give Palisadians a chance to “reconnect, share stories, and celebrate the history and heart” of the community, Objects of Affection was centered on a group exhibit, “honoring the objects of affections we lost to the fire.” Prior to the event, they had an open call for the exhibit, inviting community members to submit their own pieces.

“That’s how the art prompt came to be, which is what we built the event around, allowing folks to create pieces of art around objects they lost in the fires,” Goldberg said, “so they can transform their grief into something new and beautiful.”

Goldberg contributed a painting of Mr. Bunny. Other items that were on display included part of an iron frame that was salvaged from an Alphabet Streets home, “If It Breaks It’s Okay” by Hannah Sharpe, and “Resilience in Clay” by potter Mara Greenwald.

“[Mara] had, literally the night before the fires, put two pots in her kiln, and then their house burned down,” Goldberg said. “The only thing that remained was the kiln, and these pots were totally untouched. Those were a huge part of the art show.”

Goldberg explained that they allowed people to expand beyond the prompt itself.

“It didn’t just need to be fire victims that were creating art,” she described. “We allowed the art to be about your love for the Palisades in general.”

The event also featured brands and businesses with ties to the community, including Pali Wine Co. and Sunset Smash.

“It was so special to have local brands there that we all know and love,” Goldberg said.

Over $6,000 from ticket and merchandise sales at the event—which had about 70 attendees—went to support Together Palisades, which is a “community-led effort focused on rebuilding” things like small businesses, parks, gathering spaces and more.

Washburn, who said she has a “massive family” with parents who “know everyone” and siblings who are “friends with everyone,” had heard about Together Palisades and the work the organization was doing after the fire.

“They put incredible thought into where the money was going and how it would be best utilized,” Washburn said. “If we were going to collect money, we wanted to know that it was going somewhere legitimate and it was going to be used for what we wanted it to be used for.”

Washburn described feeling “really aligned” with the work Together Palisades is doing and that asking people to donate there “made sense for us.”

Overall, all three organizers expressed how well the event went, in terms of fundraising and bringing the community together.

“It was so incredibly special to see so many parts of our community coming together, like worlds colliding,” Goldberg described. “It was a really special day.”

Washburn said they were able to bring people that “we personally hadn’t seen in now decades that were lifelong Palisadians too, and they, in turn, got to see other people that they hadn’t seen in forever.”

“It was beautiful, all of these Palisadians connecting, and our shared love of the community—that brings us together so much, even if we hadn’t seen each other in so long, we still have that to talk about,” Washburn continued.

She described two men who were in the same grade at St. Matthew’s that she thinks “haven’t seen each other since graduation day of eighth grade.”

“I look over and they’re in the most beautiful embrace,” Washburn said. “I truly was tearing up. They were so genuinely happy to see each other and have a reason to connect after all these years.”

Madden said that people from “all walks of life” showed up to the event, including from AYSO, people they grew up with and went to school with, and parents’ friends: “Everyone really came together.”

When it comes to events in the future, the trio was unsure if there would be another Objects of Affection or event of this caliber, but they expressed interest in creating “communal gathering spaces for us to come together that are intentional.” Together Palisades also has ideas for events in the works for the future.

“It’s so important to keep having things like this and finding times to connect together,” Goldberg said. “We all live in LA—we’re in Santa Monica and Brentwood—and it has been weird to see life just going on as normal and there’s literal devastation a mile and a half away that doesn’t feel like it’s being talked about that much anymore. It is just so important to us to be like, ‘Hey, this did happen, we do all still need support … we all need to be there for each other still.’”

A Canvas of Resilience

Sheila Morovati
Photos courtesy of Crayon Collection

Crayon Collection Unveils ‘Banners of Hope’ Project Across Pacific Palisades and Brentwood

By LILY TINOCO | Assistant Editor 

Waves of color and messages of hope now line the streets of Pacific Palisades and Brentwood, as local nonprofit Crayon Collection unveiled the Banners of Hope project—a community-driven effort.

Banners of Hope for Pacific Palisades invited area schools impacted by the January fire to create art that would be on display on light poles across the community. Students at each participating school worked to create one unique artwork—representative of their school—and chose three words to describe the future of the Palisades.

To celebrate the launch, Crayon Collection hosted a community event on Tuesday, June 3, with families, local educators and civic leaders. The event featured a live performance of “Hope” by Palisadian musician Joe Sumner, “honoring the strength and spirit of those impacted,” according to Crayon Collection.

A launch event on June 3 features a display of the banners.

“I feel like when I drive through the Palisades right now, it’s really not our community,” Crayon Collection Founder Sheila Morovati explained to the Palisadian-Post. “When I come through and I [see] ads for debris removal, or remediation or lawyers … It’s just not about our community and the people. There’s this togetherness that we wanted to bring about through these images that the kids are providing us within each school.”

Morovati hoped the artwork would provide a sense of community, joy and hope to those who have been affected and are navigating great loss.

“To be honest, it feels like it’s going to do a lot because as we drive through and see the rubble and all the depressing sights, just seeing what these kids have produced already has been so uplifting,” Morovati said.

Of the artwork that Morovati previewed ahead of the unveiling, she said three words stood out most: Love, Faith and Rebuild.

Now on display throughout Brentwood and the Palisades since the start of June, light pole banners feature the student-created artwork.

Participating schools include Palisades Charter Elementary, Marquez Charter Elementary, Methodist Preschool of Pacific Palisades, Kehillat Israel Early Childhood Center, Seven Arrows Elementary, Calvary Christian, Corpus Christi School, Village School and St. Matthew’s Parish School.

“The Banners of Hope project serves as a powerful reminder that hope and creativity can flourish even in the most challenging times,” Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said in a statement.

The banners will be up through the end of August. As a conclusion, Crayon Collection is also planning on replenishing every school’s art supply closet in August, in honor of #NationalCrayonCollectionMonth, “ensuring that students are equipped for the new school year.”

Crayon Collection was founded by Morovati, a resident of the Palisades, in 2010, with a mission to collect little-used or new crayons and donate them to children in need all over the country.

“Morovati’s daughter was a year-and-a-half old and a finicky eater when the two would dine at California Pizza Kitchen and be given a pack of crayons prior to their meal,” according to a 2014 Post article. “At such a young age, her daughter would scribble a bit and be done. Morovati noticed the staff would throw away the nearly new crayons along with the napkins and straw wrappers left on the table at the end of the meal.”

Over time, Morovati continuously noticed this trend in kid-friendly dining establishments. This led her to start collecting the discarded crayons off of tables. In September 2010, she expanded her efforts and became the founder of Crayon Collection.

Now, Crayon Collection serves 30,000 low-income youth annually and provides equal access to art education in vulnerable communities where art has been defunded. The organization has saved over 22 million crayons to date and has partnered with different institutions to offer art education to vulnerable schools.

Crayon Collection is currently accepting donations to support ongoing arts programming and community recovery efforts. For more information or to get involved, visit crayoncollection.org or contact info@crayoncollection.org.

Our Town


Paliskates hosted a Fire Relief Skate Jam on June 7 at Stoner Park, with professional and amateur skateboarders, vendors, food trucks, and more. Supported by dozens of entities, including Councilmember Traci Park, city of Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks, and LA Strong Foundation, the event was hosted to support the Swarthmore Avenue skate shop in its rebuilding efforts after the Palisades fire.

Photos courtesy of Hooten


Palisades Charter High School Social Sciences teacher and golf coach Dave Suarez received an Honored National Teaching Award in June for his “incredible impact on students during and after the Palisades fire.”

Suarez was nominated by his student, Jacob Leatherman.

“In January 2025, the Palisades fire brought devastation to California, destroying homes and parts of Palisades Charter High School,” read a statement from Honored. “In the aftermath, Suarez banded his golf teams together to help students navigate the challenges and surround them with support. During this time, Suarez saw how sports play a powerful role in bringing people together and providing a sense of normalcy for students during uncertain times.”

Leatherman said he is “forever grateful” for Suarez’ help getting him “back to the game” he loves.

“This recognition highlights extraordinary educators who inspire their students,” according to Honored. Suarez received a cash award and was featured on Inspiring Teachers: The Honored Podcast.

Honored, a nonprofit, is “dedicated to keeping great teachers in the classroom and inspiring a new generation of talent to pursue teaching.”

Photos courtesy of Honored

Palisades Charter High School graduating seniors attended a live Q&A event at Skirball Cultural Center on May 28 with alum will.i.am, Black Eyed Peas frontman, tech founder, CEO of FYI.AI and philanthropist.

“Pali High students [Miranda Casas and Joshua Tavasti] co-hosted the evening’s discussions, in which will.i.am shared inspirational advice and insights on a variety of topics, including the advantages of being focused, of understanding the problems you seek to solve in order to find effective solutions, the importance of paying it forward to improve local communities, the rise of women in STEAM fields, AI and jobs, and the necessity of persistence in the pursuit of your dreams regardless of your age,” according to information from the school.

The evening also included remarks from Pali High Executive Director/Principal Dr. Pam Magee and AP Spanish & Culture teacher Myrna Cervantes (Pali alum Class of ’93).

Photo courtesy of Emily Choi for FYI.AI

Honorary Town Sheriff Sam Laganà attended the wedding of Frank Hathaway Harrer—the 1995 Pacific Palisades First Baby of the Year— and Maëlle Poirier on Saturday, May 23, in Paris, France, at Mairie de Maisons-Alfort Hotel de Ville. Frank is the son of Chris Harrer and Pam Hathaway, and grandson of the late Frank Hathaway, a former leader of The Riviera Country Club. Frank and Maëlle reside in Paris.

Photo courtesy of Sam Laganà

Regal Cleaners Owners Save Precious Memories

Photos courtesy of Lisa Kaas Boyle

By LISA KAAS BOYLE | Contributing Writer

Cira and Antonio Flores

We can all count the things, the community, the sense of home we lost in the Palisades fire. We were blessed beyond measure to have experienced our town together and for now, it’s mostly gone. But some things, community and reminders of home have a way of circling back, of providing relief and reminding us of who we are.

I’ve had three great gifts that survived the total loss of my home. My cats were rescued weeks after the fire by Viva Cat Rescue. My safe deposit box miraculously survived at Chase Bank preserving jewelry my ancestors brought to America. And finally, Regal Cleaners brought me a very unexpected gift. I had no idea what clothing we had at Regal when the fire burned our village, and a very special item was preserved, thanks to the care of Regal.

It is the intangible loss of community that I miss the most post fire. The friendly faces I had seen daily or weekly since I moved to be with my husband to his town of Pacific Palisades in 1990 when we graduated from law school.

One set of faces that I truly loved was the Flores family of Regal Cleaners. They took care of my suits when I was a practicing environmental attorney, my husband’s suits as an entertainment attorney who built his own law practice over these years and my now grown children’s clothing.

As my family grew, so did the Flores family, and I recall Cira’s pregnancy with twins, now 14. Lovely Cira was always smiling and handsome Antonio always wore beautifully patterned shirts. They were a warm part of the Palisades family that we almost took for granted until it was gone in a flash.

Boyle visits French Hand Laundry.

My husband read that the Regal family had reopened as French Hand Laundry in Pasadena and had saved the clothing from the Palisades. I called the number and was so happy to hear Cira’s voice. We made a day of it in Pasadena with the highlight, a visit to see the Flores family’s new business and see what memories they had saved for us.

The Flores Family

Cira and Antonio Flores bought Regal Cleaners on July 31, 2006, from previous owners.

“I have only good memories of Regal,” Cira said. “Palisadians took us in with a welcoming attitude. Before I knew it, I felt part of the community. We were blessed to get to know many, many people that made us feel appreciated, and we serviced their dry cleaning needs with pleasure.”

Cira described having a “big amount of clothing” from customers coming back from vacations on Monday, January 6.

“The morning of January 7, we were thinking, ‘It seems we are going to have a good year,’” Cira continued. “Then about 10:30 [a.m.], we could see the flames starting from the mountain in front of us. Anxiety started to take over our bodies, and we had to leave like everyone did.”

It took the Flores family about five weeks after the fire before they could go into the Village and find out the damage to their store.

“The feeling was indescribably hopeless,” Cira said. “We went back home to think how we were going to give customers back the clothes. During the few times we went inside the Village, some of the customers we saw, they took their clothes with smoke.”

At the start of February, Cira said they received a call about a location in Pasadena.

“Our idea was to go back to Regal as soon as they let us in and work in both stores, but we could not get an agreement with the landlord in the Palisades, so we removed all the inventory from Regal by March 31 when our lease was finished, and on April 1 we took over French Hand Laundry on 606 S Lake Avenue in Pasadena,” Cira said. “This store has a big empty room, which allowed us to do the smoke treatment for all the clothes from Regal, and now it’s all clean and ready to be picked up or mailed.”

Antonio is making trips to the Palisades every Wednesday, while Cira has been trying to contact all of their customers.

“The list is long,” Cira said, “so please call us at 626-792-3881 or even at my cell: 310-869-8615. It is really sad for me to say we won’t be able to go back to the Palisades, but I will always keep Palisadians in my heart.”

Preserving and Persevering

Seeing Cira and Antonio’s smiles again was very healing for me, and their new business is beautiful.

The biggest gift they saved for me: the kilt my husband bought for me in Ireland in his family tartan 35 years ago before I became a Boyle.

So many memories were preserved thanks to the Flores family’s care. I am deeply grateful for all the years of community with this special family, and wish them all success and love in their new community.

Double Dribble

OJ Popoola (left) and twin brother EJ (right) are ready to showcase their basketball talent at Palisades High in the winter.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

By STEVE GALLUZZO | Sports Editor

Thirty years after their father transferred to Palisades High, twin brothers Olujimi and Elijah Popoola are following in his footsteps. The 6-foot-6 juniors are two of the nation’s fastest rising prep basketball players in the 2027 class and it did not take them long to adapt to a new team and a new city.          

OJ and EJ made their summer league debuts against St. Pius X-St. Matthias on June 14 and five games in the two are already drawing college scouts’ attention. Last week they dominated at both ends of the floor and powered the Dolphins to a 4-0 record in the Fairfax Tournament at Pan Pacific Park. In the semifinal round on Friday versus Inglewood, OJ fed EJ for a layup that broke a 99-99 tie with 1:08 left, then OJ dunked a lob pass from Jack Levey for the clinching basket with 10.5 ticks to go and Palisades prevailed 106-102 despite a big game by Sentinels five-star recruit Jason Crowe Jr. The next day, OJ had 14 points and EJ added eight as the Dolphins routed Santa Monica by 40 points to win the championship.

OJ Popoola (left) and twin brother EJ (right) are ready to showcase their basketball talent at Palisades High in the winter.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

 

“We’ve only been in town for two weeks but we like it,” said EJ, a shooting guard. “We’ve been playing since we were very little.”

“Our dad wanted us to play for his alma mater,” point guard OJ added. “So here we are.”

Raised in Las Vegas, the twins aspire to be like their older brother Christian, who led Bishop Gorman to three state titles before graduating in 2017 and went on to play at the University of Utah.   

OJ and EJ each played in four games their freshman year at Arbor View High in Las Vegas and spent last season at Voyageur College Prep in Detroit. They already have two scholarship offers, from UNLV and California, but wherever the two end up signing they insist they are “a package deal.”   

Head coach Jeff Bryant is delighted the twins have enrolled at Palisades.

“They have 4.3 GPAs, they’re great kids and it’s the right place at the right time,” said Bryant, who is expecting a smooth a transition. “It makes sense for them to come to their dad’s old stomping grounds. It’s like a match made in heaven, love at first sight, they fit right in.”

Chris Popoola transferred from Westchester to Palisades his senior year (1995-96) and the Dolphins went 24-3 under coach James Paleno, winning their third straight Western League crown on their way to the City semifinals, where they fell to Crenshaw in overtime. One of his teammates that season was Donzell Hayes, who would later serve as the Dolphins’ head coach from 2016-23. Ironically, 1995-96 was the last time Palisades captured the outright league title (it finished in a three-way tie for first  with Westchester and Fairfax in 2011-12). So Popoola’s sons are plenty motivated to end a drought that began the year after Chris graduated (he went on to play two seasons at UNLV).

Bryant would like that a lot.

Helping the twins achieve that goal will be another transfer, BJ Evans, who attended Taft last season but did not play basketball. He scored 16 points against Santa Monica and is the younger brother of James Evans (now at UNLV), whom Bryant coached for four years at West Ranch High in Stevenson Ranch.

Bryant took over Palisades’ program in the spring of 2024 and in the middle of his first season the Palisades Fire destroyed several players’ homes and left the team without a gym on campus to practice or play in. Bryant scrambled to find alternate sites and navigated the Dolphins all the way to the semifinals of the City Open Division playoffs, then to the CIF Southern Californa Division III regional semifinals.

Palisades is currently practicing at UCLA but Bryant said he is “100 percent confident” the team will play in its own gym next winter. The Dolphins are expected to be one of the top teams in the City.

Summer Football Practice Kicks Off

Quarterback Caleb Burnett
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

By STEVE GALLUZZO | Sports Editor

The Palisades High football team came within one victory of capturing the City Section championship in program history last fall and the Dolphins figure to be serious contenders again in 2025.

Summer practice started Monday at Santa Monica College, where head coach Dylen Smith got his first look at the incoming freshman and newcomers  and liked what he saw.

Players were put through a series of drills to test their agility, stamina, strength, quickness and hand-eye coordination. Wind sprints capped off the two-and-a-half hour session, after which Smith had some encouraging words for his squad.

“All of the goals that we want to accomplish… everything we’re working towards begins right here and now,” he said. “We want to win the fourth quarter every game and to do that you have to be mentally tougher than the other team.      

Smith revealed that LeHenry Solomon (who led the Dolphins last season with 836 receiving yards and added 15 total touchdowns) is transferring to Chaminade, but the Dolphins still may have the best wideout corps in the City with speedster Demare Dezeurn (a junior transfer from Bishop Alemany in Mission Hills) joining King Demethris (41 catches for 714 yards) and Harrison Carter, who led the Dolphins with 2,218 all-purpose yards (1,124 rushing, 581 receiving and 513 on kick returns) and 18 total touchdowns. Dezeurn, one of the fastest high schoolers in the country, ran the 100-meter dash in 10.39 seconds to take third at the CIF state track and field finals in Clovis on May 31, one week after repeating as champion in the same event at the Southern Section Masters Meet in 10.35. He had 20 receptions for 451 yards in only seven games last season.   

“We should be the best skill-wise,” Smith added. “Harrison is one of the top wide receivers in the City and adding Demare makes us that much better. Birmingham has big, strong lines along with Carson and the other Marine League schools. That’s an aspect we’ll have to develop as we go.”

Sophomore quarterback Caleb Burnett launched  spiral after spiral during Monday’s afternoon workout and heeded the advice of Smith, himself a former quarterback at Santa Monica High.

“He needs reps but the thing I’m most impressed with is his coachability.” Smith said of Burnett, who transferred from WISH Academy in Los Angeles—a school that does not have a football program. “When I show him something he listens and tries to copy it.”      

Returners and varsity players report next week, including quarterback Jack Thomas. He won the Joe Spector Award as varsity Most Valuable Player, was named Western League Player of the Year in December and garnered City Division I Offensive MVP honors after throwing for 3,369 yards and 46 touchdowns and running for 570 yards and 12 scores.

Summer practice runs through July 25.

Smith is optimistic the blue and white can return to the  Open Division playoffs, the City’s highest level. Palisades made the eight-team bracket in his first season, losing 14-10 at Gardena in the quartertfinals.

The Dolphins finished 11-3 last season, dropping the Sunset Showdown to Brentwood 33-30 in overtime, losing to league rival Venice by a single point and falling to King/Drew 56-35 in the City Division I final at Birmingham High. The team reclaimed the Charter Bowl trophy with a 42-28 victory over Granada Hills and scored 63 points (a school playoff record) in the semifinals at Eagle Rock.

The team piled up 582 points in 14 games and averaged 400 yards per contest.          

Smith was an assistant coach under Jake Ford at Brentwood before being hired to head Palisades’ program in 2023. He has won 18 of his first 24 games at the helm, the second-best record for a head coach in their first two seasons at Palisades, trailing only his predecessor Chris Hyduke, who went 21-5.

   

Pali High Sports: Year in Review

Palisades High has won more City Section championships than any other school. Here is a recap of how far each Dolphins athletic program advanced in the postseasons in 2024-25:

FALL SPORTS

Boys Cross Country
Division I champion

Girls Cross Country
Division I Runner-Up

Girls Golf
Champion

Girls Tennis
Open Division Runner-Up

Girls Volleyball
Open Division Semifinals

Boys Water Polo
Open Division Runner-Up


WINTER SPORTS 

Boys Basketball
Open Division Semifinals

Girls Basketball
Open Division Semifinals

Boys Soccer
Open Division Quarters

Girls Soccer
Open Division Semifinals

Girls Water Polo
Open Division Finals

Competitve Cheer
Runner-Up (Varsity Large Division)

Boys Wrestling
Seventh Place

Girls Wrestling
15th Place


SPRING SPORTS

Baseball
Division I Quarterfinals

Boys Golf
Champion

Boys Lacrosse
Champion

Girls Lacrosse
Champion

Girls Beach Volleyball
Lost in First Round

Softball
Division I First Round

Boys Swimming
Runner-Up

Girls Swimming
Runner-Up

Boys Tennis
Champion

Boys Track & Field
Sixth Place

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Third Place

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Open Division Quarters

Will Rogers 5K to Be Run in Venice

2018 winner Natalie Marsh
Photo: Rich Schmitt
2014 winner Andrew Bland
Photo: Rich Schmitt
2019 winner Darby Green
Photo: Rich Schmitt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By STEVE GALLUZZO | Sports Editor

There is a distinct patriotism that permeates Pacific Palisades every Fourth of July morning and this year it will drift a few miles down the coast to Venice Beach for the annual Palisades Will Rogers Run.

What makes this year’s race unique, besides the location, is that for the first time there will be no 10K. For the first eight years, beginning in 1978, there was only the 6.2-mile route from the Palisades Recreation Center up to Will Rogers State Park and back. A 5K through the streets of the Huntington debuted in 1986 and because of the damage to that neighborhood caused by the Palisades Fire in January, the event will instead be held at Venice Beach on Independence Day. The Kids’ Fun Run will follow at 8:30 a.m., an hour and a half after the 5K.

2023 winner Noah Wexler
Photo: Craig Weston

The route is mostly flat and sraight and is slightly longer than the Palisades course. It starts at the intersection of Ocean Front Walk and Westminster Avenue, turns right at Brooks Avenue and right again onto Pacific Avenue just before the mile mark. After a left turn onto South Venice Blvd., the route continues up Venice Blvd., bends to the right at Abbot Kinney Blvd. and makes a U-turn at the two-mile mark, heading down Abbot Kinney in the opposite direction before turning left onto Venice Blvd., then right onto Pacific at the three-mile mark and finishing at Windward Plaza. The Fun Run will also be slightly longer than usual (0.65 miles instead of the half-mile course in the Palisades), starting and finishing at the Venice Beach Recreation Center.

Runners are encouraged to register early on the race website (runsignup.com/Race/CA/Venice/PalisadesWillRogers5K10KRun) at prices of $54.25 for the 5K and $32.75 for the Fun Run. No refunds allowed.

Providence Saint John’s Health Center will once again serve as the presenting sponsor. Others are the Cynthia L. & William E. Simon Foundation, Kennedy Wilson, Laura Brau Estates, LA Councilwoman Traci Park and American Legion Post 283. The Palisades Will Rogers  5 & 10K Run Foundation is supporting recovery efforts and race proceeds will go toward rebuilding the Palisades Recreation Center. Donations can be made on the website or by mail to Palisades Will Rogers 5 & 10K Run Foundation, P.O. Box 601, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272.

Brian Shea, Chris Carlson and Bill Klein founded the race and Shea served as director until passing the torch to Thomas Hathaway in 2023. Locals have enjoyed great success at their hometown race over the years, particularly Palisades High alums Peter Gilmore (eight-time 5K champion and course recordholder), Katie Dunsmuir (six-time 10K champion and course recordholder) and 11-time champion Kara Barnard, who won the 5K five times and won the 10K on six occasions.   

Last year’s 5K winners were UC Santa Barbara runner Gus Marshall, whose 15:40 clocking was the fastest since the course was lengthened by 427 feet and to gain USATF certification in 2015. Santa Monica High’s Phoebe Benun was last year’s female 5K winner in 19:13.     

The Dick Lemen Perpetual Trophy will again be awarded to the winner of the high school competition (sign-ups available on the race website). Participating schools must enter at least three runners between the ages of 14-18 to be eligible.

Last year’s July 4 race drew 2,470 runners (1,828 in the 5K and 642 in the 10K)—the biggest field since the event resumed in 2022 following a two-year hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic.