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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • The Pali-Post is staging a comeback
    Several empty lots are shown in the Pacific Palisades, some have houses being built on them and some are completely barren. Some houses are more complete than others. Construction equipment can be seen at the top left corner along the street.
    The Pacific Palisades will welcome back its local newspaper after suffering widespread devastation from last January's Palisades Fire.

    Topline:

    The Palisadian-Post, the nearly century-old community paper covering the Pacific Palisades, has found new buyers. The first issue is planned for May.

    Why it matters: The newspaper closed its doors at the end of last year after an exodus of subscribers and advertisers following the Palisades Fire.

    Why now: Palisadians and married couple Tim and Laura Schneider have always loved the paper and decided to purchase it.

    At the end of last year, community newspaper the Palisadian-Post shuttered its doors after 97 years in operation.

    Subscriptions evaporated after January’s fires, as did advertisers, according to a departing message from former owner Alan Smolinisky.

    In the months since, a pair of longtime Palisades residents have stepped up to acquire the beloved community paper.

    Under new management

    “The Palisadian-Post was a part of the reason we moved to Pacific Palisades, because the paper's role in providing a part of the character of the community was that strong,” said Tim Schneider, co-owner of the new Palisadian-Post.

    Schneider had tried to buy the paper before 24 years ago, when he and his family first moved to the Pacific Palisades.

    “We've chronicled our children growing up in the pages of the Palisadian-Post, like a lot of Palisadians,” said Laura Schneider, also co-owner of the newspaper.

    The married couple comes from long careers in the publishing industry. When they heard about the paper shutting down last December, they sprang into action and began negotiating a purchase.

    Tim says that despite the struggles the community faces, it’s a dream come true to have the chance to continue a nearly century-old tradition with the Pali-Post.

    A couple stand next to each other and pose for a picture. They smile at the camera. The woman on the left is dressed in white. The man on the right is dressed in black and blue. A city can be seen in the background.
    Laura (left) and Tim Schneider (right) , the new owners of the Palisadian-Post, pose for a picture.
    (
    Suzanne Trepp
    /
    Palisadian-Post
    )

    Something old, something new

    The paper’s relaunch is set for May 4, the paper's 98th anniversary.

    “The first step in the relaunch process is going to be gathering community feedback,” said Laura.

    The two have been making calls to former employees and residents of the Palisades, looking for input on what they want out of this new iteration. One thing they say they’d like to see is a sustained focus on the recovery.

    “ He needs to hire a news reporter who's focused on the rebuilding of the Palisades. That's a huge theme, obviously, all the aspects of the rebuilding,” said Bill Bruns, editor emeritus with the Palisadian-Post. Bruns was a longtime editor who's been advising the Schneiders on the relaunch.

    After January, Tim says people went to various sources to get information to track the Palisade Fire's chaotic aftermath. He thinks a newspaper like the Pali-Post is a better place to provide readers with authoritative and reliable information.

    He says he wants the paper to be a central information hub for the thousands of Palisadians who have been displaced.

    “ We have 5,000 Palisadians living in Santa Monica, more than 3,000 Palisadians living in Brentwood," he estimated. "So our approach with the Palisadian-Post is to use it as the connective thread that ties together Palisadians."

    A man stands next to a sign that says "Pacific Palisades Post". He is in green and wears a hat and gray pants. A woman in a blue shirt and jeans kneels to take a picture of him.
    Former Pali-Post editor Bill Bruns stands in front of the old "Pacific Palisades Post" building on Via de la Paz. The building held the newsroom as well as the paper's printing press.
    (
    Bill Bruns
    /
    Bill Bruns
    )

    Staging a comeback

    In its new iteration, the paper will be strictly digital, with a new website, daily newsletter and community calendar to give readers a full range of events in the neighborhood — recovery-related or otherwise.

    In time, the couple hopes to bring back a physical edition of the paper.

    Several former advertisers the Schneiders have talked to are committed to coming back.

    “ I'm happy to say, not only have all of them committed to supporting the new Palisadian-Post, but we've heard from dozens of businesses that have indicated an interest in getting involved for the first time,” said Tim.

    Beloved favorite columns of the paper are returning too, like the local Two-Cents section written by residents.

    The first event planned is going to be the "Pali Bee" — the local Spelling Bee that the newspaper sponsored in previous years.

    Laura says that despite the last 15 months of difficulties, the sense of community in the Palisades remains strong. The two hope that strength will get the newspaper and the community back on its feet.

    “ That's something very special about this town, and that's something that we hope that we can tap into as we bring the Palisadian-Post back," Laura said. "This town has tremendous heart. And that's a big part of the story that we wanna tell."

  • Their incomes and tax payments
    Photo illustration shows the seal of the governor of the State of California on a lectern and a state flag in a stand nearby.
    Press conference of governor of the state of California concept. Seal of the governor of the State of California on the tribune with flag of USA and California state. 3d illustration

    Topline:

    We already knew that Democrat Tom Steyer, a billionaire running for California governor, is rich. But how rich?

    The backstory: A 2019 state law, designed to better inform California voters, requires candidates for governor to release their federal tax returns to qualify for the June primary ballot.

    Why now: Among major candidates, only Chad Bianco, Matt Mahan, Katie Porter and Tony Thurmond have already filed their 2025 tax returns.

    Read on for highlights...

    We already knew that Democrat Tom Steyer, a billionaire running for California governor, is rich. But how rich?

    In 2024, Steyer and his wife, Kat Taylor, reported a total income of $39 million, thanks to the duo’s massive investments in the global stock market. That’s more than all nine of his major opponents in the governor’s race and their partners made that year combined, according to their federal tax returns released this week.

    A 2019 state law, designed to better inform California voters, requires candidates for governor to release their federal tax returns to qualify for the June primary ballot. Among major candidates, only Chad Bianco, Matt Mahan, Katie Porter and Tony Thurmond have already filed their 2025 tax returns.

    Here are some highlights:

    Tom Steyer

    Income: $39 million in 2024, primarily from massive investments in the global stock market. They also made $6 million in passive income in Luxembourg, Netherlands, Bermuda and the Cayman Islands in 2024. They collected $38,000 in royalties from other properties and earned $23,000 from TomKat Ranch, their 1,800-acre cattle ranch in Pescadero.

    Federal taxes paid: $5.4 million in 2024 — 54 times the average annual California household income.

    Their earnings swing with the market: In 2021, they reported $160 million in income from investments and paid $39 million in taxes. But in 2022, they made a paltry $8 million and paid $1 million.

    The couple regularly file tax returns in dozens of states each year (19 in 2024) and pay taxes abroad, too. Steyer also has a United Kingdom bank account, which at one point had a balance of $61 million in 2024.

    The pair are big on philanthropy, donating $18 million in 2024, including $3 million in stock to Yale University and $1.5 million in stock to TomKat Foundation, the couple’s philanthropic nonprofit.

    Steve Hilton

    Income: $7.5 million in 2024, including $250,000 from Fox News and $6.7 million his wife, Rachel Whetstone, made as chief communications officer at Netflix. The couple also earned $360,000 from global investments but reported a net $3,000 loss in capital gains.

    The couple received another $25,000 that year in rent from three properties in London, including two flats in the trendy Camden area. Hilton, a Republican, reported losing more than $226,000 on his media company CR Productions.

    Federal taxes paid: $2.8 million in 2024.

    Eric Swalwell

    Income: $461,000 in 2024, including his $184,000 congressional salary and $247,000 from his wife Brittany’s consulting work. The couple had a $41,000 home mortgage interest deduction in 2024. Rivals have challenged the Democrat’s California residency, though he lists a Bay Area rental as his primary residence.

    Federal taxes paid: $83,000 in 2024.

    Katie Porter

    Income: $300,000 in 2025, nearly all from her salary as a law professor at the University of California-Irvine. Porter, a Democrat, also collects royalties from book sales: She made $140,000 in 2023 from books she authored, including two textbooks and her memoir ‘I Swear: Politics Is Messier Than My Minivan’ published that year. She earned $18,000 in 2024 and $3,500 last year in royalties.

    Federal taxes paid: $58,000 in 2025.

    Chad Bianco

    Income: $590,000 in 2025, jointly with his wife Denise Bianco. Bianco’s return don’t break down the Republican’s wages, but his base salary as sheriff was $348,000 in 2024, after the Riverside County Board of Supervisors gave him a 27% pay raise that May.

    He was already the highest paid sheriff in the state in 2023, earning more than $593,000 in total compensation, which includes benefits such as a pension and health care coverage.

    Federal taxes paid: $127,000 in 2025.

    Xavier Becerra

    Income: $490,000 in 2024, jointly with his UC Davis physician wife Carolyn Reyes. That includes Becerra’s nearly $250,000 salary at the time as U.S. Health and Human Services secretary in the Biden administration. The couple leased out four single-family homes that made them a net profit of $110,000.

    Federal taxes paid: $116,000 in 2024.

    Tony Thurmond

    Income: $309,000 in 2025 — $203,000 as superintendent of public instruction and $18,000 from Integrated Community Services, a San Rafael-based disability supportive service where he worked as a supportive living aide, one of several side jobs the Democrat has held. Wife Vanessa Wiarco earned $87,000 as community engagement manager with KVCR Public Media at San Bernardino Community College.

    Federal taxes paid: $52,000 in 2025.

    Antonio Villaraigosa

    Income: $1.4 million in 2024, most of which came from Actum, a business consulting firm with offices worldwide, including Los Angeles and Sacramento, and his own firm, Antonio Villaraigosa LLC. He also collected a $125,000 pension as the former Democratic mayor of Los Angeles. He and his wife Patricia filed their taxes separately.

    Federal taxes paid: $462,000 in 2024.

    Betty Yee

    Income: $211,000 in 2024, almost all of which came from pensions and Social Security benefits. Yee, a Democrat, reported $1,300 in consulting and teaching income and her husband, Steven Jacobs, a rabbi with no reported income. The couple received $54,000 from selling a timeshare in October 2024. In 2021, the couple also reported $3,400 in gambling income in 2021.

    Yee, who was California controller until January 2023, received an annual salary of roughly $157,000 in 2022 and $13,000 in 2023, when the job ended in January.

    Federal taxes paid: $24,000 in 2024.

    Matt Mahan

    Income: $507,000 in 2025, including his San Jose mayoral salary of $226,000 and his wife Silvia Scandar Mahan’s salary of $267,000 as president of Cristo Rey San Jose High School. In 2024, the couple claimed $14,000 in clean energy credits for using solar-powered electricity.

    Federal taxes paid: $99,000 in 2025.

    CalMatters’ Jeanne Kuang and Juliet Williams contributed reporting. 

  • Sponsored message
  • A 'Lord of the Rings' script

    Topline:

    Stephen Colbert is co-writing a new Lord of the Rings movie, Warner Bros. Pictures and New Line Cinema announced.

    The backstory: Colbert is a Tolkien fan — he even had a cameo appearance in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug in 2013. He will co-write a new movie with his son, screenwriter Peter McGee, and LOTR veteran screenwriter Philippa Boyens. Its working title is Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past. 

    Stephen Colbert is co-writing a new Lord of the Rings movie, Warner Bros. Pictures and New Line Cinema announced.

    "We've got a very special partner that we're working with," said filmmaker Peter Jackson in a video shared across social media at midnight on Wednesday before introducing the comedian and Late Show host via video call.

    Colbert is a Tolkien fan — he even had a cameo appearance in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug in 2013. He will co-write a new movie with his son, screenwriter Peter McGee, and LOTR veteran screenwriter Philippa Boyens. Its working title is Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past. 

    Colbert said in the video with Jackson that the film will adapt six early chapters — "Three is company" through "Fog on the Barrow-downs" — from The Fellowship of the Ring, the first book of J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy. These chapters were not part of the first film.

    "I thought, 'Oh wait, maybe that could be its own story that could fit into the larger story,'" Colbert said. "'Could we make something that was completely faithful to the books while also being completely faithful to the movies that you guys had already made?'"

    Colbert said he and his son, McGee, worked out what they thought might be a framing device for the story.

    "It took me a few years for me to scrape my courage into a pile to give you a call," joked Colbert to Jackson.

    Warner Bros. sent the film's synopsis in a release: "Fourteen years after the passing of Frodo — Sam, Merry, and Pippin set out to retrace the first steps of their adventure. Meanwhile, Sam's daughter, Elanor, has discovered a long-buried secret and is determined to uncover why the War of the Ring was very nearly lost before it even began."

    Shadow of the Past is one of two upcoming films in the Lord of the Rings franchise. Andy Serkis, who plays Gollum in the films, is directing The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum, which takes place in between the fictional timelines of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.

    Warner Bros. has not announced a release date for Shadow of the Past, but it will come after The Hunt for Gollum, which is expected in Dec. 2027.

    "I did not think I'd have the time," Colbert laughed in the video about finding the hours to work on the new movie. But, he said, "It turns out I'm gonna be free starting this summer."

    Last year, CBS announced that it was canceling The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, days after Colbert publicly criticized Paramount — CBS's parent company — for paying $16 million to settle a lawsuit filed by President Trump over claims that CBS interfered in the 2024 election by airing edited segments of an interview with Kamala Harris. The Late Show will air its final episode on May 21, more than 30 years after David Letterman first hosted in 1993.

    Paramount is also set to buy Warner Bros. Discovery in a massive, nearly $111 billion merger deal.

    "If you'll excuse me, I've gotta finish a television show and I've gotta write a movie script, but I will see you all in the shire," Colbert said in the video.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • The Dodgers’ new minor league team
    The front gate of a modern, small baseball stadium.
    The Ontario Tower Buzzers' inaugural season starts April 2. It's the new team in the Dodgers' minor league system.

    Topline:

    The Single-A Ontario Tower Buzzers begins their inaugural season on April 2. This new Dodgers’ minor league team is already making history as the Dodgers try to make their own (can you say three-peat?!).

    Why it matters: The Ontario Tower Buzzers are a new team in a new stadium, expected to energize youth baseball in the Ontario area and insert energy into the region’s business.

    Why now: The team has been in development for years and hopes to succeed by engaging various groups in the Ontario community, such as youth baseball, and businesses.

    See a future hall of famer?: Most of Tower Buzzers’ players are between 19 and 22 years old, out of high school and college, along with players from other countries. All have major league dreams.

    What's next: The Tower Buzzers’ Opening Day is April 2. The cheapest tickets for that day cost just over $37. I know, you can buy four of them for what the cheapest Dodgers’ Opening Day ticket is going for on MLB.com.

    Go deeper: The fair-weather fan guide to the 2026 Dodgers season.
     

    You may not be familiar with the Ontario Tower Buzzers. But if all goes to plan, you soon will.

    The Dodgers’ new minor league team begins its inaugural season Thursday playing in a new stadium, ONT Field. (ONT is the code for Ontario International Airport).

    The Single-A team will throw its first pitch as the Dodgers begin what could be a historic season in Major League Baseball (can you say three-peat?!). History will already be made when the first fans go through the turnstile at the Ontario stadium on Opening Day.

    “This has been a dream for a lot of people, for a better part of two decades, to bring a minor league baseball team here,” said Tower Buzzers General Manager Allan Benavides.

    That name

    It’s hard enough to explain what a dodger is, but what’s a tower buzzer?

    “Obviously a straight nod to the movie Top Gun,” Benavides said. In that 1986 film, Tom Cruise plays a reckless fighter pilot, nicknamed Maverick, who flies closer than allowed to the runway control tower.

    The aviation theme is built into the stadium’s design along with signage of Ontario Airport, the team’s title sponsor. The mascot, appropriately, is Maverick, an aviation glasses-wearing giant bee (as in “buzzers”), and uniforms hue to the Dodgers’ style, with “Buzzers” proclaimed on jerseys.

    A baseball team mascot that looks like a yellow bird in a baseball uniform.
    "Maverick" is the Ontario Tower Buzzers' mascot.
    (
    Courtesy Ontario Tower Buzzers
    )
    A baseball feld seen from the stands. There are no players on the field.
    ONT Field is in the new stadium for the Ontario Tower Buzzers. The stadium has an aviation theme. Its lead sponsor is Ontario Airport.
    (
    Courtesy Ontario Tower Buzzers
    )

    Who’s on first?

    Most of Tower Buzzers’ players are between 19 and 22 years old, out of high school and college, along with players from other countries. Keep an eye on the team’s web site as it announces the list of players who made it on the team roster.

    Tickets, $$$???

    Remember when Dodgers tickets felt affordable? Currently the cheapest tickets are selling for about $178 on MLB.com. Tickets for the Tower Buzzers’ Opening Day start at just over $37.

    The Ontario Tower Buzzers are a Single-A team, the lowest rung in a minor league system with Triple-A teams at the top.

    The Oklahoma City Comets is the Dodgers’ triple-A minor league team, where the Dodgers’ players closest to entering the major leagues play.

    Future stars

    And that means it's possible to see a future hall of famer at a single-A game.

    “My little brother and I went to a Quakes game when Mike Trout was playing with the [Rancho Cucamonga] Quakes and we were there when he hit a grand slam to win a playoff game for them,” said Jonathan Campos, president of the Ontario Mountain View Little League.

    The Tower Buzzers’ inaugural season is a big deal for youth baseball in the region, Campos said, and his Little League in particular. His league’s four fields are across the street from the Tower Buzzers’ new stadium and that’s generated a lot of interest among his players to have a night for his league at a Tower Buzzers’ game this season.

  • New mental health support group launches in SGV
    Three pairs of hands are clasped on their respective owners' laps.
    A new support group for Chinese speakers with in-language facilitators starts Monday.

    Topline:

    A new Mandarin-language family support group is launching Monday in the San Gabriel Valley to help Chinese-speaking families navigate the challenges of caring for loved ones in mental health crisis.

    Why it matters: Organizers say the program, years in the making, aims to reduce isolation and language barriers for families dealing with mental illness in one of the country's largest immigrant communities.

    Why now: The program has been able to train up in-language facilitators and has fresh funding. The launch comes amid heightened stress for immigrant families amid the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, making cultural and language support feel more urgent than ever.

    Read on... to learn more about the program.

    When someone goes through a mental health crisis, their loved ones are thrown into a maze of urgent, high-stakes decisions.

    Where to get care? How to deal with insurance? When to call 911?

    For those in L.A.’s large Chinese immigrant community with limited English, helping a loved one can be especially challenging and isolating.

    Starting Monday, a new Mandarin-language family support group in the San Gabriel Valley aims to provide a much-needed resource, coordinated by the National Alliance on Mental Illness in L.A. County.

    Monthly meetings will be at the Holiday Inn in El Monte, held at night to accommodate people’s work schedules, and open to anyone from the region.

    “For recent immigrants, but also even long-term residents who just aren't comfortable communicating in English the way they are in their native language, it just made such sense for us to do it,” said Richard Tom, president of the San Gabriel Valley chapter of NAMI.

    Years in the making, the support group happens to be rolling out at a time of heightened anxiety for immigrant communities amid the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Tom said providing support in Mandarin could help lower barriers for those who might hesitate to seek help.

    “Obviously, right now, with immigration an issue, there is also a sensitivity to access in-language for folks who might otherwise be frightened of going to places where they're going to perhaps be misunderstood,” he said.

    Removing stigma

    Tom said the support group not only removes the language hurdles but also recognizes the cultural stigma many participants may be navigating.

    “There’s sort of what you expect in a lot of cultures, which is sort of an embarrassment and shame associated with having someone who has a mental health issue,” Tom said.

    Organizers say that despite L.A.’s large Chinese-speaking population, no consistent, in-language family support group has existed locally in recent years.

    An Asian woman in a black shirt stands in front of a projector screen that reads "Facilitator Training: Introduction to the Model."
    Seven locals were trained by a Bay Area facilitator Elaine Peng to lead a Chinese-language support group in the San Gabriel Valley.
    (
    NAMI San Gabriel Valley
    )

    One of the biggest obstacles has been finding Chinese-speaking family members and friends able to go through the two-day-long facilitator training and commit to leading the support group indefinitely — all the while caring for someone struggling with mental illness.

    At the same time, the concept of peer support — turning to others with lived experience rather than professionals — is still unfamiliar in many Chinese immigrant communities, said Nancy Eng, a NAMI SGV board member.

    But, “one of the reasons that the support group is so great is it gives a visual and also the sense when you're together in the room, the headaches that you’re dealing with — the exhaustion, the frustration — you're not alone,” Eng said.

    Trying your best

    The Chinese-language program is launching with seven facilitators, all of whom have personal experience supporting a loved one with mental illness.

    Support groups can normalize the idea of seeking professional help, coordinators say, acting as a bridge to therapists or psychiatrists for both the person experiencing crisis, as well as for their loved ones.

    Fellow members can also share their experiences with painful decisions such as seeking involuntary treatment or watching a loved one enter the criminal justice system.

    In a support group, Tom said, families hear something they rarely hear elsewhere: that they are doing the best they can.

    “There’s an element of validation that is very powerful for people,” he said.

    Mary YanYan Chan, who is coordinating the Chinese language program, said her own experience in a support group has helped her deal with a sister with untreated bipolar disorder.

    “I'm just kind of following the steps, and in the interim, I'm going to help others behind me, to bring them forward, because this is really community work,” Chan said.

    A grant from Cedars-Sinai is helping to support the initial rollout through the summer. But organizers say its future will depend on participation and securing a long-term space, hopefully with a community organization.

    Details

    When: Mondays on a monthly basis, from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
    Where: Holiday Inn, 9920 Valley Blvd., 1st floor, El Monte
    Info: mchan@namiglac.org