California
Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer on California OT Jackson Lloyd: ‘He’s just an athlete’
The 2,220-mile route from Carmel, California to Tuscaloosa, Ala. is a road less taken.
Known for its picturesque oceanside views, upscale cafes, art galleries and chilli temperatures, Carmel is a destination spot for romantic couples, oversea vacationers and retirees. It’s considered somewhere between sleepy and peaceful on the tranquil meter.
It has little in common with the sweltering west-central Alabama town of Tuscaloosa, population 100,000, which no doubt captures the Southern charm of the region, but is most certainly famous for the University of Alabama and its Crimson Tide football team.
City leaders, in fact, gave it the moniker “The City of Champions,” thanks to the national championships hauled in by the Tide in 2011, 2012, 2015, 2017 and 2020.
On Wednesday, these two points connected officially when Carmel’s behemoth 6-foot-7, 285-pound offensive tackle Jackson Lloyd signed a letter of intent to play for Alabama and coach Kalen DeBoer spent more time talking about the three-sport standout than any of his other 20 signees.
Besides being ranked the No. 4 overall recruit from the Class of 2025, Lloyd is also a star basketball player who led the Padres to a Central Coast Section championship last winter and he was also a standout baseball player.
He’ll be the first Monterey County football player ever to play for the University of Alabama or in the Southeastern Conference.
Jackson first came on DeBoer’s radar when he was the head coach at Fresno State at a youth camp.
“Just to be really blunt, I mean, you see his size, and you flip on the film, that’s one thing, you see his athleticism,” DeBoer told a group of reporters Wednesday. “But you look at basketball, baseball, football — the guy is an athlete.
“So you got this big body. Then you got this athlete and you’ve got a mindset. I don’t know if there’s ever been a time where I haven’t talked to him — and I know there is — but where I haven’t either called him or he’s texted me and I texted back, ‘What are you doing?’ And it involves a workout that he just finished or that you’re heading to. So you just love that about him that he just loves the grind.
“He loves just sport in general and all the things that he’s done, being a part of different athletic teams, the different sports. Just really — and that coordination is there and the footwork’s there — and now that he really just focuses on football you can probably imagine what that’s gonna be when you get a year-round program here just focusing on that alone.”
Before he leaves for Tuscaloosa at the end of the month — he plans to graduate early from Carmel and enroll early at Alabama — he’s hoping to bring home a historic state title. The Padres (13-0) host Acalanes in a CIF State Division 5-AA championship game Friday at Monterey Peninsula College.
The winner advances to the state finals next week in Southern California.
No matter how it turns out, he’ll go down as arguably the best lineman Monterey County has ever seen, said Monterey Herald longtime journalist John Devine.
That’s a mouthful, considering the County has produced some excellent NFL products, including Pleasant Grove’s Eric Mahlum (Indianapolis), Chris Dalman (49ers), Dalman’s son Drew Dalman (currently with the Falcons) and North Salinas’ Carl Nicks, who won a Super Bowl with the Saints and was at one time the highest paid guard in the NFL.
“(Nicks) is as close to a comparison to Jackson I can think of in terms of size and athletic ability,” said Devine, who has written stories in Monterey County since 1979. “(Nicks) was a basketball and track guy and threw the shot put 50-some feet.”
Besides being a four-year varsity lineman for the Padres, he was the co-MVP of the Pacific Coast Athletic League’s Gabilan Division in basketball by averaging 15.8 points and 9.8 rebounds per game — “he was a double-double machine,” Devine said — and despite coming out four weeks late for baseball due to the late hoop run, he was 2-0 on the mound with a save and blasted three home runs.
Interestingly, football came third in his own pecking order, never having played tackle football until his freshman year. He was a 305-pound eighth-grade flag-football quarterback who grew to quickly love the sport while growing three inches and shedding 35 pounds by playing three sports.
Ohio State offensive coordinator Chip Kelly, then the UCLA head coach, encouraged Jackson to keep playing three sports. A late-bloomer to weight lifting as well, Jackson’s improvement in football was immense and why he climbed the recruiting ranks.
“I’ve never focused on one sport,” Jackson told Devine after being named the region’s 2023-24 Athlete of the Year. “I’ve only played tackle football for three years. I am excited to see how my game takes off at the next level.”
Before then, he has one more go-around with the Padres.
“Playing with my best friends one last time means the world to me,” Lloyd told John Devine of the Monterey Herald. “I just hope we can end it on a good note.”
California
California Islamic calligraphy artist preserves ancient tradition during Arab American Heritage Month
As Arab American Heritage Month is celebrated, one Northern California artist is keeping the centuries-old tradition of Islamic calligraphy alive, one carefully measured stroke at a time.
Sehar Shahzad is a student calligrapher. Before starting any project, Shahzad said “one of the first things that calligraphers learn is how to cut their pens.”
Her tools must be in pristine condition.
“Your instruments are just as important as anything else in this art,” she said.
Shahzad said that as a young girl growing up in Toronto, she took up Islamic calligraphy while reflecting on her religion.
“It’s not like I’d never seen it before, but it was my first time kind of trying it,” she said. “And there’s no other way to say it except that I just fell in love with it.”
Now married with three children, Islamic calligraphy is very much part of her life.
“I remember thinking that this isn’t something that I just want to learn for fun,” she said. “I really want to be able to master it.”
Shahzad said that every angle and curve follows strict geometric rules and is measured with dots.
“For example, this letter here was just a little bit too long, so we use these nuqtas to help us guide and understand how long that letter should be,” she said.
Like the Arabic language, Islamic calligraphy is read from right to left. Its bold simplicity requires precision and a deep understanding of proportion.
“When you’re creating a composition, it’s not only about the letter itself,” Shahzad said. “It’s about composition as a whole and making sure that everything balances together.”
Even though she’s still mastering her form, Shahzad’s work is featured in the prayer room of a Muslim cemetery in Napa and in the domes of mosques in San Jose, Hayward, and San Francisco.
Still, she considers her work on paper the most special.
“A form of meditation, a form of worship, requires focus, requires discipline, really brings me to a different space,” Shahzad said. “And I think that’s what I love most.”
Proving that in this fast-paced world, this millennia-long tradition is far from disappearing.
Shahzad’s work will be featured at the upcoming Light Upon Light art exhibit at the Tarbiya Institute in Roseville from April 24-26.
California
California sees lowest number of firearm-related deaths since 1968, new data shows
LOS ANGELES (KABC) — California Attorney General Rob Bonta on Tuesday highlighted what he called historic progress in the state’s fight against gun violence.
“California has achieved something historic with the lowest rates of firearm deaths, suicides and homicides on record,” he said during a press conference.
According to Bonta, in 2024, California saw the lowest numbers of firearm-related deaths since 1968. That also drove the state’s overall homicide rate to its lowest level on record in Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, Bonta’s office said.
However, Bonta warned lawmakers that those gains could be at risk without continued investment.
“This progress is fragile,” he said. “It was driven in part by significant investments that are now declining or disappearing, and without continued and increased investment, we risk losing it.”
Bonta urged policymakers to continue advancing gun violence prevention efforts and education initiatives.
To learn more, click here.
Copyright © 2026 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.
California
California lawmaker introduces bill to protect wildlife from euthanasia, create coexistence program
A Southern California state senator has proposed a new law that would prevent euthanasia in the state’s wildlife just a month after a mother bear was put down for swiping at a woman in Monrovia, feet away from where her two cubs were located.
The legislation, SB 1135, which was introduced by Sen. Catherine Blakespear (D-Encinitas), calls for the establishment of a state program that promotes the coexistence with wildlife and codifies a wolf-livestock coexistence and compensation program. The move comes two years after funding for a similar wildlife coexistence program expired.
“We can and must responsibly support people and wild animals to exist in a California where we are all under growing pressures and cumulative threats like extreme heat, frequent drought and intense wildfires that animals respond to by moving in search of resources to survive,” Sen. Blakespear said in a statement. “That means investing in science-based, situation-specific, proactive strategies to minimize negative interactions and prevent escalation to conflicts that pose risks for people and animals. SB 1135 proposes a program to better protect people, wildlife and communities.”
The proposed coexistence program, which would be allocated nearly $50 million through the state’s 2026-27 budget, would build on the previous version, which deployed trained regional human-wildlife conflict staff around the state. The absence was noted by CDFW leaders during a state Assembly meeting in January, according to Blakespear.
“Over the last five years, wildlife incident reports logged by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) increased by 31 percent and calls, emails and field contacts rose by 58 percent,” Blakespear’s proposal says.
She noted the recent headline across the state, including “Blondie,” the Monrovia mother bear who was captured and put down by wildlife officials in March after it swiped at a woman near the home it was living under with its two cubs.
The home in question belongs to Richard Franco. He, along with many other Monrovia residents, has documented his encounters with bears over the years, even setting up a system of trail cameras to track the bears’ movements.
“Getting to know her, you could see what a devoted mother she was,” Franco said. “She was always building a nest.”
Read more: Orphaned bear cubs taken to San Diego for care after mom is euthanized for attacking people
Franco and many of his neighbors were angered upon learning that CDFW officials had euthanized Blondie after her capture, which they credited to the fact that she had swiped at the woman days earlier and another person in 2025.
“Forcing them out, and then euthanizing the mom was just traumatic for us,” said one Monrovia couple. “It was just tragic, and there was no need for it; it was completely unnecessary.”
Situations like this are what caught Blakespear’s attention, leading to her proposal last week.
“It is really my desire to make sure that wild places stay wild, and not be having to resort to lethal measures like killing bears or killing wolves,” Blakespear said, while speaking with CBS LA. “We need to have a program that is up and going so we can be educating people.”
The program calls for focus on public education, maintaining a statewide incident reporting system and deploying devices like barriers, noise and light machines and other technology that would deter predators from places where they shouldn’t be.
SB 1135 passed on a 5-1 vote and will now be considered by the Senate Appropriations Committee.
-
Health6 minutes agoGrieving mom hospitalized with rare ‘broken heart syndrome’ after veteran son’s suicide
-
Sports12 minutes agoAustin Reaves nearing return for Lakers as Luka Doncic remains out indefinitely with hamstring strain: report
-
Technology18 minutes agoMichael and Susan Dell surpass $1 billion in donations backing AI-driven hospital project
-
Business24 minutes agoContributor: ICE raids and migrant pay cuts are devastating California economies
-
Entertainment30 minutes agoReview: Monica Lewinsky, a saint? This devastatingly smart romance goes there
-
Lifestyle35 minutes agoWhat are Angelenos giving away in one Buy Nothing group? All this treasured stuff
-
Politics42 minutes agoCommentary: He honked to support a ‘No Kings’ rally. A cop busted him
-
Sports54 minutes agoSun Valley Poly High’s Fabian Bravo shows flashes of Koufax dominance
