Sports
2026 NBA Draft potential No. 1 pick reshaping NIL, basketball: Meet AJ Dybantsa
BROCKTON, Mass. — The first time AJ Dybantsa got paid for basketball, he didn’t want the money.
When the nation’s top recruit was named Massachusetts Gatorade Player of the Year as a high school freshman, it came with a cash prize: $1,000. That was a lot of money for a 14-year-old who insists he didn’t even get good at basketball until a year before.
For a teenager, that can go toward video games, shoes or even his future. But Dybantsa didn’t want it for himself. Instead, he thought about Brazzaville.
He first visited his father Ace’s hometown, the capital of Congo, when he was 4. Ace and his wife, Chelsea, used the trip to give their son perspective on their life back in Brockton and the importance of giving back to the community.
So, when the Gatorade check arrived, Dybantsa didn’t know what to do with it. Keeping it didn’t feel right.
“Do it for your heart,” Ace told his son. “Don’t take the money. That will come later.”
Ever since then, the 17-year-old Dybantsa has done things differently.
“Don’t take anything for granted,” Dybantsa told The Athletic recently. “People are less fortunate and don’t have what we have. If I continue this route, I’m going to get a lot more money than that. So, I might as well just donate (that check) back to the community.”
Name, image and likeness (NIL) rights have transformed American amateur sports, and Dybantsa has been Poseidon riding this financial wave. He was the third male basketball player to sign a sneaker deal with Nike while still playing in high school and then became the newest face of Red Bull soon thereafter. Dybantsa rose toward the top of his class at St. Sebastian’s, a Boston-area school, and then became the hottest teenage free agent in the sport when he signed lucrative deals with Prolific Prep (Calif.) as a junior and then Utah Prep as a senior.
Ace had a plan for his kids, AJ, Jasmyn and Samarra, before they were even born, getting a job as a police officer at Boston University so they could get free tuition. But when they turned out to be promising athletes, their plans changed.
“AJ, when he was in sixth grade, he said, ‘Dad, I’m not going to BU,’ ” Ace recalled with a laugh. “I said, ‘God dammit!’ ”
AJ expected to use the majority of this season to study all his college options and make a decision before March Madness. He had blue bloods Kansas and North Carolina in his final four, but Alabama and BYU were right there with them. Then, just before Thanksgiving, Dybantsa told his parents it was time. He was ready to commit after catching a BYU game in person Nov. 16.
Dybantsa will likely arrive in Provo, Utah, as the presumptive No. 1 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, unequivocally the biggest star in college basketball for a year.
“He’s what the NBA is looking for,” said a NBA front-office executive, who was granted anonymity so they could speak freely. “Wings with legitimate size that understand the game, can create offense and then, in theory, can guard multiple guys.”
When Dybantsa donated the Gatorade check to the local Boys & Girls Club as a high school freshman, he presumed that money coming later would be once he shook NBA commissioner Adam Silver’s hand on draft night. But NIL exploded overnight, and Dybantsa was the star of the bidding war that has defined this new era of college basketball.
AJ Dybantsa meets a young fan at a school in his hometown of Brockton, MA. (Jared Weiss / The Athletic)
The irony was he had no idea how much he was making. Ace’s job was to handle the business side; AJ’s job was books and ball.
“People just gonna talk, but I (didn’t) even know how much I’m getting. They just tell my dad all of that,” Dybantsa said. “I’m trying to make it to the NBA, so wherever they can get me the fastest there with the best development, there’s a whole lot of pillars that come with it. Money’s going to come if I do the work, so I’m not worried about the money in a year.”
‘Ain’t no Plan B’
One day early in Dybantsa’s junior season, he was towering over a group of elementary school students while visiting a class in his hometown. The children are in awe of this gigantic kid who isn’t that much older than them.
Most of them don’t exactly know who he is, but they know he is somebody. Dybantsa used to be the one looking up to people, but now they look up to him.
“It’s a good feeling. Basketball was funner when there was nothing going on when we were all 10 years old,” Dybantsa said. “Nobody got skill, everybody’s the same. It was way more fun. But now people judge you for who you are. The same people who hate on you are the same people in the stands trying to ask for a picture. The game’s still fun, but it’s different now.”
Once he’s walking back to his dad’s car, the dynamic shifts back to normal. Ace tells AJ he needs to go home, do his homework and make some lunch. He has to clean his room, even if he only visits for a few days a month.
“I tell AJ all the time, you may be No. 1 in the country, but in my house, you ain’t No. 1,” Ace says with a big smile. “When the coach yells at him, I say, ‘AJ, I love you, don’t I?’ He says, ‘Yes, you do.’ When the coach yells at you, he loves you. He wants you to correct what you’re doing wrong.”
Ace’s favorite stories to recall are of all the times he called his son’s coaches and told them to “bench his ass” because AJ did not uphold his parents’ lofty standards. In sixth grade, AJ didn’t make the honor roll. Ace told the coach they were driving to New Jersey for a tournament, but his son was not playing in either of their games.
“The coach looked at me and said, ‘You’re really gonna drive six hours?’ ” Ace said. “I told him, ‘You heard what I said.’ ”
When they arrived at the gym, Dybantsa went to warm up just as he always does, but then his coach approached and whispered something in his ear. Dybantsa spent the game watching from the sideline. But for the second game, the coach decided the punishment was enough.
Lesson learned, at least by his standard. But not Ace’s.
“So, on the drive home, I (told AJ), ‘Next time, I won’t even bother bringing you to the tournament,’ ” Ace said. “Ever since then, honor roll.”
AJ (left) and Ace Dybantsa (right) together in January 2024. (Jared Weiss / The Athletic)
The younger Dybantsa brings up the phrase “sugarcoating” often. He is criticized by his dad every day, so criticism from his coaches and the public doesn’t phase him.
“If you get sugarcoated your whole life, you ain’t ever gonna get better,” Dybantsa said. “(My dad) being tough on me and my sisters has impacted us in a way. Everybody wants something handed to them, but we know life is not gonna work like that.”
He has an aversion to sweets now. Tell him like it is, and he can work with that. Ask anyone who has been around Dybantsa about what makes him special, and it will take a while before you hear about his game.
“AJ is the total package on and off the floor,” said Ryan Bernardi, his coach at Prolific Prep. “He is extremely respectful, he’s charismatic, great personality. … I believe these traits were instilled in him by his parents.”
Passing always came naturally to Dybantsa, as he claims that he’s just now learning how to be a true scorer. Bernardi and Ace were constantly on him for not being aggressive enough in pursuing his shot while at Prolific. The younger Dybantsa always maintains the last thing he wants is to be known as a ball hog.
“My mindset will never be just scoring. I’m always going to pass,” Dybantsa said. “There’s never going to be a game where I have zero assists. I like making sure that everybody eats.”
What makes Dybantsa such a tantalizing prospect is that he is already such a complete player, a former center turned playmaking wing. His blend of balance, IQ, skill and explosiveness make him one of the most promising players to enter college this century. Dybantsa was measured during his September visit to Kansas at 6-foot-8 1/2 in socks with a 7-1 wingspan, according to Ace. His height is up half an inch from the beginning of the year.
He’s a gazelle attacking the rim and can pull up over anyone from every spot on the floor, levitating to a height where contests are merely suggestions that luck should intervene on the defense’s behalf. Dybantsa’s passing reads out of pick-and-rolls are some of the best at his position. He’s a brick wall on defense, flipping his hips to steer drivers more smoothly than players half his size. There is much room for improvement, but the holes in his game are measured at a molecular level.
When Boston-area skill trainer Brandon Ball first started shaping Dybantsa’s game, most of his pupils worked out twice a day during the summer. But Dybantsa, then 14, was different. It reminded Ball of his star client Terrence Clarke, who was one of the top players in the nation at the time, before dying in a car accident.
Dybantsa would arrive at the gym at 6 a.m., and they would work on building his skill set. He would lift weights at 9 a.m. and then return to the gym to work on his jumper at noon. He would have a game at 6 p.m., which should be the end of it. But no, one more workout on the floor postgame.
“Most kids can’t do three times a day, but he has great body language at every single stop,” Ball said. “He understood the mission early, and Terrence was the same way. The kid’s work ethic is different.”
Most kids that age have lives outside the gym. Not Dybantsa. He proudly claims he doesn’t do anything outside of ball and school. Ask him what his hobbies are, they’re basketball and basketball. There’s a reason BYU’s more buttoned-up campus culture wasn’t a deterrent for him.
There’s a commonality to most players who maximize their careers in the NBA. They were the ones who were getting in extra work while their peers were playing video games or going to the movies. They were taught something on the court once and then can do it an hour later as if they’ve known it their whole life.
As Dybantsa grew and quickly became one of the best players in the country, it cemented his unwavering belief that basketball was going to be his future, not that anyone who knew him was questioning it at that point.
“My life motto is ‘Ain’t no Plan B. I plan who I’m supposed to be,’ ” Dybantsa said. “People always ask me if I have a Plan B. Nah, I don’t.”
Prince of the NIL revolution
A year ago, Dybantsa had never heard of Utah Prep. Few people had.
It’s a reclamation project of a defunct school that relocated to Hurricane, Utah, but it’s not pronounced hurricane. Ask a local to explain its Scouse roots for you to understand.
Shortly after joining a star-studded roster at Prolific Prep, an Adidas school, Dybantsa signed a deal with Nike that ends before his college career begins. Now that NIL has made every high school offseason a free-agency period, Prolific knew there was a good chance Dybantsa was heading off to a Nike program for his senior year. Enter Utah Prep.
“For everyone involved, this was a first of its kind,” Bernardi said. “A new precedent had been set, and we are all trying to figure it out as it goes. I think the mindset of ‘What’s your offer’ has been the biggest change and you have to make quicker decisions.”
BYU donors facilitated an April visit to the school for Ace and Chelsea before they took a trip down to Provo to see the college’s campus. That was when they first met incoming BYU coach Kevin Young, who was then the top assistant for the Phoenix Suns but traveled out of Arizona in the middle of a playoff series to host the visit.
Dybantsa cheers with BYU student fans during a recent game in Provo, Utah. (Chris Gardner / Getty Images)
Utah Prep reportedly offered Ace $600,000 and an ownership stake in the fledgling program, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. Done deal. AJ visited, saw the mountains in the distance and signed up for the move. There was nothing else to do there, which is just how he liked it.
When Dybantsa was asked why he didn’t attend one of the iconic high school programs like Montverde Academy in Florida — which reportedly offered $1 million for AJ’s senior season — he explained how he wanted to do things differently.
“Montverde, we can use them as an example, I’m trying to show people you don’t have to go to a school like that to accomplish certain things,” AJ said. “They’re a great school, and they’ve got the most league guys from high school. So, there’s no knock going there. But you don’t have to go to a school like that.”
Just about every major NBA agent recruited AJ, but Ace decided to continue to manage his career while bringing on Shaquille O’Neal’s former agent, Leonard Armato, as an adviser.
Ace negotiates offers, goes to Armato for his input, comes to AJ for his decision, and a choice is then made. Agencies have been capitalizing on the NIL gold rush but often charge fees upwards of 20 percent, significantly more than their cut on NBA contracts. Ace has become a master schmooze and thrives in this new gig.
Reports have pegged Dybantsa’s NIL package to be worth around $7 million, though people with knowledge of the negotiations said the amount coming directly from BYU’s NIL collective is closer to $5 million. In the early stages of the NIL era, there is some ambiguity as to what defines an actual deal with the school.
The NCAA does not directly regulate NIL as the market has been shaped by court decisions over the past several years. The proposed House v. NCAA settlement in October has cleared the way for a revenue-sharing model from the schools to the players that could go into effect as soon as July 2025. But the players are not employees and there’s no union, so there is no collective bargaining to establish an agreed-upon system.
Dybantsa’s role in the recruitment was to get the answers he needed for his career. He asked coaches for their vision of building an offense through him and how he would bring winning to their team. He didn’t just want to know how the head coach operates, but what his recovery and nutritional program would look like. He wants to be a pro before he’s technically a pro.
The call that sealed the deal was from Kevin Durant, who played for Young in Phoenix. All Dybantsa wanted was to emulate Durant’s path to greatness, so he was sold on Young being his guide.
“You don’t want to just sign with somebody. You want to be partners with them,” Dybantsa said. “There’s a lot more to an offer than just money. People only see the money part of it, but it’s not just about money.”
In the late stages of his recruitment, AJ and Young were speaking directly while Ace was handling negotiations with the schools. In the end, Alabama and North Carolina matched BYU’s offer, unbeknownst to AJ.
Even when Dybantsa first informed his father in late November he was ready to commit to BYU, Ace kept the focus on basketball and didn’t reveal the price tag. Ace told his son to think it over while the elder Dybantsa paid one last visit to UNC.
When Ace returned, AJ was fully locked in on BYU. They called the school and signed the paperwork before Ace finally told AJ how much the NIL market determined he was worth.
AJ’s response?
“Wow.”
‘I’m not gonna change’
At Dybantsa’s games, the baseline under the opposing team’s basket is lined shoulder to shoulder with every young photographer and videographer trying to break into the big leagues, just like him. When the teams switch baskets at halftime, there is a mad rush of swinging tripods to get the best spot on the other side of the gym.
The days of walking the streets in solitude are coming to an end. He is already becoming instantly recognizable.
“(He’s) trying to navigate being the main character and understanding how much people look up to him and will follow him,” Bernardi said. “I think his consistent vocal presence will be a big key for him as he turns into a great leader.”
When he returned to Boston for a game with his new school, Utah Prep, every set of eyes is carefully careening his way. His aura captures the whole arena now. Aside from the blinged-out chain around his neck, he still carries himself like nobody is watching.
“I’m not gonna change. They might,” Dybantsa said. “There are some people I know that become famous and change their whole personality. They want to have this lavish lifestyle, but I just stick to who I am, and I think people mess with that.”
Dybantsa plans to return to Boston in January to see family, and they’ve already scheduled a shoe giveaway to a local high school. He never comes home empty-handed.
He’ll return as one of the highest-paid amateur basketball players in American history. Ace has been running the show while his son focuses on basketball and being a kid. Eventually, AJ can build his empire as he climbs the ladder to NBA stardom.
Getting to the big stage isn’t the hard part. Separating yourself is. Ace knows he won’t have much luck telling a nationally renowned college coach to bench his son because he didn’t get back on defense. Those days are over.
That’s why AJ joined a program where he’ll be treated the same way since he was little. Ace has no choice but to give it a break and trust his son is ready, as long as AJ still cleans his room when he comes home. Some things might never change.
“He’s probably going to correct me, but he’s not going to be yelling at me,” AJ said. “Well … he might.”
(Illustration: Meech Robinson / The Athletic; top photos: Barry Chin / The Boston Globe via Getty Images; Jim Poorten, Altan Gocher, Hans Lucas, Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)
Sports
Lakers hope comeback win over Pelicans gives the team a timely boost
Lakers center Jaxson Hayes falls after Pelicans forward Zion Williamson commits an offensive foul as Lakers guard Austin Reaves watches at at Crypto.com Arena on Tuesday.
(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)
Matching the physicality of Pelicans forwards Zion Williamson and Saddiq Bey was on the top of the Lakers’ scouting report. But the task is easier said than done.
Reaves admitted to being “terrified” of stepping in front of a driving Williamson to draw a charge. The 6-foot-6, 284-pound Pelicans forward is just as physical as he is athletic, creating a fearsome combination for defenders. Healthy for the first time in two seasons, Williamson led the Pelicans with 24 points on 10-for-18 shooting.
“We haven’t seen somebody like that in a long time, right?” Smart said. “[With] his ability. But [being] willing to put your body there, take a charge, take an elbow to the face, box him out, go vertical, is definitely something that you got to be willing to do, and not everybody’s willing to do it. And that’s the difference in the game.”
Center Jaxson Hayes was up to the task. He absorbed a Williamson elbow in the fourth quarter and ended up in the front row of the stands holding his jaw. But the knock was worth it for the offensive foul that helped maintain the Lakers’ 14-0 run that quickly erased the Pelicans’ eight-point lead. The scoring streak started immediately after Hayes subbed back into the game with 7:20 remaining after he scored on his first possession, cutting to the basket for a dunk off an assist from Doncic.
Hayes had eight points, six rebounds and two blocks, playing nearly 23 minutes off the bench in his biggest workload as a substitute since Jan. 20 against Denver. After playing with Hayes in New Orleans during the center’s first two years in the league, Redick lauded the seven-year pro’s improvement. Hayes is sinking touch shots around the rim now. He has improved his decision making in the pocket. After getting benched for his defensive lapses last season, Hayes has impressed coaches with his consistent ability to stay vertical while protecting the rim. And he still brings the same trademark athleticism that made him the eighth overall pick in 2019.
“He consistently injects energy into the group when he runs the floor, blocks a shot, or he gets those dunks,” Redick said.
Sports
Eileen Gu reflects on decision to leave Team USA for China: ‘A lot of people just don’t understand’
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Eileen Gu released a statement on social media Monday, reflecting on her controversial decision to compete for Team China despite being born and raised in the U.S.
Gu’s statement tied the decision back to her passion for promoting women’s sports, and encouraging young girls to pursue sports.
“I gave my first speech on women in sports and title IX when I was 11 years old. I talked about being the only girl on my ski team, and, despite attending an all-girls’ school from Monday through Friday, becoming best friends with my teammates on the weekends through the common language of sport,” Gu wrote on Instagram.
Silver medalist Eileen Gu of China poses for photos after the awarding ceremony of the freestyle skiing women’s freeski big air event at the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Livigno, Italy, Feb. 16, 2026. (Photo by Wang Peng/Xinhua via Getty Images) (Wang Peng/Xinhua via Getty Images)
“At the same time, I was made painfully aware of the lack of representation – at age 9, I felt that I was somehow representing all women every time I stepped in the terrain park. Landing tricks was about more than progression … it was about disproving the derisive implication of what it meant to ‘ski like a girl.’”
Gu went on to express gratitude for the one season in which she did compete for the U.S.
“When I was 15, I announced my decision to compete for China. At the time, I had spent one season on the US team, and had been lucky enough to meet my heroes in person. I am forever grateful for that season, and continue to maintain a close relationship with the team. I had spent every summer in China since I was 8 setting up summer camps on trampoline and dry slope for kids and adults, ranging from 7 to 47 years old, so I knew the industry was tiny. I felt like I knew everyone,” she added.
“Skiing for Team China meant the opportunity to uplift others through the universal culture of sport, and to introduce freeskiing to hundreds of millions of people who had never heard of it, especially with the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics around the corner.”
Gu’s statement concluded by acknowledging that certain people “don’t understand” her decision to compete for China over the U.S., while insisting the choice maximized the impact she would have.
“I can look back now, at 22, and tell 12 year old Eileen that there are now terrain parks full of little girls, who will never doubt their place in the sport. I can tell 15 year old me that there are now millions of girls who have started skiing since then, in China and worldwide,” Gu wrote.
“A lot of people won’t understand or believe that I made a decision to create the greatest amount of positive impact on the world stage that I could, at this age, given my interests and passions. Three golds and six medals later, I can confidently say was once a dream is now a reality.”
Gu has become a target for global criticism this Olympics for her decision to represent China while remaining silent on the country’s alleged human rights abuses.
In an interview with Time magazine, Gu was asked her thoughts on China’s alleged persecution of Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslim minorities in Xinjiang.
“I haven’t done the research. I don’t think it’s my business. I’m not going to make big claims on my social media,” Gu answered.
“I’m just more of a skeptic when it comes to data in general. … So, it’s not like I can read an article and be like, ‘Oh, well, this must be the truth.’ I need to have a ton of evidence. I need to maybe go to the place, maybe talk to 10 primary source people who are in a location and have experienced life there.
“Then I need to go see images. I need to listen to recordings. I need to think about how history affects it. Then I need to read books on how politics affects it. This is a lifelong search. It’s irresponsible to ask me to be the mouthpiece for any agenda.”
More controversy surrounding Gu erupted after The Wall Street Journal reported that Gu and another American-born athlete who now competes for China, were paid a combined $6.6 million by the Beijing Municipal Sports Bureau in 2025.
Gu is the highest-paid Winter Olympics athlete in the world, making an estimated $23 million in 2025 alone due to partnerships with Chinese companies, including the Bank of China and western companies.
Her alignment with China prompted criticism from many Americans this Olympics, including Vice President J.D. Vance.
“I certainly think that someone who grew up in the United States of America who benefited from our education system, from the freedoms and liberties that makes this country a great place, I would hope they want to compete with the United States of America,” Vance said in an interview on Fox News’ “The Story with Martha MacCallum.”
Later, when Gu was asked if she feels “like a bit of a punching bag for a certain strand of American politics at the moment,” she said she does.
“I do,” she said. “So many athletes compete for a different country. … People only have a problem with me doing it because they kind of lump China into this monolithic entity, and they just hate China. So, it’s not really about what they think it’s about.
“And, also, because I win. Like, if I wasn’t doing well, I think that they probably wouldn’t care as much, and that’s OK for me. People are entitled to their opinions.”
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Silver medalist Eileen Gu of China attends the awarding ceremony of the freestyle skiing women’s freeski big air event at the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Livigno, Italy, Feb. 16, 2026. (Hongxiang/Xinhua via Getty Images)
Gu has claimed she was “physically assaulted” for the decision.
“The police were called. I’ve had death threats. I’ve had my dorm robbed,” Gu told The Athletic.
“I’ve gone through some things as a 22-year-old that I really think no one should ever have to endure, ever.”
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Sports
Arnold, Jamie Lee Curtis, Janet Evans, Carl Lewis new members of California’s Hall of Fame
From Hollywood actors to Olympic athletes and politicians, California’s newest Hall of Fame class runs the gamut in talent and achievements.
Academy Award-winning actress Jamie Lee Curtis and former governor/action star Arnold Schwarzenegger, Olympic champions Janet Evans and Carl Lewis, authors Riane Eisler and Terry McMillan, chef Nobuyuki Matsuhisa, groundbreaking ensemble Mariachi Reyne de Los Ángeles and former state Democratic leader John L. Burton all earned a spot into the assembly of distinct Californians, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Tuesday.
This class, the 19th in state history, will be formally enshrined during a ceremony at the California Museum in Sacramento on March 19 as a “celebration of their contributions to civic life, creativity, and social progress,” according to Newsom’s office.
The inductees “have reshaped our culture and our communities. Resilient and innovative, these leaders and luminaries represent the best of the California spirit,” Newsom said in a statement.
To be inducted, candidates must have lived in California for at least five years and “have made achievements benefiting the state, nation and world,” according to the California Hall of Fame website. To date, 166 Californians have been selected by three governors since 2006.
Schwarzenegger, 78, served as the state’s 38th governor and last Republican head of state from 2003 to 2011. His renaissance man biography includes a career as a body builder, highlighted by his Mr. Universe titles, action film success, political stardom and even tabloid-fodder infidelity.
Curtis, 67, a Santa Monica native, is among Hollywood’s elite and teamed with Schwarzenegger in the action blockbuster “True Lies” in 1994. Her acting career dates to 1977, and she earned a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award in 2023 for “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
Evans, 54, is a four-time Olympic gold medal swimmer and Fullerton native who attended Placentia El Dorado High School, Stanford University and USC. She serves as chief athletic officer for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games.
Lewis, 64, is considered by many one of the greatest athletes of the 20th century. The track star won 10 medals, nine of them gold, in four Olympics.
Eisler, 88, and McMillan, 74, added multiple bestsellers to this Hall of Fame class.
Eisler’s critically acclaimed “The Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future” examines roughly 20,000 years of partnership between men and women and male domination over the last 5,000 years. The futurist, cultural historian and Holocaust survivor who has degrees in sociology and law from UCLA said she was informed of the honor last year by Jennifer Siebel Newsom and recently was honored by the Austrian government with its Cross of Honour for Science and Art, First Class.
“I am very honored at this time in my life to be inducted into the California Hall of Fame,” Eisler wrote in an email. “I have worked tirelessly to help create a better world, and firmly believe that a new paradigm, a new way of looking at our world and our place in it, is crucial.”
McMillan has written a series of smash hits, including a couple that became major studio films in the ‘90s, “Waiting to Exhale” and “How Stella Got her Groove Back,” centered on Black women’s voices.
Matsuhisa, 76, know for his iconic Japanese restaurant Nobu, which has six locations in California, owns businesses across five continents.
Mariachi Reyna de Los Ángeles, founded in South El Monte, rewrote the rules of music, becoming the first all-woman mariachi ensemble that has entertained for more than three decades.
Burton, the former chair of the California Democratic Party who died last year at 92, boasted a political career that included time in the California State Assembly and Senate and the U.S. House.
“This year’s class embodies the very best of California — creativity, resilience and a spirit of community,” Siebel Newsom said in a statement. “These honorees remind us that innovation and courage flourish when people are lifted up by those around them.”
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