Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Cautionary Tales Presents: Lost Hills - The Dark Prince
Episode Date: June 15, 2023Today, we're sharing an episode of the gripping Pushkin series Lost Hills: The Dark Prince. The brand-new season takes a deep dive into the surf world to explore the legacy of Malibu's Dark Prince: Mi...ki Dora. A surfer known for his style, grace and aggression, he ruled Malibu from the 1950s to the 1970s. Celebrated for his rebellious spirit, he was also a conman who led the FBI on a 7-year manhunt around the world. Episodes 1 and 2 are out now: https://apple.co/losthills. And of course, if you'd like to binge all of the season 3 episodes early and ad free, make sure you subscribe to Pushkin+.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
From the 1950s to the 1970s, a surfer named Mickey Dora ruled Malibu.
He was celebrated for his grace, his style,
and his rebellious spirit. He was also a con man, who led the FBI on a 7-year manhunt
around the world. Another episode of cautionary tales will be released on the usual schedule,
but while you wait, why not check out the new season of the gripping Pushkin
podcast Lost Hills, which takes a deep dive into the world of Malibu's Dark Prince. It's
available wherever you get your podcasts, and of course, if you'd like to binge all of the
season three episodes early and ad-free, make sure you subscribe to Pushkin Plus. I now present to you the first episode of Lost Hills,
the Dark Prince.
Not too long ago, I met a surfer named Denny Auburg.
He lives in Santa Barbara now,
but he learned to surf in Malibu when the sport was barely known on the mainland.
I still go surfing after about 62 years of surfing.
I go down to Rinkon and live close by.
I still have the stoke.
Denny told me a story about one of his early surf experiences,
a day that made an indelible impression on him.
It was 1959.
He was 12. The waves at Malibu were huge, but he and his friend decided
to paddle out anyway. They were cooks. They didn't know what they were doing.
So we were beginners. You know, we're down at Malibu. It was a big day, you know. But we went out
by the pier. When it gets real big, you have to go
way down by the pier to paddle out. And so we jump in the water with our boards, you
know, little skinny 12 year olds, and turning on those skinny arms, you know, doing this
cook paddle, trying to get on. And the big set of waves, I mean, the big waves came,
like a row of five or six waves out to sea.
I never forget the beauty of this wave coming.
As the wave approached, Denny saw there was a surfer on it.
Just perfectly placed on this wave, just trimming at the very top of the wave.
And there's a precision.
When you trim, it means your board's flushed sideways to the wave.
It's inside, and you're getting speed that way because it's in the right position.
The fins just hanging on at the top of the wave.
And it's hand-positioned in the way he's kind of arching in the little veils of water
coming off the nose.
It was the most gorgeous thing, you know, the colors.
He's riding this wind-blowing spin-dress back and we're just watching this thing.
Oh my God. wind blowing, spin drifts back and we're just watching this thing oh my god
but we realized he was coming right at us you know we were the cooks in his way you know
coming right at us so we had to turn sideways you know it's hard to explain but when you turn
broadside you just get obliterated it It just took our board, it just took us
and lasted us churning into the white water
down by the end of the pylons at the pier.
I really felt like I was gonna drown.
My friend told me I almost drowned.
I don't remember, but I remember spitting out sand
and you know, just like, oh my God, who was that guy? Who was that guy?
His name was Mickey Dora, also known as the Cat,
also known as the Dark Prince of Malibu.
In the 1950s, as surfing spread from Hawaii to California,
Mickey gained a reputation as the most dynamic
and watchable surfer on the mainland.
He was Malibu's first homegrown celebrity and the surf world's first personality.
He put Malibu on the map.
Mickey Dora was beautiful and charismatic, but he was all shade.
You don't earn that name, the dark prints for nothing.
He represented Malibu's dark side. What I think of as Malibu's true nature. He violently
opposed the happy, sun-wrenched Malibu that would come to dominate pop culture. Starting
with the Gidget movies in the late 50s, Malibu Barbie in the 70s,
and everything that came after that. He hated Gidget and everything she stood for.
New surfers, girl surfers, surfers he thought didn't belong. He went to war for the
soul of Malibu, the soul of surfing. Some days, I think he won.
Mickey Dora was a surfing Jesse James, an unrepentant outlaw, idolized by the so-called
wild kids of Malibu Beach.
A scoundrel who people say would screw them over for fun.
Scam them, steal from them, and break their hearts.
A rebel who made his own rules.
The legends were endless, mostly not fact-checkable, and Mickey was their primary author.
He stole Ringo Star's Snuff Box, or was it John Lennon's lighter.
He dated Cher before Sonny.
He knew who kidnapped Frank Sinatra Jr.
He was a diamond smuggler, a drug lord, a double agent,
a European aristocrat, a prophet of the coming apocalypse.
He was an emotionally unstable man, armed and dangerous.
That one was courtesy of the FBI FBI who tried to catch him for seven
years. Because in the early 70s at the height of his fame, when some of his bad deeds were
catching up with him, Mickey just disappeared. He went on the lamb, leading law enforcement
on a goose chase that spanned the globe. But while the law was hunting him, he was hunting something else.
The perfect wave, a once-in-a-century event,
sometimes called the rogue wave, or the episodic wave,
or the ninth wave.
Does that sound familiar?
If it does, that's because it's a lot like the plot of Point Break, the cult classic from 1991.
In Point Break, Patrick Swayze plays a groovy surfer
named Bodie, who robbed Banks so he could travel the world
and find the perfect wave.
Well, Mickey was a real life Bodie.
Minus the Combia.
He said, criminals break the laws I live outside the law.
Mickey's aliases, Richard Austin Roach Jr.
Micoos Dora, Mickey Dora.
It was a Swiss bank and yeah they found $400,000 in the bank.
Alexander Dora.
Nobody knows exactly where it came from.
There were also it's a theories.
Nicholas Dora Cornel, Michael S. Chapin.
Australia, New Zealand, Bali, Thailand, Malaysia, India.
I'm probably missing a few.
All of Europe.
Michael Spring Chapin.
He went to amazing places before anybody
was doing that stuff.
By himself!
Nickel Spring Chapin. Michael Stanley Chapin.
You don't have to be a conspiracy theorist to connect the dots around this.
Alexander Michalis. And I fell in love with the Miniti walked out of the water
until I realized he was a scoundrel at a road and was training me to be a copless.
I'm going to get in big trouble for saying all this.
He was narcissistic but also incredibly intelligent
and also I'd say a little bit sociopathic.
It just all gets darker and darker and darker
until I just want to sort of turn away from it.
I don't want to know about it anymore.
At its core, surfing is a counterculture. So Mickey being an anti-hero,
that just makes him surfing's hero.
I'm Dana Goodear, and this is Lost Hills.
Season three, The Dark Prince.
Episode 1, The Legend of Mickey Dora
Who is the best in the world? Who is the worst in the world? I don't give a fuck. I don't give a damn.
Do you want to think I have any good? Fine, if they don't think I have any good. I don't give a shit.
I have no right to ride waves and enjoy myself.
Mickey Dora died from pancreatic cancer in 2002.
For reasons I'll get into later,
there are very few publicly available recordings of him.
What you're about to hear is probably the longest and most revealing clip that's out there.
It's from a 1990 documentary called Surfers the Movie.
In it, Mickey lays out his surfing philosophy.
My whole life is this escape, my whole life is this way if I drop into, set the whole thing up, pull out the bottom, turn, pull up into it, and shoot for life.
Go in for drugs man, go out there.
And behind me, all the shit goes over my back.
He had been such a big part of surf history and as a kid I soaked all that up.
I started surfing in the mid-70s,
late-70s. This is Kelly Slater, the 11-time World Surf League champion. He's regarded as the greatest
surfer of all time. When he was in his 20s, Kelly had the chance to spend time with Mickey Dora.
It was part of the experience, you know, it was a part of a essentially like a grass roots
experience to be around Mickey Dora in the surf world because he was a legend.
He was a living character to us, to people in my era and just before me.
Mickey was one of the biggest names in surfing and he did represent the lifestyle and the freedom that surfers have.
And you know, it means to an end to go travel around the world and surf.
Mickey was one of the original California surfers,
an innovator who was among the few standout masters,
certainly the most notorious and memorable,
at the moment that surfing exploded into the mainstream.
Mickey had an ideology about surfing. Casual surfers, they should get out of his way,
or better yet, stay out of Malibu altogether. Professionals, like Slater, they were defiling something's sacred.
Mickey's way was total commitment and total freedom. No rules.
The cool thing about Mickey's story is
there's always been this sort of tinge of like
a little bit of an outlaw lifestyle or something
an expat traveling person.
Somebody who's a little bit of mystery in their life
or whatever, that was really prominent back in the 50s and 60s and 70s and surfing.
And it really built up the lore of mysterious characters around the world. I don't know if all
the stories I heard were true or not, but that was the early days of 007. Maybe he pictured himself
as like this kind of like almost a spy in this surf world or something and
that that was sort of celebrated to have this sort of life at all costs and and make it fun while you're
doing it.
I started surfing 10 years ago and there's not another way to say it.
I felt totally in love with it.
The smell of the wax, the taste of salt, the squinting into the sun, the scar I'll have
forever from the rock at Lothide, Malibu, that cut through my wetsuit and gashed my shin.
I love the salty, shaggy people who seemed to congregate around the Southern California
breaks.
People with stories from the not that distant past, when mainland surfing was born.
I got into surfing when I had a newborn and a two-year-old, was writing a book, and
teaching at a university, and writing full-time for the New Yorker.
I was living in a world of obligations, deadlines,
bedtime's clocks.
A life measured out in teaspoons.
Very unfree.
Surfing released me temporarily from that identity.
It let me drop out.
It let me live life by the tides.
This one day, early in my time surfing, I was in the water at sunset,
a beginner spot between Santa Monica and Malibu, where you park along Pacific Coast Highway
and scramble down the rocks with your board. I was sitting there in the long lag between sets of waves,
bobbing, looking up to the highway, watching all the cars streaming by.
So many times I'd been in my car on that stretch of road. I'd glanced over the
surfers in the water below. They had seemed scenic, a picturesque feature of
Los Angeles. But now I was in the waves and it was the opposite. The cars, the
city clustered at the ocean's edge. That was
the backdrop. That world looked temporary, elucery is held up as an idol.
Many people's idea of a pure surfer.
That was the case for Denny Auburg, for sure.
He idolized Mickey as a kid on the beach in Malibu.
And you can hear it in his voice.
He still does.
Mickey was 12 years older than me.
He was a man when we were kids, you know, 25.
It was serious.
Denny's house has a simple wooden structure on his buddy's avocado farm.
The window ledges are lined with surf memorabilia.
Trophies and plaques and photos of Denny as a toe-headed teenager.
That's a picture of him.
This is you surfing Malibu.
That's Mickey Door next to me.
Your style is not totally different from Mickey's.
Yeah, we probably all copied Mickey.
He was a big influence.
That's another thing that people copied his style and learned from him.
He was a teacher just by doing it. He taught us what to do.
I had to ride away. Amazing.
The way Mickey served, it was poetic. No one who saw it could forget it, and no one
could match him, though everyone tried.
This nickname was the cat, because it had feline grace on a way, you know, the way
pussy foot to the nose, you know, boom, boom, real agile, you know.
They call him the cat.
That's why they named him the, not because he was a cat burglar, but I guess he was that.
Along with Mickey's unparalleled ability on a surfboard, his appearance was unique on the beaches of Southern California.
In a sea of Boy Scout blondes, he was obsidian, dark hair and eyes, and the kind of complexion
people often call swarvy.
The fact that the guy who caught our attention the most is this hairy, dark-haired guy who
didn't look at all like the archetype.
I responded that as well.
This is Matt Warshaw.
He's a surf historian and the curator of an incredible online resource called
the Encyclopedia of Surfing.
In the surf world, you know, he looks so perfect to be that person the way
Bowie looks so good to be the person for that period of glam
rock, you know. It's not even the handsomeness, the grin by itself, it's almost like this
treasure-capped thing. Like sometimes when you think of Dora, it's like the rest of him sort of fades
away and it's just this dark hair and that really sort of devilish grin. But what really set Mickey
apart was the persona he invented.
Mickey Dora was a character, a complex self invention that was meant to draw maximum
attention and to throw people off his trail.
Mickey seemed to have a, I guess we would call a brand.
And I got the feeling that he dressed sort of for us.
He, you know, he would show up in things that you wouldn't expect a surfer to wear.
You know, he would just wear a tennis sweater to the beach.
I read someone said that Nikki would show up with a starlet one day and they'd show up
with two really pretty boys the next day.
So I think that he was never not having fun and sort of just enjoying himself, especially
in these early years, just sort of playing with the image of being a surfer
before anybody else was doing it.
The ocean is infinite, but waves,
waves shaped for surfing with a face and room to play
are finite.
The deepest joy in surfing comes from a long uninterrupted ride.
That's the whole point to be alone on a wave.
Or so I hear.
I've been surfing in Los Angeles for a decade,
and I've rarely had a wave to myself for more than a few seconds.
There are too many surfers and not
enough waves.
Denny Auburg remembers the time before the early 1950s when Malibu was an
undiscovered wave. Most days it was only Mickey Dora and one or two others in
the water. And you had this wonderful wave to yourself, which makes a big difference
because when you have a wave to yourself in a perfect wave, you get the right of your
life and nobody gets in your way. And it's just the nature all around you and it's yours.
You know, it's a personal connection with nature that is hard to duplicate. You know,
it's just nothing like it. It's so gorgeous in the water and the wind blowing the waves back.
And you're free, there's no distraction to you just in the waves.
Malibu is a perfect, long, right-breaking wave that peels from way off the point to the Malibu pier.
And Mickey Dora owned it for about two decades,
from the early 50s to the early 70s.
And because it was Malibu,
that meant that Mickey Dora stood for something,
an attitude that would spread through the culture.
Here's how one of his admirers
wrote about Mickey's influence in an authorized biography.
Quote,
he was our Elvis.
There was no one else to articulate
the fundamental gestures
of the sociopathic manifesto
of a coalescing youth consciousness.
Unquote.
The youth were sociopaths,
and Mickey was their leader.
Up until 1974,
when he vanished from Malibu.
That's when he became their God.
It was a mystery. It was kind of like where's Mickey Dora and they still had his name on the wall.
Some guy's Sprig can Dora lives, you know, on the wall. It stayed there forever, you know, and he left his mark in that way. You know, and people would wonder, where's Mickey?
Nobody knew.
It was very much of a mystery per year.
Because he was on the run, you know, and kind of like Billy the Kid, you know, he was going.
He kind of had this reputation.
The bad boy on the run.
The fugitive.
So they had it to his reputation.
Protect our children from being indoctrinated.
Stop hurting kids with these politics.
This is the story of a Texas town
that became the front line of a culture war.
A younger teaching generation has been pushing
that our kids can be any gender they want to be.
And an English teacher caught in the middle.
I broke down running in the whole day.
And I think it was, it was tears not out of sadness,
not out of being mad.
It was terrifying.
From the team that brought you South Lake,
this is a six-part podcast series about faith,
power, and what it means to protect children
in an American suburb.
This was a kind of sleeping giant.
From NBC News Studios, this is Great Vine.
Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts.
you get your podcasts.
Mickey Dora was a born con man.
He could talk his way into anything and out of almost everything.
His alleged scams ranged from petty and kind of ridiculous,
like renting out surfboards that didn't belong to him, to blatantly criminal, credit card fraud,
fake plane tickets, stolen ski equipment, stolen antiques,
stolen passports.
Eventually, his schemes would land him in federal prison.
You associated with him at your own risk.
Denny Alberg has a story about this,
the kind of thing that would happen on a typical day
hanging out with Mickey.
In the early 70s, Denny was invited to Kauai by a Hawaiian surfer named Joey Kauai.
At the time, Mickey was also in Hawaii.
Kauai told Denny he'd like to see Mickey too.
So I called up Mickey and told him, joy and buy buy a judicum, and he came right over.
He shut up, it was amazing.
Cabell, who was in peak physical shape,
proposed they hike to a beach to spend the night.
It was an 11 mile hike, and not an easy one.
So I'm trudging along with Mickey Dora on this really tough hike,
you know, for us, and we're like city slickers.
Dora had these leather boots on, really
the wrong equipment, you know. And I was kind of feeling a little sick myself. And it got
dark on us, and we're going to these canyons and pushing branches away. Mickey was tortured,
you know.
Finally, they arrived at the beach. They were exhausted, and Denny was starting to feel really bad. You passed out in some cave, you know, you woke up in the morning and Mickey could see
that I was a little sick. So he his mind started working like I can't hike back. I got
to figure something out. Saw this helicopter go by. You know, they had a tourist. So Mickey had an idea.
Mickey slipped away and went down to the shoreline.
Where he gathered up some rocks and used them to write SOS
in big letters.
The next day I know that helicopter lands on this pad
down the beach.
Mickey goes up and talks to the guy.
I don't know what he was saying, but apparently he's
telling the guy, my friend's dying on the beach. We need help.
And the guy said, I can't come back right now, but, you know, I'm sort of like, take these people.
And right before dark, this guy came back.
And Mickey says, come on, that's it. Let's go.
Okay, we start doing the 50-yard dash toward this helicopter down the beach and Mickey says slow down
You got to act a little sicker, you know
We walk up to the helicopter pilot and he kind of looks at me. I was trying to ask the person he opens the door
He let me in to the helicopter
And Mickey starts to get in behind him and the guy goes, oh, no, it's not you. It's just a sick guy
You know, you know, no, Mickey pulls out this little bottle.
He said, I'm having an asthma attack.
I can't breathe.
You know, my treater bleeding, I can't walk.
I, you know, you just started crying.
The guy, you could tell the guy wasn't buying it,
but he let him in.
So we got lifted off the pad.
It was the most beautiful, majestic thing.
I mean, the serrated mountains, it's colors, you know.
And we're in this little bubble up in this sky and making turns.
He says, our magic carpet right.
When the helicopter landed in town, there were news reporters and cameras everywhere.
They thought somewhere they were bringing the dead guy.
We'd land and all these people kind of crowd around me, you know.
And soon as I get out and they go, where's the sick guy?
Oh, that was me and they all disappointed.
You know, and they believe.
Mickey was disappeared. He's nowhere around.
He disappeared. I mean, he left me holding the bag.
He pulled this whole thing off.
And I went through and got checked out.
I did have some little dysentery thing.
The cops had gone looking for Mickey.
And they found him trying to rent a car at the airport.
And they dragged him back.
They were trying to interview the guy.
And he's showing him all these fake IDs.
And one said, Chapin, the other one said, Dora.
Who are you? Are you Chapin? Are Dora? And he's laughing. I'm Chap these fake IDs. And one said, Chapin, the other one said, Dora, who are you?
Are you Chapin or Dora?
And he's laughing.
I'm Chapin Dora, you know.
And I don't know how it happened,
but he got out of the whole thing.
And I was the fog guy.
To Mickey Dora, the highest value was freedom.
And that, to him, meant doing whatever served him best in any situation.
For Mickey, freedom took priority over any other moral or ethical consideration,
and he would do or say almost anything to get what he wanted.
In 1974, Mickey left Malibu and set out on an adventure that took him all over the world,
searching for the perfect empty wave.
He didn't have the money to travel like this, but he did it anyway, using blank airline
tickets that he filled out for whatever destination he wanted.
Mickey had a whole bunch from a woman who worked at the Pan American office. This is Linda
Kai, Mickey's girlfriend and a compless for much of the 1970s. You could
actually write your own tickets back in those days. They were paper tickets
written on and all you needed to know was the mileage and he had all the
paraphernalia to to work it out. Now I don't know who the girl was,
that gave him the stuff he must have made it sweet, you know.
But you're flying on these sort of forged tickets.
Everything was fake.
They shopped and dined and stayed in nice hotels.
All of it, according to Linda, on forged credit cards.
And all while being tracked from surf spot to surf spot
by baffled agents of the FBI and Interpol.
Back in the day, credit cards were plastic, of course.
But they didn't have the strips on the backs,
like they do nail the management.
They had numbers and dates.
I was assigned to take a little razor blade
and change some numbers.
And we did.
And make it good for another month.
Mickey had a way of justifying all this theft and deception.
Mickey described it once as,
he says, I'm not a criminal.
He says, I don't commit crimes.
He says, I'm an outlaw. He says, I don't commit crimes. He says, I'm an outlaw.
He says, and there's a difference.
Did you buy it?
Yes.
I still do.
One of the great accomplishments that Mickey set out
and probably was successful at was never working a day in his life.
That was his real goal, and he accomplished it.
I don't know if he ever actually had a job.
Jim Kempton used to be the editor of Surfer Magazine,
and these days he runs the California Surf Museum.
He knew Mickey pretty well in the 70s,
when they were both living in a surf town in the south of France.
In fact, Mickey crashed at his place a lot,
used his shower and his kitchen.
One day Jim noticed his passport was missing.
And then sitting on the beach, you know, maybe two weeks later,
I see the South African guy,
looks sort of like me, and there's my passport.
Mickey sold it to him?
I'm sure he did.
I don't have, I mean, how would you ever prove that, right? Unless you arrested them both, which I was not going to do. In any
event, did you ever say anything to Mickey about it? No. In the surf world, it was almost
currency to be scammed by Mickey. You'd come away from the experience with a story to dine out on for years. Mickey's appeal was not in spite of his criminality,
but because of it.
There's a lot of people who love the outlaw,
who love getting away with it is something that, for many people,
is a great satisfaction to them, to see people be able to accomplish that.
And Mickey, for a long time, was able to do that without payment.
We tend to idolize our outlaws. Jesse James, pretty boy Floyd, you know, you hear those stories
about them. You'd think that those guys were somehow like heroic. They were sociopathic killers,
every one of them, you know, that murdered people in cold blood. And yeah, did they give to the poor?
Yeah, they did. Most of those to make sure that they didn't tell the cops where they were.
We definitely idolize our outlaws. That's just something that is I think baked into the American American psyche. And it's very prominent in surf culture.
Very few nice guys are as idolized as the bad boys are.
And is Mickey Dora the most idolized of the bad boys?
He's not only the most idolized of the bad boys, he's also the most bad guys of the bad guys.
The darkest parts of Mickey Dora though don't have anything to do with his hustles and
his cons, or even with the more serious fraud for which he eventually served time.
The darkest parts of Mickey have to do with his soul, and the attitudes he harbored there,
of exclusion, racism, and xenophobia, a pattern of hate that maps onto the white white world
of mainland surfing,
where he was Malibu's superstar in his sunglasses with his Cheshire cat smile,
showing all the little sociopaths how it was done.
Protect our children from being indoctrinated.
Stop hurting kids with these politics.
This is the story of a Texas town that became the front line of a culture war.
A younger teaching generation has been pushing that our kids can be any gender they want to be.
And an English teacher caught in the middle.
I broke down running in the whole thing.
I think it was tears not out of sadness, not out of being mad.
Stareified.
From the team that brought you South Lake,
this is a six-part podcast series about faith,
power, and what it means to protect children
in an American suburb.
This was a kind of sleeping giant.
From NBC News Studios, this is Greatvine.
Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts. is modern California culture. You look at how California culture has affected America's culture
and how America's culture has gone on to affect the world
and you can kind of draw a line back to Dora
on a number of different things.
D.V. D.V. Sentus is a film and television writer
who back in 2004 was hired to write a movie about Mickey.
I was approached by Appian Wei,
which is Leonardo DiCaprio's company.
The movie never happened,
but it was supposed to start a Caprio as DeCat.
Just two years after he played the con artist,
Frank Abagnale Jr. in Catch Me If You Can,
DV ended up spending a lot of time
thinking about Mickey Dora.
He embodied in both his thinking and his actions the contradiction between not being
a native to somewhere and somehow feeling proprietary about that place.
Surfing is supposed to be a feel good sport, right?
Wrong.
Surfing is a club, and the membership is capped.
Everybody's getting pissed off about being displaced and everybody's getting pissed off about
being commodified and everybody's being pissed off about sharing resources and sharing
territory and it just never ends and it still just goes on to today. So you have people like Mickey who have picked a spot
where it's supposed to be
and nobody else is supposed to show up.
I think that Mickey himself was very aware
of the fact that he was excusing himself
from any prosecution for being an invader.
And it's just like, yeah, yeah, I know I am too,
but we're done now.
No more after me.
The way Mickey Dora saw the world,
I have no business surfing.
And neither do you,
not at Malibu,
not anywhere.
Knowing of my interest in the dark side of Malibu, a friend of mine, a fifth-generation Californian
who grew up surfing in Santa Monica and Venice, turned me on to an essay that ran in the
June, July 1976 issue of Surfer Magazine. It was called The Curse of the Shumash. Subtitle, Malibu is a land of strange occurrences and contrast.
This was right up my street.
I bought a copy of the magazine on eBay.
It turned out to be an odd piece of work.
A pseudo history of Malibu told through the vibrant surf culture
that flourished there and apparently
died circa 1976 with the introduction of Malibu, told through the vibrant surf culture that flourished there and apparently died circa 1976 with the introduction of Malibu Barbie. The piece was
peppered with arcane references to Mickey Dora, his antics, and his self-imposed
exile. He was obviously the star of the article of the place and of the time.
I flipped through it, studying the grainy photographs.
On one page, there were several pictures of Mickey
going down the line at Malibu.
And on the facing page,
there was a picture of Mickey in a dinner jacket,
sunglasses, and maybe a wig holding a surf contest trophy
in one hand and a baby doll in the other.
He's standing in front of a sign for Camarillo State Hospital.
A mental institution that some say was the hotel California,
the eagle sang about.
The one you could check out from, but never leave.
In the image, Mickey also has a surfboard with him,
angled away from the camera, so it
dominates the lower half of the frame.
And on the bottom of the board is an enormous swastika.
Who wrote this thing?
I flipped back to the byline.
Carlos, Izan.
Izan is an unusual name.
It took me a second to realize that it was a pseudonym.
Aizen is Nazi, spelled backwards.
My friend who'd recommended this essay is Jewish and not in any way sympathetic to this
kind of stuff. He's just into the Malibu lore, like I am, and probably hadn't read the piece since it came out in 1976.
But looking at it now, I felt a kind of uncomfortable recognition.
Something, unfortunately, was starting to make sense.
Much as I love surfing, there are things about it I have to suppress in order to keep enjoying it.
Signals that there is something rotten there.
There's the sign at my local break that warns cokes to stay off the main take-off spot.
There's the scarcity of black surfers in the water.
There are the reports year after year of swastikas and high-hitlers and anti-semitic flyers
in beach towns across Southern California.
In 2021, in Manhattan Beach, a coastal city in LA County,
an older white surfer was filmed yelling the N word
at two young black men in the water.
A nearby teenager told them, this is a local's beach.
Kateful, racist, and antisemitic messages
spray painted all over the playground
of a South Bay Elementary School.
Yeah, and this is not the first time.
Or even the second time.
And this was just in 2022,
within a couple miles of that same beach.
A photo of a giant swastika, which we've blurred,
spray painted in the middle of the playground,
and you could see some kids playing nearby.
Whatever's going on here, call it surfing's Nazi problem.
It goes back decades.
Mickey didn't invent this,
but he played the supremacists to the hilt.
Malibu belonged to him.
Some called him the Dark Prince.
He called himself Malibu's quote, rightful king.
He believed himself to be superior, and everyone around him told him he was right.
As surfing was discovered and began to be widely popular in the 60s, he railed that Malibu
was being overrun with quote, cokes of all colors, fags and finks, and a thousand other social deviations."
He railed against the Gidget movies that had exposed Malibu to the masses.
He let it be known that this was why he had to leave. Too many people who didn't belong were ruining
his wave. And everywhere he went, Mickey stoked complex, feeding surfing's rebellious young, the stories
of his exile, and all those who done him wrong.
There's a lot of faults I can find with this culture that I was in the middle of for
40-something years, arguably still am, but I'm no longer sort of here to defend it.
So putting Dora into all that, you know, there's just a lot about it that isn't great, and
Mickey on his bad days is right at the center of all that.
Not Warshaw, the Surface historian.
Remember as being a kid and seeing this famous photo shoot of Mickey Dora that was printed
in Surfer Magazine in 1969. And there was a three-shot sequence of him surfing where
he comes down the way it's Malibu. He's dropping in, you can see a surfer in
front of him, and the next picture Mickey's doing a turn off the bottom, and the
surfer in front of him is kind of looking back, and the third shot is Mickey's
just shot his board right at the guy.
And it's gone right across his chest and knocked him off his feet, right? And at nine,
because I served Malibu, where I was going to serve Malibu, and I just, it's so bought into
Cooke's go home kind of thing. This was Dora regulating, look what he's doing. He's doing what
needs to be done to get rid of the Cooke's. That guy dropped in our front and Mickey Dora regulating, look what he's doing. You know, he's doing what needs to be done to get rid of the coo. So that guy dropped in our front of Mickey Dora, you know, get out of here,
a coo can dead it out.
And so it's a kid.
I thought that was kind of cool.
And now look at that now and I go, put that board right through that guy's back.
And it was, it's terrible to me.
Mickey Dora presents a conundrum for surfers.
And anyone brought up on the California youth culture he so heavily influenced.
If I see a clip of Mickey surfing for a few seconds at Malibu, my heart as a surfer,
just melts, you know.
If I just see a picture of him with that grin, there's something about that that speaks
to my depth as a surfer.
He's unresolved for me almost on a weekly basis. Like, if
some days I'm very much on team Mickey and some days I go, this guy is a really
terrible human being. We need to put attention on and think about and talk about
somebody else. Anytime I sort of spend enough time in his life looking at
how he treated people and things that
he said, I just start pulling away. How do I feel about Mickey Dora? It depends on what
day you ask me. It seems like the surfing world is still not ready to have the Mickey Dora
conversation. Part of me is just saying God, stay away from this.
But it seems to me that if I can make sense of Mickey Dora, who he was and what he did,
what he means to people, still, I'll get closer to the heart of this strange place,
Malibu, where the central question is about belonging, insiders versus outsiders.
Mickey was both.
He was a shapeshifter and a con con man with a cruel and narcissistic streak,
entitled, charming, and living entirely for himself. Is Mickey the secret key to California?
on the beach where Mickey became famous.
On the next episode of Lost Hills, a suspicious death sets Mickey on a strange new path.
At some point he was down in Mexico I think fishing
and trying to not drink,
he was going to roll a dingy out to a friend's boat and
the body turned up five days later.
That's next in episode two, Death in Mexico.
Lothill's is written and reported by me, Dana Goodier.
It's created by me and Benadair, and produced by Western Sound and Pushkin Industries.
Subscribe to Pushkin Plus and you can binge the entire season right now, add free.
Find Pushkin Plus on the Lost Hill Showpage in Apple Podcasts or at Pushkin.fm-plus. I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child.
I'm not a child. I'm not a child. I'm not a child. I'm not a child. I'm not a child. younger teaching generation has been pushing that our kids can be any gender they want to be. And an English teacher caught in the middle.
I broke down running in the whole day.
And I think it was, it was, it was, tears not out of sadness, not out of being mad.
It's terrifying.
From the team that brought you South Lake, this is a six-part podcast series about faith,
power, and what it means to protect children in an American suburb.
This was a kind of sleeping giant.
From NBC News Studios, this is Greatvine.
Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts.