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Mon Jan 27, 2025, 03:08 PM Monday

Randy 'Crawdaddy' Miod, a Malibu Surfing Legend, Dies in LA Fire at 55

Since he was a kid, Randy Miod wanted to be at the beach. Once he got there, he never left. Growing up in Southern California’s San Fernando Valley, Miod skipped school as a teenager to take the bus to Malibu’s famous Surfrider Beach. He was missing so many classes in high school that his mother was worried he wasn’t going to graduate, so she hid his board.

She had reason to be worried: Instead of a high-school diploma, he got his GED, and instead of a 9-to-5, he worked restaurant jobs that afforded him maximum time at the beach. In his 20s, he started renting an apartment in a faded red house in Malibu that was built in 1924. It sat right on the Pacific Coast Highway, across from the beach and a short drive to Surfrider and its famous Malibu Wall. He never moved. Over the next 30 years, he became a fixture in the Malibu community, described by friends and locals as both a character and an icon.

Chris Wizner, a friend who serves on the Malibu Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce board of directors, says there were two Randy Miods: The first was just “Randy,” an organized, reliable employee of Malibu restaurants where he worked as a server and manager. The second was known as “Craw” or “Crawdaddy”—a guy who surfed every day that he could. He knew everybody. The party at the beach might migrate to a local bar or restaurant, but, inevitably, it made its way back to Miod’s house, known as the Crab Shack.

Malibu is known as an exclusive enclave that’s home to the rich and famous. But Miod was part of a constituency of surfers, bartenders, and blue-collar and middle-class workers who lived in RVs, trailers, studios, spare rooms—even a van parked along the street—if it meant they had easy access to Surfrider. All of them were welcome at the Crab Shack. They’d stop in for a drink, a party, to get some shade, take a shower, even spend the night. “Thousands of people have stayed in that house over the last 20 years,” said his friend Jen Bel, who added: “His house was just open to everybody and all he ever asked of everybody was, ‘Don’t let the cat out,’ and that was it.”

(snip)

So, when the Palisades fire made its way toward Malibu earlier this month, he didn’t leave. He had ridden out fires before and was determined to stay behind to protect his house, his cat and the life he loved. On Jan. 7, Smith spoke to Miod on the phone. He said he could see smoke, but he wasn’t leaving. The last thing he told his mother was: “Pray for the Palisades and pray for Malibu. I love you.” On Jan. 9, Smith learned that her son’s remains had been found outside his home. He was 55 years old. When Bel heard the news, she found it hard to believe: She had never thought of Miod as being 55.

https://www.wsj.com/us-news/randy-miod-dead-6c5e962a?st=8cDC2n&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

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Randy 'Crawdaddy' Miod, a Malibu Surfing Legend, Dies in LA Fire at 55 (Original Post) question everything Monday OP
He should have grabbed his cat and left Demovictory9 Monday #1
... his cat and his surfboard DBoon Monday #2
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