

I went on to build a number of restaurants in the area – Gladstone’s Malibu, The Jetty, RJ’s the Rib Joint, Malibu Sea Lion, Gladstone’s Universal Citywalk and a few others, some of which I’d rather not remember their names. My brother, Bryant, went on to build destination waterfront villages: Fisherman’s Village in Marina del Rey, Shoreline Village in Long Beach and Seaport Village in San Diego. Our hearts broken, this forced my brother and I to go out and get real jobs. My brother and I really had “fun in the sun” in those days and then Papa Joe did a dirty trick and sold Paradise Cove to the Kissel family. In those days the Cove was a truly fishy place, we had hundreds of fishermen here every day launching or renting boats, fishing from one of the live bait boats or from the barge moored out in front. A time for Beach Blanket Bingo, Gidget and the television shows Sea Hunt and Malibu Run all of which were filmed at the Cove. He first bought 30 acres adjoining the Cove from Fred Roberts and subsequently bought the adjoining 40 acres from Bill Swanson assembling the Cove in the configuration that it is today.ĭuring our time here through the late 50’s and early 60’s, Malibu was a kickback beach community. My dad, Papa Joe, assembled about seventy acres, paying from $3,500 to $25,000 an acre. Some thirty odd years ago our family owned Paradise Cove. So the saying goes…”what comes around goes around”.
