Below: Last year’s edition of Remarkable Women
Remarkable Women National Winner
Remarkable Women Sacramento-area Winner
This year’s Remarkable Women Winner is Amitis Pourarian. She arrived to the U.S. as a child and became an internationally renowned taekwondo competitor. She says martial arts has given her the confidence to overcome obstacles and achieve success in her career.
FOX40 held a celebration and announced the winner during a Remarkable Women special show aired live from Canon restaurant in East Sacramento, where all four candidates were present and were interviewed by host Sonseeahray Tonsall.






Remarkable Women Nominees 2023

Norma DePauli’s faith drives her to serve the Stockton community through volunteer work.

Dr. Elysse Versher is a local Sacramento teacher and community educator who has taken teaching outside the classroom for the betterment of her students.

She arrived in the United States as a child, went on to a successful career in construction management and became internationally renowned as a taekwondo competitor. Today, she teaches martial arts and other skills through her fitness studio.

Joan Bennett spent many years of her life in service to her country in the United States Navy. Now Bennet is on a mission to share the joy she gets from fishing with the disabled community.
Remarkable Women of 2022

From 30 kids and a few bags packed on her living room floor, Janice Davis’ passion to help hungry children has grown more than tenfold. Davis has nourished the local Blessings in a Backpack effort in Sacramento County for almost eight years.

Balancing a husband, a house, kids, grandkids and days in the chemistry lab would be more than enough to fill out the plate of most people. But Judith Lladoc is not most people.

Sacramento’s Marilyn Koenig was blindsided by the loss of her son 45 years ago, and after finding her own way through it, has dedicated her life to helping other people see hope still exists.

Growing up, Ethel Mae Thompson found herself living on a block where waving at the folks across the street meant waving to civil rights icons in the making — and eventually joining them in their fight for equality.