14.29 Alan Arakawa's Re-Entrance Interview, January 6, 2011, Volume 14, Issue 29, MauiTime

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JANUARY RY 6,6 2011

VOLUME 144

ISSUE 29

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ALAN ARAKAWA: THE (RE)ENTRANCE INTERVIEW MMAUI’S AUI’S MAYOR EXPLAINS HIS PLAN—AND WHY THINGS

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “Savor the memory of that shave ice, Barry. It’s gonna be a long year.”

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Contents VOLUME 14

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION: With what mythological creature would you like to share a cocktail (and what would be the cocktail)? Editor: Jacob Shafer (808) 283-1308 / jacob@mauitime.com @jacobshafer on Twitter Bigfoot (Hairy Buffalo) Associate Editor: Anu Yagi (808) 264-8039 / calendar@mauitime.com @anuheayagi on Twitter Anubis (absinthe) Proofreader: Dina Wilson God (beer) Contributors: Caeriel Crestin, Jory John, Avery Monsen, Rob Parsons, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Sara Tekula, Ynez Tongson, Barry Wurst II Photographer: Sean Michael Hower mauiweddingmedias.com / howerphotography.com Medusa (martini) Art Director: Chris Skiles chris@mauitime.com / lucky11studios.com Centaur (Four Horsemen) Graphic Designers: Shane Fontanilla, Naomi D. Sheikin, Christina Tarleton Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers (808) 283-3260 / brad@mauitime.com Satan (Shirley Temple)

DOWNTOWN

WAILUKU

ISSUE 29

EVERY FIRST

5 NEWS & VIEWS

FRIDAY OF THE MONTH

Coconut Wireless talks exported prisoners and imported Polynesians. The Pro Bowl is returning to Oahu—which is a good thing—and inviting dog-killer Michael Vick—which isn’t. Open Letters howls at the moon. Quizunderstood asks about Census results and Republicans on Maui. Bankruptcies and breathalyzer fees rise in By the Numbers. Obama’s vacation is over in Spin Cycle. Snot gets composted in News of the Weird. Eh Brah! cracks over butts.

10 FEATURE STORY Maui’s got a new/old Mayor, and we’ve got an interview with him, covering everything from waste to water to antigovernment grumbling.

13 FOOD & DRINK Jason “Cass” Castle goes to wine school and lives to tell the tale.

General Manager: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com @jenrusso on Twitter Godzilla (sake shots)

17 A&E Anu Yagi talks strings, soul, science and sound with the dudes from BrownChicken BrownCow.

Administrative Executive: Judy Toba (808) 244-0777 / judy@mauitime.com Nymph (Sex On The Beach)

18 FILM CRITIQUE

Administrative Assistant: Jennifer Brown Unicorn (Blue Hawaii)

Barry Wurst II says How Do You Know is no Sinead O’Conner musical.

Web Design: Linear Publishing

19 Film Capsules/Listings

Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com @tommyrusso on Twitter

20 THIS WEEK’S PICKS

MauiTime is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2010 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $70 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. MauiTime may be distributed only by MauiTime’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime. MauiTime 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 • fax (808) 244-0446 www.mauitime.com @mauitime on Twitter Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon Circulation: 18,000 copies of the MauiTime

First Friday festivities in Wailuku, a big Mana’o benefit at the Iao and a Warren Miller ski flick at the MACC.

22 Da Kine Calendar 23 Grid

28 BACK PAGES Kula Kid resolves to resolve. Sign Language tells Scorpio not to re-gift.

FIRST FRIDAY IS ALMOST HERE!

Featuring a performance by MOTH & BROWN CHICKEN BROWN COW Hear musical samples at: mothsound.com and bcbcsb.com

JANUARY 7th, 2011 MauiTime turns 13! Come help us celebrate!

30 Classified 31 Mind, Body & Spirit

ON THE COVER: Design by Chris Skiles

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JANUARY 6, 2011


BY JACOB SHAFER

NEWS&VIEWS

jacob@mauitime.com + @jacobshafer on Twitter

Coconut Wireless To Jail And Back

I

f there’s anything more sadly symbolic than the idea of shipping our garbage to the Mainland, it’s the idea of shipping out our prisoners. Yet that’s exactly what we do. The combined capacity of the state’s four jails (on Oahu, Maui, the Big Island and Kauai) and four prisons (three on Oahu, one on the Big Island) is 3,487.

has no written policies or procedures for contract administration, and the administrator and staff readily accepted CCA’s representations and conclusions of its performance without verifying statements against documented evidence.” Essentially, the state used the smokescreen of a public partnership to send Hawaii inmates to private prisons in the Southwestern desert—with no

Essentially, the state shipped Hawaii inmates off to private prisons in the Southwestern desert with no oversight. Add the federal prison on Oahu and the number climbs to 4,349, but that’s still not nearly enough. So the state contracts out, to three prisons in Eloy, Arizona owned by the private Corrections Corporation of America (CCA). It’s part of an “Inter-Governmental Agreement” (IGA) between the Aloha and Grand Canyon states, which, apparently, have complementary problems: too many prisoners and too many prisons. But it’s not all symbiosis and roses says Hawaii State Auditor Marion Higa in a December report, which termed the state’s deal with Eloy “fundamentally flawed.” According to the report, the state Department of Public Safety (DPS) “conducts all transactions directly with CCA,” indicating that the arrangement “inappropriately used the IGA exemption and is circumventing the law.” In addition, Higa writes, “the department

oversight. Oh, and (to quote from the report again): “[The] IGA does not contain safeguards that protect the state’s interests in the event of a dispute or if funds are not appropriated or available to pay CCA, so the state is exposed to a liability risk.” The good news? The contract with Eloy and CCA expires June 30, which gives DPS a shade under six months to figure out a better solution. Wait—did we say that was good news?

First Hawaii Tourists? A.D. 1190

T

he first Polynesian voyagers landed on Hawaii shores about 900 years ago, according to a group of scholars including UH Manoa professor of anthropology Terry Hunt. The group’s findings, published recently in the

The Blog Roll

NEWS BRIEFS

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shed new light on the chronology of Hawaiian history, which, as a UH press release puts it, has been “hotly debated and poorly resolved.” After settling Samoa around 800 B.C., Polynesians spread to the central Society Islands circa 1100 A.D. and then to New Zealand, Hawaii and Easter Island somewhere between 1190 and 1290 A.D. “This is an amazing feat of Polynesian sea voyaging and discovery, and represents a rate of dispersal unprecedented in oceanic prehistory,” said Janet Wilmshurst, a New Zealand paleoecologist also involved in the study. “It’s even more incredible given that these isolated islands are spread across a vast area of the Pacific Ocean from the subtropics to the sub-Antarctics. Nearly all of the 500 or so islands were discovered, despite being scattered across an area of ocean the size of North America.” Hunt said the study, which analyzed more than 1,400 radiocarbon-dated objects, shows “that we can’t just accept dates for whatever they are.” As an example, Hall cites a piece of wood charcoal. “You can date the charcoal, but the question is when did the wood actually die? If ancient Polynesians used wood from an old tree, or worse, driftwood, the age would be centuries too old. When you want to know when people arrived on an island, you have to be careful what materials you choose to date.” More information on the study, and its methodology, can be found at hawaii.edu.

State GOP: Dysfunctional Analysis

T

o say the Hawaii GOP took a beating in November is like saying...sorry, can’t think of anything else that painfully obvious. Afterward, activist Eric Ryan issued a scathing letter calling for the heads of heavyweights

like then-Gov. Linda Lingle and chair Jonah Ka‘auwai and an audit of the party’s finances. In response, Ka‘auwai sent a missive to Hawaii Republicans branding Ryan “a disgruntled party member” and accusing him of “making off-base complaints and wild accusations.” (Ka‘auwai added that Ryan “would rather see the party hoard money and not spend it on winning elections,” conveniently forgetting they didn’t actually, you know, win many elections.) Just when it seemed the story couldn’t get any more comically juicy, the Honolulu StarAdvertiser reported that Ka‘auwai has called a “closed door meeting” to “discuss financial matters...and approval of an audit committee.” Pity we weren’t invited. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429c

News. AT THE TIP OF YOUR FINGER. .com

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Erik Blair of Kihei wants to wear a different donated T-shirt every day—to fight world hunger. To accomplish that, he’s planning to...

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JANUARY 6, 2011


BY JACOB SHAFER

NEWS&VIEWS

jacob@mauitime.com + @jacobshafer on Twitter

Bowl Searching The Pro Bowl is coming home—and bringing the usual baggage along with it

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Last year, in his second season, Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson defined breakout, rushing for 2,000-plus yards and 14 touchdowns and making opposing defenses look like Pop Warner scrubs. Then he went and opened his yapper, promising to have an even bigger 2010—which he didn’t. His rushing total fell to 1,364 yards and his TDs to 11. Quite a dropoff, but he’s not being measured against 2009 Chris Johnson; he’s being measured against all other 2010 running backs. And by that metric he still deserved to go—Johnson had a higher yardsper-carry average and a half-dozen more touchdowns than the Jacksonville Jaguars’ Maurice Jones-Drew, who will be sipping pre-game mai tais.

Don’t Do Suggs For the casual fan, it’s easy to look at tackles

This was easily the biggest omission, both because quarterbacks get all the attention and because the Green Bay Packers’ Aaron Rodgers had a monster season: 3,922 yards passing, 28 TDs to 11 interceptions and another 356 yards rushing and four scores. Oh yeah, and Rodgers did it without a superstar supporting cast, taking his team on his back and carrying them to the playoffs. So who does Rodgers replace on the NFC squad? Funny you should ask...

One Vick Puppy Almost everyone has forgiven Michael Vick. The fans in Philadelphia were the first— watching a backup QB morph into an MVP candidate will do that—and most other fans, and the league, quickly followed suit. Then the general public accepted him back and next thing you knew he was getting props from President Obama, being held up as a shining example of rehabilitation and the

redemptive power of the human spirit. Screw that. What everyone has forgotten (or chosen to ignore) is that Vick isn’t merely some guy who made a few bad decisions. We’re not talking about a momentary lapse in judgement or a brief run-in with the law. We’re talking about torturing, maiming and killing dogs— repeatedly, systematically, over a long period of time. For fun. Animal rights activists say Vick should still be rotting in jail. But what good would that do? We say he should be spending his days scooping poop and filling food bowls at an animal shelter for minimum wage, and then, in his spare time, speaking out against the kind of senseless cruelty he once reveled in (and no, a few canned sound bites and photo ops don’t count). Sure, everyone deserves a second chance. But there’s a difference between getting a second chance and getting to become a multi-millionaire superstar just three years after pleading guilty to financing a dogfighting operation that used methods like drowning and electrocution to kill under-performing animals. (Seriously, if you don’t know the details, read the indictment. It’ll make your stomach turn.) Vick should have been banned for life. Instead, he’ll be soaking up the sun—and adulation—on Oahu. Hopefully Hawaii’s dog lovers will show up to let him know we haven’t all moved on. ■To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429u

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as the measure of a defensive player. It is, after all, the object of the game. But it’s at best an incomplete stat, and at worst leads to a guy like Baltimore Ravens loudmouth Terrell Suggs (the dude who thought he was insulting Tom Brady by reminding him he has a super hot wife) making the Pro Bowl. Yes, Suggs had a few more tackles than, say, left-off San Diego Chargers outside linebacker Shaun Phillips, but Phillips had equal or better stats across the rest of the board and he ran his only interception of the season (Suggs didn’t have any) back for a 31-yard TD.

Aaron Out Johnson Doesn’t Measure Up

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To the Pro Bowl, apparently. Despite finishing a disappointing 6-10 and being basically a trainwreck in shoulder pads all season, “America’s team� is sending five players to Honolulu. OK, one of them is a punter, which doesn’t really count, and none are glaringly unworthy. But come on. This isn’t about the players—it’s about the uniform they wear and the gargantuan, bajillion-dollar stadium they play in and the smug douche bag who owns them. The Cowboys are the team everyone except Dallas fans actively root against. With so many Cowboys being recognized as the best of the best, we’re denied that one, final twist of the knife.

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fter a one-year hiatus, the NFL Pro Bowl will return to Oahu’s Aloha Stadium on January 30. That’s good news for the state’s still-sputtering economy, good news for local sports fans who manage to score tickets—and most of all good news for the players, who last year were forced to accept thousands of dollars to play a meaningless exhibition in South Florida (shudder). Roster selections—made by a combination of player, coach and fan voting—came out last week and featured the usual assortment of snubs, headscratchers and downright WTFs. Oh sure, guys who were left off may end up playing anyway if someone gets injured or can’t participate because his team made the Super Bowl. And even the most undeserving players are still pretty good. Also, it’s the Pro Bowl, so who really cares? Us, that’s who!

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NEWS&VIEWS

By the NUMBERS

3,954 Number of bankruptcy cases filed in Hawaii last year, nearly 30 percent more than in 2009

5, 3, 2 Members of the newly sworn-in Maui County Council who weren’t on the Council last term, who have never been on the Council, and who have never held elected office, respectively

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Monthly fee that will be assessed to DUI offenders for the vehicle-ignition breathalyzers now required under state law

Months that first-time offenders must use the device to be allowed to drive their cars

QUIZunderstood 1. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2010 Hawaii had 211.8 residents per square mile, the fifteenth highest population density in the country. What state had the lowest population density?

2. While President Obama

3. Humans and hammerhead sharks can do something that almost no other animal is capable of—what is it? See answers, page 29 PHOTO BY BARRY PETERS

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Confidence Games

vacationed on Oahu, what former (and likely future) Republican presidential hopeful spent Christmas on Maui?

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This week, President Obama returned to Washington from his “Hawaii vacation.” (Tangential quibble: why is the national media incapable of uttering the words “Oahu” or “Kailua”? When President Bush pretended to be a cowboy on his ranch, he was going to “Crawford,” not “Texas.”) Fresh off the plane, Obama said he knows Republicans will “play to their base for a certain period of time,” but added he’s “confident that they’re going to recognize that our job is to govern and make sure that we are delivering jobs for the American people.” ‘Wonder what gives him that confidence? Was it when Sen. Mitch McConnell told the National Journal, “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president”? Or when newly minted Speaker of the House John Boehner told 60 Minutes, in response to a question about compromise, “I reject the word”? Savor the memory of that shave ice, Barry. It’s gonna be a long year. - JS

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Sources: U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Honolulu Star-Advertiser, Hawaii Legislature

JANUARY 6, 2011


BY CHUCK SHEPHERD

NEWS&VIEWS

chuck@mauitime.com +

EH BRAH!

NEWS OF THE WEIRD WHAT IS IT WITH THE MILITARY AND CATCH-22s? David Henderson, a Korean War veteran long suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, applied 15 days past the deadline for enhanced care under a 2001 veterans-benefits law and thus was, as required by the statute, disqualified from the additional benefits. Henderson’s doctor pointed out that major disorders such as Henderson’s often leave victims unable to understand concepts like “deadlines.” As U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer asked, during argument on the case in December, did Congress (which wrote the statute) really intend to deprive Henderson of care because of the very disability for which he sought help?

BAD TASTE IN MUSIC Fredrik Hjelmqvist, 45, owner of an audio shop in Stockholm, demonstrated in November his system of broadcasting music from his stomach. He swallowed a plastic capsule containing a battery-operated audio set-up, then connected an amplifier to a stethoscope and held it against his belly, and began playing recorded music, including the Village People’s “YMCA,” until the battery died three hours later. Hjelmqvist admitted that the audio quality was poor but still hopes to sell the system for the equivalent of about $17,000.

FOWL DEALINGS (1) Gloria Clark, 62, was charged in the death of her 98-year-old mother in St. George, South Carolina, in December after the mother’s body was found among squalid conditions at her home. Though Clark denied she had been neglectful, the mother’s pet parrot might have disagreed. According to the police report, the parrot, in the mother’s bedroom, continually squawked—mimicking “Help me! Help me!” followed by the sound of laughter. (2) An unnamed Danish man traveled to Vienna, Austria, in July for a trial on his lawsuit against the man who had sold him a defective cockatoo for the equivalent of about $15,000. In a demonstration for the judge in the courtroom’s hallway, the bird flew “lopsided,” with the probable cause (according to the purchaser) chronic gout. The judge’s decision was not reported.

AND YOU HAVE TO SEPARATE OUT YOUR BOOGERS... An official release of San Francisco’s Department of the Environment in July apparently cleared up a matter of controversy (according to a report in SF Weekly): Human semen is one organic waste product not required to be disposed

Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations, 200 words or less (which we reserve the right to edit), changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent, to “Eh Brah!” c/o MauiTime, 33 N. Market St, Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 or send an e-mail to

of in special “compost” bags under the city’s mandatory composting law. “Snot,” however, must be properly bagged.

ehbrah@mauitime.com

NOT PLAYING GAMES

This goes out to the smokers. I know you have it rough. I know the number of places you’re allowed to puff has basically been reduced to your home and a small patio in Beirut. But pretty please: don’t leave your butts on the beach. It’s an old gripe, I know, but it’s also a New Year. So maybe those of you who aren’t resolving to kick the habit altogether can resolve to stop leaving your soggy little nicotine stubs all over our beautiful sand. In return, I resolve to not to cough in a rudely exaggerated fashion when I inhale a cloud of your secondhand cancer vapor. Deal? ■

Darren Suchon, 42 and unemployed (and usually home all day), was charged in October with reckless driving and assault, among other things, for allegedly running his girlfriend off the road in his zeal to catch her after she drove away with his Sony PlayStation console. She had just left for work, and Suchon weaved through traffic in Palmerton, Pennsylvania, then bumped her car when he caught up with her at a traffic light, forcing her off the road. According to witnesses, Suchon rushed the car, “clawing” at it, screaming that he would “break the [expletive] window” if he didn’t get his game back.

To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429e

INCOMPETENT CRIMINALS (1) Murder suspect Earle Barranco, 24, was arrested in Charlotte, North Carolina, in November, three weeks after allegedly killing a man in a New York City diner. Barranco was spotted at a Charlotte Bobcats basketball game, mugging for the arena’s JumboTron while decked out in the distinctive jewelry he wore during the alleged murder. At the next Bobcats game a few days later, with police monitoring that same seat, Barranco was arrested. (2) Dennis Davis, 40, and his wife were convicted in October in Britain’s Staines Magistrates’ Court of manufacturing a line of pirated music CDs. Davis initially denied ownership of the pirated stash but was unable to explain why the CDs bore his company’s label with his own photo on it.

SUE’VE GOTTA BE KIDDING (1) In July, a 5-year-old boy in Dublin, Ireland, was awarded the equivalent of about $9,900 from a shopkeeper who had grabbed his arm and accused him, erroneously, of being a thief. Under the law, the boy had to prove that he has, at age 5, a “reputation in the community” for truth-telling and that his reputation had been damaged. (2) A New York City judge ruled in October that an 87-yearold woman who was accidentally knocked down by several kids racing bicycles on the sidewalk could sue the kids, including one who was 4 years old (and who is thus legally presumed to understand the difference between “reasonable” and “unreasonable” behavior). ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429n

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JANUARY 6, 2011

9


L

ast weekend, Alan Arakawa was sworn in as the seventh Mayor of Maui County—eight years after he became Maui’s fifth Mayor, and four years after he watched Charmaine Tavares take his job. A few days before the ceremony, we sat down with Arakawa in his Wailuku transition office—a small, cluttered room filled with papers, filing cabinets and a few staffers pecking at iPads—to discuss his top priorities, his political appointees and his road map for term number two.

ALAN ARAKAWA: THE (RE)ENTRANCE INTERVIEW BY JACOB SHAFER

What’s the first concrete thing you’d like to accomplish? One of the first things that I’m going to do is issue a directive that all County employees will behave in a professional manner, and that any unprofessional behavior will be dealt with through disciplinary action. We’ve had a lot of complaints about County employees not being publicoriented and not working as public servants. This is an attitude that I won’t tolerate, and I don’t believe the public should either. We’re here to serve the public—we’re not here to make demands or threaten or pretend that we’re better than anybody else. You said “professional manner.” How is that defined? The County already has a policy of behavior. [It] entails normal politeness and to be able to recognize that they have to deal with the public. The public are, after all, the business that we’re in. So we’re going to serve our clientele in a way that would befit any business. We have to be courteous. We have to receive calls and return calls. We process papers. We help people get their paperwork done. We don’t demand and we don’t force people to do things because they’re afraid of us. That’s the attitude we’re going to change. What’s the punishment if people don’t comply? There’s already a system that’s established within the union agreements. If someone is acting in a way that is non-professional, »

» we’ll have a consultation meeting and explain what it is they’re doing incorrectly, with their union representative present. We’ll do this in a written format as well as an interview format, and we’ll ask them to take corrective action. If they take corrective action, fine. If they don’t—if they repeat the improper behavior—then we’ll take further disciplinary action. There’s progressive disciplinary action that’s spelled out in the union contracts; we’ll do this according to the system that’s already in place. What’s one mistake you believe Mayor Tavares made that you can rectify quickly?

10 JANUARY 6, 2011

One is the attitudes of County employees. But there are a number of things we’re looking at. We want to create affordable housing. The community has been crying for affordable housing for some time now. And even though the ability has been there—many of the developers have wanted to produce affordable housing—a lot of that has been stymied. We’re going to work with some of those developers. We also want to work with agencies that want to take foreclosed properties, rehabilitate them and put them back into service. We have to minimize the number of foreclosures and vacant properties that are left unattended; we don’t want to create the

broken-window syndrome that many other communities are facing. In order for us to have a viable economy, we’re going to have to start being very pro-business, working with businesses and people who want to help themselves. We’re going to be encouraging people to start businesses, expand businesses and hire more people. We’re going to do away with the process of telling people we’d rather have them on welfare than helping themselves. That doesn’t make any sense. Give a concrete example of how you’d encourage a business to expand. For one thing, we’re going to look into

changing the permitting process. Let’s say a building has six offices, and somebody wants to come in and establish a new business in one of those spaces. They’re now required to fix the entire building and to make improvements to the entire property. We’re going to try to change the process so that they only need to fix what needs to be fixed, minimizing the cost of a new start-up. If someone is trying to invest $30,000 to start a business and they’re given a bill for $200,000 to fix a fire hydrant and water lines, they’re not going to start that business. The role of government is not to create rules that are unrealistic and hurtful; the role of government is to find ways to help people


survive in a very difficult environment. Speaking of the role of government: during the campaign you criticized the size of the Mayor’s staff. What are some specific cuts you plan to make? We’re taking about a 15 percent reduction in employee pay in the Mayor’s office, and we’re not filling all the positions. It’s not that we couldn’t use them, but we realize these are tough economic times. And as long as we’re asking the community to tighten its belt, the County should do the same thing. We’re looking to do that in all the departments, to streamline them so that the work that one department is doing isn’t being duplicated by every other department. For example? In departments like fire, police and parks, we have people who are trying to create buildings or facilities. The fire department is having firefighters design the fire house in Kaunakakai, for instance, and manage the project. So we have fire fighters who are not trained project managers out there trying to supervise the contractor. Does that make sense? Taking people who aren’t trained to oversee a major project? So it’s a matter of misused resources then? It’s a matter of putting the right resources in the right places to accomplish what we need to accomplish. We were on Molokai recently. We have a new community center at Maunaloa. From what I’ve been told and from what I saw myself, much of the construction is substandard. The floor of the center is raw concrete, and somebody seems to have poured non-skid on as a cover. Can you imagine dancing on a sand-based nonskid floor? Can you imagine how difficult it’s going to be for seniors with walkers? It’s obvious that whoever did the project management didn’t have the experience to know that these things aren’t done. I could go into any number of examples.

Talk about the layout of the ninth floor. We know from your infamous radio remarks you don’t buy the security explanation given by your predecessor. Do you plan to change things? First of all, the way we do security in the [County] building isn’t really going to protect anybody. If you want to have true security, it costs a lot more than what we’re willing to put out, or should put out. I want to open things up because I believe the County of Maui deserves an open government. I’m going to be walking around Longs Drugs and Safeway and everywhere else, going to a lot of events. If I’m going to go all those places without [security], I don’t see why I need it at the County building. The public should be able to come in and talk to us. So does that mean another remodel? Well, we’re going to open the door for one thing. Beyond that, I’m told I have to check the permitting process, but I don’t like the office structure. I think it’s cold and unfriendly. Anyone coming to visit the Mayor now, there’s no reception area, nowhere to sit and get a cup of coffee. That sends the wrong message. You’re paying us, and we need to be open to listening to you. We’re not going to be hiding. You tapped two termed-out Councilmembers—Jo Anne Johnson and Mike Molina—to serve in your administration. What do you expect them to bring to the table? The public returned Councilmembers Molina and Johnson to office five times, so obviously they have the support of the community. They have a lot of talent and a lot of experience. With Mike Molina, I hope we can have a good relationship with the County Council. I want him to explain to us how and why the Council passed certain laws, and how we can improve the systems we have. We also have to deal with boards and commissions. Their results end up at the Council for review. Having Mike help us find people for boards and commissions, I think, will be very beneficial. Councilmember Johnson is very community-oriented; she’s very

Parsons, is going to be part of your administration for the second time, as environmental coordinator. Talk about the role you want him to play. Everybody thinks of Rob as 100 percent environmental, Mr. Environment. And while he does have that mantle and that’s an area he’ll be able to help us with, he was also very helpful to our [first] administration being a liaison to the state. Rob attended many of the Department of Transportation meetings, DLNR meetings—he was our go-between whenever the state was planning something and the Mayor’s office needed a representative. The ability to get the County and the state working together on projects—like the bathrooms in Lahaina, in the harbor area—is invaluable. We were able to cut through the red tape to save literally tens of millions of dollars of federal money and create the harbor improvements in Manele and Kaunakakai, some of the things that are happening in Maalaea right now, the improvements to the sewer system. Rob was instrumental in putting those packages together, and those are things I’m looking at Rob to do. When you’re walking through a community and you’re looking for ways to improve it, you have very different eyes than when you’re walking through it just to get from one place to another. You’ve made water one of your central issues. What’s the plan for the next four years? Very simply we want to develop the water resources we need so that we never have a deficiency in water supply. It’ll take us a little bit to catch up, but once we do we’ll stay ahead of the curve. We’re already having discussions with A&B about sharing the use of their irrigation systems as transportation systems for water. We do have to work with the state water commission as well, but at least we’ll have a real good idea as to where we’re going and what we need to accomplish. To spend a whole lot of time just taking water out of the Iao aquifer area—Na Wai Eha—makes almost no sense in the long term. All we’re doing currently is temporary patches, the movement of wells and trying to get broader draw bases—half a million gallons here or half a million gallons there. It’s still threatening the water resource. If Lahaina’s system were to fail today, how would we supplement? We don’t have a

“We’ve had a lot of complaints about County employees not being public-oriented and not working as public servants. This is an attitude that I won’t tolerate.”

But honestly I don’t want to go into too much detail, because I’m going to have the parks department review these things and find out who was responsible. These are ways that County funds are being misspent, and we have to go back and make corrections.

bright and capable. I have her as transportation director because I believe she has the vision to look long-term at the kinds of things we need to accomplish. Corridors for a train system, for example. She’ll have engineers and experts helping with the technical side of course, but being able to go out in the community and work with the state and understand the legislative process is very important. One of our contributors, Rob

backup. We can’t be crossing our fingers and hoping on a wing and a prayer. We have to figure out ways to connect all the systems and balance our water use, to be sure there’s a redundancy to protect the community. Is that something you could accomplish in four years? Is this an issue voters should judge you on? It’s not going to happen in four years. The start of it will happen within a year or two, but these are long-term plans. We don’t have

the money to just go in and make all these improvements right away, but we do have the will to start laying out the programs and getting things going. It will take time, but we need to start someplace. What do you think about the makeup of the new Council? Are you optimistic you’ll be able to work with them? I’m optimistic I’ll be able to work with the Council. Having former Councilmembers on our staff will allow us to have a lot better communication. I want everybody to know that any breakdown in communication is not going to be because my administration is trying to estrange itself. We’re going to go out of our way to try and work with the Council, and you will note that at every meeting, every time they ask us for something we’ll be cooperative. This has to be a cooperative relationship; it’s not about political posturing. It sounds like you’re anticipating problems. Do you have any specific reason to be concerned? No. The last time we were in office, we had problems because it wasn’t always a two-way street. And I’m pointing out that we’re going to do everything in our power to make it a two-way street. I’m not anticipating a problem, [but] if there is a problem it’s not going to be our fault. We hear regularly from people who’ve given up on County government, who believe it’s broken. What would you say to them? Well, let me point out some harsh realities. If County government didn’t exist, most of these people would not have water or sewers, their roads would not be repaired, there would be no police or fire protection. All of these things they’ve given up on, they depend on them, too. And they’ll be the first to scream they want a fire engine when their house is burning down. Those are essential services. What about some of the lessessential bureaucracy? It goes hand-in-hand. Whenever you have a government system you’re dealing with a lot of areas, balancing community needs and community wants. You’re always going to have conflicts. The person who wants the perfect government for himself is being very selfish, saying, ‘I don’t care what anybody else needs.’ That doesn’t work in the real world. The reality is we have limitations in resources [and] capabilities. We can’t snap our fingers and have the best engineers, the best technicians, the best computer geniuses at fingertip. People within our community, the skills they have, are the best we have and we have to utilize them as best we can. There will be mistakes, there will be delays. But if people don’t like the way government is operating, they can volunteer for boards and commissions and be in a position to make decisions. Everything from street lighting or street naming commissions to the planning commission, police commission, the water board. People need to stand up and be part of a solution rather than just griping. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429a

JANUARY 6, 2011 11


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FOOD & DRINK

BY JASON “CASS” CASTLE jason@mauitime.com

Glass Is In Session Think becoming a wine expert is all sips and giggles? Think again

R

estaurant guests always ask me where I studied wine. It’s an understandable inquiry; they are, after all, about to let me help them spend hundreds of dollars on alcohol. While there are plenty of “schools” that claim to teach one how to become a sommelier, it is only the Court of Master Sommeliers that carries the international reputation necessary to enhance your resume.

This Society is not a school, but rather four levels of testing, ending in the coveted master sommelier diploma. In order to acquire the knowledge necessary to pass all four levels, candidates must spend years in independent study, with mentoring by masters throughout. Many restaurant professionals pass the introductory course. A fraction move forward to the second tier and earn the title of certified sommelier. But the advanced sommelier level and master diploma have less than 1,000 members worldwide. Here’s how I cracked that exclusive club.

Y

ou walk into a banquet room at some five-star hotel. The massive space has been cleared of all furniture, save a lone table in the center. Placed on the table are six wine glasses with varying shades of red and white wine. Three individuals are seated on one side awaiting your arrival. All three are master sommeliers, there to administer your blind tasting examination. There are only 172

masters in the world and the gravity of the situation hits you fast. As you sit on the opposite side, glasses before you, a master breaks the silence: “You know the drill; we will start the clock when you touch the first glass.” You do know the drill, which is why your hand is shaking when you begin a visual analysis of wine number one. You now have exactly 25 minutes to tell these masters everything about the mystery wines: vintage, region, grape varietal, quality level— of level—all it. Miss one a you wine and might have w just wasted a week’s worth wo This of work. is day five, the d of final day your advanced somm sommelier exam exam. On day four you arriv at the arrive testi site testing s on schedule ta the to take serv service por portion of the exam, hel in the held same sam room as the blind tasting tas segment, se but bu with three th Afte the test tables instead of one. After tabl where begins, you walk up to the first table two masters are seated. Acting like restaurant patrons they grill you on cocktail recipes before attacking food and wine pairing

You are ushered to a second table and another set of masters. They study your every movement as you open a bottle of champagne, all the while quizzing you on obscure wine regions and cult producers. The final table is more of the same, masters observing as you decant a bottle of old red wine and quizzing you on vintage knowledge: “This is the 1995 vintage, but I also hear the ’90 and ’96 are good, can you explain the differences between the ’90s vintages in Bordeaux, France?” Your answer is quickly followed by their retort: “Now let’s discuss the ’80s of Tuscany, Italy.” Good grief.

Y

ou wake up scared as hell on day three, knowing this is when the fun begins. In the late afternoon you will take the theory portion of the exam, considered by many to be the most difficult segment. After sitting through some morning lectures and practice tastings, the test begins. Over 100 of the hardest questions you have ever seen: 1. What is the minimum yield for Grand Cru Champagne in hectoliters per hectare? 2. List all the DOCGs of Piedmont, Italy, in order from East to West. 3. What are the grapes used in Spanish Cava production? That last question was a gimme, so you struggle through the rest, all the while wishing you’d just gone to law school like your parents wanted. The masters throw in a separate wine-list critique test intended to display your in-the-field experience. Afterward, they hand you a piece of paper with the appointment times for the next two sections of the test, coming tomorrow and the next day. Day three is over and you’re already exhausted. Right now an ice

You struggle through questions about obscure wines and regions, all the while wishing you’d just gone to law school like your parents wanted. ideology. Ingredients of old-school cocktails like the Negroni, Sidecar, Scorpion...gotta know them all. Afterwards, you are given two minutes to correctly identify twelve mystery glasses of spirits by nose only. You reply: “Number one is Islay Scotch; number two is XO Cognac…”

cold beer sounds great, but there is no time for that. Back to the hotel instead, time to pull another all-nighter. Day two is a continuation of day one. From eight in the morning to six at night you sit through a series of lectures that remind you of the infamous professor »

JANUARY 6, 2011 13


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BY JASON “CASS� CASTLE jason@mauitime.com

Âť who writes on the blackboard with his right hand while holding an eraser in his left. You now take notes in shorthand code just to keep pace. Interspersed throughout the day are blind tasting practice sessions with different masters. You start to take

certified sommelier applicants. All have letters of recommendation from masters and all have already paid the $1,000 examination fee, as well as the additional thousands necessary to take a week off work and fly to the exam site. Everyone begins

Your hand is shaking when you begin a visual analysis of wine number one. notice of the candidates who don’t have what it takes to pass, despite the fact that most are on their second or third attempt. p Such a small consolation as you ou return to your lonely hotel room m to hit the books.

nervously writing notes as they listen to lectures provided by the two dozen masters who have flown in to proctor the exam. Two

and a half days of lecture and blind tasting practice before actual testing begins. You wonder if you are good enough, knowing already that only ten people will make it out of this bright and talented field. Only ten. On day six you sit on the long flight home. The test is over. The advanced sommelier pin is newly minted and emblazoned on your suit’s lapel. Drained, you try to get back into the swing of things at your restaurant. The first table of guests requests the sommelier and asks if you have any wine recommendations. You smile. “Sure. Red or white?â€? â–

Jason “Cass� Castle is a certified specialist of wine and spirits, an advanced level sommelier and the beverage director for Merriman’s Merr Kapalua Got a hot food scoop? Contact Jen Russo at 280-3286 280 or fax to 244-0446. To sshare or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429d m t.

I

t’s day one and 60 men and women file into a conference room m clad in suits. This is the same room you will soon know intimately over the course of a week. These candidates represent the top professionals in the wine business, selected from hundreds of

For more foodie news, visit MauiTime’s food blog: mauidish.com

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Playing Chicken A globe-trotting, genre-bending string band—on Maui? Cluck yeah BrownChicken BrownCow String Band Bcbcsb.com, @BCBCSB on Twitter Next gig: Friday (January 7), on the Maui Thing stage at Wailuku First Friday, N. Market St.

B

PHOTO BY JOYCE CHIN

rownChicken BrownCow String Band defies classification—and that’s the great thing about them. They’re so determined to do things their own way, they fall outside the narrow elucidation of genre. Sure their jangly, traditional, often acoustic styling honors the past, but this foursome’s sound supersedes historical expectations. Just because you see a fiddle, a banjo or an upright bass, don’t peg it as bluegrass. The band (or any bluegrass purist for that matter) will be the first to tell you it’s not. “What do we call what we do? I have a name for it—we each have a name for it,” says guitarist Justin Morris. “We’ve been trying to peg that one down for awhile,” adds fiddler Xander Hitzig, acknowledging that the band is easy to mischaracterize—and that accurate characterization may, in fact, be impossible. “Personally, I haven’t been able to come up with anything specific,” mandolin player Orion Hitzig further explains. “I always come up with some scattered description, then when I’m done explaining it—” he stops to sound an unconvinced yawing. “Mine is ‘multicultural string music’,” says bassist Matt Del Olmo. And the band does cite far-reaching influences: country, jazz, blues, rock—and, yes, bluegrass. “What I’ve always told people is we’re an original Appalachian string band,” says Justin, as he describes a timeline of influences in and around the band’s home, West Virgina. “This band was born in the Appalachian mountains, [and] that region is a huge melting pot of culture. There’s a lot in pride in that for me.” It’s the indefinable quality of BrownChicken BrownCow String Band that I like best, and it’s the direction I’d like to see music—and society at large—head. Labels tend to obscure more than they reveal, and once we’re rid of them we can experience each other—and each others’ art—more freely. Seem a little heady for a string band? That’s nothing: Justin explains how—when “panning” (i.e. assigning elements of monaural music to make it stereophonic) their last album ...It’s A Deep Subject—he was struck with an epiphany, and started seeing sound waves as three-dimensional. “There’s an X, Y and Z axis to sound, a sphere with depth and texture,” he says. On that note, our conversation delves

into the band’s “geeked-out curiosity” about the science of sound. “We’re continually educating ourselves,” says Matt. “Jabber about the physics of music, we’re always in on that conversation. There’s always something new to learn.” “I like experimenting with the imagination of music,” Xander adds. “Sometimes you mess up and you like it. Experiment with those mistakes and you can write some pretty cool things. Do it once, it’s a mess up. Do it twice, it’s jazz.” Orion leans in to show me a YouTube video on his iPhone, of what’s called cymatics. That’s when a substrate, sometimes referred to as a Chlandi Plate, is subject to audio frequencies (they pull out a 440 Hz—middle A—tuning fork, to show me an example), and liquid or granular objects like salt or sand scattered on top suddenly and stunningly arrange into intricate geometric shapes, not unlike crop circles. (In case you’re rolling your eyes, cymatics isn’t some sort of new-fangled hippiedippieness— physicist John Tyndall published diagrams of these patterns in 1869.) As we continue, our discourse becomes littered with gestures and onomatopoeia. As the band shares its insights, they become

both more exciting and clear and harder to convey. Xander briefly explains his idea for a music camp with one rule: no talking. Instead, all communication would happen instrumentally. It’s an innovative idea for a sound-meets-social experiment, and suggests these guys are bursting with outside-the-box notions. But don’t take my word for it, go ahead and ask them yourself (after checking out one of their concerts, of course). I’m sure they’d be happy to engage in a discussion of sound, soul and science—onomatopoeia, gesture and all.

S

econd only to their bornand-bred home of West Virgina, BrownChicken BrownCow String Band finds solace and inspiration on Maui. If they remain more than a couple weeks in any other place, they say they “get antsy” (case in point: they’ve “crossed the U.S. five times in 10 months—six times if you count the airplanes”). They first ventured to the Valley Isle in September of 2008, a week after their first gig on the Mainland, and have toured here each winter since. When I say they’ve

got the schedule of whales, they laugh agreeably, adding, “and this is where we birth new ideas.” So while Mauians can lay some claim to them and trust they’ll undoubtedly return, they won’t stay here perpetually. In fact, come February they’re off and away again for another worldwide whirlwind, “fueled by adventure, so to speak.” They’ve wrapped up their four-show Ice Cream Tour with Coconut Glen, so your only chances to see them now are at spontaneously planned gigs. Given their eccentric penchant for experimentation and the flexibility that acoustic instruments allow, you might find them anywhere from the bowels of a wine cave amidst antique sculptures to out on a catamaran in the middle of the ocean. Don’t worry, though—MauiTime is making it easy for you. Check out BrownChicken, opening for the monsoon of sound that is Moth, at the January 7 Wailuku First Friday, helping us celebrate 13 years of independent media. See you there. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429ae

JANUARY 6, 2011 17


BY BARRY WURST II

FILM

barry@mauitime.com

Like Triangle

Muddled-but-entertaining rom com more fling than LTR How Do You Know

★★★★★

Rated PG13/136 min.

H

ere’s one of my favorite Hollywood stories: In 1994, writer/director James L. Brooks made a musical called I’ll Do Anything. Ever the risk-taker, Brooks shot the film as a song and dance fest and had stars Nick Nolte and Albert Brooks perform numbers written by Prince and Sinead O’Conner. A legendarily hostile preview screening led Brooks to cut out the musical bits and the film was released as a straight romantic comedy. You have to give the guy credit for taking a chance like that (and here’s hoping the director’s cut will one day surface!). More than anything, that story always makes me look forward to a James L. Brooks film. His latest stars Reese Witherspoon as a softball player who is cut from her team and takes comfort in the arms of a baseball

player (Owen Wilson) with a reputation for being a ladies’ man. Meanwhile, fatherand-son business partners (Jack Nicholson and Paul Rudd) find their reputations going down in flames after a scandal hits their office. The two worlds eventually collide and a unique romantic triangle (or some other geometic shape) forms where, regardless of who ends up with whom, the result will be an odd, damaged pairing. The dialogue is larger than life, obviously the work of a screenwriter but containing honesty and universal truths. I enjoy stylized and showy scripts, but some won’t buy it; like Quentin Tarantino, Brooks writes how we wish we could talk, not how we actually do. Some scenes feel sitcom-y, especially Nicholson’s—his extended cameo is fun but he does more for the role than it does for him. Rudd perfects the adorable dweeb he has been playing for years and Wilson is funny as an alpha male who wants to settle down but struggles with monogamy. Witherspoon certainly looks the part of a softball player (her extensive training shows) and the role is in line with the typically strong female leads Brooks has written in the

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past, but this is one of Witherspoon’s most mannered performances; I liked her work but you can see her working really hard at it. Some scenes feel sloppy and should have been cut, like a subplot involving Rudd’s loyal secretary. On the other hand, Nicholson should have been given more to do and it would have been nice to actually see footage of Wilson and Witherspoon playing the sports their characters are so

passionate about. If this sounds like a negative review, it isn’t. This is all perfectly pleasant and entertaining—a fine date movie. It just doesn’t display much of the fearless bravado Brooks is capable of. In other words, it’s no Sinead O’Conner musical. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1429f


Showtimes FRONT STREET THEATER 900 Front Street, Lahaina, 249-2222 (Matinees) The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (2D)-PG-THU-FRI (3:45), 6:30, 9:15. SAT-SUN (1:00), 3:45, 6:30, 9:15. MON-WED (3:45), 6:30, 9:15. Gulliver’s Travels (2D)-PG-THU-FRI (4:00), 6:30, 9:00. SAT-SUN (1:15), 4:00, 6:30, 9:00. MON-WED (4:00), 6:30, 9:00. How Do You Know-PG13-THU (4:15), 7:00, 9:45. FRI (4:00), 6:45, 9:30. SATSUN (1:30), 4:00, 6:45, 9:30. MON-WED (4:00), 6:45, 9:30. True Grit-PG13-THU (4:30), 7:15, 10:00. FRI (4:30), 7:00, 9:30. SAT-SUN (1:45), 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. MON-WED (4:30), 7:00, 9:30.

KA’AHUMANU 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center, 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm) Black Swan-R-THU-WED 11:45, 2:10, 4:35, 7:05, 9:30 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1-PG13-THU-WED 12:45, 3:55, 7:10 The King’s Speech-R-THU-TUE 11:50, 2:20, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. WED 11:00, 2:20, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. The Tourist-PG13-THU 11:55, 2:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:35. FRI-SAT 11:55, 2:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:35, 10:25. SUN-WED 11:55, 2:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:35. Tron: Legacy (2D)-PG-THU 12:00, 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. FRI-SAT 12:00, 2:40, 5:20, 8:00, 10:40. SUN-WED 12:00, 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. Tron: Legacy (3D)-PG-THU-WED 11:00, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40.

KUKUI MALL 1819 South Kihei Road, 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm) The Fighter-R-THU 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. FRI-SAT 11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. SUN 11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00. MON-WED 1:00, 3:35, 6:05, 8:35. Little Fockers-PG13-THU 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:00. FRI-SAT 11:00, 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:00, 10:15. SUN 11:00, 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:00. MON-WED 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:00. Tron: Legacy (2D)-PG-THU 1:55, 4:35, 7:15, 9:55. FRI-SAT 11:15, 1:55, 4:35, 7:15, 9:55. SUN 11:15, 1:55, 4:35, 7:15. MON-WED 1:55, 4:35, 7:15. True Grit-PG13-THU 1:00, 3:25, 5:50, 8:15. FRI-SAT 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40. SUN 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15. MON-WED 1:10, 3:35, 6:00, 8:25.

MAUI MALL MEGAPLEX

WHERE AND WHEN TO WATCH WHAT

Maui Mall, 249-2222 (Matinees) The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (3D)-PG-THUFRI (1:40, 4:15), 6:55, 9:35. SAT-SUN (1:40), 4:15, 6:55, 9:35. MON-WED (1:40, 4:15), 6:55, 9:35. Country Strong-PG13-FRI (1:30, 4:15), 7:00, 9:45. SAT-SUN (1:30), 4:15, 7:00, 9:45. MON-WED (1:30, 4:15), 7:00, 9:45. The Fighter-R-THU-FRI (1:25, 4:05), 6:45, 9:25. SAT-SUN (1:25), 4:05, 6:45, 9:25. MON-WED (1:25, 4:05), 6:45, 9:25. Gulliver’s Travels (3D)-PG-THU (2:25, 4:50), 7:15, 9:40. FRI (12:05, 2:15, 4:35), 6:50, 9:05. SAT-SUN (12:05, 2:15), 4:35, 6:50, 9:05. MON-WED (2:15, 4:35), 6:50, 9:05. How Do You Know-PG13-THU (1:35, 3:40), 6:30, 6:50, 9:20. FRI (12:50, 1:35, 3:40, 4:20), 6:30, 7:10, 9:20, 9:50. SAT-SUN (12:50, 1:35), 3:40, 4:20, 6:30, 7:10, 9:20, 9:50. MON-WED (1:35, 3:40, 4:20), 6:30, 7:10, 9:20, 9:50. Little Fockers-PG13-THU (2:40, 5:05), 7:30, 9:45. FRI (12:15, 2:40, 5:05), 7:25, 9:45. SAT-SUN (12:15, 2:40), 5:05, 7:25, 9:45. MON-WED (2:40, 5:05), 7:25, 9:45. Little Fockers (Sony Digital)-PG13-THU (2:10, 4:35), 7:00, 9:30. FRI-WED (2:00), 7:05. Season of the Witch-PG13-FRI (12:30, 2:50, 5:10), 7:30, 9:50. SAT-SUN (12:30, 2:50), 5:10, 7:30, 9:50. MON-WED (2:50, 5:10), 7:30, 9:50. The Social Network-PG13-THU (4:15), 9:30 Tangled (2D)-PG-THU (1:30, 3:55), 6:20, 8:45. FRI (12:00, 2:25, 4:50), 7:15, 9:40. SAT-SUN (12:00, 2:25), 4:50, 7:15, 9:40. MON-WED (2:25, 4:50), 7:15, 9:40. True Grit-PG13-THU-FRI (1:30, 4:05), 6:40, 9:15. SAT-SUN (1:30), 4:05, 6:40, 9:15. MON-WED (1:30, 4:05), 6:40, 9:15. True Grit (Sony Digital)-PG-THU (2:00, 4:35), 7:10, 9:45. FRI (4:35), 9:35. SATSUN 4:35, 9:35. MON-WED (4:35), 9:35. Yogi Bear (3D)-PG-THU (2:10, 4:20), 6:30, 8:40. FRI (12:20, 2:25, 4:30), 6:35, 8:40. SAT-SUN (12:20, 2:25, 4:30, 6:35, 8:40. MON-WED (2:25, 4:30), 6:35, 8:40. Yogi Bear (Sony Digital)-PG-THU (2:55, 5:05).

WHARF CINEMA CENTER 658 Front Street, 249-2222 (Matinees) Little Fockers-PG13-THU (1:15, 3:45), 7:15, 9:45. FRI (1:00, 3:35), 6:30, 9:00. SAT-SUN (1:00), 3:35, 6:30, 9:00. MON-WED (1:00, 3:35), 6:30, 9:00. Season of the Witch-PG13-FRI (1:30, 4:00), 7:00, 9:30. SAT-SUN (1:30), 4:00, 7:00, 9:30. MON-WED (1:30, 4:00), 7:00, 9:30. Tron: Legacy (2D)-PG-THU (1:05, 4:00), 7:00, 9:55. FRI-WED (2:00), 5:00, 8:30. Yogi Bear (3D)-PG-THU (1:30, 3:45), 6:30, 9:00.

New This Week COUNTRY STRONG - PG13 - Drama - Two country stars—one who lost her truck and one who hasn’t yet lost his—fall in love and go on tour. Gwyneth Paltrow stars, in a role supposedly inspired by Britney Spears. For real. 120 min. SEASON OF THE WITCH - PG13 - Action, Fantasy - Nick Cage dons flowing locks to play a 14th century knight. Also involves plagues and magic and stuff. 110 min.

NOW SHOWING BLACK SWAN - R - Drama, Horror - Thought ballet was all pointe shoes and demi-pliés? Think again. Natalie Portman stars. 109 min. THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: VOYAGE OF THE DAWN TREADER - PG - Fantasy Pasty-faced British kids and CGI animals hit the high seas in the third film installment of C.S. Lewis’s beloved series. 115 min.

with bigger problems than getting financial aid for wizard college. 149 min. HOW DO YOU KNOW - PG13 - Comedy Owen Wilson, Reese Witherspoon and Paul Rudd form a love triangle, with Jack Nicholson thrown in to screw up the geometry. 136 min. THE KING’S SPEECH - R - Drama - A stuttering monarch finds his voice in time to call out Hitler. Colin Firth and Geoffrey Rush star (neither as Hitler). 118 min. LITTLE FOCKERS - PG13 - Comedy Apparently two movies weren’t enough for Ben Stiller and Bob De Niro to work out their issues. And now there are kids involved. 83 min. THE SOCIAL NETWORK - PG13 - Drama - Hey, you know that little Web site all the kids are talking about? Here’s the (alleged) story of how it was born. 133 min.

TANGLED - PG - Animated - Running out of fairy tales to sprinkle with empowering modern messages and pop culture references, Hollywood turns to Rapunzel. 115 min. THE TOURIST - PG13 - Drama Smoldering good looks and vague accents collide as Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie share the screen. The plot? Come on, you don’t care about the plot. 104 min. TRON LEGACY - PG - Action - A sequel 28 years in the making. Strap yourselves in, geeks, and enjoy the ride. 141 min. TRUE GRIT - PG13 - Western - The Coen Brothers update the John Wayne classic (though they insist it’s based on the book) with Jeff Bridges donning the eye patch. 110 min. YOGI BEAR 3D - PG - Family, Animated - An existential meditation on love, yearning and the meaning of picnic baskets. 98 min.

THE FIGHTER - R - Drama - A working class boxer nicknamed “Irish” (code, as ever, for “white”) fights for respect in and out of the ring. Mark Wahlberg and Christian Bale star. 116 min. GULLIVER’S TRAVELS - PG - Comedy, Fantasy - Jonathan Swift’s 18th century adventure gets an update, Jack Black-style. Next up: Will Ferrell as Captain Nemo. 85 min. HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS, PART 1 - PG13 - Fantasy - Harry enters his final year at Hogwarts

I could gaze into your beard all night. (Country Strong)

JANUARY 6, 2011 19


PICKS

This Week's Picks

DIVERSIONS, DALLIANCES & DATES

TGIF

The Greening Of Life

Friday (January 7), 6-8pm, Market St., Wailuku, free

Friday (January 7), 7:30pm, Iao Theater, free (donations welcome)

MauiTime is somewhere between celebrating our Bar Mitzvah and Quinceanera—frankly, we’ve discussed it ad nauseum and still aren’t sure (we journalists aren’t known for our mathematical prowess). All we know is we’ve got zits, maybe even a few peeking pubes, and it’s high time we EN celebrate our coming of age (whatever ICK H C WN OW RO N C age that might be). So for simplicity’s & BROW B sake, let’s say we’re 13 and that the day we’re bringing cupcakes to class is this Friday. Because just when you thought Wailuku First Friday couldn’t get any cooler, it’s our turn to hijack the headliner helm. And c’mon, after all this time together you know us well enough to know we’ve booked some of the best. The party starts with BrownChicken BrownCow String Band (see page 17 for more) at the Maui Thing stage, followed by dynamic duo Moth, who—in a manner of speaking—will strike a match to light our birthday candles. I’ve waxed poetic here and even in Kula Kid about the brewtiful beer garden, and WFF mainstays like Gallerie Ha’s Aloha Poetry Slam (8pm; this month, and the winner gets a medal) and Gene and Shea Argel outside Cafe O’Lei (5pm). Plus, this month’s extrafun fare includes Visibly Shaken at the Main Street Promenade and Head High at Wailuku Banyan Tree Park. 249-9710, 1stfridaywailuku@gmail.com

Green. If that’s a word you’ve heard so many times you’re about to become it, we understand. Not to belittle the importance of sustainability, but what good is the word if it’s not backed up with action? Enter Ho‘okele Wa‘a: Turning The Canoe: Navigating a Sustainable Future for Maui and the World, a film project by the Sustainable Living Institute of Maui (SLIM) at UH Maui College, and Maui Film Festival audience award-winner. The doc highlights the passionate efforts of our Valley Isle brethren who are joining forces to—as the title describes— change the direction of our long-adrift ship. Narrated by Kapena Boyd with original music by James “Kimo” West, the film was directed by Hawaii Islander Danny Miller, co-produced and written by Dr. Janet Six and produced by former SLIM executive director Alex de Roode. We caught up with current SLIM e.d. Jennifer Chirico, who’s finishing up her Ph.D. in environmental policy and writing her dissertation about sustainability on remote islands. “This film really highlights community involvement — and that idea of a collective is often left out of the definition of sustainability,” she says. “Being successful requires integrating all of its components, and it takes the community coming together to make it possible.” Turningthecanoe.org, sustainablemaui.org

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20 JANUARY 6, 2011


BY ANU YAGI anu@mauitime.com + @anuheayagi on Twitter

Snow Good

Fringe Benefit

Saturday (January 8), 7:30pm, Castle Theater, MACC, $10 keiki / $12 adults

Saturday (January 8), 8-11pm, Iao Theater, $10 advance / $12 door MOUNTAIN PHOTO BY NAOMI D. SHEIKIN

DOUG STOUP PHOTO BY WILL WISSMAN

I wonder if the prehistoric Nordic progenitors of skiing would ever have imagined that centuries into the future, their sticks-and-poles mode of transport would become the elite/extreme winter sport it is today? Unlikely—they were too busy munching filet de renne (i.e. Internet French for “reindeer tenderloin”). But they’d get it pretty quickly if they took in the work of Warren Miller, whose latest (and 61st!) film, Wintervention, which, per thre press releases, asks: “Do you have a skiing or snowboarding problem? Do you always have to take ‘just one more’ run? Do you sneak around your partner to get your powder fix?” My only problem isn’t with the drug insinuation, but the fact that this film will in no way curb your enthusiasm. No. This is your dealer’s dealer’s dealer—in high-definition— dangling in front of your face the chaseddragon caught and hung by its tail. Because in case you missed it, this is a Warren Miller film, and if you don’t know Warren Miller, you don’t know winter sports. So dear, deprived Mauians, check out this showcase of “skiers who sail from Argentina to Antarctic searching for some of the last untouched descents on Earth.” And if you’re ready to start dabbling... 242-7469, mauiarts.org, skinet.com/warrenmiller

Finally, Maui’s very own Fringe Festival cometh (a series of special one-acts, February 4-6 at the historic Iao Theater). But every inaugural event of such magnitude needs a little booster—and, baby, this boisterous benefit on Saturday night is it. Plus, it’s a fundraiser for beloved Mana‘o Radio 91.5FM. Question: How can you go wrong? Answer: You can’t. For the paltry price of a couple five dollar footlongs (R.I.P. Pukulani Terrace’s Subway, BTW), you’ll not only be supporting performing arts on the isle, but enjoying an impressive, intermission-less blitz of badass entertainment. The list is long, so I’m gonna dish it straight: Marja Apisaloma of The New Project, singer/songwriter Joe Benedett, singer/songwriter Cyrus Clark, Kathy Collins of Mana‘o fame, The Comedy Hui, belly dancer Layla Katrina, Joel Katz of Jimmy Mac & The Kool Kats, slam poet Mountain, Murray Thorne of The Celtic Tigers, The Troublemakers Trio, Randall Rospond and the Ha’iku Hillbillys (whose hustle to make this event happen is most admirable), and Visions Conservatory Dance Group. Whew! Plus, get there early for a good seat (doors open at 7:30pm) and enjoy live piano by Klaus Simmer. Pre-sale tickets available at Simmer Style (Paia), Requests (Wailuku), and the Iao Theater box office. 242-6969; mauionstage.com, manaoradio.com

SATURDAY, JANUARY 8 DOORS OPEN @ 9PM · $10 BEFORE 11PM VOTED BEST HAPPY HOUR ON MAUI! 1819 South Kihei Road 808-891-2414 11AM - 2AM Daily Dinner until 10PM

572-0220 JANUARY 6, 2011 21


THE LINEUP THURSDAY t NJEOJHIU MULLIGANS PUB QUIZ NIGHT WITH TRISH THE DISH

BY ANU YAGI

CALENDAR

anu@mauitime.com + @anuheayagi on Twitter

Da Kine Calendar

FRIDAY t QN

GAIL SWANSON KA’ENA ELABAN QN NJEOJHIU

BIG SHOWS

SATURDAY t QN

JAZZ ON THE BLUE JORDAN & WOLF QN DMPTF SUNDAY t QN QN

THE CELTIC TIGERS WITH MAD BAGPIPER ROGER MCKINLEY

BIG JOHN FROM THE GROUP OFF TOMORROW QN NJEOJHIU

MONDAY t QN

Joyce & Gord TUESDAY t QN

MURRAY THORNE TIN CAN TUESDAYS

TIN CAN COMEDY

WITH SHAGGY OF Q103 QN

WEDNESDAY t QN QN

WILLIE K

AN EVENING WITH LEO KOTTKE - Thu, Jan 6. Six (and 12!) string samurai Leo Kottke is not just a great player, but a gifted singer and funny man. $30 / $40 / $50. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org MOTH WITH BROWNCHICKEN BROWNCOW STRING BAND - Fri, Jan 7. Attention smart, music-savvy folks: MauiTime is taking over this ďŹ rst-of-the-year Wailuku First Friday. So you’d better be there. See This Week’s Picks for more. Free. 6-8pm. Market & Main St., Wailuku. 1stfridaywailuku@gmail.com FREE SCREENING: “HO’OKELE WA’A: TURNING THE CANOEâ€? - Fri, Jan 7. Shown in conjunction with Wailuku First Friday festivities, learn about how locals are “navigating a sustainable future for Maui and the world.â€? See This Week’s Picks for more. Free (donations welcome). 7:30pm. Iao Theater, 68 N. Market St., Wailuku; 808-242-6969; turningthecanoe.org WARREN MILLER’S “WINTERVENTIONâ€? - Sat, Jan 8. Narrated by skiing icon Jonny Moseley, Warren Miller’s “Winterventionâ€? takes riders like Chris Davenport, Jonny Moseley and Lindsey Vonn on a global tour of Alaska, Norway, Canada, Antarctica and beyond. See This Week’s Picks for more. $12 adults / $10 keiki 12 & under. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-2427469; mauiarts.org / warrenmiller.com AN EVENING OF OF POETRY, COMEDY, THEATER & MUSIC - Sat, Jan 8. A bad-ass beneďŹ t for the Maui Fringe Festival and Mana’o Radio. See This Week’s Picks for more. $10 advance / $12 door. 8-11pm. Iao Theater, 68 N. Market St., Wailuku; 808-242-6969; mauionstage.com

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XXX .VMMJHBOT0O5IF#MVF DPN

CHRISTOPHER WILLITS - Sun, Jan 9. Folding melodic guitar loops into photo/video experiments with shapes and rhythmic textures, Willits occupies a unique corner of the electronic music-new media art universe and redeďŹ nes guitar in the digital age. $17 advance / $22 day-of. 7pm. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org

STAGE “THE FANTASTICKSâ€? - Fri-Sun, Jan 7-9. Continues on January 13-16. A wonderful parable of love, from a book and lyrics by Tom Jones, and music by Harvey Schmidt. Get your tickets now, because they go fast! $25 adults / $20 keiki under 12-yearsold. ProArts Playhouse, 1280 S. Kihei Rd, Kihei; 808-463-6520; proartspaciďŹ c.com

Events. .com

22 JANUARY 6, 2011

This trio dishes soul food for your ears. Not-to-bemissed. $60 with four-course dinner / $30 show only. 6pm. Stella Blues Cafe, 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei; 808-874-3779; stellablues.com DAN HICKS, MARIA MULDAUR AND JORMA KAUKONEN WITH BARRY MITTERHOFF - Fri, Jan 14. Topnotch musicians blend Western swing/ Django/jazz/blues/roots/hippie eclecticism with their trademark sardonic lyrics. $45 / $50 / $55. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org KUMU KAHUA THEATRE PRESENTS “THE GREAT KAUA‘I TRAIN ROBBERYâ€? - Fri, Jan 14. Continues on January 15. A historical drama set on Kaua‘i in the early 20th century, this play was inspired by a series of real events — including the only train robbery in Hawai‘i’s history. By Hawai’i playwright Lee Cataluna. $22. 7:30pm. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org KANAKA HEKILI M/C 5TH ANNUAL GOLF TOURNAMENT - Sat, Jan 15. Currently seeking golfers, sponsors and prize donations. Deadline for hole sponsorship is January 8. Deadline for tournament entry is January 13. A portion of the proceeds beneďŹ t our beloved Maui Veterans of Foreign Wars. $100. Elleair Ballroom at the Maui Beach Hotel, 170 Ka’ahumanu Ave., Kahului; Jim Lapham: 808264-016; kanakahekili.com 2ND ANNUAL WINE WOMEN & SHOES EVENT - Sat, Jan 15. A snazzy beneďŹ t for Imua Family Services. $95 single / $1,500 table. 10:30am-2pm. Four Seasons Resort, 3900 Wailea Alanui Dr., Wailea; 808-244-7467; imuafamilyservices.org/ CECILIO & KAPONO WITH MAUI POPS ORCHESTRA - Sat, Jan 15. Woo hoo! C&K is always a double dose of not-to-be-missed awesomeness. $12 / $35 / $45 / $55. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org ANESTHESIA - Sat, Jan 15. You read that right — these heavy hitters are back in black, and will be joined by (also recently reunited) Entity Awakened, Owaila and Order of the White Rose. $12 advance. 9:30pm. Stella Blues Cafe, 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei; 808-874-3779; stellablues.com HERITAGE FILM FESTIVAL: “MANA I KA LEOâ€? Sun, Jan 16. This ďŹ lm articulates how chanters feel about their relationship with their gods, their family and their environment. Meet co-writer and producer Dawn Kani‘aupi‘o and director Ruben Carrillo during a post-screening Q&A session. $10. 3pm. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808242-7469; mauiarts.org / manaikaleo.com

CIRQUE POLYNESIA - Mon-Sat. It’s Circue du Soleil meets Polynesian hula with amazing high-wire acts, aerial acrobatics and illusions, and mind-boggling contortionist and balancing-acts. Call for their Kama’aina special. Starting at $62; Deals for kids. 6pm. Hyatt Regency Maui Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Kaanapali; 808-667-4540; maui.hyatt.com

NEW SHANGHAI CIRCUS - Mon, Jan 17. Continues on January 18. Building on time-honored traditional skills, the artists of today’s New Shanghai Circus have added layers of complexity, daring and fresh techniques to their already spectacular stunts. Monday at 4pm & 7pm, and Tuesday at 7pm. $12 / $19 / $25. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org

TICKETS ON SALE

SLACK KEY MASTERS WITH GEORGE KAHUMOKU & LEDWARD KAAPANA - Thu, Jan 20. This monthly showcase of music and storytelling with Uncle George features Ledward Kaapana, the Hawaiian “grand master� of stringed instruments. $25 / $45 VIP. 7:30pm. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org / slackkey.com

LOL@MACC WITH BLONDE BOMBSHELL MELINDA HILL - Thu, Jan 13. Los Angeles-based comedian Melinda Hill presents her laugh-out-loud production of “Marriage Material.� The interactive show marries slides and stories, exploring Internet dating and the illusion of comfort versus nourishment. $25 / $45 VIP. 7:30pm. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org SUPPER CLUB WITH PAULA FUGA, MIKE LOVE & SAM ITES - Fri, Jan 14. Ooh, you’re in for a treat!

D.R.I. (DIRTY ROTTEN IMBECILES) - Fri, Jan 21. Want to get dirty? Advance tickets available at groovetickets.com, at the Hard Rock, and at all Local Motion surf shops. No Cover. The Hard Rock

Cafe, 900 Front St., Lahaina; 808-667-7400 / 1-877714-7668; hardrock.com / underworldevents.com SOJA - Sat, Jan 22. Hailing from Washington DC, members Jacob Hemphill (vocals, guitar), Bobby Jefferson (bass), Ken Brownell (percussion), Ryan Berty (drums) and Patrick O’Shea (keyboards) are known for their lyrical storytelling and free-owing rhythms. $25 / $55 Premium. 7pm. Events Lawn, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org SOLEDAD BARRIO & NOCHE FLAMENCA - Sun, Jan 23. Under the direction of MartĂ­n Santangelo, this award-winning troupe is Spain’s most successful touring company. $12 / $28 / $35. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO - Tue, Jan 25. That’s all you need to know. GO!. $12 / $28 / $38. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org MYSTIC ISLAND FESTIVAL - January 26 - 31. The Mystic Island Festival is an evolution of the Maui Mystic Garden Party with new management/owners organized in the spirit of furthering a mystic-transformational-community-building experience. $125 / $150. 3pm. Camp Olowalu, ; mysticislandfestival.com BATTLEFIELD BAND - Thu, Jan 27. Inspired by their rich Celtic heritage and fueled by modern day Scotland’s scene, this band mixes old songs with new, playing a fusion of ancient and modern instruments: bagpipes, ďŹ ddle, synthesizer, guitar, utes, bodhran (hand drum) and accordion. $12 / $25 / $35. 7:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org MAUI POPS ORCHESTRA’S CLASSICAL SAMPLER - Sun, Jan 30. Mmm... With music from master composers Mozart, Brahms and Beethoven, it’s like a pupu platter of classical ear candy. Also, special guest Sara Buechner performs Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4. $10 / $21 / $26 / $41. 3:30pm. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org SOLO SESSIONS WITH MAKANA - Sun, Jan 30. This sultry slack-keyist is next on the MACC’s intimate Solo Sessions bill. Ladies (and gents), start your engines. $25 / $45. 7:30pm. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808242-7469; mauiarts.org MAUI HUMANE SOCIETY’S ANNUAL FUR BALL Sat, Feb 19. With the 2011 event theme “The Canine Canteen: Swing the Night Away,â€? this beloved fundraising event will honor the animals, men and women who have served our country in the armed forces. Tickets and sponsorships now available. Grand Wailea Resort & Spa, Haleakala Ballroom, 3850 Wailea Alanui Dr., Wailea; 808-877-3680 ext 32; mauihumanesociety.org DAMIAN MARLEY & NAS’S “DISTANT RELATIVESâ€? TOUR - Sun, Feb 27. An all-ages show! Just think of how sad you’ll be if you miss this. So stop at nothing to get your tickets. Because “it’s a journey, some will get left behind / ‘cause in life you cannot press rewind.â€?. $40. Events Lawn, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauivents.com/featured/nas-damien-marley-distant-relatives-hawaii-tour-maui-feb-27/

ANNOUNCEMENTS CREATE YOUR OWN SHOW FOR THE HUI’S 2011 SOLO EXHIBITION - The Hui No’eau is now accepting applications for their 2011 Solo Exhibition. Proposals due January 10. Show runs June 18 - July


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

01/06

01/07

01/08

01/09

01/10 - 01/12

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

ALE HOUSE

Ladies Night w/ DJ Jamn J, 9pm

Bottoms Up w/ DJ LX & Emcee Jay J, 9pm

Family Affair 10pm

Simma Down Sunday w/ DJ Jamn J, 10pm

MON- Karaoke w/ Pearl Rose, 8pm / TUE - Live Music w/ Braddah Francis & One Inity, 8:30pm / WED - Wild Wednesday w/ Bad Kitty, 8:30pm

AMBROSIA

Old School Thursdays w/ DJ Del Sol

Freakin’ Fun Fridays w/ DJ Mats

Sunrize Saturdaze w/ DJ Decka

Sunday Night Fever w/ DJ CIA

MON – Estee Graham & Toby Couture / TUE – Beat Down w / DJ Astro Raph / WED – Maui’s HI-5 Night (S.I.N.) w/ DJs Del Sol & CIA

Live Music

Live Music

355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891-1011

CARY & EDDIE’S HIDEAWAY REST. 500 N. Puunene Ave., Kahului - 873-6555

WED - Wild Wahine Wednesdays goes “Back to the Future” w/ DJ Blast, 10pm; $10

CASANOVA

1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220

Barefoot Minded 7:30 - 10pm; No Cover

Dave Caroll 7:30 - 10pm; No Cover

Dave Caroll 7:30 - 10pm; No Cover

Erin Smith 7:30 - 10pm; No Cover

MON - Peter D / TUE - Live Jazz / WED - Ryan Palma (All sets 7:30 - 10pm; No Cover)

DIAMONDS ICE BAR

House Music 10pm; No Cover

Cody, Patrick & Amanda 10pm; No Cover

Lie Music 10pm; No Cover

Bartenders’ New Year’s Party; 10pm; No Cover

MON - Gomega, 10pm / TUE - Suppah Duppah Reggae Band, 10pm / WED - Rob & Rob, 10pm

DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB

Quiz Night 8pm; No Cover

Jarod 10pm; No Cover

Live Music 10pm; No Cover

Sebrina 10pm; No Cover

MON – Big John / TUE – Johnny Ringo/ WED – Jessica & Kanoa (all sets 10pm; No Cover)

Karaoke

Kanaka Jams 6:30-10:30pm No Cover

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON, TUE & WED - Karaoke

Rampage 9pm - Close

Dat Guyz 9pm - Close

Saucy Yoda & Mythological Horses

Industry Night Karaoke

MON - Karaoke / TUE - Karaoke Contest / WED - Open Mic Night

COOL CAT CAFE

Wharf Cinema, Lahaina - 667-0908

1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-9299

1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-9669

GREEN LEAF SPORTS BAR 1088 Lower Main St., Wailuku - 244-4888

HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891-8010

Sondo Inspiracion 9:30pm; $7

HARD ROCK CAFE

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

ISANA

515 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-8199

JAVA JAZZ

3350 L. Honoapiilani Rd. 667-0787

23. Hui No’eau Visual Arts Center, 2841 Baldwin Ave., Makawao; 808-572-6560; huinoeau.com GREEN BUILDING AND LEED EXAM PREP TRAINING PROGRAM - Applications due February 1 for this LEED Exam Prep training program (March 8-11) sponsored by SLIM and VITEC. Learn about green technologies and strategies that are appropriate for Hawaii’s unique climate zones. Funded through grants, 10 free spots available (selection based on income and experience). $699. University of Hawaii Maui, 310 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-984-3379; sustainablemaui.org

EVENTS THURSDAY, JAN 06 MEET THE ARTIST: JAN SHANER - An award winning signature member of Plein Air Painters of Hawaii, Shaner has an incredible ability to capture color and light. Enjoy this unique opportunity to meet her. Free. 3-8pm. Hyatt Regency Maui Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Kaanapali; 808-661-1234; maui.hyatt.com THE LIFE AND TIMES OF WHALES - Whale Researcher David Mattila, the Science and Rescue Coordinator for the sanctuary and has studied whales in most oceans. He will share whale stories and insights with the public, with light refreshments provided by Whole Foods. Free. 6pm. Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary Education Center, 726 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei; 808-879-2818; hawaiihumpbackwhale.noaa.gov

FRIDAY, JAN 07 HIGH FREQUENCY WORLD TOUR - Continues through January 15. Here’s what’s happening this weekend: On Friday, get your Freq-on by “broadcasting your highest frequency message to the world.” On Saturday, screen a documentary film about “real genius” with intro by Dr. Joe Marshalla. On Sunday, engage in convo with a “professional muse.” On Monday, reconvene with Marshalla re: “repeatlessness.” $10. Temple of Peace, 575 Ha’iku Rd., Ha’iku; ; temple-of-peace.org MEET THE ARITST: JENNIFER VALENZUELA Painting fantastical mixed media landscapes incorporating Japanese rice papers, Valenzuela’s whimsy takes viewers into a world of color and vibrancy. Enjoy this unique opportunity to meet her. Free. 4:30-7pm. Maui Hands, Lahaina, 612 Front St., Ste. D, Lahaina; 808-667-9898; mauihands.com

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

WED - Karaoke

Ashley Welte 7pm - Close; No Cover

Guest Performer 7pm - Close; No Cover

Farzad & Mike Madden 7pm - Close; No Cover

Brian Cuomo 7pm - Close; No Cover

HUI MEMBERS OPENING RECEPTION: ANNUAL JURIED EXHIBITION - With only 53 pieces selected from a record-breaking 306 submitted, this the Hui’s most competitive exhibition of the year. Runs through February 18. 6pm. Hui No’eau Visual Arts Center, 2841 Baldwin Ave., Makawao; 808-572-6560; huinoeau.com

Ave., Kahului; 808-871-1307; mauimall.com

KARAOKE BY ELEINA - Sing along with the screen and for a moment, live-out your onstage dreams. Free. 6pm. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-871-1307; mauimall.com

KAHULUI ART DAYS - Continued from January 9. Looking for a unique collectible? You can find it here. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-871-1307; mauimall.com

WAILUKU FIRST FRIDAY - It’s a block party! Experience the exciting street festivities and a one-of-akind blend of old and new in Wailuku. Groove to bands while you shop, dine and play at this most memorable evening. See This Week’s Picks for more.

THE PEEK-A-BOWS - Live performance. Free. 1pm. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-871-1307; mauimall.com

SATURDAY, JAN 08 “CROSSING THE EVENT HORIZON” Jamie Janover presents Nassim Haramein’s ideas about Einstein’s Unified Field Theory. Plus, check out Casanova’s late night for an after-workshop party with Janover plus DJ Plush and DJ ELF Gabe. $44. 10am6pm. Temple of Peace, 575 Ha’iku Rd., Ha’iku; ; therenosanceproject.org / jamiejanover.com / templeof-peace.org

BRAZILIAN NIGHTS - Live performance. Free. 1pm. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-871-1307; mauimall.com

MONDAY, JAN 10

WEDNESDAY, JAN 12 SEAWEES OCEAN ED-VENTURE FOR PRESCHOOLERS - Continues on January 19 & 26. This program is for preschoolers (ages 3-5) and their parents/caregivers and features field trips, activities, songs, and stories with marine educator Merrill Kaufman. Advance enrollment is required. 9-10am. Pacific Whale Foundation’s Discovery Center, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808-249-8811 ext. 1; pacificwhalestore.org

SOME HERE. ALL ONLINE. CALENDAR LISTINGS

ON MAUITIME.COM

HUI LANAKILA - Live performance. Free. 1pm. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-8711307; mauimall.com OPENING RECEPTION: “LEGACY OF THE LAND” - A collaboration between the MACC and Maui Coastal Land Trust, twenty four artists were invited to explore a specific property on Maui and develop work based on their inspiration. Artists’ opening reception features a special appearance by San Francisco musician and visual artist, Christopher Willits. 6-8pm. Schaefer International Gallery, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org

SUNDAY, JAN 09 KAHULUI ART DAYS - Continues on January 10. Feeling artsy fartsy? Get your collector’s fix by checking out all the great art offerings. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu

DINNER MUSIC WEST MAUI

CANOES - Fri, Howard Ahia 5:30-8:30pm; Sun, Live Jazz 3-6pm 1450 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-0937. DUKE’S BEACH HOUSE - Thu, Ernie 3 – 5pm, Garrett & Peter 6 – 8:30pm; Fri, Garret 3 – 5pm, Kulewa 6 8:30pm; Sat, Mondo 3 – 5pm, Kulwea 6 - 8:30pm; Sun, Mondo 3 – 5pm, Ernie & Miles 6 – 8:30pm. 130 Kai Malina Pkwy., Lahaina, 808-662-2900. HULA GRILL - Thu, Bruddah Larry 11:30am – 1pm, Ernest Pua’a 2 - 4pm, Armadillo 4:15 – 6:15pm, Kulewa 6:30 - 9pm; Fri, Ernest Pua’a 11:30am – 1pm, Kawika Lum Ho 2 - 4pm, 1810 4:15 – 6:15pm, Kawika, Roy & Tarvin 6:30 - 9pm; Sat, Closed; Sun, Ron Hetteen 11:30am-1pm; Kawika Lum Ho 2-4pm; 1810 4:15-6:15; Derrick Sebastian Trio 6:30-9pm. Mon, Ernest Pua’a 11:30am – 1pm, Kawika Lum Ho 2 – 4pm, Armadillo 4:15 – 6:15pm, Derrick Sebastian & Josh

MON - Ashley Welte / TUE & WED - Rene Alonzo (All 7pm - Close; No Cover) Kahula 6:30 - 9pm; Tue, Kawika Lum Ho 11:30 a.m – 1pm, Jarrett Roback 2 – 4pm, Ernest Pua’a 4:15 – 6:15pm, Ernest Pua’a & Friends 6:30 - 9pm; Wed, Mika Villaren 11:30am – 1pm, Ernest Pua’a 2 - 4pm, Peter DeAquino 4:15 – 6:15pm, Ernest, Roy & Tarvin 6:30 - 9pm Whaler’s Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Bldg P, Lahaina, 808-667-6636. LAHAINA PIZZA COMPANY - Every Wed, Thu & Fri, John Kane 7:30-9:30pm; Sat, Harry Troupe 7:309:30pm; Sun, Greg Di Piazza 7:30-9:30pm; Every Mon & Tue, Martin Tevaga 7:30-9:30pm 730 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-0700. LEILANI’S ON THE BEACH - Every Fri, The J.D on the Rocks Band 2:30-5pm; Every Sat, JD & Harry 2:30-5pm; Every Sun, Kilohana 2:30-5pm Whaler’s Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy. Bldg. J, Ka’anapali, 808-661-4495. LULU’S LAHAINA SURF CLUB & GRILL - Every Thu, Classic Rock Thursdays featuring Howard Ahia 6-8pm; Fri, Cyrus Clark 5-7pm; Every Mon, Junior 8-9:30pm; Every Tue, Karaoke w/ Troy 8pm. Lahaina Cannery Mall, 1221 Honoapiilani Hwy. #A1, Lahaina, 808-661-0808. MERRIMAN’S - Wed-Sun, Ranga Pae; Mon, Benoit Jazzworks will return next week; Tue, David Choy. All sets 6-9pm. 1 Bay Club Pl., Lahaina, 808-669-6400. PIONEER INN GRILL & BAR - Wed, Greg DiPiazza 6-8pm; Tue, Ah Tim 5:30-8:30pm 658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 808-661-8881. SEA HOUSE RESTAURANT - Every Tue & Fri, Kincaid Kupahu 7-9pm; Every Sun & Thu, Andrew Kaina 7-9pm; Sat, Coehlo Morrison 7-9pm; Every Mon & Wed, Albert Kaina 7-9pm 5900 Lower Honoapiilani Hwy., Napili, 808-669-1500. TIA JUANA’S CANTINA - Wed, Tableside Magic w/ Brenton Keith 6-9pm 2291 Kaanapali Pkwy., Lahaina, 808-667-4080. TROPICA - Every Fri, Soul Lounge 8 -10pm; Every Sat, Island Essence featuring DJ Zinn 8-10pm. Westin Maui Resort & Spa, 2365 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Ka’anapali, 808-662-2762.

SOUTH MAUI AMBROSIA - Every Thu, Jamie Gallow 7pm; Every Tue, “Glee” Screening 7pm. Every Wed, Red Carpet Movie Night (this week: “Talladega Nights”) 7:30pm. 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-891-1011 BEACH BUMS BAR & GRILL - Every Fri, Tom Cherry & Mike F. 5-9pm; Every Tue, Randall Rospond 5-8pm 300 Maalaea Rd. #1M, Maalaea, 808-243-2286. CAPISCHE? - Sat, Mark Johnstone 7-10pm 555 Kaukahi St., Kihei, 808-879-2224. HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH - Every Thu, Junior Lacuesta;

JANUARY 6, 2011 23


LIVE MUSIC ON THE NORTHSHORE!

“home of the $1 mai tai” Kihei’s BEST Sunset Cocktail Spot!

THURSDAY JAN 6

WAVETRAIN s pm

FRIDAY JAN 7

RABBIT & THE PROPPERS s 0-

SATURDAY JAN 8

NORTHSHORE ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS

DJ BOOMSHOT WITH SPECIAL GUEST

DJ IRLE DOLE

JAH WARRIOR FROM SHELTER HI-FI

SUNDAY JAN 9

BURGERS SALADS Live Music Daily Sunset Happy Hour 3-7 Nightly Entertainment

RAMPAGE

THURSDAY 6 9pm

KIHEI’S LEGENDARY WEEKLY REGGAE DANCE PARTY GREAT BAND PLAYING ALL THE ISLAND FAVORITES

SAUCY YODA

SUNDAY FUNDAY/NFL TUESDAY JAN 11

KARAOKE INDUSTRY NIGHT

PELIGROSO TUESDAYS!

0- 4!#/3 -!2'!2)4!3 -%8)#!. "%%23 0- $!.9%, !,!.! 42)/

WEDNESDAY JAN 12

DJ BOOMSHOT & DJ JAY P

30)..).' 37%%4 "%!43 /. 4(% ./24( 3(/2% 10PM $5 · $2).+ 30%#)!, 7%,, 0- 0- BOOKING INFO: DYINGSONS@GMAIL.COM

142 HANA HWY, PAIA

808-573-8085

www.charleysmaui.com

FRIDAY 7 9pm

DAT GUYZ

JAZZY MUSIC FROM THIS PORTLAND BAND

$)..%2 0)::! 30%#)!, "59 '%4 /&& 0- 0- (/53% 30%#)!,

24 JANUARY 6, 2011

AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD

SATURDAY 8 9pm SUNDAY 9 9pm MONDAY 10 9pm

KARAOKE

HAPPY HOUR PRICES ALL DAY!!

KARAOKE CONTEST $1 TACOS $3 CORONAS $3 CUERVO SHOTS

OPEN MIC

TUESDAY 11 9pm

WEDNESDAY 12 9pm

GET UP & JAM OR WATCH THE RISING STARS

1913 S Kihei Rd 808.891.8010 ACROSS FROM FOODLAND


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

01/06

01/07

01/08

01/09

01/10 - 01/12

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

KAHALE’S

Vince Esquire

Eight Track Players

Kahala

MON, TUE & WED - Da-Ha-Y-Ns

Ben & Glenn

Sam Ahia

MON & TUE - Sam Ahia

Billy & The Bad Dogs 8-11pm

Bady Kitty 8-11pm

Gina Martinelli Band 6 - 9pm

KOBE STEAKHOUSE

Karaoke & Dancing w/ Aunty Toddy Lilikoi

Karaoke & Dancing w/ Aunty Toddy Lilikoi

LONGHI’S LAHAINA

Crazy Fingers 9pm - 1am; No Cover

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei 875-7711

KIMO’S

Kenny Roberts

1810

845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

KIWI ROADHOUSE

95 E. Lipoa St., Ste A101, Kihei - 874-1250

Danyel Alana Trio 8-11pm

136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555

888 Front St., Lahaina - 667-2288

LULU’S KIHEI

1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9944

Live Salsa w/ Neto & Barbara 8-11pm / DJ Nexus 11pm-Close

Dezman, 8-11pm; $2 / DJ Canespider, 11pm; No Cover

Easy Listening w/ Neto 8pm / DJ AstroRaph, 10pm

LULU’S LAHAINA

Classic Rock w/ Howard Ahia

Benefit w/ Riddum of Knowledge & Mele Pono

X-clusive Saturday Nights w/ DJ Money Mike

Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

Karaoke w/ Manino 7:30-11pm; No Cover

MON - Service Industry Night w/ All Access DJ & Junior / TUE - Karaoke w/ Troy / WED - Ladies Night w/ DJ Twizzy

MAUI BREWING CO.

WED - Open Mic Night, 10pm; No Cover

Kahana Gateway Center - 669-3474

MERRIMAN’S

Ranga Pae

MOANA CAFE

Phil & Angie Benoit

1 Bay Club Pl., Kapalua - 669-6400

71 Baldwin Ave., Paia - 579-9999

MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE 100 Kaukahi St. Kihei - 874-1131

Every Fri & Tue, Rick Glencross; Every Sat, Ryan Robinson & Wolf; Every Wed, Jordan Cudworth. (All Sets 4-8pm.) Sun, Mon & Tue, Karaoke 8pm; Wed, Open Mic 9pm. 1913 S. Kihei Rd., #E, Kihei, 808-874-1250. KIWI ROADHOUSE - Thu, Dominick 5-7pm; Fri, Mango Pickers 5-7pm; Sat, Dan Saunders Rock Band 5-7pm; Sun, Gina Martinelli Band 6-9pm. 95 E. Lipoa St., Ste. A101, Kihei, 808-874-1250. LULU’S KIHEI - Fri, Salsa Lessons 7-8pm & Salsa Music w/ Neto & Barbara 8-11pm; Fri, Hula Show 5-7pm; Fri, Dezman 8-11pm; Sat, Hula Show 6-8pm; Sat, Easy Listening w/ Neto 8-11pm; Sun, Karaoke w/ Manino 7:30-11pm; Mon & Tue, Easy Listenting w/ Terry 5-7pm; Wed, Karaoke w/ Toby 7:30-11pm. 1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-879-9944. MONSOON INDIA - Every Sat, Romantic Violin & Guitar Duets by Cambria Moss & Ricardo Dioso 6:30-8:30pm; Every Tue, Hula Honeys 5:30-8:30pm 760 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-875-4555. MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE - Fri, Gail Swanson 6:308:30pm; Sat, Jazz on the Blue 7-10pm; Sun, The Celtic Tigers with Mad Bagpiper Roger McKinley 6-9:30pm; Mon, Joyce & Gord 6:30-8:30pm; Tue, Murray Thorne 6:308:30pm; Wed, Willie K 7-9pm. 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 808874-1131. PITA PARADISE WAILEA Sun, Benoit Jazzworks 5:307:30 p.m. 34 Wailea Gateway Plaza, Wailea, 808-879-7177.

MON - Service Industry Night WED - Karaoke w/ Toby, 7:30 - 11 pm

THE RED BAR AT GANNON’S, A PACIFIC VIEW RESTAURANT - Thu, Fulton Tashombe & Special Guests 6-8pm; Tue, Braddah Larry Golis 6-8pm Wailea Golf Club House, 100 Wailea Golf Club Dr., Wailea, 808-875-8080. TRADEWINDS POOLSIDE CAFE - Every Thu, Island Favorites w/ Kawika Lum Ho; Every Fri, Girls Nite Out w/ Gina Martinelli; Every Sat, Classic Rock w/ Dominic; Every Sun, Crunch Pups “Uncrunhed”; Every Mon, Bobby Ingram & Franklin Russell; Every Tue, Mike and Mark; Every Wed, Steve Sargenti. All no cover. 2259 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-891-8860.

CENTRAL MAUI ALE HOUSE - Fri, Hawaiian music with Braddah Francis 4-8pm & Tue 4-7pm. 355 Kamehameha, Kahului, 808-877-9001. CAFE O’LEI AT THE DUNES AT MAUI LANI - Every Thu, Reiko Fukina 5:30-8pm; Every Fri & Sat, Phil and Angela Benoit 5:30-8pm.1333 Maui Lani Pkwy., Kahului, 808-8770073.

CALENDAR LISTINGS MAUITIME.COM/LISTING

STELLA BLUES CAFE - Every Thu, Ah Tim 4-6pm; Every Fri, Ahumanu 4-6pm; Every Sat, Erin Smith 4-6pm; Every Sun, Slam featuring David Choy 6-9pm; Mon, Jamie Lawrence 4-6pm ; Every Tue, Tom Conway 4-6pm; Every Wed, Randall Rospond 4-8pm, Slam featuring David Choy 7-10pm; 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei, 808-874-3779. TAQUERIA CRUZ - Every Tue & Sat, Live Music - Reggae, Jazz, Blues 5:30-8:30pm 2395 S. Kihei Rd. #112, Kihei, 808-875-2910. THREE’S BAR & GRILL - Thu, Live Jazz; Fri, Jeff; Sat,

Ka’ena Elaban 9pm - 12am

Steff Lomeli; Mon, Cyrus Clark; Tue, Sammy Rouisse. (All sets 7pm) 1945-G S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-879-3133.

LISTINGS ONLINE

Ranga Pae

Ranga Pae

TUE - David Choy / WED - Ranga Pae

DJ Music

Pub Quiz Night w/ Trish “The Dish” Smith, 9pm

SUBMIT YOUR

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE - Every Thu, Erin Smith; Every Fri, Randall Rospond; Every Sat, Tom Conway; Every Sun, Viva La Rumba; Every Mon, Kanoa; Every Tue, Sebrina Barron; Every Wed, Wolf. (All Sets 4-6pm) Kihei Kalama Village, 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-874-6444.

Ranga Pae

CARY & EDDIE’S HIDEAWAY RESTAURANT - Every night, Francois on piano; Every Fri & Sat, “Early Late Night” live music until 11pm; Every Sun, Fausto on acoustic guitar during brunch. 500 N. Puunene Ave., Kahului, 808873-6555.

UPCOUNTRY MAUI

CAFE DES AMIS - Every Thu, Joe Conte plays The Chapman Stick; Every Sat, Live Argentinian Music; Every Wed, The Stone Violets 6:30-8:30pm. 42 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 808-579-6323. GREEN BANANA CAFE - Every Tue, Thu & Sat, Polynesian Dance Coffee Luau 6pm.137 Hana Hwy., Paia, 808-579-9130. LOCAL MOCHA CAFE - Every Fri & Sat, Live Music 5-9pm. 81 Makawao Ave., Pukalani, 808-573-2859. MOANA BAKERY & CAFE - Every Thu, Phil & Angela Benoit 6:30-8:30pm; Every Tue, Open-Mic 6pm. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 808-579-9999.

COMMUNITY WHALERS MUSEUM - Daily. Telling the story off the heyday of whaling in Lahaina (1825-1860) from

Jazz on the Blue, 7-10pm / Jordan & Wolf, 10pm-Close

TUE - Open Mic Night The Celtic Tigers, 6-9:30pm; Big John, 10pm-12am

the perspective off the seafarers themselves. Self-guided audio tours, daily films, scale models, artifacts, photo murals, graphic interpretations, whale ivory objects, and scrimshaw. Free. 10 a.m.6 p.m. Whalers Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Ka’anapali; 808-661-4567; whalersvillage.com WO HING MUSEUM AFTER DARK - Every Fri. Let the lights from the Wo Hing Museum draw you in for its special Friday hours of 1 to 8pm. With its usual day time hours 10am to 4pm, visitors have the unique opportunity to visit the museum and temple at night. $2 General Admission, Kids 12 and under free. 1-8 p.m. Wo Hing Temple Museum, 858 Front St., Lahaina; 808-661-3262; lahainarestoration.org LUNCHTIME TAI CHI SESSION WITH DR LORRIN PANG - Every Mon & Fri. Led by Dr Lorrin Pang and others every Monday & Friday in front of the State Office Building. Free. State Office Building, 54 High St., Wailuku; 808-984-8200 GARDEN TOURS AT MAUI NUI BOTANICAL GARDENS - Every Tue & Fri. Volunteer-guided tours include discussions about conservation, natural history, ethnobotanical uses of native Hawaiian plants, and MNBG initiatives. By appointment only. Free ($5 suggested doantion). 10-11:30 a.m. Maui Nui Botanical Gardens, 150 Kanaloa Ave., Kahului; 808249-2798 / info@mnbg.org; http://mnbg.org

MON, Joyce & Gord / TUE - Murray Thorne / Tin Can Comedy, 9-10pm / WED - Willie K, 7-9pm at 11am. Free. 11 a.m. Whalers Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Ka’anapali; 808-879-2818 / bo.petty@noaa.gov; whalersvillage.com WEED & POT CLUB - Every Wed. Push up your sleeves and pull some weeds, in a beautiful garden setting, with this cleverly named club. Free. 8:30-10:30 a.m. Maui Nui Botanical Garden, 150 Kanaloa Ave., Kahului; 808-249-2798; mnbg.org ISRAELI AND INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING - Every Wed. The public is invited to participate in Israeli folk dancing on Maui with great Middle Eastern music. Free. 6-8 p.m. Grace Church, 1000 Kula Hwy., Kula; Dan: 808-280-1051

FARMERS MARKET, ART/ CRAFT FAIRS

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING?

FARMERS MARKET OF MAUI, HONOKOWAI - Daily (except Thu). Lots of fresh, local produce plus baked and canned goods. 7am7pm. Farmers Market Maui & Deli, 3636 Lower Honoapiilaina Rd., Lahaina; 808-669-7004

KAHULUI SHOPPING CENTER “GREEN DRAGON: FARMER’S MARKET - Every Sun, Tue, Wed & Sat. “Green Dragon” Farmer’s market features arts, crafts, food booths and fresh Maui produce. 7am-4pm. Kahului Shopping Center, 65 W. Kaahumanu Ave, Kahului; gdmaui@hotmail.com

CALENDAR LISTINGS

ON MAUITIME.COM

HABITAT FOR HUMANITY - VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! - Every Sat. HOME BUILDERS: at least 4 hours every Saturday, from 9am-4pm, Experienced Project Managers on-site with training, needed tools/supplies.808-893-0334; habitat-maui.org PET-A-PALOOZA - Every Sun. There are kitties and canines who need loving na ‘ohana. Check out this special, weekly open house and find your new best friend. Free. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Maui Humane Society, 1350 Meha Meha Loop, Puunene; 808-8773680; mauihumanesociety.org “45-TON TALK” - Every Fri & Sat. Learn tons of stuff about whales. Call or e-mail to RSVP. Also hosted at the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary Education Center in Kihei on Tuesdays and Thursdays

OHANA FARMERS & CRAFTERS MARKET - Every Tue, Wed & Fri. Vendors provide a plethora of juicy, fresh fruits and vegetables to Ka’ahumanu’s Center Court. 8am-4pm. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-877-3369; queenkaahumanucenter.com HO`OLOKAHI ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR - Every Tue & Fri. Fresh flower lei-making classes. 9-11am. Wailea Beach Marriot Resort & Spa, 808-879-1922 FARMERS MARKET OF MAUI, KIHEI - Mon-Fri. Sample the goods at this local market for fresh produce. On Fridays, open until 5pm. 8am-4pm. Farmers Market of Maui, 61 South Kihei Rd., Ki-

JANUARY 6, 2011 25


LOVE YOUR PET... WE DO.

Premium Nutrition Quality Brands Personalized Service G S DO SSE ILY CLA ! (808) 667-2662 M FA IN G RED wmpetsupply@gmail.com IN FFE A 910 Honoapiilani Hwy, Lahaina 96761 O TR

WE BUSTED

PARIS HILTON

READING MAUITIME IN LAHAINA. WHO CAN YOU BUST ? Thanks Paris

PARAGON SALON

JEFFIE HARRIS northshore stylist & color guru

Love your hair 1160 Makawao Ave. 808.573.1300 Daeal ) []jlaÚ[Yl] h]j [mklge]j ^gj Újkl lj]Yle]fl& =phaj]k )')1'))

26 JANUARY 6, 2011

for supporting local independent media. Wishing you best of luck on your upcoming court case and all other future endeavors from all of us at MauiTime.

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TheGRID

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FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

01/06

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01/09

01/10 - 01/12

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

OCEANS BAR & GRILL

Live Music

1819 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-2414

Live Music

PINEAPPLE GRILLE

Jawaiian Music w/ DJ Bruddah Damien

SANSEI - KAPALUA

Free Karaoke 10pm - 1am; No Cover

Free Karaoke 10pm - 1am; No Cover

Open Mic Night 10pm - 1am; No Cover

SANSEI - KIHEI

Free Karaoke 10pm - 1am; No Cover

Free Karaoke 10pm - 1am; No Cover

Free Karaoke 10pm - 1am; No Cover

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE

DJ Slackin 10pm - Close; No Cover

DJ Sonny 10pm - Close; No Cover

DJ LX 10pm - Close; No Cover

Live Music 9pm-12am

Live Music 9pm-12am

Ah-Tim

Ahumanu

Erin Smith

Karaoke w/ Pearl Rose 9pm-1am; No Cover

Marty Dread & Tom Conway, 9pm-1am; $3

Karaoke w/ Pearl Rose 9pm-1am; No Cover

WED - DJ Mania Dancing 9:30pm-1am; No Cover

Arise 10pm

Ladies Night w/ DJ CIA 10pm

I-NOLOGY 10pm

TUE - Sushi Tuesday w/ DJ CIA

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON through WED- Karaoke

Industry Night 9pm-2am; No Cover

Undone Party w/ Q Ross 9pm-2am; $10

Spun Out w/ DJ Calcul8 9pm-2am; $10

Closed

MON - WED - Closed

TROPICA

Soul Lounge 8-10pm

Island Essence w/ DJ Zinn 8-10pm

THE UNDERGROUND

Under-21 Party

Under-21 Party Free Karaoke

TUE - Thirsty Tuesday & Free Karaoke / WED - Free Karaoke

200 Kapalua Drv. Lahaina - 669-9600

115 Bay Dr., Lahaina - 669-6286

1881 S. Kihei Rd., Ste. KT116 -879-0004

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-6444

SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR 2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-0602

STELLA BLUE’S

1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-3779

STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR 1127 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-1380

THREE’S BAR & GRILL 1945 S Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-3133

TIFFANY’S

1424 L. Main St., Wailuku - 249-0052

TIMBA

505 Front St, Ste. 212, Lahaina - 661-9873

2365 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Ka’anapali - 662-2762

744 Front St., Lahaina

WATERCRESS

Pac Vibe, 10pm

WOW-WEE MAUI’S

Karaoke No Cover; 8pm

Waiehu Beach Center, Wailuku-243-9350

333 Dairy Rd. #101, Kahului - 871-1414

Smooth Jazz Sounds w/ Brian Cuomo & Friends, 7pm -10m

Karaoke

Kanoa of Gomega 10pm - Close; No Cover

MON - DJ Blast / TUE - DJ LX / WED- The ADD Twins (All sets 10pm - Close; No Cover)

Slam feat. David Choy

MON-TJamie Lawrence / TUE - Tom Conway; WED Randall Rospond / Slam w/ David Choy

MON, TUE & WED - Dat Guyz; No Cover hei; 808-875-0949

JOIN THE MAUITIME PHOTOS FLICKR GROUP AND SHOW US MAUI THROUGH YOUR EYES.

K-MART FARMERS MARKET - Every Sun, Mon & Thu. Held in the parking lot. 8am-4pm. K-Mart, 424 Dairy Rd., Kahului; 344-4220 MAUI’S BIGGEST YARD SALE - Every Sat. Crafts, food, artwork, T-shirts, massages, and more.7am-4pm. Old Kahului Shopping Center, 65 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 1-808-333-2478 MAUI’S SWAP MEET - Every Sat. From camo hunting gear and koa carvings to vintage aloha postcards and delicate, locally-crafted jewelry, this place pretty much has it all. Killer produce market, too. 50 cents admission. 7am-1pm. Maui Community College, 310 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-244-3100; mauiexposition.com UPCOUNTRY FARMERS MARKET - Every Sat. Follow the signs to the football field parking lot to find the best veggies, fruits, flowers and plants, Maui farmers have to offer. Plus, extra goodies like jams and jellies. 7am-12pm. Kulamalu Town Center (near Longs Drugs), 808-283-3257 / upcountryfarmersmarket@gmail.com LAHAINA ARTS SOCIETY’S HE U’I BANYAN TREE ART AND CRAFT FESTIVAL - Every Sun & Sat. Under the shade of Lahaina’s famous banyan tree, over 50 select Maui artists show and sell their work. Find unique treasures including jewelry, art, handsewn items, candles and time travel at the Historic Old Lahaina Courthouse. Plus, live music for your shopping enjoyment. Free. 9am-5pm. Banyan Tree Park, 649 Wharf Street, Lahaina; 1-888-310-1117 / 808-661-9175; visitlahaina.com MAALAEA FARMERS MARKET & CRAFT FAIR Daily. Be a savvy locavore and support the over 35 vendors by brining home all Hawaii-grown produce. Free. 8am-4pm. The Harbor Shops, Maalaea; 808-205-1943 / 808-298.8928.

flickr.com/groups/mauitimephotos/

HAILIIMAILE FARMERS MARKET - Every Fri. All products are from Maui -- and Maui only -- like fresh and dried exotic fruits and veggies, sustainably grown produce, coconuts, coffee, loofas, and even handblown glass. Only $5 to vendor. ML&P, Hailiimaile; 808-463-1676

LIST YOUR EVENT! Post your free online listing (up to 15 months early), and our editors will consider your submission for the printed calendar as well. Print listings are also free, but subject to space limitations. Online, you can include a full description of your event, a photo and a link to your Web site. Go to mauitime.com/ listing and start posting events. Deadline for print listings is 10 days prior to the issue in which you wish the listing to appear.

WAIT, THERE’S MORE! Looking for something to do? Use MauiTime’s free calendar to browse hundreds of events online. Art galleries, family events, education classes, film and literary events, church groups, music, sports, volunteer opportunities—all this and more on our free events calendar at mauitime. com/calendar.

Start planning your week!

JANUARY 6, 2011 27


BY ANU YAGI

KULA KID

anu@mauitime.com + @anuheayagi on Twitter

DOWNTOWN

WAILUKU

EVERY FIRST

FRIDAY OF THE MONTH

Resolvolution “I’m on to the next one / on to the next one / I’m on to the next one / on to the next one… / I got a million ways to get it / Choose one...” – Jay-Z, “On to the Next One”

I

FIRST FRIDAY IS ALMOST HERE!

Featuring a performance by MOTH & BROWN CHICKEN BROWN COW Hear musical samples at: mothsound.com and bcbcsb.com

JANUARY 7th, 2011 MauiTime turns 13! Come help us celebrate!

EN

CK HI N COW W RO N C & BROW B

28 JANUARY 6, 2011

s ambition absurd when bare necessities are barely met? Yes, I think. Yet somehow, sad, silly me still made a bevy of so-called resolutions with an irrational zeal deserving of a straight jacket. Instead of flossing and paying bills, I cranked up the volume and stayed up late into the waning thunderstruck hours of 2010, inhalanthigh off Sharpie fumes, lost in a flurry of 1,001 Post-its. Maniacally, I justified the wasted sleep and pulverized trees by convincing myself I was better for it because I was, this year, making more than mere mental note. Wading through the 3x3 color-coded bits of blue, yellow and orange, I recently reviewed the wreckage. Apparently, this year, I’m to learn a new instrument every month and write to you about how bad I am at it. Hopefully, you’ll laugh a little—or at least not send hate mail—and I’ll make it through another column alive. Apparently, I’m going to take every Akaku class offered and with those mad skills supplement our MauiTime stories with mini-documentaries so stunning, The Daily Show will be jealous. (In truth, if the introductory class does not sneak up so fast I miss it entirely, that will be a stunner unto itself.) Apparently, my third-grade dream of shedding the big bag of rice that I lug around my opu will at long-last be realized. Moreover, the 30 pounds I gained since last June will be but a bad memory by next June. For the first time in my earthly existence I will go to the beach without hiding under a T-shirt and jeans. All this will be accomplished instantaneously by out-swimming Phelps each morning, jogging to Wailuku from Kula, finally returning to Iaijutsu (my cartoon is sword-brandishing, but I have not been) and eating nothing but strawberries and kale. With those things checked off the list, John Safran will fall madly in love with me, David Sedaris will become my new best friend and I’ll have engaged in lengthy, philosophical correspondence with Captains Kirk, Picard and Archer—oh, and Agent Cooper from Twin Peaks, too. Wow. Look at that crescendo of crazy. Lock me up and throw away the key. Threat level is elevated to A Clockwork Orange. OK. So maybe there are the faintest granules of sanity that can be plucked out and polished into something reasonable. I should at least choose one. But seeing as we’re a week into 2011 and I’m already off to a

lackluster—if not utterly lame—start, I’m going to try to be real here (no more blaming Mercury). Ah, there they are—the pink Post-its. The retina-searing ones that you can see from space. (I knew I chose that color for a reason!) The ones with the important, practical things scrawled on them. Written on the first one is “meeting deadlines.” As I write this, instant fail. The second says “timely bill paying”— and whew, that’s a whole other can of worms. Then there’s “flossing,” and “no more McDonalds”, and “no smoking cigarettes” (er, well, not as often), and “if there’s no rest for the wicked—and you’re tired—stop being wicked,” and “call family every so often so they know I’m not daysdecomposing in some roadside ditch.” Jeez. This whole “being realistic” thing feels a lot worse than being ridiculous. I shouldn’t have to write down the things that should be second nature—the things that normal people do normally.

T

his weekend, I asked a bunch of friends and strangers their New Year’s resolutions, and you know what they told me? Dance more. Surf more. Breathe deeper. Read more books. Have more sex. Make more money. Be happier. And—the kicker—I have no resolutions. Really? Really? I mean that’s admirable and all, but am I the only one in another dimension? OK. I’m going to meet deadlines and pay my bills and floss and eat good and sleep better and call my folks. And I’m going to do everything I can to write better and be better for you, dear readers—instrument-a-month and mini-movies or no. But I’ve got one last little crazy thing I’m going to cling to: That all y’all lie about your resolutions. (Sorry. I love you—but I have to do this, for my sanity.) I’m going to have one last desperate hope that there are still simple things we all neglect and big impossible fantasies we love to roll around in our heads. And in this Year of the Rabbit (well, almost—Chinese and Greogians, can we get it together here?), I’ll start with bunny steps. ■

To read more Kula Kid with links and photos and stuff, and to leave comments, visit mauifeed.com/ kulakid To share or save: mt.hy.pr/1429k


BY CAERIEL CRESTIN

HOROSCOPE

sign.language.astrology@gmail.com +

Sign Language CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19) Your attention span is relatively long. You can stick to one thing and see it concluded, whereas many need breaks, or are unable to finish at all. This can, naturally, be incredibly frustrating when you’re supposed to be working collaboratively with people who simply lack your work ethic or capabilities. You’re left either waiting for them to catch up, or forging ahead anyway. Which you choose is up to you, but I can tell you what not to do: call them out. Being a team player means letting them get credit for work you did, or covering for them if you had to pick up the slack—and being that team player is more important right now than any other consideration.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) Be grateful! Sometimes you get so caught up in the two things that are going wrong that you forget to notice, appreciate, and say thanks for the twenty-three things that are going more or less right. Want a sure-fire way to make shit go from bad to worse? Keep focusing on the couple negative things to the exclusion of all else, and failing to offer your gratitude to those around you for all they do manage to do right. Downward spiral, here you come! Of course, it’s so easy to turn around—just make a special point of really noticing all the wonderful stuff that’s going on.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) Waiting until things are right down to the wire is very exciting, and often leads to inspired leaps of resourcefulness and nearly miraculous improvisation. However, it can also spell disaster, or make you look really bad. This is one of those scenarios where you must weigh the risks, and on the other side of the scale measure the rewards of your procrastination. If the rewards don’t outweigh the risk, get off your ass and get things done with time to spare. On the other hand, if you’ve truly got better things to do, then any consequences you suffer as a result of your deadlinetaunting will be well worth it, won’t they?

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) You can be a bit snobbish, and that’s okay. No one’s perfect, and you, like everyone else, are free to choose who you want to associate with. However, when you start to project your snobbery on someone else, you’ve gone too far, both in assuming they share your values, and in not allowing them to form their own judgments and opinions. Bite your tongue, you catty thing! Let others draw their own conclusions. They may very well end up in the same place you are—your own opinions aren’t coming out of nowhere, after all. But if they don’t, just leave them be.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) You’re adorable, even if you’re not model-beautiful. Every Pisces has something eminently loveable about him or her. That might be true about almost everyone on the planet, if you look hard enough, but for some reasons that quirky appeal is easier to spot on you. Work it. It’s your way in to whatever door you want opened. Of course, the first step to such a strategy is figuring out just what’s so cute about yourself. If you don’t already know, try to find out this week. Most Pisces, when they learn what others find most appealing about them, are truly surprised—but can’t deny such knowledge is a valuable source of power.

QUIZunderstood ANSWERS ...to questions on page 8

1. Alaska (1.2 residents per square mile) 2. Mitt Romney 3. Get a sun tan

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) Assuming you have or will ever have kids, accepting them for whatever they turn out to be should be a no-brainer, even if it’s nothing like what you’d hoped for them. Of course, everyone knows parents who simply can’t put aside their own selfish desires to notice what’s wonderful about their surprising and unpredictable offspring. This is true of all kinds of progeny, not just the type that springs from your loins. Many vivid creations can evolve in unprecedented and astonishing directions; if you’re not too busy being selfish, controlling, or shortsighted, you’ll realize just how delightful that is.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) I rarely lose my temper, but when I do, I do it right. Man, it feels good—and it makes me feel most decidedly like one of you Rams. You’re actually some of the most laid-back people I know, but when you do get pissed off, everyone around you knows it. You certainly have no problem expressing it. I think that’s pretty healthy, most of the time. Becoming vexed about every little thing that goes wrong would be bad, but letting yourself be angry about the stuff that matters to you is better than repressing it. Unfortunately, not everyone knows that. If someone you know has trouble letting themselves go there this week, do what you can to help them along.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) Drop the scales, Libra. Keeping tabs on everything that passes between you and those you know is not only exhausting, it’s pointless and counterproductive. I’m not just talking about vengeful payback when you’ve been wronged—in which case the wisest course is forgive and forget—but also feeling as if you must match the generosity you’re lucky enough to receive. While it’s nice to be as generous as you can afford to be, you should under no circumstances feel any indebtedness when accepting a gift, which is surely offered without expectation of reciprocation; indeed, the givers would probably be appalled if they thought you felt so obligated.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) When in conflict with someone, you could charge in headlong and attempt to resolve it as swiftly and decisively as possible, or attempt to avoid that person altogether, or employ any number of strategies that fall somewhere in between these extremes. Weirdly enough, though—this isn’t about you. When considering which tactic is best, mostly disregard your own personal feelings and figure out which resolution would minimize the negative impact of your disagreement on the innocent bystanders all around you, who really deserve such kind consideration more than either of you.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) Once a gift’s given, it’s a terrible idea to ask for it back, no matter the circumstances. If you can’t truly let something go, you shouldn’t offer it in the first place. Naturally, keep that in mind for all future gifting—and get it in your head for all the stuff you’ve already given, and perhaps later regretted. Don’t act on those regrets, no matter how powerful they are—and for someone as passionate as you are, that can be very powerful indeed. You want to create more of a problem or greater regrets? Try to take back something you’ve given? Trust me, don’t go there.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20) You’re not usually a control freak, but every once in a while that button gets pushed and suddenly it’s your way or the highway. Fortunately, this happens so rarely that people will usually either humor you or obey out of pure shock. Just because it’s not especially common, however, doesn’t mean it’s not something you should work on, especially because once in a while it could make people uncomfortable or downright angry—like this week. Ironically, your lack of control issues has made you less adept at quietly dealing with them when they do crop up. Nevertheless, that’s your challenge this week.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC.21) You’re so confident and strong that you can sometimes conveniently forget about moments of weakness you’ve suffered in your past, or admit them to anyone else. However, this is depriving yourself of a great source of that very strength you’re so proud of possessing, as well as needlessly keeping secret something valuable and insightful from those you love. Your truly low moments—and the way you moved past and through them—are something special. If you can think of them as gifts you give to the people you adore, they will be exactly that.

JANUARY 6, 2011 29


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