12.35 Covered Up, February 19, 2009, Volume 12, Issue 35, MauiTime

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CONTENTS

VOLUME 12 • ISSUE 35

5 MAUI COUNTY

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION If you were a cover band, whose music would you cover and what would you be called? Editor: Jacob Shafer Guns N’ Roses, Buns N’ Roses (all nude) Calendar Editor/Staff Writer: Kate Bradshaw Steve Miller Band, Steve Miller Bandoliers (mariachi)

A tourist weighs in on the tourism downturn in Letters. A guy just wants his computer back in Eh Brah! Human fat is turned to fuel in News of the Weird. Sexy Zombies invade Click of the Week. Rob Report talks systemic changes with a rocket scientist. Seriously, he’s not just a smart dude; he’s an actual rocket scientist. The LC breaks its own rule in LC Watch. Coconut Wireless catches Lingle in a medical marijuana contradiction.

Proofreader: Heather Nicholson Intern: Katie Barraco Contributors: Jessica Armstrong, Caeriel Crestin, Lloyd Dangle, Rob Parsons, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Ynez Tongson, Barry Wurst II Photographer: Sean Michael Hower Credence Clearwater Revival (CCR), CPR Art Director: Brittany Shaw Barry Manilow, The Orange Jews (bar mitzvahs) Graphic Designer: Kellee LaVars NWA, Straight Outta Kihei Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers The Beatles, The Dung Beatles General Manager: Jennifer Russo Administrative Executive: Judy Toba Yes, No Administrative Assistant: Jennifer Brown Debbi Gibson, Total Eclipse of the Fun Web Design: Linear Publishing www.linearpublishing.com Publisher: Tommy Russo MC Hammer, Hammer Time/Maui Time

MauiTime Weekly is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2008 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $70 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. Maui Time Weekly may be distributed only by MauiTime Weekly’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime Weekly is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime Weekly, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime Weekly are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime Weekly.

12 FEATURE STORY Does the demand for cover songs hurt Maui’s music scene? And is anyone not sick of “Brown Eyed Girl”? Kate Bradshaw investigates.

14 ONO KINE GRINDS

Heather Nicholson takes a culinary trip around the world at Lahaina Grill. Plus: she eats a snail.

16 MUSIC SCENE

Multifaceted Mojomana aims for infamy.

17 Mind Candy

18 FILM

Barry Wurst II says Confessions of a Shopaholic is a chick flick in the worst sense of the term.

19 Movie Listings

20 DA KINE CALENDAR

Kate’s got the week’s top events covered, from a Whale Day celebration to an artistic PowerPoint presentation.

22 Calendar & Grid

Maui Time Weekly 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 • fax (808) 244-0446 www.mauitime.com

28 BACK PAGES

Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon

29 Local Classifieds 30 Sign Language 31 Mind, Body, Spirit

Circulation: 18,000 copies of the MauiTime Weekly

ON THE COVER: Design by Brittany Shaw Photo by Andrew Dubber

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

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LETTERSTOTHEEDITOR A TOURIST’S TAKE Re the article about Maui’s dependence on tourism [“The tourism trap,” February 5]: I love Maui. I’ve been visiting almost every year since 1990. We don’t do a lot of the tourist activities anymore, but we do support MACC, attend at least one of their shows every year, along with any other cultural events we can find and spend a lot of money shopping and eating out. We tip an average 25-30 percent at the restaurants knowing that these employees depend on tips to survive. We have made friends with locals and some even come to stay with us when they are in Washington. We also take it upon ourselves to help keep your beaches clean by walking with garbage bags and picking up fishing lines, food containers and even used condoms. We have always enjoyed the interactions with the locals and tried to be ever so unnoticeable, unlike many tourists. Year before last our contact with locals started to decline. Not the true Hawaiians, but some of the others. We attributed it to a busy season and people just being tired. In 2008, people were horrible. My mother is a very quiet, reserved person and people treated her like crap. One time she wasn’t quick enough to make her decision at a shave-ice shop and the person threw her pen and pad down and stormed off. She finally came back from bitching at her co-worker about how slow my mom was, was still so crappy that I had to step in and ask her if there was a problem. We gave them a second chance, went back another day and same girl was there doing the same thing to the people in front of us. There were other times that these attitudes came from nowhere. We saw it happening to all sorts of people at different places. I’m on the fence on whether I will return this year. I may try another island or a whole other state or country. Being treated like crap does not make for a relaxing vacation nor does it make me want to return. So just let it be known that the economy isn’t the only reason for less tourism—so is your treatment of tourists. Pam, submitted online at mauitime.com

INDIANA AND MAUI: TWO PEAS IN A POD I find it interesting that I am labeled a tourist because I choose to visit a state of these United States. I live in Indiana. I own a timeshare in Maui and I like to think that Maui is my home away from home when I visit there. I have often been asked why I spend so much on airfare to go to Maui from Indiana when there are island resorts southwest of

Florida that are closer to Indiana. I reply that those island resorts are not part of the United States of America and until they become part of this country, I plan on spending my money in the U.S.A. When I visit nearby states like Michigan, Illinois and Ohio, I don’t hear residents of those states calling me a tourist. I am usually referred to as a neighbor or friend. I would hope that when I return to Maui this fall for my usual visit that I am welcomed as a neighbor or friend and fellow citizen. Tim from Indiana, submitted online at mauitime.com

THEY DOTH PROTEST If Gov. Lingle doesn’t like seeing protestors [Coconut Wireless, February 5] she’d better not leave Oahu. Or maybe her house.

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ROB AND THE RICH A recent Rob Report [“Watchdog Millionaire,” January 29] concluded with a list of seemingly recommended Web sites. Yet along with Maui Tomorrow and the Sierra Club, Dowling Company was on the list. Maui Tomorrow has been working for stewardship of our Maui environment. Dowling Company, on the other hand, seeks only to maximize profit. I know Rob Parsons has repeatedly testified against Dowling’s development plans, so I imagine there is some explanation. Please enlighten me. Chandrika McLaughlin, Kihei Rob responds: Due to a typo, the title of my article, “Watch Dowling Millionaire” had a few letters deleted and read, “Watchdog Millionaire.” No, seriously, I noted that the Focus Green lecturers are sponsored by Dowling Company to help illustrate that things are not always merely black and white, or even green. I added his company Web site link along with the eco-groups deserving of financial support because I think the intelligent reader will discern the distinct contrast in what is being promoted by the millionaire developer versus the grassroots environmentalists.

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SEND YOUR LETTERS to the editor via e-mail (letters@mauitime.com), post (Letters to the Editor, Maui Time Weekly, 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793) or fax (808-244-0446). All correspondence must include your full name, hometown and phone number. We reserve the right to edit letters. Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Maui Time Weekly.

MAUI’S ONLY CLASSIC ROCKER A little comedy, a little vicodin, a little haole on the mic, a lot of great rock ‘n’ roll

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

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BOYCOT T SEAFOOD FROM CANADA!

New Station KNUI 900am – “THE TALK OF MAUI” Fridays at Noon, with Co-Hosts Ed Bigger & Kevin Lawrence

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ST O P T H E S L A U G H T E R O F 3 5 0 , 0 0 0 B A B Y H A R P S E A L S I N C A N A D A !

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

PUMP DON’T DUMP IN OUR OCEAN WATERS!

IS THERE REALLY AN UPSIDE TO ALL THIS MADNESS?

EH BRAH!

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 Maui Time Weekly, 33 N. Market St, Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 or send an e-mail to

ehbrah@mauitime.com That silver and black Samsonite computer bag you stole outta my truck at the Maui Mall the other Friday night—I guess it looked like something with some money in it. Nope, just a bunch of papers, folders, some flash drives and an old password secured computer; not even worth cracking into because it’s just filled with a bunch of files. Lots of hard work—priceless to me, not really a score for you. And besides, the pawnshops are all looking for it, not to mention many others including the police (but they won’t be as nice as me). I don’t want to “get” whoever took it, I just want my stuff back, no questions asked. Whoever finds this thing and returns it will be rewarded. Take it to the Paia post office desk or just use the biz cards in the bag to get a hold of me. I will pay anyone as the finder, not as a suspect.


NEWSOFTHEWEIRD GENITAL ORDER A sex-education advocacy organization in Sweden complained in November about the government’s program that, finally after years of resistance, provides prosthetic penises to newly transgendered males. The policy was nonetheless termed unfair because the devices are cosmetic only and do not “work.” (Regulations prohibit taxpayer money for “sexual aids.”)

HOLY ROLLER Episcopal priest Gregory Malia, 43, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., buys top-dollar champagne at New York City nightclubs, even leaving five-figure tips and treating his favorite waitresses to shopping sprees, according to a December New York Daily News report. Said Malia (who is a hemophiliac and owns a pharmacy devoted to blood-disorder medicine), “I work hard. I make good money. How I spend it, that is my business.” Waitresses interviewed by the Daily News said “Father Greg” is a sweetheart, never doing anything inappropriate, but exceedingly generous, whether alone or with business clients. Said one waitress, “A bad night for him is [a tip of] $5,000.”

PEOPLE POWER, PART 1 Forbes magazine reported in December that state authorities were investigating Beverly Hills, Calif., plastic surgeon Alan Bittner over his claim that he had created diesel fuel for his and his girlfriend’s SUVs out of liposuctioned fat from his patients. California law is said to prohibit using medical waste for such a purpose, but Bittner’s claims came to light in patients’ lawsuits over liposuction treatments, quoting Bittner as brag-

‘CLICK’ OF

BY CHUCK SHEPHERD CHUCK@MAUITIME.COM

ging about the biodiesel. Bittner wrote on one Web page (no longer online), “The vast majority of my patients request that I use their fat for fuel, and I have more fat than I can use.”

PEOPLE POWER, PART 2 London’s Gymbox in Bank athletic club, recognizing that lifting weights can be a boring way to exercise, introduced “human barbells” recently, hiring five men of various sizes (including two dwarfs) that customers could use for weights instead of the iron. One advantage of the humans is that, on request, they shout encouragement to the customer with each lift. The largest of the five is a 37-year-old, 340-pound man.

SHELLFISH ACT Walter Tessier was charged with one of the pettiest of petit larceny counts in January as sheriff’s deputies in Amsterdam, N.Y., said he tried to defraud a Price Chopper store. Tessier had purchased a $10.99 lobster but returned it, claiming that it had turned “bad,” and the store allowed him some crab meat in exchange, but employees discovered that the “lobster” was only its empty, carefully reconstructed shell that made it appear whole. Tessier then ran from the store but was arrested later at his home, where he had just finished the crab meat.

BY THE

NUMBERS

$940 million Hawaii’s share of the federal stimulus package

$1.81 billion Cost of 1,521 “shovel-ready” projects identified by state officials

20,000 Number of people who participated in the annual Great Aloha Run on Oahu

50 min. 52 sec. Time it took Honolulu’s Peter Hershon to complete the 8.15-mile course in a wheelchair

1,002 Number of DUI arrests in Maui County in 2008

10 Number of fatal crashes in the county last year in which alcohol was a suspected factor Sources: Federal Funds Information for States, greataloharun.com, Honolulu Advertiser, The Maui News

DELAYED REACTION The sheriff in El Dorado, Kan., asked in January for help from the public in locating a missing boy named Adam. According to the sheriff, Adam’s parents, Doug and Valerie Herrman, only recently reported him missing, even though they had not seen him since he ran away in 1999, when he was 11. The Herrmans’ attorney said that his clients were nonetheless “very worried about him.” MTW

THE WEEK

A member of the Maui Time crew who shall remain nameless has a fixation with zombies that borders on the unhealthy. She can take solace in the fact that she’s not alone. The good people (OK, maybe not good people) at Zombie Pinups have dedicated an entire site to the worship of those cranium chomping horror movie staples. But these aren’t your father’s zombies. Forget the ragged Dawn of the Dead dudes who walked like they’d just had broom handle enemas; no, these are hot zombies. The site offers pictures and bios of various sexy undead specimens, as well as the chance to learn “deadspeak” and even to “get zombified!” But by far the best part is the tagline: “Beauty and Braaaaains!” Who says necrophilia can’t be funny? -JS Find it at… zombiepinups.com

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

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ROBREPORT

BY ROB PARSONS ROBPARSONS@EARTHLINK.NET

Fixing the system Scientist Jon Schulz is doing something ‘radically different’ t doesn’t take a rocket scientist to define sustainability, but I found one who was willing to do exactly that. Jon Schulz founded the Colorado Sustainability Project in 1994, after a stint at Martin-Marietta, during which time he worked on NASA projects from Skylab to the Viking orbiters and Mars landers. Fulfilling a lifelong dream to visit Hawaii, Schulz showed up for last week’s Focus Green talk by Ray Anderson, author of Mid-Course Correction. Schulz, now working as a systems designer with Integrated Living Systems, had heard Anderson speak some seven years earlier, and didn’t want to miss an opportunity to be re-inspired by the former corporate CEO turned sustainability guru. Anderson, who introduced himself as a “husband, father, grandfather and radical industrialist,” addressed a McCoy Theater audience that included

I

Schulz, trained as a biologist and accustomed to observing the way nature designs things, agrees. “Ray said, ‘If the way we think about things doesn’t shift, we will not achieve sustainability,’” said Schulz. He argues that whole system design, using “total resource productivity, with zero waste as a corporate goal,” earns “incredibly more money” than existing practices. “In nature,” Schulz emphasizes, “nothing is separate, nothing is wasted. Everything is food for something else.” ver Sunday afternoon coffee at a Makawao deli, Schulz elaborated on his ideas. He said it’s hard to comprehend how much waste we produce—how standard practice may generate as much as 94 percent waste, while the remaining 6 percent is the end product. “If you’re manufacturing and polluting,” Schulz offered, “or digging stuff out of the Earth and it’s causing problems— stop!” He emphasized, however, that you can’t optimize any system merely by

O

Schulz feels that most economists are incompetent, because they ignore natural and social capital. “It’s just more money down a rat hole if you don’t shift how you think about things.” Councilmember Mike Victorino and Mayor Charmaine Tavares. While otherwise “preaching to the choir” of Mauians interested in the sustainability movement, Anderson detailed how new thinking that considers upstream effects of corporate actions is essential. “The status quo is an opiate,” Anderson related. “The break with ‘we’ve always done it this way’ is hard.” Nevertheless, he shared how his company, Interface Carpets, has already achieved a 50 percent reduction in fossil fuel consumption and emits 82 percent less greenhouse gasses. The ultimate goal is not just to do no harm, but to help restore ecosystems compromised by humans’ wasteful consumption. And, Anderson reported, “These initiatives have been amazingly good for business.” Still, he believes that an educational culture shift toward “enviro-responsibility” is the key component of seven steps needed to “climb the mountain of sustainability.”

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

adjusting one part. Likewise, if you don’t fix a dysfunctional system, your own productivity within it “doesn’t matter a damn bit.” As a teenager, Schulz told me, he faced a pivotal decision between art, at which he was proficient enough that he was already selling his own artwork, and science. He chose the latter and immersed himself in university studies in zoology, physiology, microbiology and finally—at the University of Colorado—ecology. Upon graduating, he worked for the Great Western Sugar Company, a huge sugar beet operation based in Northeastern Colorado. Running their analytical laboratory at age 26, Schulz helped the company develop proprietary information and trade secrets that allowed them to utilize every part of the sugar beet. After extracting the sugar, the remaining four-fifths of beet pulp and beet molasses or “vin liquor” is full of proteins and minerals. Potassium is extracted for fertilizer use. Schulz described a potash

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

shed five stories high and longer than a football field. Crystalizers would then separate out high value glutamic acid, used for flavorings. The remaining mixture is still onequarter protein, and is used to coat beet pellets for animal feed. Thus, Schulz helped guide an agricultural industry that was proficient in what he terms Total Resource Productivity. He next had an opportunity to go into the aerospace industry, working on contamination control with Skylab and the Viking Mars missions. He helped assure that “planetary quarantine” treaties were honored, and that no microbes or spores were launched or landed on Mars, where we now know there is ice and permafrost. In the 1980s, Schulz said NASA’s budget “went away.” Since he was “just a biologist,” they looked to give him work he’d fail at so they could lay him off. But he excelled at his new assignments, drawing commendations from Martin Marietta’s customers. Finally, he was asked to put together an Integration Plan for the enormous Titan 34D launch rocket, designed to carry communications satellites and other spacecraft into orbit. His breakthrough success with the project (he later found out three others had tried and failed) came when he viewed it like an ecological food chain, and determined the key was to get the right information and hardware to the right place at the right time. In the end, his final plan was accepted by all of the 40-plus agencies and purveyors involved. Martin Marietta laid off 12,000 of 17,000 employees in the early 1990s, eventually merging to become Lockheed Martin in 1995. This allowed Schulz, who obtained a master’s degree in Systems Management from the University of Denver in 1992, to shift his focus more fully into sustainability. ince then, he has helped design nearly three dozen off-the-grid homes, with water catchment, cisterns, purification, graywater recycling and solar thermal and electrical systems. In existing buildings, he

S

LC Watch Cell out If you’re going to be a stickler for the rules, you’d better follow them. That’s the moral; now let’s get to the story. Here’s the scene: It’s the morning of February 5 and a handful of folks has shuffled into one of the meeting rooms in Wailuku’s David K. Trask office building for another LC Adjudication hearing. Joy is in the air. Everyone finds their seats, the brief pleasantries are dispensed with and the board is about to get down to business—in this case slapping Minit Stop with a $2,000 fine for selling a six-pack of Steinlager to a minor decoy— when the proceedings are interrupted by the shrill notes of a cell phone. We all look around, as people do in those situations. A couple board members shoot icy glares at the peanut gallery, assuming it must be one of us who forgot to switch to “vibrate.” There is, after all, a clearly visible sign posted right beside the door that asks all who enter to shut off their mobile devices. Surely it had to be a newbie, someone unfamiliar with the rules of the room. Nope. Turns out the offending ringtone is emanating from the pocket of Vice Chair Darren Lopez, the man who leads these meetings and does the bulk of the talking. Probably the one person with zero excuse to not follow that simple rule. (To his credit, he did look a bit embarassed as he shut the thing off.) Think we’re being unfairly nitpicky? That we’re holding Lopez to an unreasonable standard and getting morally indignant over something that’s actually pretty silly? You’re right. That’s exactly what we’re doing. Guess we’ve been spending too much time hanging around the LC.

–Jacob Shafer


ROBREPORT

BY ROB PARSONS ROBPARSONS@EARTHLINK.NET

whale or a pine tree and a sugar beet. Out of the Box is a collection of 21 “fairy tales that are true,” said Schulz. The book’s aim is to help business executives understand profound concepts displayed in nature. Schulz named several other schools of thought that, like ZERI, view the economics of whole systems and following nature’s guidelines as the real cornerstones of sustainability. He sees each of the multiple frameworks—permaculture; cradle to cradle; natural step; natural capitalism; ZERI; and biomimicry—as compatible ways to think clearly about system science. Schulz took the first-ever ZERI training offered in the United States in 2002, and is now among their certified systems designers found around the world. “The Japanese are way ahead of us on this,” said Schulz. “In fact, the rest of the world is ahead of us.” ERI begins by conducting a Critical Needs Assessment and addressing basic human needs first. For example: a project in South Brazil that looked to improve rice harvests and prices determined that the majority of the children were undernourished. By adding cultivation of blue-green algae to their rice fields, they were able to provide nutritional supplements for the entire community while also commanding a high price for the coveted spirulina. Soon Schulz will travel to India for work on specific projects, including microenterprise development. But first, he has his eyes on a local opportunity. Schulz told me he stopped by the Puunene Sugar Mill last week and asked to meet with someone to discuss some whole systems thinking. He hopes to talk story with Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar plantation executives. Given Schulz’s experience in Mainland sugar processing—and the fact that the company is reeling from $13 million in 2008 losses—perhaps HC&S officials will heed his advice. Schulz feels that most economists are incompetent, because they ignore natural

and social capital. “It’s just more money down a rat hole if you don’t shift how you think about things. The crazy thing is you can make so much more money by doing things differently and beneficially.” “The economics of whole systems is radically different than core business,” he continued. “You know, the reductionist, materialistic old world view—competition, and win-lose scenarios. In the current paradigm, even compromise feels like everyone leaves the room feeling as though they lost something. I prefer when everyone wins.” MTW

Z

Even rocket scientists need to refuel. believes it is wise to look at energy efficiency first. Get a rating, find the leaks, then fix them. The Colorado Sustainability Project he founded in 1994 merged four years later with the Sustainable Futures Society. Their thrust was twofold: education/outreach and implementing grassroots projects. He learned about the Zero Emissions Research and Initiatives (ZERI) global network while attending an Omega Institute conference in September 2001. The nonprofit ZERI was founded by Gunter Pauli, president of one of the first ecologically based corporations in Europe in the early 1990s, Ecover, which pioneered biodegradable household cleaning products. ZERI’s network of creative minds shares a common vision: using

nature’s design principles as inspiration and viewing waste as a resource, not a disposal issue. Striving to be “uniformly beneficial,” ZERI has participated in more than 14,000 projects in more than 50 countries on five continents. ZERI also boasts an impressive library. One noteworthy volume is Nature’s 100 Best, which offers insight into green jobs based on ideas from the natural world. In partnership with the Biomimicry Guild, ZERI authors described air-conditioning inspired by termite mound design, solar cells inspired by leaves and glue-free adhesion adapted from geckos. Pauli has helped create an education model to expand the eco-literacy of children and young adults, published and distributed by Chelsea Green. Gunter’s Fables is an 18-book set containing stories told with great emotion and intelligence, such as a conversation between a sea gull and a

EH BRAH! TALK IS CHEAP SEND YOUR EH BRAH TO ehbrah@mauitime.com

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

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MAUICOUNTY

COCONUT WIRELESS THE WEEK IN REVIEW

BY JACOB SHAFER JACOB@MAUITIME.COM

Oh, and then there was this: “Although our economy continues to be strong, we can expect a slower growth in the visitor industry.” First, you’d think if you were trying to make the bold claim that Maui’s cripplingly tourist-dependent economy is “strong” you wouldn’t immediately follow it with the contradictory conclusion that visitor numbers are bad and getting worse. Also, doesn’t “a slower growth” kind of sound like there’s a tumor in the middle of the visitor industry? OK, maybe that’s just me.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11 The Bush legacy reverberates: Maui lost its fourth soldier in Iraq this week, as Maui High graduate Christopher Sweet died in a stillunder-investigation “noncombat incident” at a base north of Baghdad. Condolences to his family and friends. Now, President Obama: get us out of there. If you do nothing else (and I know there’s a lot else that needs doing), do that.

Photo: www.co.maui.hi.us

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12 Mayor Tavares delivered her State of the County address yesterday to mostly glowing praise from the county council. Quoted in The Maui News, Councilmember Jo Anne Johnson called it “an excellent speech” that “gave us a definitive sense of where we are and where we need to be going.” Huh. Not sure we read the same speech, Jo Anne, because the one I saw was heavy on sizzle and extremely light on steak. Tavares dedicated the bulk of her remarks to looking back, touting what she claimed were her administration’s many accomplishments. (One of my favorite parts was when she gave a shout out to our old pals in the Department of Liquor Control for doing “an outstanding job in enforcing laws and working to reduce underage drinking.”) The portion of the speech that focused on the future was slim and contained basically zero concrete details. We got lots of soaring platitudes and even a Tibetan proverb, but not much in the way of tangible ideas or policy statements.

“Love really is not between a man and a woman. It’s between two human beings.” That’s Rep. Joe Bertram, quoted in a Maui News piece about the push for same sex civil unions in Hawaii. A civil union measure passed the House by a 33-17 vote and now heads to the Senate, where it’s expected to meet stronger opposition. (For those keeping score at home, Rep. Angus McKelvey of West Maui was the lone Valley Isle representative to side with the “nays.”) The main argument against the bill, which will be familiar to anyone who’s followed this debate here and in other states, was summed up succinctly by Rep. Gene Ward of Oahu: “This bill is not about equality. It is about an end-run for same sex marriages.” No, it’s about equality, but thanks for playing.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14 So what if I told you Hawaii could enjoy a net gain of $33 million a year by changing one law? Given the bleak status of the tourism industry and the state’s ballooning deficit, I’m sure you’d be all ears. Well, that scenario could become a reality, according to a report from the University of Hawaii, if marijuana was decriminalized and taxed. The report, titled “The Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Decriminalization and Legalization for Hawaii,” found that enforcement and prosecution of marijuana laws costs the state about $10 million a year, while revenue from the taxation of pot could top $20 million. Even if you think those numbers are inflated, there’s no denying that treating marijuana like tobacco and alcohol—in addition to making a large amount of sense—would save and make money for the state (and they could create a whole new department—the MC!). On a related note, the state legislature is currently considering four marijuana-related bills, as reported in the Hawaii Tribune-Herald; three of them deal with expanding and clarifying medical pot laws, but the fourth, HB1192, would make possession of less than an ounce a civil offense, meaning the punishment would be a parking ticket-sized fine rather than jail time. Of course, any bill that makes it out of congress will have to be approved by Gov.

Whole lotta sizzle, not much steak. Lingle, who vetoed a law last year that would have created a medical marijuana task force. At the time Lingle called the bill “an exercise at finding ways to circumvent federal law.” You know those Republicans—always fighting against state’s rights.

haven’t read the thing and may not even know it exists. I agree. Even if you have read it, reviewing your rights is always a good idea. So here it is: hawaiis.com/tenant-landlord-code. (You can also get a copy from the Office of Consumer Protection; call their hotline, 586-2634.)

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15 Oh wait: “Throughout my political career, I’ve believed in the concept of home rule. Some call it local control. Whichever phrase you use, the concept is the same: the best decisions are those made closest to those who will be impacted by the decisions.” –Gov. Lingle, at a 2004 education summit. Man, 2004 Lingle should have a chat with 2009 Lingle. If anyone can talk some sense into her, it’s her.

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16 Got an e-mail from reader Patti asking me to print a link to the Hawaii Residential Landlord-Tenant Code, which is the rulebook that renters and property owners have to live by—security deposits, repairs, access, the whole bit. Patti believes that many people

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17 Well, that was predictable: After sailing past the dreaded $4-a-gallon mark this summer then plummeting late in the year, gas prices have risen 20 percent nationwide since the start of 2009, according to CNNMoney.com. (Hawaii is one of 16 states where the average gallon tops $2.) While lower demand and a growing emphasis (finally!) on fuel efficient vehicles will probably keep prices from shooting through the roof in the short term, it’s time to accept that cheap gas is an illusion. We’re running out of the stuff, and most of what’s left belongs to folks who, as John McCain is fond of putting it, “don’t like us very much.” Oh, and the people who sell it are greedy bastards, so there’s also that. MTW

OVERHEARD... “Don’t sneeze—it might fall off!” -Woman on her cell phone on South Kihei Rd.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

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t’s happy hour on the kind of evening for which outdoor seating was invented. You suck down a discount mai tai and contemplate ordering another in anticipation of sunset. A guy strums his guitar in the corner, perhaps with a drum machine backing him up, and he plays with rare precision. As his set list unfurls you may experience deja vu, or perhaps the sense that some unspoken rite is unraveling as bar patrons reduce their rumrunners to rubble, as another day in paradise is laid to rest. The crowd eagerly imbibes “Margaritaville” and “Tequila Sunrise,” but the pinnacle of this late afternoon ceremony happens when the sun hits the home stretch and you hear the opening bars of “Baby I Love Your Way.” One can observe this scenario in virtually any subtropical, tourist-trodden locale in the United States, and certainly here in Maui. It is ritual in a time when ritual seldom goes beyond the mundane, but the fact that it hinges on the familiar repetition of the same songs reflects music’s ability to comfort by way of reinforcing cultural values. It also might be bad news for originality.

Venues book cover bands because they’re a tried and true way to bring people in. This makes it tougher for original acts to try out new material and to build a following.

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

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he proliferation of cover acts, especially in tourist destinations, calls into question the purpose that music serves. While perpetuation of culture is obviously one of its vital functions (something we can especially see in Hawaiian music), innovation among musicians can spark many things, including a strong sense of community among creative people. But is there room for both on the Valley Isle? There seems to be a profusion of performers from both camps on Maui at the moment. Bands and solo musicians that play mostly cover tunes usually enjoy steady work, while bands with original material, granted they have a following, can play at a number of venues throughout the island, though with less frequency. People who are heavily involved with the Maui music scene say there are many talented musicians these days, most of whom are willing to work together as a community, and that there is potential for the scene to blow up, to put the island on the map. Others say that demand for cover tunes among venues is stifling what could be a thriving original music scene. But it may not be so cut-and-dried. “It’s a mixed bag,” says longtime Maui musician Eric Gilliom who, though he respects Jimmy Buffett, has never learned “Margaritaville.” “In one respect you have an incredible opportunity for musicians to make a living.” The proliferation of Maui venues that want to bring in tourists—who usually aren’t all about seeking out original music—allows for a musician who doesn’t mind playing “Brown Eyed Girl” at least once a day to make a living, says Gilliom. Some musicians, after all, are just stoked to be able to support themselves by playing music, and happen to be skilled players and good entertainers. At the same time, Gilliom says, Maui’s population may not be big enough to support a thriving original music scene. The venues book cover bands because they’re a tried and true way to bring people in. Original or not, places want acts with a following. This makes it tougher for original acts to try out new material on a crowd weaned on old standbys. “It’s hard for the music to thrive if [venues] are responsible for generating revenue,” says Jerry Kunatomo, owner of BJ’s Pizzeria in Lahaina and a longtime player in the local music scene. “I think audiences are asking for something familiar.”

But a few places are trying to bring in acts that perform mostly original material. “There’s a handful of venues that are open to supporting the Gomegas and Anuheas” of Maui, Gilliom says. Prolific Maui musician Kanoa of the band Gomega, who many say is one of the hardest working musicians on-island, has it both ways. He stresses versatility on the part of musicians. “I look at it as fishing,” he says. “You’ve got to get people in there to listen to you.” Then, once patrons are secured in their seats, you play your original stuff. Kanoa says musicians who want to play consistent gigs while disseminating their original material have to


Playing covers can be tougher than playing originals, at least if you want to do them right. When you play an original, you know the song’s source of inspiration, while some covers get lost in translation. acknowledge that their role goes beyond that of brilliant musical innovator. “We’re social workers,” he says. “We help people through our work.” Having an audience member walk up to you after covering, say, Neil Young’s “Old Man” and tell you that you made his day may be just as satisfying as a warm reception after performing a new original. The difference between an entertainer and an artist, then, lies in the way he or she relates to the crowd. In any case, Kanoa says, one of the great advantages of the music scene on Maui is that it’s accessible; there are venues for musicians who can regularly bring in a solid crowd. “We as musicians on Maui should really appreciate the fact that we get to play,” he says. “No matter what, I appreciate all the gigs that I have.” The key for cultivating a strong music scene, he says, is to have a strong musical community. Ipo Kahele, who manages Gomega among other projects, agrees that it’s up to the musicians, at least in part, to build a scene. “We all try to help each other out,” she said. “We help people who are doing music for the right reason.” As for covers, Kahele says, “Sweet Home Alabama” and “What I Got” are not going anywhere. “Overall, that’s part of the business,” she says. “In order to make a dollar bill this is the formula that works.”

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he people it works for are musicians whose strong suit lies in their playing. For example, while they have quality originals, the Vince Esquire Band tears the roof off at every gig because of their impeccable musicianship and high energy. And while an original may be good, audience members often respond to “Pride and Joy” not only because it’s familiar, but also because of the band’s ability to rock it out. Esquire said that the band’s original-to-cover ratio varies depending on the situation. “It can vary by venue,” he says. “We also play to the crowd. It depends on what the crowd is feeling, the energy.” The degree to which a band’s set list contains cover songs often has no bearing on a musician’s talent. Esquire said that playing covers can be tougher than playing originals, at least if you want to do them right.

When you play an original, you know the song’s source of inspiration and can thus infuse it with the emotional gravity it warrants. Covers, on the other hand, can get lost in translation. Being heavy on covers often reflects the fact that that’s what works for a given act, but it could also mean a musician or band, for whatever reason, doesn’t write. If you take it seriously, the songwriting process can be agonizing. A song can take weeks, or more, to write. Rarely does a composition come together in a flash of inspiration, contrary to popular belief. It’s a process. “You chip away at it,” says Gilliom. So, if you’re playing out four to five times a week and want to keep your set list dynamic, you may have to learn some new covers, which can have a silver lining for some. “Learning covers is a great way to keep your chops up,” Gilliom says. “In such a small area it is extremely difficult to play original music and maintain a busy gigging music business,” said Tim Rausch of A Kettle Prime, which plays primarily originals and has a following, though they do not play out as often as most cover bands. “[We play] mostly original music, normally only two or three covers a night. However, we only play twice a month. We play what we love to play. We all have jobs that pay our rent and bills. This is our passion.”

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he nature of a given cover also says a lot about a musician or band.

“Unfortunately I sometimes assume a loss of creativity,” said Chantilly Mers, a musician originally of Maui who is now based in New York. “If the cover song isn’t redone or rearranged then it doesn’t really showcase the inherent original quality of the musician.”

A band can be innovative in its arrangement of someone else’s composition. A good adaptation can break down and rebuild a song as something completely different. Or a band can choose to cover deeper cuts, shedding “Brown Eyed Girl” for a lesser-known Van Morrison track like “Sweet Thing.” Many see development of original material as a matter of ambition. “I think that doing [covers] in the short term could benefit an artist,” says musician consultant and Waiehu Records publicist Jeison Manaois. “When you’re known for your music you’ll go further. The more creative, the better.” Fortunately, he says, given recent technological advances, musicians everywhere have the advantage of being DIY, from recording to promotion and touring. “There are so many artists here on Maui who could make an impact,” says Manaois, by way of getting their music online via MySpace, among other things. Original artists, in other words, don’t have to rely solely on venues for getting their stuff heard.

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o many, now is an opportune moment for Maui musicians to build a scene. There are widely available, relatively inexpensive tools that help artists move forward independently. And then there’s an underreported silver lining that coincides with any economic slump: people want to be entertained, to be around something that takes their mind off their troubles. In such times people demand more from their music. The same old tunes may no longer be enough for those who once sought refuge in them. If so, now’s the time for Maui’s music community to step up and meet this demand. The sun may never set on “Baby I Love Your Way,” but we might be ready for the dawn of something new. MTW

Under the Covers

Ten played out cover songs and ten underrated alternatives

Ditch this... “Margaritaville”

...Play this “Son of a Son of a Sailor” Jimmy Buffet

Jimmy Buffet

“Sweet Thing”

“Brown Eyed Girl”

Van Morrison

Van Morrison

“Gates of Eden”

“Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”

Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan

“Burned”

“For What It’s Worth”

Buffalo Springfield

Buffalo Springfield

“Sir Duke”

“Superstition”

Stevie Wonder

Stevie Wonder

“Ooh La La”

“Baby I Love Your Way”

The Faces

Peter Frampton

“99 1/2 Won’t Do”

“Mustang Sally”

Wilson Pickett

Wilson Pickett

“Sweet Home Alabama”

“Mississippi Queen” Mountain

Lynyrd Skynyrd

“Porterville”

“Proud Mary” Credence Clearwater

“What I Got”

Credence Clearwater

“The Ballad of Johnny Butt” Sublime

Sublime

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

13


ONO KINEGRINDS

BY HEATHER NICHOLSON HEATHER@MAUITIME.COM

Maui eat world Lahaina Grill offers eclectic, globe-spanning dishes eyed the buttery escargot on my spoon like a kid who just took a dare to eat a bug. It looked innocent enough, like a well-cooked mushroom soaking in a warm bath of garlic and butter. I reminded myself that people have been eating snails for centuries, and I would be doing the dining

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Lahaina Grill

Photos by Kent Hwang

127 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina 667-5117 Dinner served nightly starting at 6pm gods a great disservice if I did not at least try this popular French delicacy. I took two deep breaths and put the whole thing in my mouth. As I chewed the firm morsel, every bite burst with guilty, buttery flavors far from what I expected from a mollusk. I exhaled a sigh of relief—escargot is not so bad. You mean you haven’t tried it yet? The escargot was my first stop on a trip around world cuisine that I experienced at Lahaina Grill. The restaurant touts itself as “New American cuisine,” which (and I had to look it up) is a term for upscale, contemporary cooking that combines flavors from America’s melting pot of ethnicities. It lives up to that definition: the owner/chef is Swiss, the executive chef is Mexican, the general

manager got her start with T.G.I. Friday’s and the original menu was modeled after famed Chicago chef Charlie Trotter. The décor is nothing short of eclectic. With cream-colored walls and eggshellblue trim reminiscent of a country cottage, Ikea-like glass lamps emitting subdued, contemporary lighting and shockingly colorful floral paintings by Maui artist Jan Kasprzycki hanging on the walls, the unusual mix of colors and genres gives the impression that someone gave Mozart a paintbrush and Picasso a piano. Our next stop on the jet-set menu felt like it should be paired with margaritas. The chile relleno placed at our table’s center was a plump poblano pepper the size of a ballpark hotdog and fried to a perfect golden brown. The pepper sat beautifully on a heap of fresh corn kernels and a tomato and vinegar puree. I am quite partial to chile relleno and have sampled every variation of the Mexican staple, which literally means “stuffed pepper.” Lahaina Grill’s version has an island twist: it’s not only stuffed with melted cheese, but with pureed prawns and scallops as well. The delicate stuffing is moist and tastes more like breading than seafood. While devouring the pepper up to the stem, my pallet was not quite prepared for the hit of heat that came at the end; it was like the poblano’s gangsta cousin taking the last punch in a fight. It’s a nice surprise for this spicy-food lover and I concede that it might be the best chile relleno this side of the Rio Grande, which is saying something given my Texas roots.

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For the entrée, I ordered the kalua duck. As I pierced the fowl leg with my fork, the meat fell apart in long, juicy strips, much like any Mauian would recognize in a pulled-pork sandwich. The usually gamey dish has the soft, smoky flavor of roasted pig. Duck confit is a special dish because generally it is made using a centuriesold process of preservation that involves curing a piece of duck leg in salt and then poaching it in its own fat. After marinating for up to 36 hours, the duck is slowly cooked at a low temperature from 90 minutes to 10 hours until it is meltingly tender. More so than any filet mignon could hope to be. We ended our meal with the dessert sampler. A quarto of Crème Brule, berry pie, flourless chocolate cake and a vintage Hawaiian chocolate cake called Road to Hana, Maui. While all four are exceptional, only one made my toes curl. Starting with a soft chocolate cake base, the Road to Hana is paved with a chocolate and sour cream mousse, intertwined with gen-

Photos: Owner/chef Jurg Munch; dessert sampler; chile relleno.

erous chunks of caramel macadamia nuts. Topped with a silky chocolate ganache, this chocoholic indulgence could very well be the best desert I have had on Maui. If you’re looking to break away from the Pacific Rim dishes that dominate Maui’s restaurants, take a trip around the world at Lahaina Grill by sampling local products prepared with a foreign flair. MTW


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15


MUSICSCENE

BY KATE BRADSHAW KATE@MAUITIME.COM

Good mojo Mojomana: like Velvet Underground plus The B52s four hours into an acid bender ne of music’s most important functions is enhancement of landscape. Part of the appeal of a record like, say, Getz/Gilberto lies in its ability to define a moment and become inseparable, at least in memory, from a physical setting. (Think early evening, Makena, champagne, Getz. Damn.) Some artists’ compositions just have an unquantifiable ability to invoke various types of scenery, some nameless force that pushes the music into another dimension. Haiku-based Mojomana does this without overdoing it. And they know how to party. “I aim for infamy,” drummer Dan Minichiello tells me over an assortment of flavored cleaning products at a cafe in Paia. His first concert was Cream, he says, and he recalls a lethargic and bone-thin Ginger Baker mounting the stage, later coming alive for a 45-minute drum solo. Magic.

O

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

Singer/guitarist Melissa M., who writes most of their songs, says that she often breaks strings from playing too hard, from trying to convey the gestalt of whatever musical picture she has in mind. It’s no wonder geography seems to play heavily into their sound: M. grew up in

Mojomana Web site: MySpace.com/mojomana Next gig: Saturday, February 21, 9pm at Eha’s, Wailuku

New Mexico and went to college and grad school in Flagstaff, AZ. She’s been on Maui for nearly a decade. Not a bad record as far as inspiring locales go. M. employs chord progressions that are simple and pretty catchy, but often dramat-

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

ic (with a few blues structures here and there), and lead guitarist Rodney K. overlays them with stretchy, psychedelic solos (I would like to stress here that they’re not quite a jam band). Bass and drums (furnished by Dino Segovis and Minichiello, respectively) give M.’s dreamy compositions a dance-inducing bounciness. The band assembled in 2005, and debuted at an Iraq War veterans’ benefit concert. Now in a slightly different configuration, they gig a few times a month, and play at Eha’s this Saturday. M. says Mojomana has gotten comparisons to the likes of the Cowboy Junkies and Mazzy Star. While bands with female vocalists tend to get compared to other girl-fronted bands simply by virtue of plumbing, these comparisons actually have merit. Here’s my comparison: The Velvet Underground plus The B52s, four hours into an acid bender in the desert.

They do surf versions of “Walkin’ After Midnight” and “Tracks of my Tears” and a blues version of “Gin and Juice.” Lyrically, M. explores an array of physical and psychological landscapes. “A lot of it is really somewhat of a stream of consciousness,” she says. M.’s vocal style is striking. She’s on the low end of mezzo-soprano with a breezy, slightly frail sound that never becomes nasal. She sometimes goes a little flat, but in a way that totally works; the way Liz Phair used to do before selling out. So what about the name? M. says they came up with it while trying to describe what mana is to someone—kind of like mojo, but then again pretty different. It is at the intersection between mojo and mana where their music lies—music that is more conjured than crafted. MTW


MINDCANDY

BY YNEZ TONGSON YNEZ@MAUITIME.COM

Voulez-Vous Bagel Avecc Moi?

Get your geek on WORLD OF WARCRAFT worldofwarcraft.com WoW is a lot like a hard drug. First, they offer you a free 10-day trial. Sure, it seems innocuous enough: a MMORPG (massive multiplayer online role-playing game) to fill in the hours when you’re not busy. You create your character, wander around the world of Azeroth on quests, meet people and consequently kill them. Suddenly, you’re blowing off important engagements, your hygiene has gone out the window and your family is afraid to come near the computer. If this hasn’t scared you off yet, there was an incident in WoW that replicated real-life epidemics. Even the Center for Disease Control was interested in it. But I’m sure you’re made of stronger stuff; this won’t happen to you. And hey, you can quit at any time…right? The newest expansion kit, The Wrath of the Lich King, was released in November 2008. This probably explains why I haven’t had a date since.

I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER? I would like to present you with lolcats. Lolcats are amusing pet pictures (usually cats) with captions written in lolspeak. This is a lot more time consuming and entertaining than it sounds. This is also a lot more debilitating than it sounds. Soon, you’ll find that you can’t stop speaking in lolspeak. I used to pride myself on my grammar, going so far as to use it while texting. However, with the advent of lolcats, I find myself saying things like, “Oh noes! I need more pix of teh kittehs!” If lolcats don’t do it for you, there are links to other lol-related things, such as: Lol News and Politics, Engrish and the ever-popular Fail Blog. Even so, you can’t have a Web site devoted to those of feline persuasion without some protest. Fear not, dog connoisseurs, there are loldogs too, at www.ihasahotdog.com.

©Photo Kevin Rebelo Oct. 2008

icanhascheezburger.com

THE GUILD watchtheguild.com Now that you’ve accepted geekdom as a legitimate way of life, it’s time to watch the lives of other geeks and their struggles. Codex (who seems to be a favorite of Joss Whedon, having starred in his Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, and that other show…you know, Buffy), is a gamer girl trying to adapt to the pressures of real life. But, due to some misguided semicolons in chat, Codex has found herself rooming with a delusional warlock from her guild. You will giggle at the characters flat out refusal to accept life for what it is, before the doomed realization that you probably have one of these people living on your couch, eating all your snacks. So watch The Guild for some solutions before “all your base are belong to us.” MTW

Come in and hang out in our cool A/C or relax outside on our ocean-view lanai

We offer delicious: Panini, Bagels, Sandwiches, Soups made daily, Salads Coffee, Espresso, Smoothies, Internet access and much more. Located in Dolphin Plaza across from Kama’ole Beach Park One 2395 S. Kihei Road 808.875.7668 Open Mon-Sat 6:30am-5:00pm, Sundays 6:30am-3:00pm

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

17


FILMCRITIQUE

BY BARRY WURST II BARRY@MAUITIME.COM

Shop ‘til you drop Chick flick clunker like the Home Shopping Network with a plot hate writing reviews for movies like this because I have to: a) admit to seeing it and face ridicule from my male friends who detect a drop in my testosterone; and b) profess to really liking so-called

I

Confessions of a Shopaholic

★★ ★★★★ Rated PG/105 min.

“chick flicks” and women’s movies in general, while, at the same time, bashing this one. Here’s the reason I wanted to see this movie: the director, P.J. Hogan, made My Best Friend’s Wedding, a witty, stylish romantic comedy. Let’s just say lightning didn’t strike twice.

Isla Fisher stars as a city gal with an expensive addiction. Her credit card bills become so dire, she cons her way into a job as a fashion writer with a gift for Finnish culture. The movie thinks it’s a satire of materialism, but really it’s a celebration of it and a world record candidate for having the most product placements in film history. It’s liking watching the Home Shopping Network with a plot. Fisher is a sunny, try-anything-for-alaugh physical and verbal comedienne and she gets some real laughs out of this desperate material. The running subplot about her dodging a bookish collection agent and a scene where she assaults her dance partner with a fan get chuckles entirely because of Fisher’s hardworking performance, but she can’t overcome material this flimsy. John Lithgow has a small supporting role as a company big wig; he’s one of our greatest living stage and screen actors and one who rarely does movies anymore, which makes his nothing

You pink you know, but you have no idea. role all the more of a letdown. Kristin Scott Thomas, Joan Cusack, Fred Armisen, Lynn Redgrave, Julie Hagerty and John Goodman are cast in roles that define thankless and are completely wasted. Action movie guru Jerry Bruckheimer is the film’s executive producer, which shouldn’t come as a surprise. He was also behind Coyote Ugly, which was equally slick, heartless, dumb and degrading to women. I went to this movie with two female friends. They both said it was made for women, noted all the ladies in the audience who laughed throughout the screening and

simply dismissed my negative opinion as immaterial, since the movie wasn’t intended for men. I couldn’t disagree more. Women love good films tailor-made for men, just as I know many guys who loved Sleepless in Seattle. A great movie is great no matter who the filmmakers intended the audience to be. I’m giving this movie one star for the one thing in it that’s worth seeing: Isla Fisher’s performance. She has oodles of talent, but her work is mostly eclipsed by one bad, cringe-inducing scene after another. MTW

– – “Na– ‘Oiwi ‘Olino – People Seeking Wisdom” 6:30a.m. – 9a.m. weekday mornings on

– – “Na– ‘Oiwi ‘Olino – People Seeking Wisdom” is a morning drive-time radio program presented by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, with hosts Brickwood Galuteria and Kimo Kaho‘a–no.

• • • •

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18

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY


MOVIECAPSULES Maui Film Festival Candlelight Cinema THE BEAUTIFUL TRUTH - Unrated Documentary - This flick explores a cancer cure allegedly developed nearly a century ago that involves juicing and detoxification. Adopts the perspective of a teenager in pursuit of the truth. 93 min.

New This Week MADEA GOES TO JAIL - PG13 - Comedy - A Tyler Perry film involving Tyler Perry done up Big Mama style and ending up in prison aside a young and formerly crack-addled prostitute. Hi-larious. 103 min.

Now Showing CONFESSIONS OF A SHOPAHOLIC - PG - Thriller - This one actually sounds kind of twisted and somewhat pertinent. A young New York City woman gets herself into debilitating credit card debt due to a grotesque shopping addiction, but manages to score a gig writing a financial advice column. Regardless, she finds her life unraveling because of her debt...this us a Disney flick, so I’m guessing the ending will be a happy one. 112 min. CORALINE (3D) - PG - Animation - A young girl discovers a parallel world with striking similarities to her own mundane existence. Some sinister non-bear elements threaten to tear her away from her host reality. 100 min.

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

by a film’s characters, but no. This is actually about a hotel for dogs. Stars Don Cheadle. Seriously. 100 min. INKHEART - PG - Fantasy - A young girl’s father discovers he has the power to bring certain characters from the stories he reads to life. Unfortunately none of these characters are Jesus, Pan or even Tom Sawyer (all of whom are the topics of about six Rush songs). 106 min. THE INTERNATIONAL - R - Action - Here we have an attractive and unlikely pair (Naomi Watts in the form of a New York prosecutor and an Interpol agent played by Clive Owen) that happens upon a very powerful bank that sees nothing wrong with funding terrorism. As they cruise the globe in search of, I don’t know, clues?, they find that their own lives may be at risk. And not because of bears. 118 min. NEW IN TOWN - PG13 - Comedy - A Renee Zellweger-esque woman is climbing the corporate ladder. A project that guarantees a promotion lands her in a podunk town where she inevitably meets a dreamy gentleman. Sacrificing one’s career for a dude is the worst thing a girl can do, so let’s hope that doesn’t happen. 96 min. PAUL BLART: MALL COP - PG - Comedy - A scathing commentary questioning the aptitude of quasi-governmental entities that occupy mercantile centers in present-day New Jersey while tackling the most complex of existential quandries. 87 min. PINK PANTHER 2 - PG - Comedy - They made a second ‘Pink Panther.’ 92 min. PUSH - PG13 - Action - A young dude and a teenage girl are forced to battle a destructive element that works outside the physical realm with hilarious results. 90 min.

THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON - PG13 - Drama - A peculiar story of a man who is born in his eighties and ages backwards, becoming younger through time. 120 min.

THE READER - R - Drama - A young man has a bit of a fling with a woman twice his age, who spontaneously disappears. Years later, when he is observing a Nazi war crimes trial, he runs into her again, only to discover she has a secret. 122 min.

FRIDAY THE 13TH - R - Horror - In this absolutely necessary remake of a classic horror flick, a young dude stumbles upon an abandoned summer camp after going to the woods to look for his missing sister. He ends up among a bunch of partying college kids, all of whom begin to learn the hard way that bears are not the only killing machines that live in the woods. 95 min.

REVOLUTIONARY ROAD - R - Drama Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet star as a suburban couple in the ‘50s who discover the meaninglessness of their existence and actually try to do something to resist it. 119 min.

GRAN TORINO - R - Drama - Clint Eastwood plays a grizzled racist/Korean War veteran who has remained in his Detroit neighborhood despite white flight (hey, that rhymed!). His concept of reality gets thrown for a loop through his interactions with a family of Hmong immigrants. 114 min.

TAKEN - PG13 - Drama - It’s been, what, two weeks since you’ve seen a movie or television show involving government operatives, kidnapping, conspiracies? This one stars Liam Neeson as a CIA agent whose daughter gets kidnapped. Good times. 93 min.

HE’S JUST NOT THAT INTO YOU - PG13 - Comedy - A group of loosely-connected young-ish people, all fumbling through the whole romantic relationship minefield, all dealing with their own shortcomings as well as those of the people that surround them, all figure it out in the end, presumably. 129 min. HOTEL FOR DOGS - PG - Family - You would think that such a title would bear a metaphorical significance to a film, or perhaps allude to the existential longing shared

SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE - R - Art, Foreign - A Mumbai street kid attempts to become a contestant on India’s ‘Who Wants to Be a Millionaire’ to find the girl he loved and lost. 120 min.

UNDERWORLD: RISE OF THE LYCANS - R Thriller - Based loosely on the life of Mark Twain, this prequel to the first ‘Underworld’ chronicles the conflict between upper-crust vampires and a race that they once held as slaves. 93 min. THE UNINVITED - R - Horror - After the tragic non-bear mauling death of her mother, a young lady finds her mother’s former nurse putting the moves on Dad. Mom’s ghost warns of ill intentions. Audience members get repeatedly startled. Everyone wins. 102 min.

SHOWTIMES

.com

Maui Film Festival Castle Theater, 572-3456 The Beautiful Truth - Unrated - W 5, 7:30

Front Street Theater 900 Front Street, Lahaina, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-F until 6:30pm, Sa-Su until 3:30pm, Discount Tue), Confessions of a Shopaholic - PG - Th-W 4:30, 7, 9:30. Sa-Su 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30. Coraline (3D) - PG - Th 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Push - PG13 - Th-W 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. Sa-Su 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. The Reader - R - F-W 4:15, 7, 9:45. Sa-Su 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45. Slumdog Millionaire - R - Th 4, 6:45, 9:30. F-W 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30.

Ka’ahumanu 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 1800-326-3264 ext. 2711 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm), Friday the 13th - R - Th 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:15 Gran Torino - R - Th 12, 5, 7:30 He’s Just Not That Into You - PG13 - Th 11, 12, 1:50, 4:40, 5:40, 7:40, 8:30 The International - R - Th 11, 1:50, 4:40, 7:30 Taken - PG13 - Th 11:20, 1:25, 3:30, 5:35, 7:40 Underworld: Rise of the Lycans - R - Th 11:10, 1:20, 3:30, 4:40, 7:30 The Uninvited - R - Th 2:45. Th 2:45. Call for fremaining showtimes.

Kukui Mall 1819 South Kihei Road, 1-800-326-3264 ext. 2716 ( Matinees: everyday until 4pm), Friday the 13th - R - Th 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:15 He’s Just Not That Into You - PG13 - Th 1:30, 4:20, 7:15. Th 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:45. Pink Panther 2 - PG - Th 1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:25 Slumdog Millionaire - R - Th 1:45, 4:30, 7:30

Wed. 2/25 # 5pm m & 7:30pm

NEW W BESTT DEAL!! $88 PASSS ‘CLICKS’’ AREE BACK! Seee thee trailer:: MauiFilmFestival.com MFF’ss 3-Film m Pass:: $26** H Singlee Tix:: $12.50* *Forr ‘09,, Passs & Tixx Pricess includee Statee Ex.. Taxx & Ticketingg Fees

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Call for remaining showtimes.

Maui Mall Megaplex Maui Mall, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm), Confessions of a Shopaholic - PG - Th 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. F-Su 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. M-W 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. M-W 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. Coraline (3D) - PG - Th 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. F-Su 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. M-W 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - PG13 - Th 4:30, 8. F-Su 1, 4:30, 8. M-W 4:30, 8. Friday the 13th - R - Th-Su 12:10, 1:35, 2:35, 3:50, 4:50, 6:10, 7:10, 8:30. 9:35. M-W 1:35, 2:35, 3:50, 4:50, 6:10, 7:10, 8:30. 9:35. Hotel for Dogs - PG - Th 1:40, 4, 6:25 Inkheart - PG - Th 1:35, 4:05, 6:35, 9. F-W 1:40, 4:05, 6:35, 9. Madea Goes to Jail - PG13 - 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 New In Town - PG13 - Th-W 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20. Paul Blart: Mall Cop - PG - Th-W 2:40, 4:55, 7:15, 9:30. F-Su 12:30, 2:40, 4:55, 7:15, 9:30. FSu 12:30, 2:40, 4:55, 7:15, 9:30. Pink Panther 2 - PG - Th 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:45. F-Su 12:25, 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:45. M-W 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:45. Push - PG13 - Th 1:45, 4:20, 7:05, 9:40. Th 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:45. F-W 1:45, 4:20, 7:05, 9:40. Revolutionary Road - R - Th 8:50. Th 2:40, 4:55, 7:15, 9:30. Slumdog Millionaire - R - Th-W 3:25, 6:15, 9:05. F-Su 12:35, 3:25, 6:15, 9:05.

Wharf Cinema Center 658 Front Street, 249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day), Friday the 13th - R - Th 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15. F-W 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9. Sa-Su 12, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9. He’s Just Not That Into You - PG13 - F-W 3:30, 6:30, 9:30. Sa-Su 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30. Madea Goes to Jail - PG13 - F-W 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15. Sa-Su 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15. Pink Panther 2 - PG - 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

19


THIS WEEK’S PICKS Straight to the Source

Heating up Lahaina

Friday-Tuesday (Feb. 20-23), Camp Keanae, Haiku

Friday (Feb 20), 5:30pm, Lahaina Civic Center

Did you know that we get the term “guy” (as in: Florida Governor Charlie Crist? Man, that guy is hot!) from effigies of Guy Fawkes, which Brits would burn after Fawkes plotted to blow up the Parliament building in 1605? Fawkes and crew sought to restore Roman Catholicism as Great Britain’s national religion. Fast forward to Black Rock Desert, Nevada, Labor Day Weekend, the modern era: Burning Man. Unlike Fawkes, this event promotes radical self-reliance and expression, decommodification and leaving no trace, among other things. This weekend’s Source event is Maui’s Burning Man equivalent. In its second year, Source consists of music, art and theatrical performances as well as health and education workshops. Look for the Franklin Symposium, a meeting of the minds described as “adult show and tell.” But Source is more than the sum of its parts; it’s something you really have to experience in order to fully grasp it. This year’s theme is The Great Expression, a not-too-subtle word play indicating creativity and collaboration in the face of economic peril. A bunkhouse and tent camping are available on-site for multiple-day attendees. For more information and to buy tickets, visit sourcemaui.com. Presale tickets are $175 for an all-inclusive pass and $65 for a day pass.

When I was made aware of Pepper’s Maui show I warily checked out their MySpace page. My concern was that they might not be very good. Yet a band that started out in Hawaii (Kona, to be exact) that has become a national act warrants attention when they come back to the islands. So I clicked, and was pretty impressed with what I heard. In addition to their originality and obviously good musicianship, Pepper has a natural edge that other bands in its league lack: their Kona roots add a layer of Hawaiian life and music to their already eclectic rock/reggae/dub sound. One might lump these guys with the likes of 311 and Slightly Stoopid, with whom they share similarities on the surface, but I detect a much broader net of musical influences in their sound. While punkinspired tune “Blackout” is so far my favorite tune of theirs, I detect the influence of some of my own musical heroes, namely Cream, in some of their other tunes. Yet while their songs tend to be heavy and driven, their approach to music is playful (look at their album art) and extremely dynamic. It’s no wonder that the band has shared the stage with Shaggy, Snoop Dogg and Burning Spear, among others. The Alliez open. Find tickets at Quietstorm, Maui Tropix, Hard Rock, Otopia or Request.

THURSDAY

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FRIDAY FEB 20

10:00 PM

THE KRYPTONES MARTY DREAD TEOMON

MONDAY FEB 23 9:00 PM $10 COVER

WILLIE K

www.charleysmaui.com Daily Happy Hour • $1.00 OFF ALL DRAFTS BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER

20

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JOURNEY Under the Stars - At the MACC Maui Arts & Cultural Center - Lawn

Tuesday, March 24, 2009 7:00 PM Reserved Tickets: $55. $65, $75, $125 plus applicable fees available to MACC Annual Donors this Sat Feb 21 at 10:00am on-sale to General Public on Feb28 Purchase Tickets: On-line www.mauiarts.org • Charge by phone at 242SHOW(7469) • Visit the MACC Box Office 10am-6pm Journey fans who are not yet Annual Donors can enjoy the benefits of early ticket purchase by joining the Annual Donor Program at http://www.mauiarts.org/donorbenefit.html or at the MACC Box Office


BY KATE BRADSHAW

Cool hand fluke

Pecha keen

Saturday (Feb. 21), 9am, Kalama Park, Kihei

Tuesday (Feb. 24), 6:30pm, Café Moana, Paia

What do whales, sunsets and Creedence Clearwater Revival have in common? I mean, aside from the obvious? Here’s a clue: I doubt you’ve ever heard anyone say, “Man, that whale/sunset/CCR song sucks!” All three enhance the arenas of existence in which they operate, so it is tough to imagine anyone disparaging them. All three are celebrated periodically. Sunsets are observed daily. The town of El Cerrito, CA celebrates John Fogerty Day July 15 in honor of Creedence’s singer/rhythm guitarist. Maui honors whales every February. The Pacific Whale Foundation’s Whale Day celebration kicks off with an all-things-whale parade, which goes along South Kihei Road from the fire station to Kalama Beach Park. Festivities continue at said park with food, live music, information booths and more. Musical acts include: John Cruz, The Willie K Band, Micah Wolf, Marty Dread, Gomega, George Kahumoku Jr., Shifty Sailors and others. Plus, Maui Time staffers like myself will be representin’ by way of a booth. Bring me a thermos full of cold Corona and I’ll make you famous. Free.

I have lost count of the number of times I’ve heard friends complain that there is no intellectual community on Maui. I mean, there are plenty of intelligent, creative people here, but it’s hard to get them to assemble in one place. Pecha Kucha night is an event that has great potential to bring together those on-island who seek to creatively exchange ideas and information. Here’s how it works: Participants put together a 6-minute, 40-second PowerPoint presentation consisting of 20 slides, each to be projected for 20 seconds. The beauty is that presenters can talk on any topic they wish. I’ve been to an event like this that included presentations on everything from the history of pepper to how to build a rocket. And you don’t have to present to attend; it’s totally cool if you would rather have couple of beers and take it all in. If you’re interested in presenting send an e-mail to pechakuchanightmaui@gmail.com with your idea.

DAY

Jimmy! Tuesday (Feb. 24), 7pm, MACC, Kahului Grab your frozen concoctions, Parrotheads. He’s coming, with his Coral Reefer Band in tow. Sure, there are those who say that Jimmy Buffet is overexposed, that he’s become too commercialized and blah, blah, blah. But you know what? His music is fun; it makes you bob your head and sing along. And he’s never pretended to be anything more than that, so why not just tip one (or five) back and enjoy? Tickets are $56 and up; call 242-7469 or visit mauiarts.org. [JS]

➤➤➤➤➤MONDAY ➤➤➤➤➤TUESDAY ➤➤➤➤➤WEDNESDAY

In the heart of Olde Makawao Town

WILD WAHINE WEDNESDAY CASANOVA’S FAMOUS

Friday

LADIES NIGHT

HAWAII MUSIC AWARD WINNER

THE EVENING THAT EARNED CASANOVA THE AWARDS

Q103 and the Big Hawaiian present ‘808 dopest djs’

February 20th

Dj Stylz & DJ Jammin J

Jamallad and Global Citizens

Reggae Rock from West Africa Music Starts at 10:00pm $10 cover

“BEST LATE NIGHT IN MAUI” and “BEST SINGLES SCENE IN MAUI” Music Starts at 10:00pm $10 cover Saturday

February 21st

PRYO & GYPSIE MOON Mediterranean beats and melodies Music starts at 10pm $10 cover

Make it a memorable evening. Dine and dance at Casanova. For dinner reservations call 572-0220 www.casanovamaui.com

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

21


Big Shows Alisdair Fraser & Natalie Haas - Fri, Feb 20. Maui Celtic presents the return of the World’s Top Scottish Fiddler. Fraser, a musician of unsurpassed eloquence and passion is paired with sizzlingly-talented cellist Natalie Haas. Special guest, Hawaiian musician Wilmont Kamaunu Kahaialii, will join Alasdair in a Hawaiian/Scottish tribute to Hawaiian Princess Ka’iulani. Courtyard Celtic Music Preshow, 6pm. $30. 7:30 p.m. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Pepper - Fri, Feb 20. This badass reggae/dub/rock outfit, originally from Island of Hawai’i, come to Maui for one night. Bonus: The ALLIEZ and Inna Vision open. You can find tickets at Quietstorm and Hard Rock Cafe in Lahaina, Request Music in Wailuku, Otopia in Queen Ka’ahumanu Center, all Maui Tropix locations and online at groovetickets.com. $25. 5:30 p.m. Lahaina Civic Center, 1840 Hono`apiilani Hwy., Lahaina. 661-4685. Angelique Kidjo - Sat, Feb 21. West African singer and composer Kidjo has captivated audiences and won acclaim worldwide for her amazing voice and commanding stage presence. $12/$30/$47/keiki half price. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Jimmy Buffet & the Coral Reefer Band Tue, Feb 24. Yeah, Jimmy Buffet’s coming. 7 p.m. A & B Amphitheater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului, HI, 96732. 242-7469.

Tickets on Sale Mercy Me - Thu, Feb 26. This Christian rock band is wildly popular among people who listen to Christian rock. $29/$39/$49. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Hapa - Fri, Feb 27. This postmodern slack key and vocal duo, consisting of Barry Flanagan and Nathan Aweau, takes the MACC stage for a rare, can’t-miss performance. Will also feature chant from Charles Ka’upu’s and a hula performance by Malia Peterson. $12/$28/$37/keiki half price. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469.

The Sound of Music - Fri, Feb 27. Tickets are now available for Maui On Stage’s production of this classic musical, set during WWII. $20/$15. Fri. & Sat. 7:30 p.m.; Sun., 5 p.m. Iao Theater, 68 N. Market St., Wailuku, HI, 96793. 242-6969. How to Thrive in a Time of Change - Sat, Feb 28. Neale Donald Walsh (author of Conversations with God) and Alan Cohen will discuss how to move through times of economic hardship with grace, and how to prosper through it all. $75. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Student Lounge, Piilina Building, Maui Community College. 875-8820. Steve Miller Band - Sat, Feb 28. Jokers, smokers and midnight tokers rejoice: Steve Miller Band is coming to Maui. I’ve seen him live before; the man is a machine and so are the musicians with whom he surrounds himself. Jungle Love, anyone? $55/$65/$85/$125. 7 p.m. A & B Amphitheater, MACC. 242-7469. Lines Ballet - Sun, Mar 1. Artistic Director Alonso King brings his unique and highly acclaimed show to Maui. 5 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Sam & Howard Ahia: Generations - Fri, Mar 6. This legendary father and son team jam on stage with their mellow island tunes. $25. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Maui Pops Spring Fest - Sun, Mar 8. This Year’s Maui Pops Orchestra Spring Fest has a theme of ìLas Vegas Reviewî and will feature pianist Hyperion Knight and Hawaiian jazz singer Jimmy Borges. $10/$21/$26/$36. 3:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Augie T - Sat, Mar 14. This award-winning, megapopular comedian and drive time DJ returns to Maui to crack some jokes about Hawaii life. $25. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Montessori School of Maui’s Crystal Ball Fundraiser - Sat, Mar 14. Camelot is the theme at this year’s swanky fundraiser, so get your Guinnevere on. Ocean Vodka hosts a martini bar, which is pretty sweet, especially when coupled with hors d’oeuvres and gourmet dinner by Celebrations. There will also be a live auction, dancing and fortune telling, among other things, so, you know. $150. 5 p.m. Hui No`eau Visual Arts Center, Makawao. 573-7568.

Home: Inside & Out - Sun, Mar 15. Three young Hawaiian men, each from a different island, will perform a series of vignettes that deal with home, family and cultural identity. Tickets available at MACC box office, by phone and through mauiarts.org. $20/keiki half price. 7:30 p.m. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC. 242-7469. India Jazz Suites - Thu, Mar 19. Award-winning dancers Chitresh Das and Jason Samuels Smith perform alongside one another put on a rare, eclectic and captivating performance that spans all genres and embraces both tradition and innovation. $12/$22/$37. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Diana Krall - Sat, Mar 21. Grammy-winning jazz vocalist and pianist Diana Krall comes to Maui for one night of cool, smooth, genre-transcending tunes. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469. Na Leo Pilimehana - Sat, Mar 28. The translation of this best-selling Hawaiian female trio’s name is “voices blending together in warmth.” These three family women and long-time friends not only write and record their tunes, but they have even launched their own record label. $12/$28/$37. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469.

Events

Focus Green Lecture - Alex Lee of Phoenix Motorcars delivers this lecture on Phoenix and MECO’s plan to bring electric cars to Maui in 2009. Benefits the Hawaii Nature Center. 6 p.m. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC. 270-0567. Valley Isle Kennel Club Meeting - They’ll be discussing upcoming dog shows. Anyone who wishes to volunteer or join is invited. 6 p.m. Maui Medical Group Annex Building, Wailuku. 573-1192. Kirtan Performance - Prem Prayojana will be speaking and leading kirtan singing and dancing. The topic will be ëThe Attainment of Samadhi or Ecstatic Trance through Kirtaní. Suggested donation is $5 to $15 with no one turned away. Prem lived as an ascetic for 10 years in rural India. He has translated ten volumes of devotional yoga literatures from Sanskrit to English. 6:30-10 p.m. Studio Maui, Haiku. 280-3845. Cinema Night - Cafe Mambo will be hosting an evening of classic and cult classic films for the 21 and older crowd. This week’s flick is Hero. 9 p.m. Cafe Mambo, Paia. 579-8021. Spay/Neuter Clinic - The Neuter Scooter. The name Says it all. For pet and feral cats. Call for appointment. All day. 1-866-662-5838.

FRIDAY, FEB 20

THURSDAY, FEB 19 Garage Sale - Proceeds will benefits the spaying and neutering efforts of the Feline Foundation of Maui. Call if you have items you wish to donate. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Piilani Village II, Kihei. 879-3059. Travel Club Car Wash - Participating schools will be raising funds to help students enhance their education through travel. The plan is to go to Europe for Spring Break. Cars $7/Trucks & SUVs $10. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Azeka Mauka Shopping Center. 357-9284. Black History Month Celebration - 2-3:30 p.m. Wailuku Public Library, 251 High Street, Wailuku, HI, 96793. 243-5766. MCC Dental Program Meeting - Interested parties are encouraged to attend and find out more about Maui Community College’s Dental Assisting Program. 4 p.m. Maui Oral Health Center, Wailuku. 984-3250.

Keiki Day of Whales - Fri. This is whale day for the little ones. Includes crafts, science activities and more for keiki aged 5-12. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Kalama Park, Kihei. 249-8811. Source: The Great Expression - This eclectic, trippy 3-day event includes music, interactive art, healing and more. Think of it as Maui’s Burning Man. $175/day passes $65. Camp Keanae, East Maui. Visit sourcemaui.com for tickets. Economic Systems Readers Circle - Do you have a passion for all things economic? Come to this discussion to chat about economics with other people who share your interest. Free. 7:35 p.m. Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 573-3250. Drag Racing - Valley Isle Timing Association Season Opener takes place at Maui Raceway Park. More info at mrp.org. Fri: 4 p.m.; Sat: 1 p.m. Maui Raceway Park off Mokulele Hwy. 281-1273.

Come to Fred’s for Amazing Whale Watching & Margaritas 844 FRONT ST., LAHAINA • 667-7758

22

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

2511 S. KIHEI RD., KIHEI • 891-8600

2511 S. KIHEI RD., KIHEI • 891-8600


The Grid lists nightly entertainment at bars, clubs, cafes and other non-dinner serving establishments, as well as restaurants with entertainment after 9pm.

Thursday 02/19

Friday 02/20

Saturday 02/21

DJ Del Sol No cover, 10pm

Estee Graham No cover, 10pm

Erin Smith No cover, 10pm

MON - Mark Johnstone; TUE - Rob Yamanoha; WED Mary Jane & Buds

Hand Jive Jazz Trio

Mojo Gumbo

Liz Parmalee

MON - Mana’o Jazz Cafe

Jamallad & the Global Citizens; $10, 10pm

Pryo/Gypsie Moon $10, 10pm

WED - Ladies’ Night, $10, 10pm

Latin Night

Guerrilla Jazz

DJ Blast

MON - Manic Mondays; TUE - Hot Latin Tuesdays; WED - Pool Night/Group Lounge

Smokin’ Hot Thursdays 9:30pm

Information Not Available

Information Not Available

Information Not Available

MON - Willie K, $10, 9pm

Orin & Junior

Dave Carroll No cover

Dave Carroll No cover

Eric the Whale Shark No cover

MON - Erin Smith; TUE - Jazz Night; WED - Howard Ahia, No cover

Quiz Night (Super Freak Out)

Pau Hana

Byron Brown

Farels Kitty Meow

MON - Jordan, 10pm, No cover; TUE - Bobby’s Blues, 10pm, No cover

Anick Violette Band

Homestead

Mojomana

TUE - Backyard Jam, 7pm;

House Party w/ DJ Del Sol; $5, 10pm

Ultra Fab B-Day Bash w/ DJ Michael Fong; $10,10pm

WED - WII Wednesdays w/ DJ Michael Fong 10pm

AMBROSIA 1913 S. Kihei Road, Kihei - 891-1011

CAFE MARC AUREL 28 N. Market St. Wailuku - 244-0852

CASANOVA 1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220

CELLAR 744 744 Front St., Lahaina 661-3744

CHARLEY’S 142 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-9668

COOL CAT CAFE Wharf Cinema, Lahaina - 667-0908

DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-9669

EHA’S POOL BAR 1234 Lower Main, Wailuku - 242-1177

GIAN DON’S 1445 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-4041

Sunday 02/22

Monday 02/23– Wednesday 02/25

HARD ROCK CAFÉ

MON - Marty Dread & the Kryptones

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

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

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

Rampage No cover, 10pm

Gomega

A Kettle Prime

Karaoke w/ Melani

MON - Kanoa of Gomega, 10pm; TUE - Lucky Bum Girls; WED - Kamaka

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON-WED - Karaoke

DJ Boomshot $10, 9:30pm

DJ CIA No cover, 9:30pm

JACQUES 120 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8844

SATURDAY, FEB 21

open to the public, etc. 10-6 p.m. Kalama Park, Kihei. 808-249-8811 ext. 1.

WEDNESDAY, FEB 25

Malassadas Sale - Presented by the Portuguese Association of Maui. $5 for 7 malassadas. 10 a.m.12:30 p.m. Hoaloha Park, Kahului. 877-0123. Upcountry Sustainability Expo - A chance to learn about sustainability that includes a blessing from Hawaiian cultural leader Kimokeo Kapahulehua and a talk by Mayor Tavares. Participating organizations include Maui Biodiesel, First Wind, Maui Electric, and the Dept. of Water Supply. The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, The University of Hawaii, and the D. T. Fleming Arboretum. 10 a.m.2 p.m. Kamehameha School, Pukalani. 573-7000. West Maui Safety Fair - Participating organizations include Civil Defense and CERT (emergency preparedness), Maui Police Department (child safety seat inspections), Maui Fire Department (child identification cards) and others. Entertainment includes pirate music from Raggle Taggle and keiki hula from Te Tiare Patitifa. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. 661-5304. Aloha Poker Tournament - Because sometimes nothin’ can be a pretty cool hand. This Texas Hold Em’ is set to last all day. Call for further details. $200. 11:30 a.m.-12 a.m. Maui Lani. 298-3560. Swap Meet - 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. Admission: 50 cents. 7 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Community College, Kahului Harbor side. 877-3100. MHS Ho’olaule’a - Students provide entertainment at this event, which includes spam musubi and plate lunches provided sold by school clubs. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Maui High School. 873-3000. Art Fair - Stroll beneath the banyan tree and check out the wares of Lahaina Art Society artists. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Banyan Tree Park, Lahaina. 661-0111. Elmo’s Birthday Party - Sat. Celebration of this beloved Sesame Street Character includes a stories, games, giveaways and more. 2-3:30 p.m. Borders, Kahului. 877-6160. Maui Parade of Whales - Annual community parade in honor of the humpback whales that migrate to Maui each winter. Goes along South Kihei Road, from the fire station south to Kalama Park by the big whale statue. The parade is the official kick-off to Whale Day, a free, an all-day festival in celebration of whales. 9-10 a.m. Kalama Park, Kihei. 808-249-8811 ext. 1. Maui’s Whale Day Celebration - Maui’s biggest and longest running celebration of Hawaiian humpback whales.Kind of a big deal. This free, all-day festival in the park includes live music by some pretty fabulous Hawaii musicians, including John Cruz, Willie K, Marty Dread and George Kahumoku, Jr., great food, a craft fair, environmental displays, activities for children, and more! Free,

Bollywood: An Evening in India - This is bound to be an extremely vibrant night, given the elaborate productions that come out of Bollywood. Live Indian music, Bollywood dance, cuisine by Bev Gannon, and auctions make for a colorful evening. $150. 5 p.m. Hui No’eau Arts Center, Makawao. 572-6760.

Love Habits Tour - Learn about the dating and mating habits of animals including Humpback whales, spinner dolphins, various sharks and more while on a personal tour with an Ocean Naturalist. 11:30 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. Maui Ocean Center, Ma`alaea. 270-7089.

John Cruz - Fresh off playing Obama’s inauguration, Grammy and Hoku winner Cruz follows up his Whale Day set with a show in Paia. Tomas of The Easy fame opens. 5 p.m. Be Happy Books, Baldwin Ave., Paia. 579-9600.

Building Supplies Drive - Mon-Sat. New Year’s Resolutions: get rid of the old and make a donation; someone’s trash is another’s treasures, you’ll never know what you’ll find here; a penny saved is a penny earner, find items marked 50% below retail; penny pinching can support a needy family build a decent and simple home. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 399 N. Market St, Wailuku. 986-8050. Ecstatic Chanting Kirtan - Tue. Heather Neeraja Parsons and friends. Heather Neeraja leads kirtan in the tradition of Jai Uttal, Krishna Das and others, blending in her own unique style that welcomes the elements of harmony, English words mixed with Sanskrit mantras, bhajans and sublime moments of silence, prayer and meditation. $5-$10. 7 p.m. 115 East Lipoa St. Ste. 202, Kihei. 874-9642. Free HIV/Hepatitis C Testing and Counseling - Mon-Fri. Available from the Hawaii Dept. of Health. Free Hepatits A & B Vaccines also available. Times and locations vary around the island. 984-2129. Iridiology/Rayid - Daily. Clinical herbalist Kimberly Kneier peers into your irises, which are said to be amazing indicators of your state of health. Mini consultations are $20. 2-5 p.m. Dragon’s Den, Makawao. 572-2424. Israeli Folk Dancing - Every Tue & Wed. The public is invited to experience the music and dance of Israel, sponsored by the Jewish Congregation of Maui. $5 suggested donation. 6-8 p.m. (Upcountry dance sessions take place at Grace Church in Kula Sundays from 4-5:30 p.m.). Beit Shalom Synagogue, 634 Alulike St., Kihei. 280-1051. Maui Singles Investment Club - Tue. This event gives Maui singles a chance to mingle while learning about investments. 5:30-7 p.m. Cary & Eddie’s Hideaway, Kahului. 579-9249. Non-Profit Polynesian Dance - Tue. Support the kids of the Napili Kai Foundation by watching their Polynesian dance show. $10 adults, $5 kids. 5:30 p.m. 669-6271. Speed Dating - Tue. Sit down for a round of threeminute dates. Who knows, you could find true love... or at least someone you might want to spend a whole second date with. Registration: $5. 8 p.m. Wow-Wee Maui Kava Bar & Grill, Kahului. 871-1414. Toastmasters - Tue. Perfect your public speaking skills in this community club. 9 a.m., Kapalua Land Co. training center, 665-5485; 6 p.m., St. Theresa Church, Kihei, 298-3966.

African Dance Performance - Includes performances by Xavier & the Africa Aina Drum Ensemble, Odisa Omar, African Dance performer Sodengi Mills and poet Ayin Adams. 6:30 p.m. Founders Court, MACC. 242-7469. Drag Racing - Valley Isle Timing Association Season Opener takes place at Maui Raceway Park. More info at mrp.org. Fri: 4 p.m.; Sat: 1 p.m. Maui Raceway Park off Mokulele Hwy. 281-1273.

SUNDAY, FEB 22 Classic Car Show - Check out a wide range of classic cars - Corvettes, Studebakers, Plymouths, and more. My fingers are crossed for a GTO or two. Free. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Maui Mall, Kahului. 871-1307. Art Fair - Stroll beneath the banyan tree and check out the wares of Lahaina Art Society artists. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Banyan Tree Park, Lahaina. 661-0111. VIP Whalewatch - Join Pacific Whale Foundation for a VIP Whalewatch narrated by President and Founder Greg Kaufman. All parties will receive a copy of Gregís newly released book, ìHumpbacks of Hawaii: The Long Journey Back.î Adults $49.95, children ages 7-12 $34.95, children ages 6 and under free. Internet and member discounts available. 12:302:30 p.m. Ma’alaea Harbor. 808-249-8811 ext. 1.

TUESDAY, FEB 24 Flatbread Nicaragua School Fundraiser Part of the proceeds from pizzas bought this evening will go to Son Amigos, a Maui nonprofit that seeks to help little Nicaraguan villages build schools. 5-10 p.m. Flatbread Pizza, Paia. 572-9898. Pecha Kucha Night - It’s quite simple, really. You have 6 minutes, 40 seconds to deliver a presentation on the topic of your choice. You get twenty seconds per slide. If you’re not interested in presenting, at least come have a beer and talk story. 6:30 p.m. Cafe Moana, Paia. 579-9999. Free Film - Hawaii SEED Sponsors this Screening of the documentary film The Power of Community; How Cuba Survived Peak Oil. 7 p.m. Hannibal Tavares Community Center, Pukalani. 572-1965.

Ongoing

Ukulele Lessons - Tue. Learn some strumming techniques to impress you friends with. Free. 5:45 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. 661-5304. Soroptimists of Maui Meeting - Wed. Visitors are welcome at this meeting of business and professional women that’s dedicated to improving the lives of women and girls in our community. 4:30 p.m. Hale Mahaolu Elima Community Hall, Kahului. 264-1775. Ultimate Whalewatch Experience - Wed. Join Pacific Whale Foundation researchers for an intimate presentation on whale behavior and breakfast, followed by a whalewatch. Guests will receive free whale posters and whalewatch guides. $79.95. 7-11 a.m. Ma’alaea Harbor. 294-8811 ext. 1. Low Cost Accupuncture - Mon-Fri. Affordability should not be a factor when it comes to health care, which is why this upcountry clinic is offering treatments for between $20 and $30 a pop, which is a pretty good deal. No appointment necessary. Mon.-Fri., 8-1 and 4-7. 1170 Makawao Ave. (Next to Casanova). 276-6037. Wailea 670 Cultural Preservation Registration - Daily. Honua’ula Partners is asking kanaka maoli and others knowledgeable of historic areas within the development site to sign up to participate in their Cultural Preservation Plan. To participate, mail your name and address to Honua’ula Partners, LLC, c/o Mr. Charles Jencks-Owner Representative, Pacific Rim Land, Inc., 1300 N. Holohpono Street, suite 201, P.O. Box 220, Kihei, Hi 96753. 268-0303. Biofeedback - Fri. Mary Higgins, QXC/SCIO practitioner, helps you energetically rebalance after living yet another day in a toxin-filled world. Walk-ins only. Sliding scale pricing. 2-5 p.m. Dragon’s Den. 573-2424. Humpback Whale Outreach - Fri. Volunteers from the Hawaiian Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary will be on hand with educational materials and binoculars for those interested in viewing humpback whales near shore. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Whaler’s Village, Kaanapali. 661-4567. Job Club - Fri. Get help preparing resumes, contacting prospective employers and interviewing. Free. 3-5 p.m. Job Connections of Maui. 871-4143. Papale Pepe Na Kupuna Knitting & Crocheting Club - Every Fri & Sat. This group meets every second Saturday and last Friday to knit and crochet caps, scarves and lap blankets for chemo patients, Hale Makua and Women Helping Women. Group members also share patterns and teach knitting and crocheting methods. Call Alma for further details or to donate. 1 p.m. Kahului, call for details. 214-9864. Shakin’ Keiki - Fri. Come see little hula dancers in adorable outfits doing the cultural dance of their ancestors. Free. 3:30 p.m. Lahaina Center, 900 Front St. 667-9216.

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Thursday, Feb. 19th

HOT LATIN

Jammin J’s Latin Takeover Bennie Blanco Drink Specials

FRIDAY, MARCH 27TH 9:30 PM $20

Friday, Feb. 20th

GUERRILLA JAZZ Saturday, Feb. 21st

DJ BLAST $2 Bud Light Drafts

Monday, Feb. 23rd

MANIC MONDAYS

PAULA FUGA ERIN SMITH

Alternative Night DJ Astro RAF $3 Cosmos

Tuesday, Feb. 24th

HOT LATIN NIGHTS Jammin J’s Latin Takeover Mexican Beer Specials Bienvenidos Argentina

WE’VE AMPED UP OUR MENU We’ve added some fresh new fare to our already delicious menu offerings.

Our newest items include the Open Faced Sirloin Sandwich, Sirloin Steak grilled to perfection carved over toasted garlic bread, smothered with mushrooms and caramelized onions, topped with melted Swiss cheese and Hard Rock Merlo Sauce. Stop by and check out our other new items including: Grilled Hawaiian Chicken, Honey-Mustard Grilled Chicken Sandwich, and HRC Baker’s Choice (a special dessert offering that changes daily).

Wednesday, Feb. 25th

GROOVE LOUNGE with Mike Rozak

Thurs., Feb. 26th -

Fri., Feb. 27th -

Mon., Mar. 2nd -

DJ BLAST

MANIC MON.

Tues., Mar. 3rd -

HOT LATIN

Doors Open at 9 pm

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

Kama‘aina 20% off

HOT LATIN NIGHTS

LOVE N LIGHT PRESENTS

Sat., Feb. 28th -

24

Tickets available at Hard Rock Cafe, Request Music and West Side Vibes

10PM–MIDNIGHT • $5 COVER

900 FRONT STREET

LAHAINA, MAUI 667-7400


The Grid lists nightly entertainment at bars, clubs, cafes and other non-dinner serving establishments, as well as restaurants with entertainment after 9pm.

KAHALE’S BEACH CLUB 36 Keala Pl., Kihei - 875-7711

KAHULUI ALE HOUSE 355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001

Thursday 02/19

Friday 02/20

Saturday 02/21

Sunday 02/22

Monday 02/23– Wednesday 02/25

Vince Esquire Band No cover

Kenny Roberts No cover

Way Back Machine No Cover

Kahala No cover

TUE - Da Ha-Y-ans, No cover WED - Chico & Da Kine, No cover

Internet Juke

Q103 & Kila Kila $6, 9pm

DJ Boomshot

MON - Internet Jukebox; TUE - Hawaiiana w/ Kilo Hana; WED - The Crunch Pups, No cover, 8pm

Oren and Junio No cover, 9pm

KIMOS 845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

KOBE STEAKHOUSE

Karaoke

136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555

LOS PELONES Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-9900

LULU’S KIHEI 1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9944

LULU’S LAHAINA Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

Simply Solid w/ Jason Sadang; $5

Karaoke Salsa Night $7, 10pm

Kimo & Zack Neto Latin Salsa No cover, 9pm

Inferno Fridays $5, 10pm

JR & the Boys

Reggae w/ DJZZ $5, 10pm

TUE - Rave Night w/DJZZ, $5, 10pm; WED - DJZZ No cover, 10pm

Classic Rock 9pm

Hip Hop DJ 9pm

Hip Hop DJ 9pm

DJ 9pm

MON - DJ; TUE - Kanoa Mixed Plate; WED - Neto Latin Salsa

MAI TAI LOUNGE 839 Front St., Lahaina - 661-5288

Hip Hop DJ 9pm

MAUI BREWING CO.

Bingo Pajama

Kahana Gateway Center - 669-3474

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S

DJ Decka 9pm

844 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7758

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

MULLIGAN’S AT THE WHARF Cinema Center, Lahaina - 661-8881

OCEANS BAR & GRILL 1819 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-2414

TUE - Bottomless Boogie

DJ Dolla Drink $5; 9pm

TUE - DJ Dolla Drink, $5, 9pm

The Afrodisiacs 10pm

D.U.H. 10pm

WED - Willie K, $25/$45/$65

The Silky Ringo No cover, 10:30pm

MON - Duh Boyz, No cover, 10:30pm; TUE - Unifires, No cover, 10:30pm; WED - Open Mic

Wee D’ono No cover, 10:30pm

The Silky Ringo No cover, 10:30pm

Wee D’ono No cover, 10:30pm

Karaoke w/Toby 9pm

DJ C 10pm

DJ C 9:30pm

Habitat for Humanity - Sat. Spend a few hours helping a family in need get secure shelter. 9 a.m. Call for details. 893-0334. Hula Classes - Sat. Every Sat. Halau Kawaianuhealehua holds open hula classes for children, teen and adult wahines and kanes. 9 a.m. Maui Waena School. Hula Show - Every Sun & Sat. Get a taste of Hawaiian history and culture. Free. 1 p.m. Maui Mall, Kahului. 877-8952. Line Dancing - Sun. Practice your tush push ya’ll and come on down for some line dancing by the Maui Paniolo Posse. Lessons: 6:30 p.m.; Dancing: 7 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. Dance Jam - Mon. Celebrate the end of the month with a free-form dance party with great music and no instruction, just come to shake your booty. $13. 7:3010 p.m. The Studio Maui, Haiku. 575-9390. Free Parenting Class - Mon. This 12-week course is aimed at parents of difficult adolescents. There is a $25 charge for the accompanying workbook. Call for time. 300 Hoohana St., Kahului. 344-7308. High Hopes Square Dance Club - Mon. A place for beginners to pick up some steps and seasoned square dancers to show off their moves. Free. 7 p.m. Hannibal Tavares Community Center, Pukalani. 572-0671. Pipe Up - Mon. No experience is needed for drummers and bagpipers at these open, free lesson and practices for the Isle of Maui Pipe Band. 6 p.m. Call for Direction. 876-0154. Senior Line Dancing - Mon. Line dance lessons for people 55 or better. 8:30-10 a.m. Kaunoa Senior Center, Sprecklesville. 270-7313.

Keiki After-School Help - Mon-Fri. Hui Malama Learning Center offers after-school homework help and classes. Call for directions and hours. 2445911. Athletic Club Outreach - Every Tue & Thu. Got tough kids? Get them instruction on Olympic weightlifting, power lifting, body building and sports-specific weight training by an experienced team of coaches. Ages 11-19. Free. 4:45-6 p.m. St. Mark Weightlifting Hall, Good Shepherd Episcopal Church, Wailuku. 244-4656. Free Keiki Art Classes - Every Mon, Tue, Wed & Fri. Lahaina Arts Society offers free children’s art classes island wide. MON - Lahaina Surf Hawaiian Housing, 3-5 p.m. & Baha’i Faith Maui Center, Makawao, 9 a.m.-12. TUE - Kehekili Park Terrace, Wailuku, 3-5 p.m. WED - Baha’i Faith Maui Center, 9 a.m.-12 p.m.; Honokowai Kau Hale, 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Ka Hale A Ke Ola, Wailuku, 4-6 p.m. FRI Haiku Boy’s and Girl’s Club, 3-5 p.m. For more info call 661-0111.

West Side Storytime - Every Tue & Sat. Lahaina’s biggest bookseller is hosting keiki story time, so get them hooked on reading early. Tue., 10 a.m.; Sat., 11 a.m. Barnes and Noble, Lahaina. Keiki Shots - Wed. (Central Maui) Bring children up to the age of 18 without medical insurance in for vaccinations. Bring all immunization records. Walkin basis. Free. 12-3 p.m. Wailuku Health Center. 984-8260. Keiki Issues? - Thu. The Parent Project, a program for parents of strong willed children. Wrestle the phone away from the child and make that call. Free. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Hui Malama Learning Center. 289-5050. Story Time - Thu. Keiki story time and crafts. Free. 10 a.m. Hawaiian Village Coffee, Kahana. 665-1114. Toddler Story Time - Thu. Brush up on the latest in children’s books with your little one. Free. 10 a.m. Makawao Public Library. 573-8785. Keiki Book Signing - Every Wed & Sat. Author Judi Riley will be on hand to sign copies of her book, When I Am Quiet on Maui. 12-2 p.m. Maui Ocean Center, Ma`alaea. 270-7000. Yu-Gi-Oh - Sat. Little gamester get out your cards and get ready for a Yu-Gi-Oh tournament! Free. 3 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. 661-4766. Swimming Lessons - Sun. Valley Isle Aquatics is offering keiki swimming lessons in conjunction with the County of Maui, Community Classes. Folks can call or go to www.valleyisleaquatics.com for further information. 12:15-4:15 p.m. Kihei Aquatics Center. 572-4665. Yo Yo Workshop & Demo - Sun. Yo Yo’s are silent, so encourage your kids to learn how to use them and finally get some peace and quiet! Free. 45 p.m. Maui Toy Works. 661-5304. Keiki Chess Club - Mon. For little masterminds age 8-12. Taught by magician Neil Bruce. Free. 2:304 p.m. Makawao Public Library. 573-5313.

Lecture Aging With Aloha Talk - Thu. Rita Barreras, chair of the Aging with Aloha Coalition, will give a talk on growing old with grace as part of a lecture series on . 6-7:15 p.m. Kula Hospital Cafeteria. 878-1221. Enough is Enough - Thu. Bonnie Nelso, author of Cheetah Portal, will give a talk on the current economic what-have-you. $11. 12-1 p.m. Cary & Eddie’s Hideaway, Kahului. 873-6555. Free Talk - AYear with the Whales - Thu. Pacific Whale Foundation President and Founder Greg Kaufman will conduct a free talk and slide/video show entitled “Hawaii’s Humpback Whales: Back from the Brink?” Admission is free and open to the public. No registration required. 6-7:30 p.m. Pacific Whale Foundation Discovery Center, Ma’alaea Harbor Shops. 808-249-8811 ext. 1.

TUE - Karaoke w/ Toby, 9pm

The Apocalypse - Sun. Well, not actually. But author Barbara Hand Clow, who penned The Mayan Code: Time Acceleration and the Awakening of the World Mind, will be discussing 2012 and the things predicted to accompany this year. 7:30-9:30 p.m. The Studio Maui, 810 Haiku Rd, Suite 265, Haiku, HI, 96708. 575-9390. What’s Out There? - Tue. Kahului Public Library will host a live feed from a telescope atop Haleakala, weather permitting. Astronomer Dr. James “J.D.” Armstrong will discuss what the telescope sees and how it functions. Free. 7 p.m. Kahului Public Library. 873-3097. Families With Mental Illness Course - Wed. Course aims to help families of individuals with serious mental illness. Free. 5-7:30 p.m. Cameron Center, Wailuku. 572-3757. Medicine Buddha Teaching - Every Fri & Sat. Chan Yi De Chu conducts these introductory evening lectures on this fascinating and beneficial topic. Lectures can also be conducted by appointment. Call for location and time details and to reserve. 281-7955.

Workshops Business Loans for Native Hawaiians - Thu. Jim Patterson, Manager of OHA’s Native Hawaiian Revolving Loan Fund will discuss the Malama Business Loan and how it can help you finance your business needs. 12-1 p.m. Maui County Business Resource Center, Maui Mall, Kahului. 873-8247. Healthy Brain Workshop - Thu. The Alzheimer’s Association present this information session on how to maintain a healthy brain. Includes tips on lifestyle, memory jogs, diet, exercise, and not eating aluminum foil. 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Alzheimer’s Association Office, 1063 Lower Main, C206 (Above Tokyo Tei, Wailuku. 242-8636. Starting A Business in Hawaii - Thu. Learn how the intricacies of launching a small business on in Hawaii through lecture, video, and question and a answer session. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lahaina Education Center, 60 Kenui St. 661-7900. AARP Driver Safety Course - Sat. This course will help drivers over 50 become aware of the physical effects of aging that may limit their driving abilities. $12 members/$14 non-members. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Kaiser Permanente, Maui Lani Clinic. 270-7308. Healthy Food Preparation for Busy People - Sat. Master nutritionist Grace Purusha will show you how to cook and eat in a manner that will help you lose weight, feel better, reduce food allergy symptoms and more. Call to register and for directions $30. 12-2:30 p.m. 879-5511. Lymph Drainage Therapy Workshop - Sat. A chance for massage therapists, estheticians and health care providers to learn this therapeutic technique. $130. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Spa Luna School. 575-2440.

Surviving and Thriving in these Economic Times - Wed. A number of experts will occupy panels that will discuss generating new business, cash flow and work flow management. Free. 8-11:30 a.m. Maui Economic Opportunity, Kahului. 871-7711. The Work and Silence - Fri-Sun. This two-day retreat focuses on the work of Bryon Katie and the power of meditation. $150. Fri., 6-10 p.m.; Sat., 6 a.m.-10 p.m.; Sun., 6 a.m.-12 p.m. Banyan Tree Retreat Center, Makawao. 891-8956. Lifesaving Class - Sat. DLNR hosts this free session on how to safely operate firearms and archery as well as first aid and survival skills. Free. 8 a.m.-3:45 p.m. Maui Economic Opportunity Family Center, Kahului. 800-353-4868.

Environment Field Volunteer Day - Sat. The public is invited to volunteer as part of an effort to maintain the Waihee Coastal Dunes & Wetlands Refuge. 8 a.m.12 p.m. Maui Coastal Land Trust. 244-5263. Daily Onsite Coral Reef Naturalist Program - Mon-Fri. Learn names of fish youíve seen while snorkeling and how to protect Mauiís reefs at Pacific Whale Foundationís free Coral Reef Information Station. Sponsored by Hawaii Tourism Authority and County of Maui Office of Economic Development. . 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Ulua Beach, Wailea. 808-249-8811. Humpback Whale Interpretive Station Daily. Learn about humpback whales and whale watch with a Pacific Whale Foundation naturalist at this free information station. 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Papawai Point, West Maui. 808-249-8811 ext. 1. Kanaha Beach Project - Every Tue & Thu. Join group leader Val Magee in removing invasive species, clearing marine debris and planting native species at Kanaha Park. Bring water, snacks and sunscreen. Wear cool clothing, a hat and good walking shoes—and bring your swimsuit if you wish for a refreshing dip afterwards! Meet at the Canoe Hale at Kanaha Beach Park in Kahului. . 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. Kanaha Beach Park. 808-294-8811 ext. 1. Save Honolua - Tue. Meeting to inform, educate and involve the community on the proposed development of Honolua Bay. 6:45 p.m. Lahaina Civic Center. 870-0052. Smarter than a Sand Crab? - Mon-Fri. Get free info about marine life and answers to all those pesky questions that keep you up all night. The Pacific Whale Foundation Marine Naturalists are definitely smarter than a fifth grader. The question is, are you?. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Ulua Beach, Wailea. 249-8811. Building supplies - Every Wed, Thu, Fri & Sat. Spring cleaning! Donate new and nearly new building materials or purchase them at reduced prices. Volunteers needed to stock, display and price merchandise. Reduce the amount of usable building

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

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DA KINE CALENDAR materials going into the landfill. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Habitat for Humanity, Market St., Wailuiku. 986-8050. Weed and Pot Club - Wed. Did that get your attention? Push up your sleeves and rake, hoe and pull weeds in a beautiful garden setting. Tools, gloves and drinking water provided. Bring sunscreen and tennis shoes. 8:30 a.m. Maui Nui Botanical Gardens, Kahului. 249-2798. Maui Coastal Land Trust Service Project Fri. The Pacific Whale Foundation’s Volunteering on Vacation program gives you a chance to help save unique ecosystems at Maui Coastal Land Trust in Waihee. Be prepared to help weed out invasive plants or help with other tasks. Get a free t-shirt for your efforts!. 7:45 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Coastal Land Trust, Waihee. 808-294-8811 ext. 1. Honokowai Valley Restoration - Sat. Visit remote Honokowai Valley, which is closed to public access, with leader Ed Lindsey. Help save archeological sites of old Hawaii, pull invasive plants and possibly plant native species. Get a free t-shirt for your efforts! Sponsored by County of Maui Office of Economic Development and Hawaii Tourism Authority. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Honokowai Valley, West Maui. 808-294-8811 ext. 1. Volunteer on Vacation - Sat. Get to know Maui better by volunteering time to one of many important environmental projects. Meet local experts and learn about the history and environment of the land and get a free t-shirt from the Pacific Whale Foundation!. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Honokowai. 249-8811. Save the Forest - Sun. The Pacific Whale Foundation is hosting a group of ten volunteers to pull invasive pine trees near Hosmers Grove. Transportation is provided. Bring warm clothes, long pants and closed boots. Pick ups: 7:30 a.m., Harbor Shop, 300 Ma`alaea Rd; 8:15 a.m., Upcountry Tavares Community Center. RSVP 856-8341.

rate works of art. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Viewpoints Gallery, Makawao. 572-5979. Maui Glass Art Expo - Daily. Features the work of 25 phenomenal glass artists (no bongs). Work is on display in the open air lobby outside Mala Wailea restaurant. 8 a.m.-10 p.m. Wailea Beach Marriott Resort & Spa. 293-9921. Schaefer Portrait Challenge - Through Sun. This showcase of Hawaii artists is kind of a big deal. It happens only once avary three years and features the work of many artists’ diverse take on the portrait, from sculpture to painting. Free. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Schaefer International Gallery. 242-7469. WOW! - Wed. Every Wed. Wailea on Wednesdays presents live island music, gallery receptions, artist appearances and more. . 6:30-8 p.m. 897-6770 x2. Meet the Artist - Thu. Painter Mort Luby will be on hand to talk about technique, inspiration and other things art-related. Luby was an AP reporter for more than 40 years, filing stories from dozens of countries, so he probably has some iinteresting stories.7 p.m. His work will be hanging at the gallery throughout February. 7 p.m. Maui Hands Gallery, Lahaina. 573-2021. Art Night - Fri. Stroll through Lahaina Town’s many art galleries. Special gallery shows, featured artists-inaction and refreshments. Each week features a different guest artist. Free. 6:30 p.m. Lahaina. 661-6284. Artist Reception - Daily. The show is called iKons, and features recent works by Maui artist Carla Crow. 5-8p.m. 84 Hana Hwy. Paia. 579-9245. Oil Painting Demonstration - Fri. Maui artist Jack Hamilton shows how it’s done. 4-7 p.m. Maui Hands Gallery, Lahaina. 667-9898. Art Bistro - Mon. Local artists display their wares, from photography and painting to jewelry and sculptures. Live music, too. 5-10pm. Jacques Northshore Bistro, 120 Hana Hwy. Paia. 808-269-0961.

Sports

Farmers market, Art/Craft Fairs

Kula Kaipuni Golf Tournament - Sat. This twoperson scramble event benefits Hawaiian Language Immersion programs at Paia Elementary, Kalama Intermediate & King Kekaulike High schools. $90. 7 a.m.-1 p.m. Waiehu Golf Course. 357-0091. Lahaina Canoe Club Annual Membership Meeting - Sat. Lahaina Canoe Club’s 2009 membership meeting at Hanako’o Beach Park (Canoe Beach) features potluck, BBQ (provided), membership info and outrigger canoe rides. 12-3p.m. Hanako’o Beach Park (Canoe Beach). 870-6466. Dragon & Tiger Medical Chi Gung - Every Tue, Thu & Fri. This exercise is believed to fight cancer in China. Free class sponsored by the Pacific Cancer Foundation. 3-4 p.m.; 5:30-6:30 p.m. Maui YMCA, REPS Fitness Training Center, Wailea Town Center, respectively. 243-2999. Maui Croquet Club - Every Sun, Tue & Thu. You could be an amazing croquet player and not even know it. No mallet? No problem. 2-5 p.m. Waipuilani Park, Kihei. 879-0087. Group Run - Wed. Stay in shape while taking in some beautiful views! Group meets at Kihei Community Center. Open to runners of all ages and fitness levels. Refreshments will be provided after. Sponsored by Valley Isle Road Runners. Free. 5:30 p.m. Piilani Highway and Lipoa Parkway. Paddling for Breast Cancer Survivors Every Mon & Wed. Get together with other survivors for canoe paddling. Free. 6:45 a.m. Kihei Canoe Club. 243-2999. Tai Chi - Every Mon & Fri. Get your Tai Chi in during your lunchbreak with Dr. Lorrin Pang. Free. noon12:45 p.m. State Building Plaza, Wailuku. 984-8200. Lahaina Canoe Club Weekly Paddle - Daily. Get buff, talk story, check out the scenery. Thu., 8 a.m.; Sun., 10 a.m. Hanako’o Beach Park (Canoe Beach). 870-6466. Volleyball Day - Sat. Bump, set, spike! Open to everyone. Free. 12 p.m. Kamaole III Beach Park, Kihei.

Art Meet the Artist - Fri. Par Street will be on hand to talk story about art and other pertinent topics. Street’s work is vivid, at times verges on psychedelic and inspired by nature. 7-10 p.m. Sargents Fine Arts Gallery, Lahaina. 667-4030. Oil Painting Demonstration - Fri. Painter Joe Fletcher shows how it’s done in this idyllic setting. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Viewpoints Gallery, Makawao. 572-5979. Quilting Demonstration - Sat. Diana Grundhauser show how to assemble these elabo-

26

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

Farmers’ Market and Craft Fair - Every Tue, Wed, Fri & Sat. Great deals on locally grown produce and locally made goods. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Maui Mall, Kahului. 871-1307. Ho`olokahi Arts & Crafts Fair - Every Tue & Fri. Fresh flower lei-making classes from 9-11 a.m. on Fridays. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Wailea Beach Marriott Resort south lobby. 879-1922. Ohana Farmers & Crafters Market - Every Tue, Wed & Fri. 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 877-3369. Farmers Market of Maui - Every Mon, Wed & Fri. Sample the goods at this local market for fresh produce. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 61 S. Kihei Rd. Honokowai Farmers Market - Every Mon, Wed & Fri. Lots of fresh local produce plus baked and canned goods. 7-11 a.m. Lower Honopiilani Hwy. Resort Craft Fair - Every Wed & Fri. Hawaiian arts and crafts. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Renaissance Wailea Beach Resort. Aloha Craft Fair - Fri. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Maui Mall. 872-4320. KBH Craft Fair - Fri. Cultural crafts and live demos. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Ka`anapali Beach Hotel lobby. 667-5978. Organic Farmers Market - Sat. Fresh produce that’s cheaper than the grocery store. 6:30 a.m.noon. Eddie Tam Memorial Center.

Poetry Open Mic - Every night is open mic night at Hawaiian Village Coffee. Kahana Gateway location, call 665-1114. Poetry Slam - Every First Fri. Poets 13 and over are encouraged to share their stuff with the First Friday crowd. Pieces are limited to three minutes. $5. Ha Gallery, Wailuku, 244-3993. Express Yourself - Every Mon. Open Mic Night with music, song, poetry! Free. 7 p.m., Cafe Marc Aurel, Wailuku, 244-0852. Poetry Reading - Every second Tue, read your original work, your favorite poem, or just come to be inspired. Free. 6:30 p.m., Lahaina Public Library, 662-3950. Open Mic - Every Saturday the Maui Media Lab hosts an open mic night for poets, muscicians and others who want to be heard. Sessions are recorded and fed to the internet. All ages are welcome. Free. 6-9 p.m., Maui Media Lab, Baldwin Ave, zumatribe@yahoo.com.


The Grid lists nightly entertainment at bars, clubs, cafes and other non-dinner serving establishments, as well as restaurants with entertainment after 9pm.

PINEAPPLE GRILLE 200 Kapalua Drv. Lahaina - 669-9600

Thursday 02/19

Friday 02/20

Saturday 02/21

Scotty Rotten

Damien Awai

Brian Como & Friends

DJ Mike Rozak No cover, 10pm

DJ Mike Rozak No cover, 10pm

Karaoke

Karaoke

Damien Awai

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

RUSTY HARPOON 2290 Kaanapali Pkwy - 661-3123

SANSEI - KAPALUA 115 Bay Dr., Lahaina - 669-6286

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

SANTA FE CANTINA 900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7805

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-6444

Sunday 02/22

Monday 02/23– Wednesday 02/25

MON - Silky Ringo;TUE - Willie K

P Silva/C Mahon B-Day Bash; 10pm DJ Slackin No cover, 10pm

WED - Junio, Oren & Friends, No cover, 10pm DJ Sonny No cover, 10pm

SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR

DJ Magnetic No cover, 10pm

Kanoa of Gomega No cover, 10pm

MON - DJ Blast; TUE - DJ Nature Boy; WED - DJ Decka; All no cover, 10pm

Kenny Roberts No cover, 9pm

2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-0602

STELLA BLUE’S 1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-3779

STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR

Maui Underground $3, 10pm

1127 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-1380

TIFFANY’S 1424 L. Main St., Wailuku - 249-0052

TIP-UPS TAVERN 1279 2. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9299

UNISAN 2102 Vineyard St., Wailuku - 244-4500

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON - WED - Karaoke

DJ Malik

Scott Baird & Merika

The Crunch Pups

Open Mic w/ Jordan

MON - Karaoke w/ Tyrone; TUE - DJ Astro Raph; WED Bobby’s Blues

Karaoke

Karaoke

Club Disco Night

Poetry Reading - Every second Thu Maui Live Poets Society hosts an open poetry reading on the West side. Free. 6:30- 9 p.m. Lahaina, 661-0517

DINNER MUSIC WEST MAUI BJ’s Chicago Pizzeria - Wed-Fri, John Kane; Sat, Harry Troupe; Sun, Greg DiPiazza; Mon, Tue, Marvin Tevaga. All sets 7:30-9:30 p.m. 730 Front St., Lahaina, 661-0700. Cheeseburger In Paradise - Mon, Tue, Scotty Rotten; Wed, Fri, Harry Troupe; Thu, Sat, Sun, Brooks McGuire. All sets 4:30-10:30 p.m. 811 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4855. Cool Cat Cafe - Thu, Erin Smith; Fri, Sat, Dave Carroll; Sun, Wed, Whale Sharks; Mon, Mickie Moore; Tue, Jazz; . all sets 7:30-10 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 667-0908. Hard Rock Cafe - Mon, Marty Dread, 6:30-8:30 p.m. 900 Front St., Lahaina, 570-7400. Hula Grill - (Early sets) Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat Ernest Pua’a; Sun,Mon, Kawika Lum Ho; Tue, Jarret Roback. Early sets 3-5 p.m. (Followed by) Thu, Braddah Brian & Roy; Fri, Brian, Roy & Kawika;. Sat, “TBA”; Sun, Ryan Tanaka & Friends; Mon,Oversized Productions; Tue, Roy & Friends; Wed, An Den. Late sets 79:30 p.m. 2435 Ka`anapali Parkway, Building P, 667-6636. Java Jazz/Soup Nutz - Mon-Sat, Acoustic music. All sets 7 p.m. 3350 Lower Honoapi`ilani Rd., Honokowai, 667-0787. Kimo’s - Mon- Wed, Sat, Sun, Sam Ahia. Fri, deAquino Bradaz. All sets 6:30-8:30 p.m. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4811. Leilani’s On The Beach - Fri, Scott Baird;. Sat, JD and Harry; Sun, Kilohana. All sets 2:30-5 p.m. 2435 Ka`anapali Pkwy, Building J, 661-4495. Moose McGillycuddy’s, Lahaina - Fri, Llayne & Pro Ed; Sat, Mark & Mike. All sets 6-9 p.m. 844 Front St., 667-7758. Mulligan’s on the Wharf - Fri, AnRil. All sets 7 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 661-8881. Pioneer Inn - Thu, Ah-Tim Eleniki; Tue, Captain Billy Bones; Wed, Greg Di Piazza. All sets 6-8 p.m. 658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 661-3636. Santa Fe Cantina - Tue, Ryan from Silky Ringo; 5-8 p.m. Fri, Mike Carrol & Friends, 4-7 p.m. Sat, Damien Awai; 5-8 p.m. 900 Front St., Lahaina, 667-7805. Sea House Restaurant - Thu & Fri, Kincaid Basques; Sa,-Coelho Morrison; Su, Andrew Kaina; Mon, Albert Kaina, Tue, Kincaid Basques; Wed, Albert Kaina. All sets except Sat. 7-9 p.m. Sat set is 6:30-9p.m. Napili Kai Beach Resort, 5900 Honoapi`ilani Rd., Napili, 669-1500.

SOUTH MAUI Beach Bums Ma’alaea - Tue, Randall Rospond, 5-8 p.m. 300 Ma’alaea Rd. 243-8226. Haui’s Life’s A Beach - Thu, Erin Smith. 1913 South Kihei Rd., 891-8010. Henry’s Bar and Grill - Gina Martinelli Jam. 6-8 p.m. 41 E. Lipoa St. Kihei. 879-2849. Longhi’s - Sat, acoustic music. 10:30-11 p.m. 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., 891-8883 Ma`alaea Grill - Thu, Fri, Sat, Benoit Jazz Works. All sets 6:30-9 p.m. Maalaea Harbor, 243-2206. Mulligan’s on the Blue - Thu, Rick Glencross Fri, Gail Swanson; 6-8 p.m.; Sat, The Celtic Tigers, 6 p.m. Sun, Celtic Tigers, 6:30 p.m.; 7 p.m. Tue, Joyce & Gord; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Wed, Willie K., 7:30 p.m. 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131. Shangri-La - Sat, Acoustic Sitar By the Sea. 6:308:30 p.m. 760 S. Kihei Road. Suite 109, Menehune Shores, Kihei, 875-4555. South Shore Tiki Lounge - Sat, Erin Smith; Mon, Kanoa. All sets 4-6 p.m. 1913 Kihei Rd., Kihei Kalama Village, 874-6444. Stella Blues - Sat, Valentine’s Dinner Show with Gail Swanson. Reservations suggested. 6:30 p.m. 1279 S. Kihei Rd. 874-3779. Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Café - Sun, Mon, Brittany; Wed, Sat, Merv Oana Thu; Fri Margie; Tue Jamie Lawrence. All sets 6-10 p.m. The Shops at Wailea, 875-9983. Tradewinds Poolside Cafe - Thu, Kawika Lum Ho; Fri, Gina Martinelli; Sat, Monda Kane; Sun Merv Oana, Mon, Bobby Ingram & Fulton Tashombe; Tue, Rama Camarillo; Wed, Kaleo Cullen. All sets 6-9 p.m. The Maui Coast Hotel, 2259 S. Kihei Rd., 874-6284.

CENTRAL MAUI Café Marc Aurel - Live Music on various days. Mon, Open Mic Night. 7:30 p.m. 28 N. Market St., Wailuku, 244-0852. Kahului Ale House - Thu, O‘Kaleo. 5 p.m. Wed, Kilohana. 6 p.m. 355 E. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului. 877-9001. Main Street Bistro - Th-Fri, Rhythm & Blues with Freedom. 5-7:30 p.m.. 2051 Main St., Wailuku, 244-6816. Unisan - Sat, Ola Hou, 6-9 p.m. 2102 Vineyard St., Wailuku. 244-4500.

UPCOUNTRY MAUI Hana Hou Cafe - Wed, Dorothy Betz and Les Adam with Vince Esquire. Thu, Haiku Hillbillys. Sat, Live music. All sets 6:30-9:30 p.m. 810 Haiku Rd, Haiku Cannery, 575-2661.

MON - WED - Karaoke

Moana Cafe & Bakery - Wed, Benoit Jazzworks; 6:30-8:30 p.m. Fri, Soulful sounds of Gerad Shea 6:30-8:30 p.m. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-9999.

RESORT SHOWS WEST MAUI ■ HYATT REGENCY MAUI RESORT & SPA 200 Nohea Kai Dr, Lahaina, 661-1234 Weeping Banyan Lounge - Nightly, Live music. All sets 6:30-9:30 p.m. Torch lighting ceremony nightly. ■ KAANAPALI BEACH CLUB 104 Ka`anapali Shores, Lahaina, 661-2000 Ohana Bar & Grill - Wed, Thu, Live music; Fri, Patrick Major; Sun, Wayne and Friends; Mon, Tue, Ernest Pua`a. All sets 5:30-9:30 p.m. Torch lighting ceremony nightly. ■ KA`ANAPALI BEACH HOTEL 2525 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 661-0011 Kupanaha - Nightly, Hula show, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Tiki Courtyard - Nightly, Alanui with Uncle Rudi; Sun, Hula show. All sets 6:30 p.m. ■ NAPILI KAI BEACH RESORT 5900 Honoapi`ilani Hwy, Napili, 669-1500 Thu, Kincaid and Albert; Fri, Sat, Mon,Tue, Kincaid Basques; Sun, Kapule Paoa; Wed, Albert Kaina. All sets 7-9 p.m. ■ RITZ CARLTON 1 Ritz Carlton Drive, Kapalua, 669-6200 Banyan Tree Restaraunt - Wed & Thu, Ranga Pae 6:15-9:45 p.m. ■ ROYAL LAHAINA RESORT 2780 Keka`a Dr., Ka`anapali, 661-3611 Royal Ocean Terrace - Thu, Fri, Sat, Live Hawaiian. 6-8 p.m. ■ SHERATON MAUI HOTEL 2605 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 661-0031 Lagoon Bar - Nightly, Hula dancing during sets. Thu, Kulewa; Fri, Ralph and Allan; Sat, Fausto and Kawaika; Sun; Kulewa; Wed, Nathan and Ralph. All sets 6-8 p.m. Torchlighting and cliff diving ceremony at sunset nightly. ■ THE WESTIN MAUI HOTEL 2365 Kaanapali Parkway, 667-2525 Ono Bar & Grille - Thu, Sat, Steve Sargenti; Fri, Larry Golis; Sun, Margie Heart; Mon, Ernest Puaa; Tue, Brian Haia; Wed, Pam Peterson. Tue-Sun shows, 6-9 p.m. Mon, 5:30-9 p.m. Tropica - (Early sets) Thu, Wed, Brian Haia; Fri, Sat, Mon, Marvin Tevaga; Sun, Josh Kahula; Tue, Ernest Pua`a. Early sets 3-6 p.m. (Followed by) Thu, Fri, Wed, Benny Uyetake; Sat, Tue, Mitch Kepa; Sun, Steve Sargenti; Mon, Josh Kahula. Late sets 6-9 p.m.

SOUTH MAUI ■ FOUR SEASONS RESORT WAILEA 3900 Wailea Alanui, 874-8000 Lobby Lounge - (Early sets) Thu, Steve Repollo and Alan Villeran; Sat, Mon, Island Style Trio with hula dancing. Early sets 5:30-7:30 p.m. (Followed by) Thu, Sal Godinez and Marcus Johnson; Sat, Mon, Nils and Anastasia; Sun, Pam Peterson and Rudy Baria; Late sets 8:30-11:30 p.m. Torchlighting ceremony nightly. ■ GRAND WAILEA RESORT HOTEL & SPA 3850 Wailea Alanui, 875-1234 Botero Bar - Wed, 5:30-9:30 p.m., Live music. Humuhumunukunukuapua`a - Nightly, 5:30 p.m., Strolling Hawaiian Duo. ■ THE FAIRMONT KEA LANI MAUI 4100 Wailea Alanui, 875-4100 Lobby Bar - Nightly, 5:30-9:30 p.m., Live music. MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131 Wailea Wednesdays w/ WIllie K - Wed, 7:30-10 p.m. ■ THE SHOPS AT WAILEA 3750 Wailea Alanui East Wing - Wed, 6:30-8 p.m., Marti Kluth. Lower Courtyard - Wed, 6:30-8 p.m., Jamie Lawerence and Friends. ■ WAILEA MARRIOTT 3700 Wailea Alanui, 879-1922 Kumu Bar & Grill - Nightly, Hula dancing. 6-9 p.m. Mele Mele Lounge - Nighly, Live music. 9-11 p.m. ■ MAUI PRINCE HOTEL 5400 Makena Alanui, 874-1111 Molokini Lounge - Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat, Mele `Ohana Duo. Tue, Thu Ron Kuala’au; Sun-Thu sets 6-9 p.m.; Fri, Sat sets 6-10 p.m. Sun, Mele `Ohana Duo, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mon, Wed, Fri, Hula performance, 6-6:45 p.m.

EAST MAUI ■ HOTEL HANA-MAUI Hana, 248-8211 Paniolo Lounge - Thu-Sun, Live music. 6:309:30 p.m. Main Dining Room - Thu, Sun, Hula dancing. 7:30-8:15 p.m.

Send your listings and photos for the Da Kine Calendar to Kate Bradshaw at calendar@mauitime.com or fax (808) 244-0446

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

FEBRUARY 19, 2009

27


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PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) I delivered newspapers to the neighborhood cat lady when I was a kid. When I stopped by her house to pick up the delivery fees, I’d almost gag at the unholy stench of all those semi-feral cats. By the time she fetched her purse and fished out some money, though, I’d barely notice the stink anymore. Like her, you’ve been living with unpleasantness for so long that you barely notice it. It’s still there, though—you might still see it on people’s faces when they first encounter it. Everything’s a trade-off, of course. I’m sure the cat lady got something out of providing sanctuary for all those unwanted strays. However, this is a good week to ask if the trade-off you’re making is still worth it.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) Clear-cutting forestland is relatively fast, efficient, and easy. Sustainable logging is much more laborintensive and less lucrative—in the short-term. The long-term is what we need to look at, though. The clear-cutters won’t see another lumber-yielding tree on that land for decades. Those who pursued a more responsible approach, however, can return every year for more, and find what they left last year taller, healthier (and therefore more profitable), because it benefited from the absence of the neighbors they chopped down last year. Don’t be tempted to just make a quick careless buck (or have a quick careless screw), not when what’s before you could easily keep you flush (or flushed) for years. Make it last.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) When dealing with spoiled children (often of the technically adult variety), I’ve sometimes found it worthwhile to stand up to their capricious whims. Someone ought to! Your general opinion is that much of the time it’s more trouble than it’s worth. Still, I could use some help keeping them from getting their way all the time—which we both know will only make matters worse. This week you’re in a great position to lend a hand. Be the grown-up: patient and kind—but also firmly unyielding, no matter what kind of temper tantrum you have to consequently endure. Please don’t shirk your duties—that’d definitely come back to haunt you.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20) If I asked you to take apart a car engine and then put it back together, you’d probably be clueless, initially. Yet given enough time and the proper tools, I have faith that eventually you’d figure it out. It might be quicker and easier to just call in a professional, but consider the longer, more challenging path this week. Because of the way it will not only enrich and enlighten you, but also lead you somewhere you never thought you’d go, it’s by far the better route. If you can see it clearly enough to choose it, please do.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) Water, given enough time, can carve deep canyons. Sure, given enough of the stuff you could wreak a lot of havoc in a short time, but you’d be missing out on the good stuff. Really shaping something, putting your mark on it—for good or ill—takes patience. Though you’ve gotten better, I would still not list this as one of your strong suits. If I were you, I’d take every opportunity to practice it. This week’s situation could inspire a flash flood, but I’d resist that temptation if I were you. A slow trickle might serve you better, in the long run. Take your time.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) An invisible fence is a way to train your dog to stay on your property. Beacons are buried on its borders and when he tries to cross them, his collar gives him an electric shock. Eventually for some dogs the collar becomes unnecessary. They’ll stop testing its limits. As it turns out, humans aren’t much smarter than dogs. Someone trained you to stay boxed in ages ago, and you forgot to keep checking if you were still stuck. The collar’s been off forever! Why don’t you figure out just how far you can go now that you’re free of it? The only thing stopping you is yourself; that’s pretty much all it’s ever been.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) I honestly think that you could approach any subject, no matter how ostensibly boring, and make a fascinating documentary about it, if you did so with enough naked honesty, love, and attention to detail. You’ve seen the big picture. It’s not so hot. Your fascination with and adoration of the details of everyday existence and the people you encounter in it is a source of a lot of richness and joy in your life. It’s like a language only you can read. This week, see how much of it you can translate so that others can understand and appreciate it too, would you?

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) A careless cook leaves a fishbone in your filet. What do you do? Simply pick it out, put it on the side of your plate and carry on with the meal and accompanying conversation? Make a big stink and send the plate back? Sue the restaurant? I’m worried that you’re more inclined than usual to make mountains out of molehills, an attitude that won’t benefit you in the slightest, but will instead cause a lot of misery. You’re not suffering. In the grand scheme these are inconveniences and hassles, nothing more. Don’t be a brat. Let them go.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) In the presence of each moment, there’s plenty of time for most of us to have a plethora of rich and valuable experiences. But because of the way our perspective fish-eyes and distorts looking ahead or behind us, life can often seem brutally short. That is why many forms of spirituality discourage us from spending too much time peering through those lenses, and to instead simply enjoy the expansiveness of each moment as it occurs. Of course that’s easier said than done, especially for you Scorpios, who have an almost obsessive tendency to rehash the past and fret about the future. However, staying consciously, serenely present should be easier for you this week than it usually is. Try to resist your old habits; just enjoy each instant as it unfolds.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21) Beware illusions that imply that you’ll have tremendous influence over the people around you. If parents can’t take malleable children and steer them where they want to go, what makes you think you ought to be able to with full adults? I don’t know who started the notion that we should try to steer people in directions they’re not inclined to go, but I’d like to slap him. Be there for people, or not, as you wish, this week—but don’t try to make them go where or be who you want them to. It’ll just piss them off.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19) Having minimum standards is all well and good but what do you do if no one qualifies? Most people eventually lower those unreasonable criteria. It’s either that or give up that aspect of your life for which there’s currently no one worthy. Part of me admires your commitment to excellence, but at some point it crosses over into delusional nothingness. These things are important to you—thus the standards. But when upholding them means you don’t even get the tiniest part of what you want, for a really long time, it may be time to reconsider and revise them.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) Forget the concept of “normal.” There’s quite simply no such thing. Sure, a manic holy roller or bearded lady might not be as able to hide their freakhood as others, but rest assured that every last one of us is just that freaky, even if some have gotten very good at hiding it. Get close enough to anyone and it becomes incredibly obvious. This is a good thing! What a relief! We’re all crazy weirdoes! If you honestly haven’t realized that yet, I hope this week you get the chance to really figure it out once and for all. Then you can finally drop this ridiculous business of trying to be “normal,” and start the much more important business of getting to know other people for real—and really get to know yourself.

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FEBRUARY 19, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY


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