14.10 The Rainbow Connection, August 26, 2010, Volume 14, Issue 10, MauiTime

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RAINBOW CONNECTION IN T THE HE SUMMER OF 1970, JIMI HENDRIX PLAYED HIS PENULTIMATE U.S. CONCERT IN A FIELD ABOVE SEABURY HALL AND SOME HIPPIES MADE A MOVIE. FORTY YEARS LATER, WE RELIVE THE EXPERIENCE WITH MAUI’S OWN LES POTTS PG.101

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Contents VOLUME 14

✚

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION: As a kid, in what sport did you want to go pro?

ISSUE 10

5 NEWS & VIEWS

Contributors: Caeriel Crestin, Beau Ewan, Jory John, Nancy Kanyuk, Doug Levin, Jared Libby, Greg Mebel, Avery Monsen, Rob Parsons, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Sara Tekula, Ynez Tongson, Barry Wurst II

Coconut Wireless jumps from political bitchslaps to frozen coral. Polling places and construction jobs decline in By the Numbers. Obama’s faith is tested in Spin Cycle. We parse the County Council hopefuls in our latest round of candidate proďŹ les. Open Letters has a beef with cheese. A Supreme Court hopeful is weeded out in Quizunderstood. Maui salaries and Israeli attacks ďŹ ll up Reader Feedback. Big is beautiful in News of the Weird. Eh Brah! boos underdressed cheerleaders.

Photographer: Sean Michael Hower mauiweddingmedias.com / howerphotography.com Skydiving

10 FEATURE STORY

Editor: Jacob Shafer (808) 283-1308 / jacob@mauitime.com @jacobshafer on Twitter Baseball Associate Editor: Anu Yagi (808) 264-8039 / calendar@mauitime.com @anuheayagi on Twitter Bobsledding Proofreader: Dina Wilson

Graphic Designers: Amy Mendolia, Christina Tarleton

In the summer of 1970, Rainbow Bridge—a ďŹ lm about hippies, aliens and, oh yeah, Jimi Hendrix—was shot on Maui. Anu Yagi chats with Les Potts, who was there and (mostly) remembers it.

Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers (808) 283-3260 / brad@mauitime.com Tennis

13 FOOD & DRINK

Art Director: Chris Skiles (808) 281-8975 / chris@mauitime.com lucky11studios.com Basketball

General Manager: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com @jenrusso on Twitter Billiards Administrative Executive: Judy Toba (808) 244-0777 / judy@mauitime.com Cow tipping Administrative Assistant: Jennifer Brown Elvis impersonating Web Design: Linear Publishing www.linearpublishing.com Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com @tommyrusso on Twitter R/C racing

About This Week’s Cover Artist The striking illustration gracing this week’s cover is the work of RICK RIETVELD. In addition to being an award-winning artist, Rietveld has been surďŹ ng since the early ‘70s and co-founded the surfwear company Maui and Sons; he’s responsible for the stillrecognizable Maui Cookie and Sharkman logos. In 1995, Rick, who currently lives in Southern California, co-founded his own surfwear company, RIETVELD USA. You can see more of his stuff at rietveldart.com, or purchase his work at mckibbenstudios.com.

Bruddah Willy’s has new digs, but the same ono ribs. Jen Russo talks story with Ambrosia bartender Will Sythes.

17 MUSIC SCENE Anu Yagi catches up with Keola Beamer and Raiatea Helm ahead of a gig at the MACC.

18 FILM CRITIQUE Barry Wurst II says Piranha 3D is a chomp-you-in-the-ass good time.

19 Film Capsules/Listings

20 THIS WEEK’S PICKS MauiTime is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright Š 2009 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $70 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. MauiTime may be distributed only by MauiTime’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime. MauiTime 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 • fax (808) 244-0446 www.mauitime.com @mauitime on Twitter Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon Circulation: 18,000 copies of the MauiTime

Horsing around Upcountry, Lukas Nelson and Promise of the Real at Charley’s, Erin Smith at Mulligan’s on the Blue and a wine dinner on the West side.

22 Da Kine Calendar 23 Grid

28 BACK PAGES Kula Kid laments her lost musical career. Sign Language tells Virgo to get on with the show.

30 Classified 31 Mind, Body & Spirit

ON THE COVER: Illustration by Rick Rietveld Design by Chris Skiles

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by Jacob Shafer

News + Views

jacob@mauitime.com + @jacobshafer on Twitter

Coconut Wireless Hawaii Schools Get Race to the Top Money, Hawaii Politicians Race to Take Credit Local schools got a rare bit of good news this week, in the form of a $75 million federal grant. Hawaii was one of nine states—along with Washington D.C.— selected in the second round of the Race to the Top program, part of President Obama’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The winning states were chosen by the U.S. Department of Education, whose secretary, Arne Duncan, was a harsh critic of the furloughs that made our 2009-’10 school year one of the shortest in the nation. Hawaii Superintendent Kathryn Matayoshi called Race to the Top a “rallying call” and praised “the unprecedented collective support from educators, legislators, policy makers and community partners.” Of course, this being an election year, a gaggle of politicians rushed to trumpet the news—and toot their own horns in the process. Based on the press releases and Twitter posts that flowed out after the announcement, everyone from Senators Inouye and Akaka to Representatives Djou and Hirono to Gov. Lingle and Lt. Gov. Aiona to the various candidates vying to replace them fully supported the program and/or had a hand in landing the funds. Further proof that nothing dissolves political acrimony like a feel-good soundbite.

Ed Case Endorses Abercrombie, Slams Hannemann For a guy who is neither an elected official nor an active candidate, Ed Case sure has managed to stay in the headlines. This week, Case announced he’s endorsing Neil Abercrombie for Governor. That alone is somewhat newsworthy, since Case and Abercrombie haven’t always seen eye to eye. But what really gave the

story legs were the harsh words Case reserved for Abercrombie’s Democratic opponent, Mufi Hannemann. “I’ve known and worked with Hannemann [for years] and once saw him as a leader for Hawaii today and tomorrow,” Case said. “But, as I’ve watched him in public office, I’ve come to view him as the most dangerous politician in a generation, because his talents mask an agenda which, if successful, will set Hawaii back a generation.” Case went on to accuse Hannemann of “exploiting rather than healing differences of race, origin and

Though some—most prominently the Cultural Resources Commission— criticized the party, many residents, visitors and merchants have lamented its loss. But no one has calculated how much money the event once known as the “Mardi Gras of the Pacific” brought in. Until now. A study commissioned by the North Beach West Maui Benefit Fund and conducted by Hawaii Pacific University Professor Jerome Agrussa found that Halloween in Lahaina generates about

Scientists have created the first frozen bank of Hawaiian coral cells, which could later be de-popsiclized and used to replenish decimated populations. economic status” and governing “by fear and intimidation, rewarding compliance and punishing disagreement.” If Case’s words were bait, Mufi bit. “This is negative campaigning at its worst,” Hannemann spokesperson Carolyn Tanaka shot back. “Ed Case’s hateful e-mail assassinates the character of Mufi Hannemann with accusations that are completely devoid of any facts.” Abercrombie, meanwhile, said simply that he was “very happy” to receive Case’s support and that his “statement speaks for itself.”

Halloween in Lahaina: the $3 Million Baby For the last two years, Halloween in Lahaina has been a virtual non-event, with no permits issued for adult activities and Front Street left open to traffic.

$3 million in additional revenue for businesses, mostly hotels and restaurants. The study, which focused on visitor spending, also found that revenue dipped significantly between 2007, the last year the street was closed, and 2009. Total sales generated fell more than $180,000, while restaurant sales on Front Street plummeted nearly 30 percent. Whether the study will have an impact on this year’s festivities remains to be seen. For now, Benefit Fund spokesperson Lance Collins touted the importance of collecting “objective economic data,” adding it’s “impossible to have a reasonable discussion without all the facts.”

UH Scientists Try Coral Cryonics Coral reefs are dying, in Hawaii and

around the world, and could disappear in our lifetime. That’s the bad news. The (potentially) good news is that experts are trying to do something about it. Last week, scientists from the Smithsonian and UH Manoa’s Institute of Marine Biology announced that they’ve created the first frozen bank of Hawaiian coral cells, which could later be de-popsiclized and used to replenish decimated populations. “Because frozen banked cells are viable, the frozen material can be thawed in one, 50 or, in theory, even 1,000 years,” said researcher Mary Hagedorn. And, science fictiony as it sounds, the process isn’t merely theoretical; Hagedorn said coral eggs have already been successfully matched with frozen sperm samples to produce viable coral larvae. Malia Paresa of Oahu, who grew up near Kaneohe Bay where the research was conducted, worked on the project as a student intern. “Before this internship, I had no idea how dire the situation was,” said Paresa. “As a Native Hawaiian and Kaneohe native, I take great pride in making a difference in the future of Hawaiian coral reefs.” ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410c

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THE BLOG ROLL Hot blog on blog action: Even when people say hurtful (because they’re true) things, or tell me I’m “destroying the planet and further darkening hearts” with “jaded cool,” I love it. Of course, when people say... Read more at mauifeed.com

At Ambrosia, and the Twlight Don Julio cocktail by mixologist William Sythes is blowing my aftermidnight mind. Also love the tween vampire reference, though I don’t know if... Read more at mauidish.com

Presented by the Molokai ‘Ohana Surf Club (a nonprofit dedicated to providing Molokai youth with healthy watersport opportunities), the first annual Molokai Holokai is a competitive venue for... Read more at mauivents.com

August 26, 2010

5


News + Views

By the NUMBERS

97

Number of polling places, out of 339, that will be eliminated statewide for the September 18 primary election; Maui County is losing three polling places, and will now have 40

42 percent

Statewide voter turnout in the last mid-term primary, in 2006; turnout in Maui County was 36 percent

1,700

Number of jobs lost in Maui County in the second quarter of the year

750

Number that were in construction, the hardest-hit industry Sources: Hawaii Office of Elections; Hawaii Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism

SPIN CYCLE Wagging the Dog...

Í Well

WATER GET IT DONE Randy points to a County well drilled ten years ago. It could provide over a million gallons a day to Central Maui, but it is still not operational.

MAUI HAS ENOUGH WATER Randy Piltz ILSPL]LZ [OH[ 4H\P OHZ LUV\NO ^H[LY >OH[ 4H\P KVLZU»[ OH]L PZ H MHPY HUK JVUZPZ[LU[ ^H[LY WVSPJ` WYHJ[PJLZ 0M `V\ [OPUR P[»Z [PTL [V NL[ TV]PUN VU ^H[LY ]V[L MVY Randy Piltz VU :LW[LTILY [O

Last week, the Pew Research Center released the results of a poll titled “Religion, Politics and the President.” One of the findings: 18 percent of Americans think President Obama is a Muslim. (43 percent said they don’t know what his religious beliefs are, while only 34 percent correctly identified him as a Christian.) This, naturally, set off a minor media frenzy. The poll also asked respondents how they reached their conclusions. According to Pew, “60 [percent] of those who say Obama is a Muslim cite the media.” That, curiously, got less media attention.

WATER - LESS TALK - MORE ACTION Paid for by Piltz for Mayor, Box 1796, Kahului 96733 www.piltzformayor.com

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by Jacob Shafer

News + Views

jacob@mauitime.com + @jacobshafer on Twitter

Candidate Profiles

T

his is the secondto-last installment in our series of candidate profiles, which will culminate in endorsements before the September 18 primary. This week, we look at the three County Council contests that feature more than two candidates.

South Maui Name: DON COUCH Profile: In 2008, Couch lost a tight, contentious race against Nishiki by less than 4 percent. Couch served in the Arakawa Administration as an Executive Assistant to the Mayor and as Deputy Planning Director, and currently works as an IT manager. He promises to “bring more openness, more honesty and more common sense to the South Maui seat,” to “make it easier for our small businesses to make a legitimate living, which will allow them to grow and provide much-needed jobs” and to work toward “food and energy self-sufficiency on Maui.” Web site: Doncouch.com Name: WAYNE NISHIKI Profile: Nishiki has been part of Maui’s, and Hawaii’s, political landscape for more than 30 years, first running for Lieutenant Governor in 1978. He served a 10-year stint on the County Council before terming out in 2004, and won his seat back in 2008 in a hard-fought contest against Couch. After the election, revelations that he’d accepted a $100,000 loan from developer Everett Dowling while out of office did damage to his credibility and no-strings-attached image. Yet his voting record and style have remained unchanged—he’s still a favorite of the environmental crowd and a reliably independent, sometimes combative voice on the Council. Web site: Electwaynenishiki.com Name: NORMAN VARES Profile: Vares also ran for this seat in 2008, finishing third out of four candidates with just over 8 percent of the vote. A retired plumbing contractor, he lists affordable housing, water (he supports desalination), “eliminating government waste” and promoting local agriculture as among his top priorities. Web site: Normanvares.com

Makawao-Haiku-Paia Name: MARY COCHRAN Profile: A member of the state Board of Education, Cochran says she’s running “to be a voice of reason on the County Council.” She says her focus is on

“affordable housing, developing water sources, expanding public transportation and restructuring property taxes so long-time residents are not overburdened.” Web site: Marycochran.org Name: KAI NISHIKI Profile: Nishiki challenged incumbent Mike Molina in 2008, losing by a wide margin, but is trying again now that term limits have pushed Molina aside. The daughter of Wayne, Nishiki shares her father’s environmental focus—and political ambitions. “I want to be a voice for other young families like my own, who work hard and dream of a future that includes jobs we can count on, housing we can afford and a safe, clean community,” she says. “As a volunteer community leader, I am already working to improve conditions in my district and our county.” Web site: Kainishiki.com Name: LEONA BAK NOMURA Profile: Owner of the Ku‘au Mart, Nomura says she “will make no promises” but is motivated by her 22 grandchildren and “love and passion for these islands” to “preserve, protect and serve for the betterment of us all.” Web site: Electleona.com Name: MIKE WHITE Profile: Other than a five-year stint in the state House from 1993 to 1998, White has spent his career in the visitor industry. He’s currently the general manager of the Kaanapali Beach Hotel, a position he’s held since 1985. He describes himself as “probusiness, pro-environment and dedicated to cultural preservation” and says he has “the compassion and balanced perspective necessary to make informed and effective policy decisions.” Web site: Mikewhiteforcouncil.com

West Maui Name: SU CAMPOS Profile: Campos has served on various boards and committees and ran for the West Maui seat in 1994. She says she’s running again because of her “passion for the working class” and her “never-ending concerns for the lack infrastructure in West Maui.” Web site: Unknown Name: EVE CLUTE Profile: “As a doctor of public health, and professor in environmental sciences, I teach evidence-based practices to assess, plan, implement and evaluate policies and programs,” says Clute. She says she’d tap into federal funds available for small

businesses, increase government efficiency through consolidation and make “jobs, homes, health and aloha” her top priorities. Web site: Clute4council.weebly.com Name: ELLE COCHRAN Profile: A small business owner who lives “off the grid” in Honolua Valley, Cochran says that “our environment is our economy” and promises to bring “sensible and accessible government back to the people of Maui County.” She’s a founder of the Save Honolua Coalition, a founding member of Faith Action for Community Equity Maui and president of Maui Unite! Web site: Electelle.com Name: ALAN FUKUYAMA Profile: Fukuyama challenged popular incumbent Jo Anne Johnson in 2008 and lost by almost 10,000 votes. Now, with Johnson termed out, he’s facing a much more crowded field. Fukuyama didn’t respond to our candidate questionnaire and we couldn’t find an official campaign Web site, but earlier this month he told the Lahaina News that, as an account executive, he brings “a consultative approach to solving problems” and that he wants to “bring Maui back to the prominent vacation destination it has always been.” Web site: Unknown Name: ZEKE KALUA Profile: Kalua has extensive nonprofit experience, most recently as Executive Director of the West Maui Taxpayers Association. According to his bio, he served on the Mayor’s West Maui Advisory Committee from 2003-’06 and was an Executive Assistant in the Mayor’s office from 2005-’08. He lists infrastructure, affordable housing and maintaining social services among his key issues. Web site: Zekekalua.com Name: KE‘EAUMOKU KAPU Profile: A taro farmer who serves on numerous Native Hawaiian boards including the Hawaiian Historic Preservation Council and the Maui/Lanai Islands Burial Council, Kapu says he has “always been an advocate towards land and ocean environmental issues” and promises to “help empower our community to ask the questions that will lead to a more harmonious future.” Web site: Unknown Name: PAUL LAUB Profile: The president of the Maui County Veterans Council, Laub says Maui “could be in much greater economic shape if it wasn’t for County-imposed restrictions.” He cites “permitting agencies [that] are exceedingly notorious for their poor permitting processes and are in desperate need of a

makeover,” and says “hundreds of jobs are currently held up due to the status quo.” Web site: Paullaub.com ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410u

VOTE! ESSENTIAL INFO: Primary Election: September 18 General Election: November 2 Web site: Hawaii.gov/elections Phone: 453-VOTE E-mail: Elections@hawaii.gov

POST YOUR

OWN LISTINGS Want to get your listing in the issue? Go to mauitime. com/listing and enter it.

It’s that simple. August 26, 2010

7


News + Views

Re the August

their part that was designed specifically to instigate a military response. This reminds 19 feature “How me of the crap about how America is Much Do They responsible for terrorism against itself. It’s Make”: You are by like saying rape victims were asking for it. far my favorite local Meanwhile, North Korea blows a rival publication. You don’t country’s ship out of the water unprovoked pull punches or pretend to and the world does nothing. If you play be “politically correct.” I think this is one with fire, prepare to get burned. of your best pieces of work. I’ve paid taxes into our County since I started working Kukui (via K in high school, which mauitime.com) m was about 12 years ago. This might be a This story was T controversial statement, rridiculous. Both Egypt but I feel comfortable aand Israel have a about the directors, and boycott together—it b especially the Chiefs of iis to keep as many Police and Fire, making weapons as possible w the amount of money out of the hands of o that they do. In fact, I’m Hamas. No one in Gaza H surprised they aren’t iis starving, without being paid more. I medical assistance or m think it’s important to llacks for goods because keep the pay for these of the blockade. Get o positions competitive, yyour facts straight—the otherwise we would move was anti-Israel. m lose quality people to QUOTE OF THE WEEK: Not all criticisms N the corporate world. aare anti-Israeli but Everyone knows that this definitely was. For a paper that wants County workers get paid less than the America out of Iraq and Afghanistan, why average corporate or private enterprise don’t you keep your d worker of similar nose out of Israel’s n capacity. The only part business? Let’s see b of the article that could how many pro-Israeli h have improved it would lletters you print. be for you to include all the “perks” that PPhyllis Kober, Wailuku the Councilmembers (via e-mail) seem to have. On top of their salaries, some OOPS! At least one O Councilmembers rack aastute reader noticed up thousands in travel tthat, in last week’s benefits (including per ffeature, we failed to diem while traveling iinclude information off island). Not to FROM THE MAYOR TO THE COUNTY COUNCIL TO THE CHIEF OF POLICE, YOU PAY THEIR SALARIES aabout Planning mention the fact that Director Kathleen D Chair Mateo sent out PLUS: Ross Aoki. Her salary R a memo to all of the QUOTE OF THE WEEK: ffor the 2011 fiscal other departments yyear, factoring in basically saying that the 4.6 percent furlough reduction, is they and their staff will be exempt from $96,831. Also, in last week’s candidate the furloughs that even department profiles, we didn’t include District 11 heads are subjected to. According to our House candidate Johanna Amorin’s illustrious Chair, they are in control of Web site, johannaamorin.com. their own budgets and do not have to account for how they spend their money when it comes to their staff and other expenses. I think you should take this Send your FEEDBACK article a little deeper and explore the real to the editor via e-mail issue, which is our Councilmembers’ (editor@mauitime.com), or spending. At any rate, thank you post (Editor’s Inbox, MauiTime, MauiTime for always keeping it real. 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, August 12, 2010 ✚ Volume 14 ✚ Issue 08 ✚ FREE

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INTERNATIONAL

INCIDENT TWO MONTHS AGO, RET. COL. ANN WRIGHT OF OAHU WAS INVOLVED IN A SHOWDOWN WITH ISRAELI FORCES THAT LEFT NINE DEAD. NOW SHE’S BACK IN HAWAII, AND READY TO TELL HER SIDE OF THE STORY PG.10

PLUS: CANDIDATE PROFILES

PG.7 PULEHU GRINDS PG.13 THIS WEEK’S PICKS PG.20 KULA KID PG.28-

“Could you cut out this macho stuff and quit stinging my eyes after I handle you?” pg.8

QUIZunderstood 1. What Hawaiian royal (with a still-famous nickname) wrote “Hawai‘i Pono‘i,” which in 1967 became the official state song of Hawaii? Bonus: Besides “Hawai‘i Pono‘i,” how many state songs are written in a language other than English? 2. Greenland, the world’s biggest island, is how many times larger than Kahoolawe, the smallest of the eight main Hawaiian islands? A. 18,670X B. 8,670X C. 867X 3. Recently, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy spoke at a judicial conference in Kaanapali. Kennedy was nominated to the high court in 1987 by President Reagan, after Reagan’s previous nominee, Douglas Ginsberg (pictured), withdrew amid allegations of what? A. Accepting bribes B. Sexual harassment C. Smoking marijuana

See answers, page 29

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August 26, 2010

August 19, 2010 ✚ Volume 14 ✚ Issue 09 ✚ FREE

HOW MUCH

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DO THEY MAKE? AND YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO KNOW

PG.10

UNSTIMULATING LINGLE

PG.8

EH BRAH!

PG.9

MAI TAI MANIA

PG.13

KULA KID

PG.28-

“Sometimes even your thick skull gets tired of slamming into a stone wall...” pg.29

Pixie Kea (via mauitime.com)

Re the August 12 feature, “International Incident”: So let me get this straight. These people knowingly violated an Israeli Naval blockade, were given instructions for where to go if they wanted to deliver their aid, but still decided to belligerently forge ahead with their plan? It was a suicide mission on

Wailuku, HI 96793), or check us out on Twitter (twitter. com/mauitime) and Facebook (facebook.com/mauitime).

We reserve the right to edit feedback. Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of MauiTime.


by Chuck Shepherd

News + Views

chuck@mauitime.com

THE ROYAL TREATMENT The Yaohnanen tribe on the South Pacific island of Tanna believe their true ancestral god is Britain’s Prince Philip (based on photographs of him with the Queen during a 1974 visit to Tanna’s mother nation of Vanuatu) and believe he promised he would return for good on his 89th birthday (June 10, 2010). Although the prince has kept in touch, he failed to show up for the grand celebration, but fortunately, Scottish university student Marc Rayner was on the island, working as a volunteer teacher, and stepped in for the prince, which meant that he and not the duke of Edinburgh got to wear the “formal” ceremonial penis sheath appropriate for such special events.

MORE CUSHION FOR THE PUSHIN’ Iconic female beauty in Mauritania (and in a few other African societies, as News of the Weird has reported) regards “rolling layers of fat” as the height of sexiness, according to a July dispatch by Marie Claire magazine, and professional force-feeders earn the equivalent of about $200 each from parents for bulking up their young daughters in boot camps that sometimes serve animal fat as drinks and apply the cattle-thickening drug Oradexon. “The stomach flab should cascade; the thighs should overlap; and the neck should have thick ripples,” said Aminetou Mint Elhacen, the feeding drill sergeant. Some girls rebel, but others embrace their new bodies. Said one, “When I realized the power I had over men, I started to enjoy being fat.”

PARTY HARD, INDEED “It’s springtime in Japan, and that means [two] things,” wrote GlobalPost.com in March: penis festivals and vagina festivals. Held annually in several locations (for the last 1,500 years, some say), with the best-known taking place at Komaki City’s Tagata shrine in March, they were initially spiritual, serving as prayers for procreation and crop fertility. However, they have grown into carnivals for tourists and children of all ages. Most Western visitors hardly believe what they’re seeing: huge, parade-floatsized phalluses heavy-lifted through the street and giggling children brandishing toy penises and vaginas (to make offerings of them at local temples).

TO THE DOG Gail Posner (the widow of legendary hostile-takeover executive Victor Posner) died in March in south Florida but left a will that endowed her beloved Chihuahua Conchita (and two other, less-loved dogs) a $3 million trust fund plus the run of her $8.3 million mansion for their remaining dog years. (After all, Conchita has a style to maintain, including a four-season wardrobe, diamond jewelry and full-time staff.) Mrs. Posner’s only living child, Bret Carr, who

admits he had issues with his mother, is challenging her $26 million-plus will (that left him $1 million), mostly because, he said, Mrs. Posner’s staff and bodyguards suspiciously wound up with the bulk of the riches on the pretense that they would be caring for Conchita.

UNWELFARE In May, the Daily Mail profiled the Houghtons of Crawley, West Sussex (Lee and Jane and their five youngest children), who live in free government housing and draw monthly benefits of the equivalent of about $1,600, without doing a bit of work because Lee has a “personality disorder” and daughter Chelsea, 16, has attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and needs a caretaker to help with her baby. The Houghtons admit that they spoil their kids at Christmas with lavish gifts, and the reporter noted the presence of four TVs, two Xboxes, three DVD players, mobile phones for everyone, and a computer and laptop. Lee is unpopular with his neighbors, who call the police on him frequently because of his drinking. Said Lee, “If people want to work, good for them. I would if I could.”

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

ehbrah@mauitime.com This is for all the parents who let their daughters join the various “dance” troupes on the island that are in fact training grounds for the next generation of hoochie mamas: Just because something is organized and has uniforms doesn’t make it a wholesome activity. Dancing is great; cheerleading is perfectly fine. But young girls wearing skin-tight shorts and short-shirts shaking their okoles, sometimes right out on the sidewalk to attract people (dirty old men?) to their car-wash fundraisers? It’s sick. I’m sorry—someone had to say it. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410e

AT LEAST THEY WEREN’T TALKING ON CELL PHONES Driver Bryan Parslow, 19, injured himself and three passengers when he crashed into a tree near Wheatland, New York, in May. He was playing “hold your breath” with the others and passed out. And in July, Lora Hunt, 49, was sentenced to 18 months in jail in the crash that killed a woman on a motorcycle in Lake County, Illinois, in 2009. Hunt was so preoccupied painting her nails (polish was splashed all over the car’s interior) that she never even moved to apply the brakes before the collision.

BUYING THE FARM Americans continue to agonize over government “giveaways,” but as News of the Weird has noted several times, somehow federal farm subsidies continue unabated—even though much of the money no longer goes to cuddly “family farms” but to rich urban industrialists who hardly know a plow from a sow. In the latest accounting from Environmental Working Group records, the weekly New York Press revealed such “agrarian” handout-seekers as Manhattan billionaires Leonard Lauder and David Rockefeller and Rockefeller’s son Mark. For 10 years now, the federal government has handed Mark $54,500 a year not to grow anything on his 5,000 acres in Idaho. According to the Press, Mark never intended to, in that he only bought the land because it was adjacent to the upscale, socialite-hangout South Fork flyfishing lodge he runs next door. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410n

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9


WORDS BY ANU YAGI ILLUSTRATION BY RICK RIETVELD

RAINBOW CONNECTION IN THE SUMMER OF 1970, JIMI HENDRIX PLAYED HIS PENULTIMATE U.S. CONCERT IN A FIELD ABOVE SEABURY HALL AND SOME HIPPIES MADE A MOVIE. FORTY YEARS LATER, WE RELIVE THE EXPERIENCE WITH MAUI’S OWN LES POTTS

I

REMEMBER THE DAY Jimi was leaving Maui. He looked at us with tears in his eyes and said, ‘You guys are so lucky. You get to stay,’” reminisces Mauian Les Potts, who spent three July weeks with Hendrix filming Rainbow Bridge, and was involved with the film’s production from its genesis. Shooting culminated with what was dubbed the “Rainbow Bridge Vibratory Color/Sound Experiment,” a storied concert on Baldwin family ranch land in Olinda, on July 30, 1970. Hendrix immediately went on to play at the Waikiki Shell on August 1. It was his last concert on U.S. soil. He died less than two months later.

H

endrix’s final days were dark ones. He was having problems with his manager, Michael Jeffery, and, according to biographer Harry Shapiro, “was becoming increasingly distrustful of those around him.” At the same time, Hendrix was changing his sound—with mixed results. “Both his management and his audiences seemed determined that Hendrix should be content with simply repeating his former triumphs,” writes another biographer, Charles Shaar Murray. “Much to Hendrix’s

10 August 26, 2010

disgust and despair [his] fresh material seemed to be merely tolerated.” This “fresh material,” while beloved by enthusiasts today, embodied a bold new direction for Hendrix—jazzier, rolling compositions inspired by his camaraderie with Miles Davis as well as his repeat visits to the Hawaiian islands from 1968-’70 (Potts, among others, points to the tune “Pali Gap”). “He planned to release a double album with the working title of First Rays of the New Rising Sun, at the end of [1970],” writes Murray. But with that project left unfinished, “two posthumous albums released in 1971,

Cry of Love and Rainbow Bridge... both betray their makeshift origins.” The latter-named release is better known for the movie of the same name, principally filmed on Maui during the summer of 1970. Murray writes that Rainbow Bridge was a project “close to [Jeffery’s] heart—an incoherent farrago of dope and mysticism.” (It might be more accurate to say it was close to Jeffery’s pocketbook—Potts says Jeffery personally sunk over $500,000 into it, plus $300,000 to Warner Bros. and $40,000 to the IRS—funds that weren’t recouped until

the movie was sold in ’72 to Transview Pictures Corp.) But the film is closer still to Mauians, especially those who were in it. Sure, the flick’s incongruous plotline (if one even exists) coupled with misleading marketing (bootlegs and re-releases often try to pass it off as a straight concert film) make it a tough sell to even diehard Hendrix fans. But it remains worthy as a cinematic hippie relic; a portrait of a sect of youth—specifically youth on Maui—from that era, and includes a unique snapshot of one of music’s most revolutionary icons in what would be his final weeks.


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ever mind the oft hard-to-follow ramblings of rawboned hippie waifs at “The Rainbow Bridge Occult Research Meditation Center” (i.e. Seabury Hall, rented out during the school’s summer vacation, Potts says, for a meager $3,000 for three months), where lead actress Pat Hartley is sent to investigate the experimental outpost of a man she meets in the Mojave Desert. Even the concert footage in Rainbow Bridge is frequently dismissed by Hendrix historians as not particularly memorable. But sit down and screen the film with someone who was there—as we did with Potts recently, in his Napili home—and not only are the movie’s charms made more evident, but the texture of noteworthy

Potts says he first met Jeffery at Lahaina’s Pioneer Inn, while having breakfast one morning. Potts and a friend were petitioning a potential investor for $10,000 in startup cash to open a surf shop, but things “weren’t really going anywhere.” It was a time when bogus rumors often flew about acts like Led Zeppelin coming to the isle. But when a man who’d earlier introduced himself, to Pott’s disbelief, as Hendrix’s manager interrupted, saying, “Ten grand? I’ll give you ten grand!” the direction of the conversation quickly turned to Jeffery. Jeffery returned to Lahaina “six to eight months later with Michael Hynson” (who remains a close personal friend of Potts’s), and it was then that Potts learned of—and became involved with—plans to make a movie. Cast member Melinda Merryweather,

“Thick” though it may be, it sets up movie’s intended themes—themes that aren’t necessarily upheld in any organized manner. “Chuck Wein wanted to produce a program to relieve mass paranoia against the arrival of extraterrestrials,” says Potts. “[He] was talking about UFOs because he believed that evil power monopolies ran the planet, along with the military industrial complex, and UFOs were powered by electromagnetic energy. If this were to come out, it’d be a bigger revolution than the Industrial Revolution, because electromagnetic energy would replace oil electricity. We went into a lot of detail about that, but most of it was not in the film.” The opening monologue, meanwhile, croaks, “Have you heard of the Mystical Population? Have you ever met anyone from this enigmatic section of the land?

ever seen... All our islands have mysterious lights seen in odd places... in the sky or on the ground.” “Of course, this is all theoretical,” admits Potts, “[but] this is what we were talking about at the time. I’m not talking about little green men, I’m thinking more like the book Chariot of the Gods,” he adds, referring to the 1968 book by Erich von Daniken. Potts has a few key scenes in the movie, including an infamous one where he and others cut open a surfboard to reveal a large bag of smuggled psychoactives—which in reality, Potts says, was chocolate cake mix. Another takes place at Lahaina’s Banyan tree. There, Potts really interviews two young Mauians about a UFO sighting they’d had, where a vessel came out from the valley above Lahainaluna.

HENDRIX’S MUSIC IS THE MOVIE’S AUDIBLE CORNERSTONE AND HIS CONCERT ITS VISUAL CLIMAX, BUT JIMI HIMSELF IS LITTLE TO BE FOUND.

brushstrokes from this portrait of our island’s history come clear. “Forty years is a long time, and I bet if you talk to any of the other survivors, you’ll get a different story,” says Potts, who adds that most cast members have since passed. “But this is what I remember. At the time, we were just dumb, haole hippies, and back then, we weren’t really socially accepted at all. Our county government was gearing toward the fact that they wanted [Maui] to be a tourist place for rich people.” Pamphlets essentially saying “we don’t want you here, go back where you came from” were handed out to anyone at the airport with “a backpack and long hair,” says Potts. A May 27, 1970 Maui News editorial titled “Forecast for a Troubled Summer” reflects a similar sentiment. “Young people here on Maui as throughout the state and across the nation will find summer employment hard to come by... [as] recruiters and businesses... have learned to pick and choose while being most selective,” reads the piece. “There might be a measure of satisfaction to be gained from this if the only ones to be hurt and frustrated were the radicals who have spent four years damning the establishment. There might even be some therapeutic value in discovering the world does not revolve around the desires of the young, and that it can be a tough old world to get along in.”

in a 1995 interview with Straight Ahead Magazine, says she approached Jeffery on Maui and told him about a guy named Chuck Wein, a protégé of Andy Warhol, who had an idea for a film. Wein’s vision, Potts says, was forwardlooking, a precursor of what we now call reality TV. The concept was to take reallife personalities and subtly script mostly impromptu interactions. “He just took different people that were heavy into their trips, put them together and let the cameras roll,” says Potts of the “very, very loose script.” A California native, Potts was behind the scenes during filming in So. Cal. in the Spring of 1970 (though he needed to keep off-screen as he was to be in Hawaii shots), and points out the many locations seen early in the film. During the opening sequence, when a group of young people approach actress Hartley with rapid-fire testimony, Potts says, “those are real Jesus freaks.” Later, during a scene where Hartley is hassled by two police officers, Potts quips, “those are real cops—and, frankly, some of the better actors in the movie.” And, in a scene where Hartley imagines marching off to war with a band of young men lead by a barking drill sergeant, “those poor suckers” were really off to Vietnam. Potts cringes during the movie’s long, opening monologue—a canned voiceover set to a black screen. “This is a little thick, this guy’s rap.”

Do you know their mission? Their destiny? Do you know that the space people have already established regular routes to the U.S. and the makers of this film—who are energized with them—are already in contact with them at will?” Shapiro’s Hendrix biography expands on this: “Wein claims that a group of people meditated for several months and traveled astrally to visit those with sufficient funds to finance the venture. The record books fail to show whether Mo Ostin of [Warner Bros.] received an occult visitation, but he did get a call from Mike Jeffery.” “At the time, we were having a lot of UFO activity [on Maui] because they were doing Star Wars testing up at the crater,” says Potts. Even a May 9, 1970 Maui News piece titled “Ghost Lights Over Maui,” by Jeanne Booth Johnson describes a “funny kind of meteor [that] was reported by a whole lot of folks in Honolulu, including government officials, Air Force and FAA personnel. A spokesman for the latter said ‘the object was not like any object missile or satellite’ he’d

Potts says that, in all, they filmed 43 hours of 35mm tape, “ridiculous” by today’s standards and part of the reason they racked-up “$300,000 in lab fees with Warner Bros.” Some of the footage consisted of “a giant cigar with a blue ball around it, right above Lahaina Harbor.” When the footage returned from Warner, he says it was wiped clean, but audio interviews of “people freaking out on Front Street” remained, though those too were lost 20 years ago to TV news reporter John Yoshimura, when Potts provided his insight for a 20-year anniversary Rainbow Bridge story for KHON2. “John, if you’re out there,” Potts says, “I want that tape back.” None of the UFO themes—which are clearly what resonate with Potts four decades later—are evident until the very end of the film (and even then, they require explanation). After the famed “Rainbow Ridge” Olinda concert with the Jimi Hendrix Experience (featuring Hendrix, drummer Mitch Mitchell and, replacing Noel Redding on » Continued on page 12

August 26, 2010

11


Âť Continued from page 11

bass, Billy Cox), the final scenes of Rainbow Bridge are of primary cast members (Potts included) romping barefooted through the Haleakala crater to the Holua cabin, where they sit enraptured by Charlotte Blobe, who was “the closest thing we had to an actual UFO contact,� according to Potts. Blobe was the personal secretary to George Adamski, famous for his claims of meeting with Nordic “Space Brothers� (a term also used in Rainbow Bridge). Then, credits roll over shots of a highly-active Kilauea.

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eed a recap? Us too. A chick from the Mainland shows up on Maui and yaks with a bunch of haole hippies (save one Honolulu girl billed as “Hawaiian Susanne� in the credits) who have an array of competing “trips,� and duke it out with feverish pitch in an “Occult Research Meditation Center� otherwise known as Seabury Hall in the summertime. One of the greatest guitarists of all time shows up, speaks but briefly, and plays a concert Upcountry for a few folks

Hendrix. “We were standing there [outside of the Cooper House] and Barron was giving his speech. Then, he just runs up there, grabs that gun—which he must have seen up there at some point—and just did that.� Potts says Hendrix told him, over the course of their time spent on Maui and “having breakfast every morning for three weeks,� that he was under a lot of pressure from the Black Panthers to step to the forefront of the civil rights movement. That, Potts guesses, was likely the root of his motivation for the scene. It was a rare moment of spotlighthogging for the famed guitarist; Potts says Hendrix was incredibly shy throughout the shoot. In fact, every time they’d commence shooting, Jimi would “freak out.� Finally, before the attic “interview�—which reveals an obviously drunk but very clever and cool-tongued Hendrix—Jimi, then still refusing to do the scene, talked with Potts, who’d escaped to the furthest reaches of the campus and was listening to recordings from Hendrix’s famous Fillmore East concert from New Years’ Eve 1969. Potts says Jimi questioned why he would listen

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12 August 26, 2010

who subsequently run up to the top of the mountain and talk to an alien lady. Then there’s an eruption. So what about Hendrix? Isn’t he the point? Are criticisms of Rainbow Bridge as a misrepresented concert DVD, or Hendrixcentric movie, true? Yes and no. Hendrix’s music is indeed the movie’s audible cornerstone and his concert its visual climax, but Hendrix himself is little to be found other than in a rather voyeuristic interview conducted in Seabury’s rafters and in perhaps the film’s most fascinating scene, where a grinning Jimi assassinates the Barron Bingen from a window at the school’s Cooper House, as he gives a speech next to a green American flag. Potts shares some insider knowledge about that intriguing and (as with everything else) incongruous scene—the only violence in the movie. “That was all Jimi’s idea,� Potts says, as he shows me a framed photo from an old California newspaper, of him standing next to

to that, saying it was “imperfect,� and so Potts replied, “Well, it may be imperfect to you, but it’s genius to me.� They downed a few Miller High Lifes, and Hendrix was sufficiently calmed—and inebriated—to do what fans consider the most important and insightful part of the film. It may be in Potts’s words to Hendrix that we find the best summation of why Rainbow Bridge—chaotic plotting, crazy hippies and UFOs aside—matters. Because when all is said and done, in art as in life, nothing is faultless and everything is brilliant. ■To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410a


by Jacob Shafer

Food + Drink

jacob@mauitime.com + @jacobshafer on Twitter

Willy Good Ono rib stand has a new location, but the same finger-lickin’ food d Bruddah Willy’s Sticky Ribs 1670 Honoapiilani Hwy., Waikapu Thurs.-Sat., 11am-6pm; 243-7427

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ibs. If the mere mention of the word sets your stomach rumbling, you’ve either already discovered Bruddah Willy’s or you need to, ASAP. I say “discovered” because, until recently, it was easy to miss. Tucked away in a single-window stand by

housemade sauce, with extra on the side (trust me—you’ll want it). Sides include steamed rice, buttered corn (off the cob), potato salad, coleslaw and baked beans. I generally opt for the latter three. The potato salad, featuring creamy, chewy hunks of skin-on baked potatoes, is a refreshing change of pace from the usual, ubiquitous potato mac. The slaw offers the ideal marriage of sweet and tangy and is augmented by bits of bacon, which, every meat-lover knows, make anything better. The beans are slow-cooked with Portuguese sausage, plus onions, celery and a blend of herbs. Where the old location was takeout only,

The slaw offers the ideal marriage of sweet and tangy and is augmented by y bits of bacon, which, every meat-lover knows, make anything better. the side of the road in Waikapu, I drove by dozens of times before a friend’s glowing recommendation motivated me to stop. A couple months ago, Bruddah Willy’s moved into new, expanded digs at the Maui Tropical Plantation (and put up a big sign to make sure people know where to find them). But thankfully one thing hasn’t changed—the ono, finger-lickin’ grinds. The menu is simple, just ribs and pulled pork and an array of classic barbecue sides. The pulled pork holds its own, but the ribs steal the show: fall-off-the-bone tender, loaded with meat and slathered in a rich

es the new spot features ting. shaded outdoor seating. lace (Calling ahead to place your order is still a good idea.) And, after you’ve stuffed yourself to the gills,, you can take a strolll around the stately grounds to feed the ducks and watch the tourists ride the tram. The BBQ stand is open

s, three days a week—Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 11am ’til they run outta ribs (usually 6pm). But owner Will Bailey and his crew also do catering. (In addition, they’ve taken over food and beverage operations at the Tropical Plantation as a whole and reopened the old Lagoon Grill as the Waikapu Grill Restaurant.) So yeah, I’ll say it again: ribs. Hungry? ■

Got a hot food scoop? Call 280-3386 or fax to 244-0446.

Kevin Salvador & Duro

To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410d 410d For more foodie news, visit MauiTime’s food blog at: mauidish.co om mauidish.com

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by Jen Russo

Food + Drink

jen@mauitime.com + @jenrusso on Twitter

Pouring It On South Maui bartender dishes on hot cocktails and cool customers Ambrosia Martini Lounge 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei; 891-1011 ambrosiamaui.com, @ambrosiamaui

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illiam Sythes and I meet about 7pm for coffee and I realize this is his morning. Will is a straightforward guy; he didn’t take me for a drunkard, so we met at Starbucks, an alcohol-neutral zone. Of course, we quickly move the interview to Hang Loose Lounge after both of us confessed a love for the corner bar. Sythes is a bartender and sometimes mind-reader at Ambrosia Martini Lounge. Ambrosia isn’t your ordinary Maui watering hole. Tucked off on the less-seen side of the Life’s a Beach and Fat Daddy’s building in the Kihei Kalama Village, it’s a locale that defines intimate. Contemporary decor outfits the lounge with cement, rock and leather, but there’s a timeless quality once you’re inside. It’s dark and climate controlled, with ambient lighting making the bottles and glasses sparkle; it just feels classy. Dark drapes conceal the liquor storage facilities behind the small bar--you’ll see bartenders duck under and emerge from behind these mysterious velvet coverings from time to time. Entertainment is different every night of the week, and you get a divergent crowd every time. Over a beer and a Jack and Coke, Sythes and I break down some of his specialty drinks.

What’s up with the Green Fairy? We carry a lot of specialty spirits [and] Lucid Absinthe is one of them. We aren’t the only bar on Maui with it, but we have an absinthe fountain. You drip water from the fountain over a sugar cube into the glass. The herbs in the alcohol make the drink cloud over;

the sugar breaks down from the drip and sweetens it. Then you sip it. There are also cocktails with absinthe. The Mint Muse is a mojito-like absinthe drink; the Green Lantern is a Midori pineapple absinthe mixture. I like to pair [absinthe] with a Peach Lambic.

Cute cocktail names aside, I hear that absinthe gives a special buzz. What’s that about? Yeah, there is a lot of mystique and controversy behind the herbal tincture of wormwood that’s in absinthe. Especially since it was outlawed for a while. Thujone is the compound in it that’s supposed to give that buzz. Other herbs in the spirit are anise and fennel. It tastes like black licorice. Lucid, the company we carry, was the first genuine absinthe to get approval to import in the U.S. since the ban in 1912. Is there anyone in the U.S. distilling or making absinthe? St. George Spirits of Alameda, California,

aromatics, like your flavored vodkas, vanilla, lemon and so forth. One of the more obscure [spirits] we have is Fernet Brianca. It’s an Argentinian favorite. If someone comes in and orders a a Fernet and Coke they are usually from or have been to Argentina. I think it’s a good digestive, taken after a meal. The flavor is basically like an unsweetened bitter Jaegermeister. You can substitute it for vermouth in some cocktails.

Ambrosia has Cachaca too. What is that, exactly? Cachaca [pronounced ka-cha-ssa] is a spirit distilled from sugarcane juice. Not everyone knows that rum is distilled molasses, not

I don’t mind a loquacious guest or two at my bar, but honestly sometimes I feel like the kindergarten teacher. Is everyone playing nice today? was the first, with their St. George Absinthe Verte. There may be more now.

Botanical and herbal spirits are hot right now. Do you serve any others? Lots. A lot of spirits are made with

What’s the best time to come down and enjoy a taste or two of these exotics? We open for happy hour from 5 to 9pm. That’s a good time, when you can really sip and taste, and the night rush isn’t around. You don’t want to try absinthe after having other cocktails. It’s just not the way to enjoy it. I’m a self-proclaimed happy drunk. How does that jive with your bar? I don’t mind a loquacious guest or two at my bar, but honestly sometimes I feel like the kindergarten teacher. Is everyone playing nice today? That kind of stuff. I ask people how they are when they come in, check their vibe. I’ll say, “How are you doing?� If you don’t answer, I’ll ask again. My thing is I want to make you a drink that you like, serve it to you professionally and efficiently. I strip the pretentiousness away. ■Got a hot food scoop? Contact Jen Russo at 808-280-3386 or fax to 808-244-0446.

sugar, so Cachaca is very different. It has a kind of a tequila aroma and taste. With a lime and sugar muddle it makes the Caipirinha, a Brazilian drink.

To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410d2

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favorite spirit. What kind of tequila cocktail can you recommend? The Twilight. I make with grapefruit juice, sugar and Don Julio Reposado. The Don Julio lends a gentle smoky flavor to it, due to the oak aging.

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

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808. 872.1113 872.1113 113 3 CALL FOR APPOINTMENT By the Airport 111 Hana Hwy #202 B Kahului, HI 96732 FIND US ON FACEBOOK

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There are over 100 things you could be doing today on Maui.

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Go to mauitime.com for complete weekly calendar listings, and find something to do today. With the dog days of summer comes the slow month of September. When tourist vacation season wraps up, that will be your time to attract the year round Maui folks into your business. The Taste of Maui is your chance to tell MauiTime readers about your specials. If you're willing to offer a half off special for an entree item at least one day per week, then you qualify for special pricing and a FREE listing in this special issue. Deadline for listing is August 27th, email to food@mauitime.com

.com

16 August 26, 2010

Deadline is August 27th P Publishes September 2nd To reserve space contact Brad Chambers at 808-2833260 or email brad@mauitime.com or Tommy Russo at 808-283-0512 or tommy@mauitime.com


by Anu Yagi

Music Scene

anu@mauitime.com + @anuheayagi on Twitter

The Power of Two Tuneful Hawaiian duo discuss inspiration, collaboration and the wordless language of music New Album: Keola Beamer & Raiatea Essential Tracks: “I Kilohi Aku Au,” “Hilo Hanakahi,” “You Somebody” and “Kimo Hula” Upcoming Show: Saturday (August 28), 7:30pm, Castle Theater, MACC, $30-$45, 242-7469 or mauiarts.org Online: kbeamer.com; raiateahelm.com

T

his week, Keola Beamer and Raiatea Helm will play a onenight-only engagement at the MACC’s Castle theater, joined by Chamber Music Hawaii’s Spring Wind Quartet. Beamer—who comes from prestigeous Hawaiian pedigree; his mother Nona coined the phrase “Hawaiiana”—and Helm—an effervescent vocalist—recently released a self-titled album. We chatted with them via phone ahead of their Maui gig.

I understand you two had never met until talent coordinator Cary Hayashikawa suggested you collaborate for a 2007 show at Ala Moana Beach Park. How quickly did you realize you wanted to work together more? RAIATEA HELM: I was going into the studio to work on my next solo album. But while going through the songs, for some reason I didn’t feel the right drive. I thought about Uncle Keola—we’d just met [and] the chemistry was there right away—and for some strange reason, he was thinking about the same thing. It was a no-brainer to talk about recording a CD together. All of a sudden, we were making a CD and 18 months later, we made a “baby.” [Laughs] [Keola] is a perfectionist. While working with him in the studio, he had taught me a lot about being honest as a person and being courageous with my voice—finding things that I would never imagine trying. He really, really encouraged me to try to step out of that box and be open with myself. That’s what he taught me, and it made me comfortable in my own skin. It was quite an experience. KEOLA BEAMER: I’d listened to Raiatea’s records and liked the sound of her voice, but didn’t know too much about her. When I began to work with her, I really fell in love with the beautiful light behind her voice and I also really began to appreciate her discipline and her love of her craft. The thing about talent is that it’s a ke akua thing, you know? You can’t really learn it. You either have it as a gift or you don’t. That’s kind of the equation for music people, you have to have the gift and hopefully some kind of discipline to bring that gift forward. You must not only have talent, but a sincere wish to malama that talent. I work hard at it, and I help the

people I work with work hard at it. It’s not easy—we live in a 500-channel world with so many distractions. So when [people] come to see you, they deserve the very best.

During that first live collaboration, you performed “Ina,” John Lennon’s “Imagine” translated in Hawaiian. It’s also the first track on your CD. What significance does that song have to you? RH: You know, Keola is a genius with music—having the right songs come out for the right reasons. And that song has so much spirituality and a message. KB: It’s so amazing to me that John Lennon wrote that song 40 years ago, and it’s perhaps even more relevant in today’s world. When we performed that for the first time, people were weeping. It carries a message, and that’s what we’re carrying through these concerts. Carrying forward a message of aloha. Aloha is not just a word, it’s a way of being in the world. What can Maui audiences expect from your show? KB: What’s good about it is that this show has a lot of musical horsepower, with the best musicians in Hawaii. We’ve got a band that’s second to none and a great wind section. With Raiatea, myself and my wife, Moanalani, we all play as a group and there’s a cohesion, a strength, a refined beauty—each using our own skill set to bring the material forward. In contrast to a lot of contemporary Hawaiian music, many of the songs on your new CD are quite haunting—especially “I Kilohi Aku Au,” with its use of harmonics and spacious-sounding piano. Describe the motivations and emotions behind songs like these. KB [Raiatea] did a beautiful job on the vocals with “I Kilohi Aku Au.” I really appreciate the complexion of music, the space in music. Hawaiian music has a beautiful mana—the Chinese would say

chi—a healing energy. It kind of goes past language. It’s so hard to talk about music with words, but basically the space between the notes is as important as the notes themselves—and maybe more important. You have to create this sort of esoteric place that somehow reflects the guitar. Perhaps a way to look at it is, ancient Greeks had a thought that music and astronomy are separate sides of the same coin. Where astronomy is study of hidden objects in space, music is the study of hidden objects in the human soul—and the relationship of those objects. RH: “Haunting” is a good word for it, and I use it to describe that song all the time. When we began working on the album, “I Kilohi Aku Au” was the first song that Uncle Keola introduced me to, and it started the whole concept for the CD. When I first heard the music, I thought, “What? What is this?” I thought to myself, “I can’t sing to this.” He said, “No, just try.” So I did. I tried really hard. It was frustrating to me. When I sing, I try to put myself into a song. I try to put my whole body into it. You have to really dig deep when you sing a song— especially with a song you’re unfamiliar with. It took me three months to try to feel it and be comfortable.

Keola, you used six types of ki ho‘alu tunings in this recording, including classic D, G, D, G, B, D “taro patch” tuning, and your own, special C, G, D,G, Bb, E “G minor tuning.” Do you have a favorite way to play? KB: Each one has a different sort of tonal palette. I believe that part of the mastery of the instrument is understanding what the potential of each one of those palettes is. You have six strings on the guitar, and with each you get a new, I guess, “flavor” would be a word. The way I look at it is, I take a song and sort of imagine going down a hallway. It’s a long hallway with doors on either side. In one door is one type of tuning. So I take a song that I’m thinking about interpreting, and I’ll play it in one tuning, look at it in

the light of that tonal palette and assess if that coloration lifts up the piece. If it does, I know that’s where it belongs. Often times, it doesn’t happen with the first door. So you go to the next door. If that doesn’t work, you close that door and continue down.

Raiatea, last year you performed at the Presidential Inaugural Ball in Washington D.C. What’s your most memorable anecdote from that experience? RB: Besides the freezing cold? [Laughs] I think it was being a part of all the excitement. Everybody in Washington D.C., they’re very proud. Being in that moment, you can actually feel millions and millions of people at the same time. They’re really proud of a new world, change, and it was really cool to be a part of. It was exciting because all the Hawaii people were there, and were having a good time for one reason— representing Hawaii and Obama being President, and he being from Hawaii. Even though he didn’t come to our ball. It was pretty much a secret to everyone. With all the security and whatnot, you can’t really say what he’ll be going to. There were hundreds of balls that night. I met [Obama] before he was elected, when he came to Honolulu for a fundraiser at the Kahala. I performed at that, with Ho‘okena and Willie K and he spoke afterward. I got to take a photo with him and his wife Michelle. I remember I took a photo with the President, his wife, Willie K and [Willie’s] brother, and before he left, [Obama] accidentally stepped on my dress. My champagne colored gown! He said, “Oh, I’m sorry. I hope I didn’t ruin your dress.” I was looking at him, just totally star struck. I don’t know if I even said anything—I can’t remember. I didn’t wash it. I would never wash it. Or wear it! I leave it in the closet. Having performed all over the world, do you have a favorite place play? RH: Well, I haven’t been all over the world. I have yet to go to Europe. I’ve been to Japan, China, Tahiti and all over the United States. But I would love to travel the world more. KB: It’s hard to say, every place has its own wonder and beauty. I’m one of those people who likes to learn stuff. So when I’m with a different culture, I really try to participate— eat the food, hang with the people, walk off the beaten track—to get the feel of how people exist in different parts of the world. It’s a valuable, interesting experience. I have wonderful memories of places all around the world. I’m so remarkably grateful for music to have carried me so far. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410m

August 26, 2010 17


Film Critique

by Barry Wurst II barry@mauitime.com

Bite Me Supercharged carnivorous fish snacking on scantily clad co-eds—in 3D? Yes, please Piranha 3D

★★★★★

Jacques Cousteau’s recurring nightmare.

Rated R/89 min.

D

espite its considerable flaws, two things make Piranha 3D both recommendable and utterly critic-proof: the killer fish look great and the 3D effects are the best I’ve seen all year. Elisabeth Shue stars as a local law enforcer who discovers that, during an especially rowdy Spring Break weekend, the waters are overflowing with a bloodthirsty, thought-tobe-extinct breed of monster piranhas. Boats full of drunk, scantily clad and exceptionally stupid co-eds are soon mere appetizers for the toothy creatures, which are fast and ugly, like Gremlins with gills. Don’t bother seeing this for the actors. Shue looks embarrassed, Ving Rhames has one cool moment but is otherwise barely utilized and Jaws alum Richard Dreyfus, despite being top-billed, literally has nothing to do in his one scene. The only

18 August 26, 2010

bright spots are Christopher Lloyd (reunited with Shue for the first time since Back to the Future Part II), who goes on Doc Brown auto pilot as the local aquatic expert, and Jerry O’Connell, hamming it up as a thinly guised version of the Girls Gone Wild creator (here, it’s Wild Wild Girls). James Cameron enthusiasts won’t

appreciate this, but the 3D is as clever, layered and vivid as anything in Avatar. Other than How to Train Your Dragon and Despicable Me, most of this year’s 3D “enhanced” movies have been letdowns. Here’s one you’ll want to see on the big screen or not at all. You’ll not only feel closer than you’d ever want to get to the

title creatures, but you’ll see some other things thrust at you that you’ve never seen before in a mainstream movie. Yes, there are the inevitable moments of nudity (or, more accurately, extended scenes of gratuitous nudity) but there are some truly fiendish surprises that make this funnier and smarter than it has any right to be. The scares are minimal. I jumped a couple of times early on, but the film plays better as a dark comedy than a horror movie. Even with some genuine suspense at the end and ample gore at the mid-point, what stays with you are the outrageous, gleefully excessive moments. Joe Dante directed the original Piranha in 1978, a shameless Jaws parody/ripoff that also juggled shocks and laughs and featured the classic line, “They’re eating the guests, sir.” The remake is likewise a bawdy cheese fest, but with sensational 3D. Grab your rowdiest friends and have a blast. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410f


Film Capsules

NEW THIS WEEK TAKERS - PG13 - Drama, Action - A notorious bankrobbing crew decides to pull one last job and it goes off without a hitch. Or something. Matt Dillon, Anakin Skywalker, Stringer Bell from The Wire and that girlfriend-beating R&B singer star. 107 min. AVATAR 3D SPECIAL EDITION - PG13 - Fantasy - James Cameron’s little arthouse movie returns to theaters, because apparently it didn’t make enough money the first time. 162 min. THE LAST EXORCISM - PG13 - Horror - Based on the number of movies that have been made about exorcisms, we find this claim dubious at best. 100 min. GET LOW - PG 13 - Drama - An old recluse with skeletons in his closet plans his own funeral. We’re laughing already. Robert Duvall, Sissy Spacek and Bill Murray star. 102 min. HIGHWATER - NR - Documentary - First released in 2008, this surf doc chronicles Oahu’s Triple Crown and all the rivalries, partying and bad-ass waves that make it world famous. 97 min.

NOW SHOWING CATS & DOGS: THE REVENGE OF KITTY GALORE - PG - Adventure - Talking cats and dogs unite their uber-techie forces against an evil-doer feline. Chris O’Donnell and Alec Baldwin go slumming. 82 min. EAT, PRAY, LOVE - PG13 - Romance - Julia Roberts wanders the globe in search of spiritual fulfillment and hot Italian men in this adaptation of the bestselling, Oprah-certified book. 133 min. THE EXPENDABLES - R - Action - Sly Stallone and a gaggle of other sorta washed-up action stars try to prove they can still kick some butt. 103 min. INCEPTION - PG13 - Thriller - Leo DiCaprio and the chick from Juno invade people’s dreams in the latest mind-bender from director Christopher Nolan. 147 min. LOTTERY TICKET - PG13 - A kid holding the winning numbers has to survive a holiday weekend in the projects before he can cash in. May we suggest three nights in a locked hotel room, on credit? 95 min. NANNY MCPHEE RETURNS - PG- Comedy, Family - Honestly didn’t know she’d left. But yeah, Emma Thompson with fake warts, protruding tooth and a big prosthetic nose. Good times. 109 min. THE OTHER GUYS - PG13 - Comedy - Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg are mismatched cops who play by their own (ridiculous) rules. 107 min. PIRANHA 3D - R - This will either be the final nail in 3D’s coffin or this year’s Snakes on a Plane. Or maybe both. See this week’s Film Critique for more. 89 min. SALT - PG13 - Suspense - Angelina is again allaction in a flick not for the faint of heart. 99 min. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD - PG13 - Action, Comedy - A dude (Michael Cera) has to battle a chick’s seven evil exes to win her heart. What happened to dinner and a back rub? 113 min. STEP UP (3D) - PG13 - Drama - Interchangeable, tight-bodied dancer/”actors” gyrate provocatively. In an extra dimension. 97 min. THE SWITCH - PG13 - Comedy - A guy gets hammered and swaps his spunk with that of his gal pal’s sperm donor. Hilarity, and possibly a paternity suit, ensue. Jason Bateman and Jennifer Aniston star. 101 min. VAMPIRES SUCK - PG 13 - ...and so does this movie, the latest in a long line of cynical “comedies” that confuse shoddy reenactment with parody. Rub yourself in garlic, grab a wooden stake and then see something else. 80 min.

S H O W T I M E S FRONT STREET THEATER 900 Front Street, Lahaina, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-F until 6:30pm, Sa-Su until 3:30pm, Discount Tue) NANNY MCPHEE RETURNS - PG - THU-FRI 4:00, 6:30, 9:00. SAT-SUN 1:30, 4:00, 6:30, 9:00. MON-WED 4:00, 6:30, 9:00. THE EXPENDABLES - R - THU 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. FRI 4:15, 6:45, 9:15. SAT-SUN 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15. MON-WED 4:15, 6:45, 9:15. THE LAST EXORCISM - PG13 - FRI 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. SAT-SUN 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. MON-WED 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. VAMPIRES SUCK - PG13 - THU 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. FRI 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. SAT-SUN 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. MON-WED 4:45, 7:15, 9:45.

KA’AHUMANU 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm) THE OTHER GUYS - R - THU 11:45, 2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:25. FRI-SUN 11:45, 2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:25. MON-WED 11:45, 2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:25. NANNY MCPHEE RETURNS - PG - THU 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40. FRI-SUN 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40. MON-TUE 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40. WED 11:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD - PG - THU 12:05, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. FRI-SUN 12:05, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. MON-WED 12:05, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. STEP UP 3D - PG13 - THU 10:45, 1:05, 3:25, 5:45, 8:05. FR-SAT 10:45, 1:05, 3:25, 5:45, 8:05, 10:25. SUN 10:45, 1:05, 3:25, 5:45, 8:05. MON-WED 10:45, 1:05, 3:25, 5:45, 8:05. THE EXPENDABLES - R - THU 11:05, 1:25, 3:45, 6:05, 8:25. FRI-SAT 11:05, 1:25, 3:45, 6:05, 8:25, 10:45. SUN 11:05, 1:25, 3:45, 6:05, 8:25. MON-WED 11:05, 1:25, 3:45, 6:05, 8:25.

KUKUI MALL 1819 South Kihei Road, 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm) EAT, PRAY, LOVE - PG13 - THU 1:10, 4:05, 7:10. FRI-SAT 1:10, 4:05, 7:00, 9:55. SUN-WED 1:10, 4:05, 7:00. GET LOW-PG13 - FRI - SAT 11:15, 1:30, 3:45, 6:00, 8:15, 10:30. SUN 11:15, 1:30, 3:45, 6:00, 8:15. MON-WED 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45. INCEPTION - PG13 - THU 1:05, 4:05, 7:05. FRI-SAT 11:15, 2:20, 5:25, 8:30. MON-WED 1:05, 4:05, 7:05. THE EXPENDABLES - R - THU 1:20, 3:40, 6:00, 8:20 THE SWITCH - PG13 - THU 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45. FRI-WED 11:05, 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8:00, 10:15.

MAUI MALL MEGAPLEX Maui Mall, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm) (Wednesday showtimes unavailable at press time.) AVATAR 3D SPECIAL EDITION - PG13 - FRI-TUE 1:30, 5:00, 8:30. CATS AND DOGS: THE REVENGE OF KITTY GALORE (3D) - G - THU 2:55, 5:05, 7:15, 9:25. FRISAT 12:15, 2:25, 4:35. MON-TUE 2:25, 4:35. EAT, PRAY, LOVE - PG13 - THU 1:55, 3:05, 5:00, 6:10, 8:05, 9:15. FRI-TUE 1:55, 5:05, 8:05. GET LOW - PG13 - FRI-TUE 1:25, 3:50, 6:15, 8:40. HIGHWATER - Unrated - FRI-TUE 1:50, 4:10, 6:30, 8:50. INCEPTION (SONY DIGITAL) - PG13 - THU 1:45, 4:45, 8:00. FRI-TUE 1:30, 4:45, 8:00. LOTTERY TICKET - PG13 - THU 1:45, 4:10, 6:35, 9:00. FRI-TUE 1:45, 4:10, 6:35, 9:00. PIRANHA 3D - R - THU 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45. FRI-SUN 12:45, 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45. MON-TUE 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45. SALT (SONY DIGITAL) - PG13 - THU 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10:00. FRI-TUE 7:15, 9:40. TAKERS - PG13 - FRI-TUE 1:50, 4:25, 7:00, 9:35. THE LAST EXORCISM - PG13 - FRI-SUN 12:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30. MON-TUE 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30. THE SWITCH - PG13 - THU 2:35, 5:00, 7:25, 9:50. FRI-SUN 12:05, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. MONTUE 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. VAMPIRES SUCK - PG13 - THU 2:15, 4:25, 6:35, 8:45. FRI-SUN 12:00, 2:15, 4:25, 6:35, 8:45. MON-TUE 2:15, 4:25, 6:35, 8:45.

WHARF CINEMA CENTER 658 Front Street, 249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day) THE OTHER GUYS - R - THU 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 EAT, PRAY, LOVE - PG13 - THU 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00. FRI 1:45, 5:00, 8:00. SAT-WED 1:45, 5:00, 8:00. PIRANHA 3D - R -THU 2:00, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45. FRI-WED 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. TAKERS - PG13 -FRI 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. SAT-WED 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30.

Compiled by Jenn Brown

August 26, 2010 19


Picks

This Week's Picks Full Nelson

Horsing Around

Friday-Saturday (September 27-28), 9pm at Charley’s, 142 Hana Hwy., Paia

Saturday (August 28), 10am-2pm, Piiholo Ranch, Makawao

When you hear that a Nelson is set to play Charley’s, we know whose grizzled, twinkling visage you conjure up. Not so fast; we’re talking about the younger Nelson, 21-year-old Lukas. Raised on the road in Willie’s famed Honeysuckle Rose bus, Lukas inherited his father’s gift. But he’s also his own man—and his own musician. And, along with his band, Promise of the Real, he’ll be appearing at the popular Paia watering hole for two shows this weekend. With a sound that’s described as part “American heart’n’soul” with tinges of Latin, blues, country and funk, this is an outfit not be missed. “When we formed the band, we promised to be real and that’s where the name came from,” says Nelson. “It’s going to go for the rest of my life. I’m not doing it to get famous; I’m just doing it because I like playing.” P.O.R.T.A.L. opens the Friday show; Marty Dread and special guests open on Saturday. 579-8085, charleysmaui.com [Jacob Shafer]

Saddle up, equestrian enthusiasts, for the 2nd annual Maui Horse Show Association Fun Day. The association “provides Maui with sanctioned Western Pleasure, Jumper and Hunter shows and clinics” and seeks to “promote the welfare of horses and ponies.” For riders, they’re hosting events for both mounted PHOTO BY FRANÇOIS MARCHAL ($20 registration) and unmounted ($10 registration) participants, with sign-ups beginning an hour before the festival’s 10am start time. Plus, lots of good-natured fun for the whole ‘ohana, with activities including pony rides, games, face painting and crafts. The event will be held at the Piiholo Ranch (325 Waiahiwi Rd.); fairgoers unfamiliar with this Upcountry location should take Piiholo Rd. to the Waiahiwi fork and follow the signs for approximately 1.5 miles. 870-3877; mauihorseshow.com

20 August 26, 2010


by Anu Yagi calendar@mauitime.com

Girls Gone Rockin’

Wine & Dine

Mulligans on the Blue, Wednesday (September 1), 9-11pm, $7 for ladies includes a drink, boys free

Friday (September 3), 7pm at Gerard’s Restaurant, 174 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina, $75

Maui rock phenom Erin Smith isn’t satisfied sitting at home on her duff writing sonnets to her husband. She needs more. How much more? How about a night of rocking out for the ladies at Mulligan’s on the Blue, an event that’ll feature music, fun, fashion and hair. You’ve been looking for an excuse to get dressed up PHOTO BY JESSICA PEARL and go out with the girls, right? Maui Thing is featuring a new item every week, and gift certificate giveaways, and Soleil Luna is giving away coupons and gift certificates, while Erin Smith and Wolf will be rocking the room. All Smith’s natural-born inspiration and creativity will be pouring into new original music, and the occasional local entertainer will be guest appearing on these hot Wednesday nights; it’s going to be pure ear candy. Mulligan’s hosts from their beautiful perch in Wailea, and serves up a drink with your cover, plus boy-toys get in free. I’m looking for the right stilettos already. 874-1131, mulligansontheblue.com [Jen Russo]

Dining at Gerard’s is a one-ofa-kind experience; the awardwinning contemporary island-French cuisine is unparalleled on Maui. The dining room takes you on a no-ticketneeded trip to New Orleans with its old world charm, veranda and garden tables. Chef Gerard Reversade is recognized as one of our state’s extraordinary culinary masters, and has spent much of his life creating delicacies on the Valley Isle. He doesn’t throw wine dinners very often, so this is an exclusive chance to spend the night immersed in vinatages from the Burgundy region of France, paired with special chef’s selections. Bon appetit. 661-8939, gerardsmaui.com [JR]

THURSDAY 26

WAVETRAIN DIRTY,MODERN,ELECTRO FUNK MAUI’S BEST LIVE BAND 10pm-CLOSE / $5

FRIDAY 27 “home of the $1 mai tai� Kihei’s BEST Sunset Cocktail Spot!

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

RAMPAGE

THURSDAY 26 9pm

KIHEI’S LEGENDARY ISLAND REGGAE BAND

DAT GUYZ ORIGINAL AND ISLAND -53)# &!6/2)4%3

NA KOHO ISLAND DANCE MUSIC

KARAOKE

W/ OPENING ACT P.O.R.T.A.L & SPECIAL GUESTS VERY LIMITED SEATING 10PM- CLOSE $20 ADVANCE @ CHARLEY’S / $25 DOOR

SATURDAY 28

LUKAS NELSON & THE PROMISE OF THE REAL

SATURDAY 28 9pm SUNDAY 29 8pm

MONDAY 30 8pm

HAPPY HOUR PRICES ALL DAY!!

KARAOKE CONTEST TUESDAY 31

S

ST

U AUG

HT NIG

C I T O C

EXCLASSOIW & R SH CA

W/ OPENING ACT MARTY DREAD & SPECIAL '5%343 s 6%29 ,)-)4%$ 3%!4).' 10PM- CLOSE $20 ADVANCE @ CHARLEY’S / $25 DOOR

TUESDAY 31

TACO TUESDAY FRIDAY 27 9pm

INDUSTRY NIGHT...COME SING!

KARAOKE

LUKAS NELSON & THE PROMISE OF THE REAL

T O H

$2.50 TACOS, $3 MEXICAN BEERS 5pm-10pm

DANYEL ALANA & FRIENDS FEAT. DON LOPEZ, & JOHN SOMERA FUNKY ISLAND SOUL

SUNDAY AUG. 29TH

LIVE MUSIC GIVEAWAYS

TROPHIES FOR BEST EXOTIC CAR & CLASSIC CAR

kkk $3 COORS LIGHT &

DRINK SPECIALS

5-9PM

10pm-CLOSE / $5

WEDNESDAY 1 MOJAM PARK PRESENTS FROM PORTLANDS UNDERGROUND FUNK SCENE MAUI’S FIRST DOOKIE JAM W/ LEGENDARY BASSIST: DANNY WILSON ON DRUMS: FUNKPLASTIC ALL MUSICIANS, POETS, MC’S & ARTISTS WELCOME 10pm-CLOSE / $5

9pm PRIZES!! $1 TACOS #/2/.!3 s #5%26/ 3(/43

OPEN MIC WATCH OR BE A STAR!

WEDNESDAY 1 9pm

1913 S Kihei Rd 808.891.8010 ACROSS FROM FOODLAND

VOTED BEST HAPPY HOUR ON MAUI! CHARLEY’S RESTAURANT Reservations & Info 808-579-8085 Booking Info: michael53valenzuela@gmail.com

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Calendar

Da Kine Calendar BIG SHOWS LUKAS NELSON & PROMISE OF THE REAL W/ SPECIAL GUESTS - Fri & Sat, Aug 27 & 28. Two nights with Nelson, who was raised on his father Willie’s famed Honeysuckle Rose bus. P.O.R.T.A.L. opens on Friday and Marty Dread on Saturday. If you don’t get tickets lickety split, you’ll miss it. See This Week’s Picks for more. $20 advance / $25 door. Charley’s Restaurant & Saloon, 142 Hana Hwy., Paia; 808-579-9453; charleyspaia.com Q103 AND HOUSE OF ROOTS PRESENT J BOOG Fri, Aug 27. This Samoan star is sure to pack the house, and you’ll be asking to “do it again.â€? Joining him are Siaosi, Jah-Maoli, Hot Rain, and Tiva of PacďŹ c Vibes (formerly of Kapena). $20 when you buy online. 6 p.m. Mulligan’s on the Blue, 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea; 808-874-1131; houseofroots. com / mulligansontheblue.com KEOLA BEAMER & RAIATEA HELM - Sat, Aug 28. Two world-class artists share their love of Hawaiian music and culture, and celebrate their new CD “Keola Beamer & Raiatea.â€? See this week’s Music Scene for more. $30 / $35 / $45. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808242-7469; mauiarts.org KEYS OF CREATION - Sat, Aug 28. Want to live up Polynesia? Head down to the South side. Arise opens. $10. 10 p.m. Stella Blues Cafe, 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei; 808-874-3779; stellablues.com

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

FOODIE OUTBACK FUNDRAISER FOR NURSING STUDENTS - Every Mon, Tue & Wed. Kihei’s Outback Steakhouse supports the 2010 graduating RN class and will donate 50% of proceeds from a special takeout menu. Funds will be utilized for their gradation ceremony, as the University does not ďŹ nancially support the event. $20. 4-9:30 p.m. Outback Steakhouse, Pi’ilani Shopping Center, 281 Pi’ikea Ave., Kihei, HI 96753

TICKETS ON SALE ULUWEHI GUERRERO CONCERT - Sat, Sep 4. Kaulupono Music proudly presents Maui’s own Kumu Hula and Na Hoku Hanohano Awar-Winning male Vocalist Uluwehi Guerrero and Halu Hula Kauluokala in “Na Mele O Ku’u Pu’uwai,� Songs of My Heart. $25-$40. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org 5TH ANNUAL HULA FESTIVAL - Sat, Sep 11. This international competition features group and solo dancers from Japan as well as Hawai‘i nei. The groups compete in adult male and female categories, along with solo performances in kahiko (traditional) and ‘auana (modern). $25 / Half-price for keiki 12 years & under. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org PAULA FUGA, MIKE LOVE & HUTCH HUTCHINSON - Fri & Sat, Sept 17 & 18. What better way

22 August 26, 2010

by Anu Yagi calendar@mauitime.com

to start the fall show season than with this trio?. Stella Blues Cafe, 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei; 808-874-3779; stellablues.com HANDS PERCUSSION TEAM - Thu, Sep 23. A world-renowned professional percussion ensemble from Malaysia, where the “handâ€? is the spirit of the drummer, bringing life to the drum. $12 / $25 / $32. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org THE LARRY CARLTON TRIO - Fri, Sep 24. Jazz fusion, blues and rock guitarist, Larry Carlton is a triple Grammy winner whose credits include performing on more than 100 records that have gone Gold or Platinum. Larry’s theme music credits include “Against All Oddsâ€? and “Who’s the Boss.â€?. $12 / $28 / $38. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org THE ATARIS - Sat, Sep 25. Celebrating Hard Rock’s 20th anniversary, The Ataris will headline. The group is currently touring and recording their forthcoming album “The Graveyard of the Atlantic.â€? Doors open at 9pm, music at 9:30pm. 21+ only. For tickets, visit the Hard Rock. $23 advance / $28 door (partial proceeds to beneďŹ t The Sustaina.) 9 p.m. The Hard Rock Cafe, 900 Front St., Lahaina; 808-667-7400; hardrock.com/ maui / groovetickets.com ROB SCHNEIDER - Sat, Sep 25. You can do it. Get tickets to see Schneider stand-up live, in concert with Brian Evans. $35 / $55/ $95 VIP includes backstage meet and greet. 9:30-11:30 p.m. Maui Theatre, 878 Front St. (Old Lahaina Center), Lahaina; 808-856-7973; themauicelebrityseries.com MAKANA - Sun, Sep 26. Ooh, mama—it’s Makana. This suave slack key phenom returns to the Supper Club. Stella Blues Cafe, 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei; 808-874-3779; stellablues.com

ard Ho’opi’i Leo Ki’e Ki’e Falsetto Contest. Vie for cash prizes $200-$500. Must be 18 years or older. No entry fee for competitors. Ritz-Carlton Kapalua, 1 Ritz Carlton Dr., Kapalua; 808-870-7546 / 808268-9285; noelaniw@gmaill.com CREATE CLEAN BEACHES - Beginning Sept 1. Take part in a cleanup of your favorite beach and monitor marine debris along Maui’s shorelines, through “Volunteering on Vacation,â€? a free program offered by PaciďŹ c Whale Foundation. Free tote bag for your good deed. PaciďŹ c Whale Foundation, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808249-8811 ext. 1; paciďŹ cwhale.org SCHAEFER PORTRAIT CHALLENGE - This highly anticipated, statewide juried triennial exhibit promises to be captivating, and the prospectus for the 2012 challenge will be made available starting September 2010, online or in the gallery. Schaefer International Gallery, MACC, 1 Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org O’O FARM VOLUNTEER PROJECT - Beginning Sept 1. Work on an organic farm in Upcountry, through “Volunteering on Vacation,â€? a free program offered by PaciďŹ c Whale Foundation. 8:3011:30 a.m. O’o Farm, Waipoli Rd., Kula; 808-2498811 ext. 1; paciďŹ cwhale.org / oofarm.com ONSITE CORAL REEF NATURALIST PROGRAM Daily (except Fri & Sat). Learn names of ďŹ sh you’ve seen while snorkeling and ďŹ nd out how to protect Maui’s reefs, from knowledgeable folks at the PaciďŹ c Whale Foundation’s free Coral Reef Information Station. Sponsored by Hawaii Tourism Authority. Free. 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Ulua Beach, Wailea, Between the Renaissance Wailea Resort and the Wailea Marriott, Wailea; 808-249-8811 ext. 1; paciďŹ cwhale.org

AN INTIMATE EVENING WITH DONNA DELORY Thu, Sep 30. 2010 BhaktiFest & Lilith Fair headliner, Donna Delory returns to Maui, making her MACC debut for an intimate musical evening. The ethereal music star (former Madonna backup vocalist) will perform with her long time collaborator, Cameron Stone. $22 / Buy two get 2nd half-off. 7:30 p.m. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; mauiarts.org

EVENTS

JOHN CRUZ - Every Fri & Sat. Not one, but two nights headlining the Supper Club. Stella Blues Cafe, 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei; 808-8743779; stellablues.com

CFL LIGHTBULB WORKSHOP - Active exchange program with CFL for all of you old light bulbs. Yep. You can exchange all of your old bulbs for brand new ones. Powerpoint presentation. Free. 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Community Work Day, 808-357-0920; blueplanetfoundation.org

TOM ARNOLD, BRIAN EVANS, AND SPECIAL GUEST CHEECH MARIN - Thu, Dec 30. You read that right: “Cheech & Chong� star Cheech Marin is coming. He’ll perform alongside Maui Celebrity Series second-timer Tom Arnold, and show crooner/creator Brian Evans. Get tickets now for this December show, and be someone’s best-ever Santa. $35 / 55 / $69.50 (VIP). 8-10:30 p.m. Maui Theatre, 878 Front St. (Old Lahaina Center), Lahaina; 808856-7973; themauicelebrityseries.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS ARTISTS, VENDORS AND MUSICIANS, OH MY! - The Wailuku First Friday event planning hui is trying out an expanded location and offering free spaces for artists, vendors and musicians. Interested? Contact Teri at iftheshoeďŹ ts1@hawaiiantel.net. Free. Wailuku First Friday, Market St., Wailuku; 808-249-9710 CALL FOR FALSETTO CONTESTANTS - Daily. Maui County’s amateur male falsettos are invited to showcase their talent at the ninth annual Rich-

THURSDAY, AUG 26 MAUI PHOTO FESTIVAL & WORKSHOPS - Bringing the top pros to the most photogenic locations. Boost your mad shooting skills at this annual workshop series. A must for shutterbugs. Continues through August 29. Hyatt Regency Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka’anapali; mauiphotofestival.com

POET GALLERY SLAM - A Maui Slam Fundraiser to help send Mountain to the Individual World Poetry Slam. Performances by Maui Slam poets. Open mic for rogues 18 and older. Fashion show by A.R.I.E Designs and Lola & Anna. Paia Tattoo Gallery Art Exhibit. Inspired beats. BYOB. $5 / $10 suggested donation. 6-10 p.m. Paia Tattoo Parlor, 120 Hana Hwy., Paia; 808-579-8515 / paiatattooparlor@yahoo.com COMEDY NIGHT - Tonight, Ambrosia’s brand of funny returns. Wondering about the recent onisle comedy explosion? They say they started it all. Stick around for Old School Thursdaze with DJ Del Sol, to follow. $5 advance / $7 door. 8 p.m. Ambrosia, 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei; 808-891-1011 TURTLE TALKS - In honor of Sea Turtle Mania month, talk-story sessions about turtles will take place at the Turtle Lagoon. Join renowned sea turtle experts and aquarium staff who will discuss the fascinating life of green sea turtles, both in the open ocean and at Maui Ocean Center. Complimentary with aquarium admission. 12 p.m. Maui Ocean Center, 192 Ma’alaea Rd.,


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

8/26

8/27

8/28

8/29

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

8/30 - 9/01

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

ALE HOUSE

Thirsty Thursdays w/ DJ Style, Kamikaze & Da Hawaiian

Flashback Fridays w/ Next Level Ent., 9pm; $10

AMBROSIA

Old School Thursdaze w/ DJ Del Sol, 10pm

What the Funk! Fridays w/ Special Guest DJ Daniel J

Sunrize Saturdaze w/ DJ Decka, 10pm

‘Ohana Groove

Estee & Company

355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001

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

BOCALINO BISTRO & BAR 1445 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-4041

Boat Night w/ DJ Jamn J 10pm; No Cover

TUES - Ladies Night w/ Bad Kitty, 8 - 11pm WED - Cheryl Rae Band

Closed

MON - Wolf & Ryan /TUE - Drum & Bass w/ DJ AstroRaph; WED - Maui’s HI-5 Night w/ DJ Del Sol & DJ CIA WED - Latino/Blues & Jazz Night w/ Lydia Toccafondy & Neto Peraza TUE - Willie K, 9 - 11pm; $10 WED - Ladies Night, 10pm-1am; $10

CASANOVA

Closed for renovation

Closed for renovation

Closed for renovation

CHARLEY’S

Wavetrain 10 pm ; $5

Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real w/ P.O.R.T.A.L.

Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real w/ Marty Dread

Barefoot Minded 7 - 10pm; No Cover

Dave Caroll 7 - 10pm; No Cover

Dave Caroll 7 - 10pm; No Cover

Erin Smith 7 - 10pm; No Cover

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

DIAMONDS ICE BAR

Alternative Night w/ DJ Ralph, 10pm; No Cover

House Blessing

Vince Esquire 10pm; No Cover

Gina Martinelli

MON - Gomega / TUE - Open Mic Night WED - House Mic Night (All 10pm; No Cover)

DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB

Quiz Night / DJ Chrest 10pm; No Cover

Jarod 10pm; No Cover

Junior 10pm; No Cover

Sunday Funday

MON - Ka’ena Elaban; TUE - Live Music WED - Jessica & Friend (All 10pm; No Cover)

Karaoke

Kanaka Jams No Cover

Karaoke

TUE - Pool Tournament WED - Ladies Night / DJ Dance Party

Rampage 9pm-Close

Dat Guyz 9pm - Close

Karaoke 8pm - Close

MON - Karaoke / TUE - “Jersey Shore” Karaoke Contest; WED - Open Mic Night

Karaoke

MON through WED - Karaoke

1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220

142 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8085

COOL CAT CAFE

Wharf Cinema, Lahaina - 667-0908

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

1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-9669

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

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

Na Koho 9pm - 1:30am

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

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

TUE - Danyell Alana 10 pm; WED - Rack ‘Em Up Wednesdays & Dookie Jam

Sonido Inspiracion Latina 9:30pm; $7

HARD ROCK CAFE ISANA

Closed for renovation

Karaoke

LOCAL MOCHA CAFE’ MAUI 81 Makawao Ave., Pukalani - 344-5884

Karaoke

Karaoke

Live Music

Live Music

MON through WED - Karaoke

Ma`alaea; 808-270-7000; mauioceancenter.com

SATURDAY, AUG 28

SUNDAY, AUG 29

TUESDAY, AUG 31

FRIDAY, AUG 27

16TH ANNUAL SEABURY HALL GOLF TOURNAMENT - Two-person scramble. Call athletics director Steve Colflesh for more information or visit seaburyhall.org. The Dunes at Maui Lani, 1333 Maui Lani Pkwy., Kahului; 808-572-8394

BOWLING TOURNAMENT - For kupuna ages 50+. Apply at the center. $40 entry fee. Maui Bowling Center, 1976 E. Vineyard St., Wailuku; 808-244-4596

TIN CAN COMEDY: CHAMPIONSHIP FINALS - It’s been months in the making? Who will win the granddaddy honors of opening for Augie T live at the ‘Iao Theater on September 4? This is the night to find out. No Cover. 9-10 p.m. Mulligan’s on the Blue, 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea; 808-874-1131; mulligansontheblue.com

DEMO: THE HEALING TOUCH - Practitioners of the subtle energy touch of Akash Khi mudras say it may awaken your wholeness of being, energetic renewal, and cosmic consciousness. Find out for yourself in this free introductory demo, with mudra master Jasmin Akash Khi. Free. 6-7:30 p.m. The Studio Maui, 810 Haiku Rd, Suite 265, Haiku; 808575-9390; thestudiomaui.com KAMA’AINA NIGHTS FEATURING IKAIKA LUM LUNG - Enjoy uniquely kama’aina entertainment at this monthly event. Free. 6-8 p.m. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-877-3369; queenkaahumanucenter.com MANTRAS AND MOJITOS - Lululemon Athletica Maui Showroom will provide free 60 minute all levels yoga class led by yoga instructor Nadia Toraman. Afterwards, mingle with the yoga community and enjoy Maui’s sunset with specially priced mojitos that incorporate the Westin’s Super Foods. 6-8 p.m. Westin Maui Resort & Spa, 2365 Kaanapali Pkwy., Lahaina, HI, 96761, Lahaina; 808-667-2525 FULL MOON PARTY - Presented by Primo (with promo giveaways all night). Securing beats to boogie your booty to are The Whiskey Pimps and N8 Castro. Plus serious screenage upon which cult movie classics and moonscape imagery will be projected. Outdoor lounge. Surprises. $10. 10 p.m. Lulu’s Lahaina Surf Club & Grill, Lahaina Cannery Mall, 1221 Honoapiilani Hwy. #A1, Lahaina; 808-661-0808 MAUI PHOTO FESTIVAL & WORKSHOPS - A must for shutterbugs. Continues through August 29. Hyatt Regency Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka’anapali; mauiphotofestival.com WO HING MUSEUM AFTER DARK - Let the lights from the Wo Hing Museum draw you in for its special Friday hours of 1 to 8pm. With its usual day time hours 10am to 4pm, visitors have the unique opportunity to visit the museum and temple at night. $2 General Admission, Kids 12 and under free. 1-8 p.m. Wo Hing Temple Museum, 858 Front St., Lahaina; 808-661-3262; lahainarestoration.org DANCE JAM - 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. Studio Maui, Haiku Marketplace, 810 Haiku Rd., Suite 265, Haiku; 808-575-9390; www.thestudiomaui.com

HOT AUGUST NIGHTS EXOTIC AND CLASSIC CAR SHOW - Vrooom! Ogle at will and fulfill your fuelinjection fantasies. No Cover. 5-8 p.m. Oceans Beach Bar & Grill, 1819 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei; 808-891-2414

UFC #118 - If you care, saying simply “BJ Penn” is unnecessary. $10 Cover. Kahului Ale House, 355 E. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului; 808-877-9001; alehouse.net

FREE SUNDAY FUNDAY YOGA - Complimentary alllevels yoga class, at Paia Yoga. Free. 11 a.m.-12 p.m. lululemon athletica, 93 Hana Hwy., Paia; 808-579-9108

UFC #118 - Where to watch, in Wailuku. 4-8 p.m. Greenleaf Sports Bar, 1088 L. Main St., Wailuku; 808-244-4888

PET-A-PALOOZA - There are kitties and canines who need loving na ‘ohana. Check out this special, weekly open house and find your new best friend. Free. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Maui Humane Society, 1350 Meha Meha Loop, Puunene; 808-8773680; mauihumanesociety.org

NATIVE HAWAIIAN PLANT SALE - Grow native. Promote the survival of native Hawaiian plants by growing them in your own backyard. Offering kamani, kukui, kalo, ko’oloa’ula, kolomona, several native bibiscus, ‘ohi’a ai (mountain apple), awapuhi, ‘ohi’a lehua, ‘ilima, ‘ulu, ‘awa, mai’a, a. 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Nui Botanical Gardens, 150 Kanaloa Ave., Kahului; 808249-2798; mnbg.org

SOME HERE

MAUI PHOTO FESTIVAL & WORKSHOPS - A must for shutterbugs. Continues through August 29. Hyatt Regency Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka’anapali; mauiphotofestival.com

MAUI PHOTO FESTIVAL & WORKSHOPS - Final day! A must for shutterbugs. Hyatt Regency Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka’anapali; mauiphotofestival.com

ALL ONLINE

Calendar Listings

MONDAY, AUG 30

on mauitime.com

MECO COMMUNITY DAY Putting the co in community, MECO wants to partner with you for a better island. Free. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-877-3369; queenkaahumanucenter.com KEIKI STORYTIME - Hosted in the “Hawaiians and the Sea” exhibit and followed by a fun craft. Complimentary with aquarium admission and appropriate for children ages 3-12. 11:30 a.m. Maui Ocean Center, 192 Ma’alaea Rd., Ma`alaea; 808270-7000; mauioceancenter.com THE MAUI WAVE STUDIO “SAVE THE MUSIC” BENEFIT CONCERT - Not-to-be-missed musical event featuring Rushouze, Arise, and 6oldawn Won & The HI-Hatz, with special guest Stef Lomeli. Sponsored by 97.3 KROK, Oceans Bar Kihei, AECG Music. $5 before 11pm / $10 after. 9 p.m. Oceans Beach Bar & Grill, 1819 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei; 808-891-2414

KEIKI CRAFTS - Exciting ocean-themed crafts at the craft station in the Marine Mammal Discovery Center. Complimentary with aquarium admission and appropriate for children ages 3-12. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Maui Ocean Center, 192 Ma’alaea Rd., Ma`alaea; 808270-7000; mauioceancenter.com HULA SHOW - Original hip-sters. Free. 10 a.m. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-877-3369; http://www. queenkaahumanucenter.com TURTLE TALKS - In honor of Sea Turtle Mania month, talk-story sessions about turtles will take place at the Turtle Lagoon. Join renowned sea turtle experts and aquarium staff who will discuss the fascinating life of green sea turtles, both in the open ocean and at Maui Ocean Center. Complimentary with aquarium admission. 12 p.m. Maui Ocean Center, 192 Ma’alaea Rd., Ma`alaea; 808-270-7000; mauioceancenter.com

“JERSEY SHORE” KARAOKE CONTEST - This may be the one occasion where “Jersey Shore,” is in any way acceptable (let alone fun). Hosted by LAB girl Shay. Prizes will be given to top singers and best outfits. Contestants may reserve a song by calling or stopping-in. 10 p.m. Haui’s Life’s A Beach, 1913 S. Kihei Rd. #E, Kihei; 808-276-3676

WEDNESDAY, SEP 01 MASTERS OF HAWAIIAN SLACK KEY GUITAR SERIES WITH GRAMMY-WINNER GEORGE KAHUMOKU JR. AND HAWAII’S TOP SLACK KEY ARTISTS - Masters of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Series with Grammy-winner George Kahumoku Jr. and Hawaii’s top slack key artists. $39.99. 7:30 p.m. Napili Kai Beach Resort, 5900 L. Honoapiilani Rd., Napili; 808-669-6271; napilikai.com SEAWEES - OCEAN “ED-VENTURE” FOR PRESCHOOLERS - Explore the forces that shape our world. Weekly program (today through 9/15) themed “Water, Waves & Wind,” for keiki 3-5 and their caregivers. Lead by experienced early childhood educators, culminating with a field trip to make/test wind/ water tools/toys. $10 per adult / $5 per child / $40 for all five. 9-10 a.m. Pacific Whale Foundation’s Discovery Center, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 211, Maalaea; 808-249-8811 ext. 1; pacificwhale.org

ART ARTISTS IN RESIDENCE PROGRAM EXHIBITION: “THE POLITICS OF PAPER / MANY STORIES, MANY VOICES” - Daily. See case-study work about using the arts as a catalyst for social change, by Favianna Rodriguez and Orlando Reyes. Free. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Hui No’eau Visual Arts Center, 2841 Baldwin Ave., Makawao; 808-572-6560; huinoeau.com FAR ART - Daily (except Sunday). Featuring works by eleven artists who led Maui’s counterculture of the late sixties and early seventies. From Rainbow Bridge to Rainbow Sun, they exchanged the con-

August 26, 2010 23


THE LINEUP THURSDAY s PM

WILLIE K BAND

MULLIGANS PUB QUIZ Hosted by Trish “The Dish� & Daithi MIDNIGHT FRIDAY s PM

HOUSE OF ROOTS W/ J BOOG, SIAOSI, JAH-MAOLI, HOT RAIN & TIVA W/ PACIFIC VIBES 4)8

SATURDAY s PM

JAZZ ON THE BLUE SUNDAY s PM

THE CELTIC TIGERS LIVE BAND ./ #/6%2 s PM #,/3% MONDAY s PM CLOSE

WILLIE K BAND 2/#+ 9/52 7/2,$

$07&3 t "4, "#065 ,"." "*/" 3"5&

TUESDAY s PM

MURRAY THORNE TIN CAN TUESDAYS

Bring a can of food for the Maui Food Bank, get half off your drink!

TIN CAN COMEDY W/

3(!''9 1

PM

WEDNESDAY s PM

WILLIE K LADIES NIGHT PM CLOSE

s +AUKAHI 3T 7AILEA (Located at the Wailea Blue Course)

WWW -ULLIGANS/N4HE"LUE COM

Mahalo to our over 2,000 Facebook friends and counting...

.com 24 August 26, 2010

SEAN MICHAEL HOWER

808.250.1788 MAUI WEDDING MEDIAS.COM

YOU ONLY HAVE ONE SPECIAL DAY—CAPTURE IT CORRECTLY.


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

8/26

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

8/27

8/28

8/29

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

8/30 - 9/01

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

JAVA JAZZ

Renee Alonso 7 pm - Close; No Cover

Guest Performer 7 pm - Close; No Cover

Farzad & Mike Madden 7 pm - Close; No Cover

Brian Cuomo 7 pm - Close; No Cover

MON - Guest Performer 7 pm - Close; No Cover; TUE - WED - Rene Alonzo 7 pm - Close; No Cover

KAHALE’S

Vince Esquire

Kenny Roberts

Eight Track Players

Betzt Adam

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

KIMO’S

Benny Ueytake

Fausta & Kawika 8 - 10pm

Glen & Ben 8 - 10pm

Sam Ahia

MON, TUE & WED - Sam Ahia

KOBE STEAKHOUSE

Karaoke & Dancing w/ Aunty Toddy Lilikoi

Karaoke & Dancing w/ Aunty Toddy Lilikoi

LONGHI’S LAHAINA

Crazy Fingers 9pm - 1am; No Cover Karaoke 7:30 - 11pm; No Cover

WED - Karaoke 7:30 - 11 pm; No Cover

3350 L. Honoapiilani Rd. 667-0787

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei 875-7711

845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555

888 Front St., Lahaina - 667-2288

LULU’S KIHEI

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

LULU’S LAHAINA

Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

Netto & Barbara Salsa / Latin Top 40 DJ; 8pm - 2am

Tony Ray & Friends / Hip Hop Sesh

Gay Night 10pm - 2am

Classic Rock Thursday w/ Howard Ahia

Full Moon Friday w/ The Whiskey Pimps & DJ N8 Castro

X-clusive Saturday Nights w/ All Access & DJ Big Mike

MON - Service Industry Night / TUES - Dolla Balla Night w/ DJ Twizzy / WED - Sizzling Salsa Nights

Kulewa 9:30pm; No Cover

WED - Open Mic Night, 10pm; No Cover

MAUI BREWING CO.

Kahana Gateway Center - 669-3474

MOANA CAFE

71 Baldwin Ave., Paia - 579-9999

Phil & Angie Benoits / Movie Night

Ray’s House 10pm - 2am; $10

TUE - Open Mic Night DJ Pete 90X No Cover, 9 pm - 12 am

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S 2511 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891-8644

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S 844 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7758

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

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

sciousness of art for the art of consciousness. Showcase runs through December 31. Puka Puka, 43 Hana Hwy., Pa’ia; 808-579-3080 THE MASTERS’ EXHIBITION - Mon-Sat. A fine exhibit of new artworks by local artists, running through Sept 18. Gallery hours are 10am-6pm Monday-Friday, 10am-5pm on Saturdays. Closed Sunday. Free. Upcountry Fine Art, 1156 Makawao Ave., Makawao; 808-573-6000 EXHIBITION: MCCANN AND KEAY - Daily. A joint show with works by self-taught fiber artist, Mika McCann and oil paintings by Anna Keay. Free. 6-8 p.m. Lahaina Arts Society Courthouse Gallery, 648 Wharf St., Lahaina; 808-244-5489; lahaina-arts.com

SCHOOL SPORTS MIL FOOTBALL - Thu, Aug 26. Preseason. Baldwin vs. San Clemente (Calif.). 7 p.m. War Memorial Stadium, 211 Kanaloa Ave., Kahului; 808-270-7389 MIL GIRLS VOLLEYBALL - Thu, Aug 26. Lahainaluna at Kamehameha Maui. 7 p.m. Kamehameha High School Maui, 275 Aapueo Pkwy., Makawao; MIL GIRLS VOLLEYBALL - Fri, Aug 27. Baldwin at King Kekaulike. 6:30 p.m. King Kekaulike High School, 121 Kula Hwy., Pukalani; MIL FOOTBALL - Fri, Aug 27. Maui High vs. Kamehameha Maui. 7 p.m. War Memorial Stadium, 211 Kanaloa Ave., Kahului; 808-270-7389 MIL CROSS COUNTRY - Sat, Aug 28. Meet #1. 9 a.m. Seabury Hall Erdman Athletic Center, 480 Olinda Rd., Makawao MIL GIRLS VOLLEYBALL - Sat, Aug 28. Kamehameha Maui at Maui High. 6:30 p.m. Maui High School, 660 Lono Ave., Kahului; 808-873-3000 MIL FOOTBALL - Sat, Aug 28. Lahainaluna at King Kekaulike. Na Ali’i take on the Lunas after a seasonopening win. 7 p.m. King Kekaulike High School, 121 Kula Hwy., Pukalani

DINNER MUSIC WEST MAUI CANOES - Sun, Live Jazz 3-6 p.m.; Fri, Howard Ahia 5:30-8:30 p.m. 1450 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-0937.

Jonny & the Ringo’s 9:30pm; No Cover Pub Quiz Night with Trish the Dish, 9:30pm - 12am

DJ Black House 9pm; $5

House Music 9pm; No Cover

MON - Country Music, 9pm / TUE - DJ Black House 9pm; $5 / WED - Dubfire, 9:30pm; No Cover

House of Roots w/ J Boog & Siaosi, Jah-Maoli, Hot Rain, Tiva

Jazz on the Blue 7 - 10pm

The Celtic Tigers, 6 - 9:30pm / Live Band, 10pm - Close

MON - Willie K Band / TUE - Murray Thorne/Tin Can Comedy w/ Shaggy / WED - Open Mic w/ Rick Glencross

Johnny Ringo 10pm; No Cover

Sounds of Addiction 10pm; No Cover

Ryan Palma 10pm; No Cover

MON - Bloodlines / TUES - Ryan Palma / WED TBA (All sets 10pm; No Cover)

DUKES BEACH HOUSE - Every Mon, Tue & Wed, Damien & Edee 6-8:30 p.m.; Thu, Ernie 3-5 p.m.; Thu, Garrett & Peter 6-8:30 p.m.; Fri, Damien Awai 3-5 p.m.; Every Fri & Sat, Kulewa 6-8:30 p.m.; Every Sun & Sat, Mondo 3-5 p.m.; Sun, Ernie & Miles 6-8:30 p.m.; Every Mon, Tue & Wed, Brian 3-5 p.m. 130 Kai Malina Pkwy., Lahaina, 808-662-2900.

Rocks Band 2:30-5 p.m.; Sat, JD & Harry 2:305 p.m.; Sun, Kilohana. Whaler’s Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy. Bldg. J, Ka’anapali, 808-661-4495. LONGBOARDS KA’ANAPALI - Every Tue, Wed, Thu & Fri, Solo guitarist 5:30-8:30 p.m. 100 Nohea Kai Dr., Lahaina, 808-667-1200.

MERRIMAN’S - Daily (except Mon & Tue), Ranga HULA GRILL - Fri, Ernest Pua’a 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m., Pae 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Mon, The Benoits 5:30-8:30 Kawika Lum Ho 2-4 p.m., Dub Fire 4:15-5:15 p.m., p.m.; Tue, David Choy 5:30-8:30 p.m. 1 Bay Club Pl., Ernest Pua’a & Kawika Lum Ho, 6:30-9p.m.; Sat, Lahaina, 808-669-6400. Jack Stone 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m., Kawika Lum Ho 2-4 MULLIGAN’S AT THE WHARF - Fri, Irish Aloha Frip.m., Oren & JR 4:15-5:15 p.m., TBA, 6:30-9p.m.; Sun, days 7-9 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, 658 Front St., Ron Hetteen 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m., Kawika Lum Ho 2-4 Lahaina, 808-661-8881. p.m., Dub Fire 4:15-5:15 p.m., Derrick Sebastian Trio, PINEAPPLE GRILL - Sat, Jazz on the Green 7-10 6:30-9p.m.; Mon, Ernest Pua’a 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m., p.m.; Fri, Jawaiian Music 7-10 p.m. 200 Kapalua Dr., Kawika Lum Ho 2-4 p.m., Armadillo 4:15-5:15 p.m., Kapalua, 808-669-9600. Derrick Sebastian & Josh Kahula, 6:309p.m.; Tue, Kawika Lum Ho 11:30 PIONEER INN GRILL & BAR - Tue, a.m. - 1 p.m., Ernest Pua’a 2-4 Ah Tim Elenicki 5:30-8:30 p.m.; p.m., Peter DeAquino 4:15-5:15 Wed, Greg DiPiazza 6-8 p.m. p.m., Ernest Pua’a & Friends 658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 8086:30-9p.m.; Wed, Mika Vil661-8881. laren 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m., ErRITZ-CARLTON KAPALUA nest Pua’a 2-4 p.m., Peter - Every Wed & Thu, BanDeAquino 4:15-5:15 p.m., yan Tree Restaurant. 1 Ritz Ernest Pua’a & Friends Carlton Dr., Kapalua, 8086:30-9p.m. Whaler’s Village, 669-6200. 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Bldg mauitime.com/listing SEA HOUSE RESTAURANT P, Lahaina, 808-667-6636. - Every Sun & Thu, Andrew JAVA JAZZ/SOUP NUTZ Kaina 7-9 p.m.; Sat, Coehlo MorEvery Tue, Wed & Thu, Renee rison 7-9 p.m.; Every Mon & Wed, Alonso 7 p.m.; Every Mon & Fri, Albert Kaina 7-9 p.m.; Every Tue & Fri, Guest Performer 7 p.m.; Sat, Farzad & Kincaid Kupahu 7-9 p.m. 5900 Lower HonoMike Madden 7 p.m. 3350 L. Honoapiilani Hwy. apiilani Hwy., Napili, 808-669-1500. #203 & 204, Honokowai , 808-667-0787. TIAJUANA’S CANTINA - Wed, Tableside Magic KIMO’S RESTAURANT - Thu, Hula Honeys 6:30-8:30 with Brenton Keith 6-9 p.m. 2291 Kaanapali Pkwy., p.m.; Fri, Barefoot Minded 8-10 p.m.; Sat, Glen & Ben Lahaina, 808-667-4080. 8-10 p.m.; Sun through Wed, Sam Ahia 6-8 p.m. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-4811.

DIAMONDS ICE BAR & GRILL - Sun, Gina Martinelli Band 6-9 p.m. 1279 S. Kihei Rd. # 314, Kihei, 808-874-9299. FIVE PALMS RESTAURANT - Sun, Brian Cuomo 7 p.m. 2960 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-879-2607. HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH - Thu, Junior Lacuesta; Fri, Rick Glencross; Sat, Ryan Robinson & Wolf 4-7 p.m.; Sun, Dan & Ann 5-8 p.m.; Mon, Kahala; Tue, Rick Glencross; Wed, Jordan Cudworth. All sets 4-8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1913 S. Kihei Rd. #E, Kihei, 808-891-8010. KIWI ROADHOUSE - Thurs, Dominic 4-8 p.m.; Fri, Billy & The Bad Dogs and The Vince Esquire Band 7 p.m. - 1 a.m. 95 E. Lipoa St., Suite 201, Kihei, 808-874-1250 LONGHI’S WAILEA - Sat, Longhi’s. The Shops at Wailea, 3750 Wailea Alanui , Wailea, 808-891-8883. LULU’S KIHEI - Sat, Hawaiian Music & Hula Show 6-8 p.m.; Fri, Hawaiian Music & Hula Show 5-7 p.m. 1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-879-9944.

SUBMIT YOUR

MONSOON INDIA - Tue, Hula Honeys. 760 S. Kihei Rd, Kihei, 808-875-4555.

LISTINGS

MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE - Fri, Gail Swanson 6:308:30 p.m.; Sat, Jazz on the Blue 6-9 p.m.; Sun, The Celtic Tigers 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Tue, Murray Thorne 6:308:30 p.m. 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 808-874-1131.

Calendar Listings

SOUTH MAUI

LAHAINA CAFE - Fri, Alex L Calma 7-9 p.m. 843 Wainee St., Lahaina. LAHAINA PIZZA COMPANY - Every Mon & Tue, Martin Tevaga 7:30-9:30 p.m.; Every Wed, Thu & Fri, John Kane 7:30-9:30 p.m.; Sat, Harry Troupe 7:30-9:30 p.m.; Sun, Greg Di Piazza 7:30-9:30 p.m. 730 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-0700. LEILANI’S ON THE BEACH - Fri, The J.D on the

BEACH BUMS BAR & GRILL - Every Mon, Thu & Sat, Kenny Roberts 5 p.m.; Tue, Randall Rospond 5-8 p.m.; Fri, Tom Cherry & Mike F 5-9 p.m.; Sun, Kaleo 5-9 p.m.; Wed, Randall Rospond & Tom Conway 5:30-8:30 p.m. 300 Maalaea Rd. #1M, Maalaea, 808-243-2286. CAPISCHE? - Sat, Mark Johnstone 7-10 p.m.; Fri, Mark Johnstone 7-10 p.m. 555 Kaukahi St., Kihei, 808-879-2224.

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE - Thu, Erin Smith 4-6 p.m.; Wed, Lawaia 4-6 p.m.; Fri, Haiku Hillbillys 4-6 p.m.; Sat, Tom Conway 4-6 p.m.; Sun, Viva La Rumba 4-6 p.m.; Mon, Kanoa 4-6 p.m.; Tue, Sebrina Barron 4-6 p.m. Kihei Kalama Village, 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-874-6444. STELLA BLUES CAFE - Thu, Ah Tim 4-6 p.m.; Fri, Ahumanu 4-6 p.m.; Sat, Erin Smith 4-6 p.m.; Sun, Phil & Angela Benoit 5-8 p.m.; Mon, Tom Cherry and Mike Finkiewicz 4-6 p.m.; Tue, Harris Moku 4-6 p.m.; Wed, Randall Rospond 4-6 p.m. 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei, 808-874-3779. TAQUERIA CRUZ - Every Tue & Sat, Live Music Reggae, Jazz, Blues 5:30-8:30 p.m. 2395 S. Kihei Rd. #112, Kihei, 808-875-2910. TOMMY BAHAMA’S TROPICAL CAFE - Every Sun & Sat, Howard Ahia 5:30-9:30 p.m.; Mon, Greg Di Piazza 5:30-9:30 p.m.; Every Thu & Fri, Margie Heart 5:309:30 p.m.; Every Sun & Wed, Merv Oana 5:30-9:30 p.m. 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., Kihei, 808-875-9983. TRADEWINDS POOLSIDE CAFE - Wed, Steve Sar-

August 26, 2010 25


TIN N

A C COMEDY S ONSHIP CHAMPI

OPEN M MIC COMEDY COMPETITION FINAL 4UESDAY !UGUST s .O #OVER PM s &2%% 0UPU "UFFET #OMEDIANS PERFORM MIN s 3ETS OPEN TO PUBLIC s #OME AS YOU ARE 7INNER OPENS FOR !UGIE 4 AT ,AHAINA 4HEATER IN 3EPTEMBER

s +AUKAHI 3T 7AILEA Located at the Wailea Blue Course)

WWW -ULLIGANS/N4HE"LUE COM

We need happy* interns. *happy interns do not necessarily need to be as happy as interns shown. In fact, we find interns this happy quite creepy.

Do you think you have what it takes? Send your resume to interns@mauitime.com or 33 N. Market St., Suite 201, Wailuku, HI 96793

26 August 26, 2010


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

8/26

8/27

8/28

8/29

8/30 - 9/01

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

OCEANS BAR & GRILL

Billy & The Bad Dogs 8:30pm; No Cover

Entourage Friday w/ All Access 10pm; No Cover

Maui Wave Studio presents “Save the Music”

PINEAPPLE GRILLE

Jawaiian Music w/ DJ Bruddah Damien

Ocean Vodka Beach Party 7-10 pm

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

1819 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-2414

200 Kapalua Drv. Lahaina - 669-9600

RB BLACK ANGUS STEAKHOUSE

Evan Almighty

4465 Honoapiilani Hwy, Lahaina - 669-8889

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm - 1am

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm - 1am

Open Mic Night 10 pm

SANSEI - KIHEI

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm-1am

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm - 1am

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm-1am

Erin Smith / DJ Slackin, 10pm; No Cover

Mango Pickers / DJ Sonny, 10pm; No Cover

Tom Conway / DJ LX, 10pm; No Cover

Roots Judgement 9pm - 12am; No Cover

No Remorese 9pm - 12am; No Cover

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

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

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

STELLA BLUE’S

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

The Edge 9pm - 1 am; $3

Karaoke w/ Pearl Rose 9pm-12am; No Cover

DJ CIA 10pm - Close; No Cover

Marty Dread / Nuff Said

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

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

TIA JUANA’S

2911 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Ka’anapali - 667-4080

TIFFANY’S

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

TIMBA

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

WATERCRESS

Waiehu Beach Center, Wailuku-243-9350

WOW-WEE MAUI’S

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

genti 6-9 p.m.; Thu, Island favorites with Kawika Lum Ho 6-9 p.m.; Fri, Girls Night Out with Gina Martinelli 6-9 p.m.; Sat, Classic Rock with Dominic 6-9 p.m.; Sun, The Crunch Pups “Uncrunched” 6-9 p.m.; Mon, Bobby Ingrham & Friends 6-9 p.m.; Tue, Mike & Mark 6-9 p.m. 2259 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-891-8860.

CENTRAL MAUI CAFE O’LEI AT THE DUNES AT MAUI LANI - Every Fri, Phil and Angela Benoit 5:30-8 p.m.; Thu, Reiko Fukina 5:30-8 p.m. 1333 Maui Lani Pkwy., Kahului, 808-877-0073. CARY & EDDIE’S HIDEAWAY RESTAURANT - Every Thu, Fri & Sat, Friends of Bryan 5:30 p.m.; Every Thu, Fri & Sat, Menehune Music and Bryan and Friends 8-11:30 p.m.; Sun, Fausto’s Guitar 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Every Tue & Sat, Francois’ Piano 5 p.m. 500 N. Puunene Ave., Kahului, 808-873-6555. MAIN STREET BISTRO - Every Thu & Fri, Rythm & Blues with Freedom 5 p.m.-7:30 a.m. 2051 Main St., Wailuku, 808-244-6816.

UPCOUNTRY MAUI FLATBRED CO. - Every First Wed, Randall Rospond & Tom Conway 6:30 - 9:30. Hana Hwy., Paia GREEN BANANA CAFE - Every Tue, Thu & Sat, Polynesian Dance Coffee Luau 6 p.m. 137 Hana Hwy., Paia, 808-579-9130. MAX WORLD BISTRO - Fri, Goody and the Kit 6-9:30 p.m.; Every Tue & Wed, Brooks Maguire 6:30-9 p.m. Ha’iku Town Center, 810 Kokomo Rd., Ha’iku, 808-575-2629. MOANA BAKERY & CAFE - Thu, Phil & Angela Benoit 7-9 p.m.; Fri, Randall Rospond 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Tue, Open-Mic 7-11 p.m. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 808-579-9999. THE HAIKU FOOD EMPORIUM - NORTHSHORE CAFE & OISHI SUSHI - Fri, Makana 7-9 p.m.; Tue, Ryan - Keyboards from Brooklyn 7-9 p.m. 824 Kokomo Rd., Ha’iku, 808-575-2770.

RESORT SHOWS WEST MAUI

Arise 10 pm ; No Cover

MON - DJ Blast / TUE - Tequila Tuesday w/ DJ LX; WED- Ladies Night with the ADD Twins

Jazz w/ Phil & Angie Benoits

Keys of Creation 10pm; $10

Ah-Tim

WED - Hip Hop & Top 40 w/ All Access DJ 10pm; No Cover

TUE - TBA / WED - Evan Almighty

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

Hot August Nights Exotic & Classic Car Show

MON - Tom Cherry & Mike Finkiewicz / TUES - Tom Conway; WED - Randall Rospond

MON - Happy Hour / TUES - DJ CIA, 10 pm; No Cover / WED - Industry Night

Dubfires 10pm - 12am; No Cover

MON - Gigi / TUES - Randy (All Sets 10pm - 12am)

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON through WED- Karaoke

Industry Night 9pm - 2am; No Cover

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

DJ Calcul8 9pm - 2am; $10

Closed

MON - WED - Closed

Jesse Taoue / Piilani Arias / Kamakoa Ah Sing, 10pm

Kua Aina 10pm; No Cover

Ladies Night w/ All Access Gogo Dancers

Karaoke

MON - Karaoke / TUES - Thirsty Tuesday & Karaoke / WED - Karaoke

Karaoke No Cover; 8pm

MON through WED - Dat Guyz; No Cover

Hyatt Regency Maui Resort & Spa

ALALOA LOUNGE - Every Fri & Sat, Live entertainment 8-12 p.m.

FOUR SEASONS RESORT - Daily, Tourch Lighting Ceremony 5:30 p.m.

UMALU - Thu, Off Tomorrow 6-9 p.m.; Daily (except Wed), Live Music 7-9 p.m.; Daily, Torch Lighting Ceremony 5:30-6 p.m.; Daily (except Wed), Live Music 4-6 p.m.

RITZ-CARLTON KAPALUA - Daily, The Lounge.

Kaanapali Beach Club - 104 Kaanapali Shores, 808661-2000.

Sheraton Maui - 2605 Kaanapali Pkwy., 808-661-0031.

LOBBY LOUNGE - Daily, Torch Lighting Ceremony 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Tue, Jazz Music 8-10:30 p.m.; Every Mon, Wed, Thu & Sat, Contemporary Music 8:3010:30 p.m.; Fri, Jazz Music 8-11:30 p.m.; Sun, Hawaiian Music 8:30-10:30 p.m.; Daily, Hula Dancers 5:30-6:30 p.m.

200 Nohea Kai Dr., 808-661-1234.

Royal Lahaina Resort - 2780 Kekaa Dr., 808-661-3611. ROYAL OCEAN TERRACE - Every Thu, Fri & Sat, Live Hawaiian Music 6-8 p.m. LAGOON BAR - Daily, Cliff Diving Ceremony 6-8 p.m.; Daily, Torch Lighting Ceremony 6-8 p.m.; Daily, Live Music 6-9 p.m.

OHANA BAR & GRILL - Every Wed & Thu, Live Music 5:30-9:30 p.m.; Every Sun, Thu & Sat, Torch Lighting Ceremony 5:30-9:30 p.m.

Sugar Cane Train - 975 Limahana Pl., 808-661-0088.

Kaanapali Beach Hotel - 2525 Kaanapali Pkwy., 808-661-0011. KANAEHELE ROOM - Daily (except Sun & Mon), “Kupanaha: Maui Magic for All Ages” Kanehele Room 4:30-7:30 p.m. TIKI BAR & GRILL - Daily, Hula Show 6:30-7 p.m.; Every Tue & Wed, Leo Kane 6-9 p.m.; Thu, Daniel Palakiko 6-9 p.m.; Every Sun & Mon, Kealaoka’ (Jason Fundang) 6-9 p.m.; Daily, Music by Lanui 6-9 p.m.

SUGAR CANE TRAIN - Thu, Sugar Cane Train Dinner 5 p.m.; Daily, Ride the Sugar Cane Train 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Warren & Annabelle’s - 900 Front St., 808-667-6244.

LOOKING FOR

SOMETHING? More Listings are

Marriot Maui Ocean Club - 100 Nohea Kai Dr., 808-667-1200. LONGBOARDS KA’ANAPALI - Daily, Solo guitarists and sunset hula dancers 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Sun, Miles Ahead Duo 8-11 a.m.; Wed, Desmond Yap 5:30-9:30 p.m. Napili Kai Beach Resort - 5900 L. Honoapiilani Rd., 808-669-6271. NAPILI KAI BEACH RESORT - Thu, Kincaid Basques and Albert Kaiana 6:30-9 p.m.; Sun, Andrew Kaina 7-9 p.m.; Sat, Coelho Morrison 7-9 p.m. Ritz-Carlton Kapalua - One Ritz-Carlton Dr., 808669-6200.

BOTERO BAR & LOUNGE - Wed, Live Hawaiian Music 5:30-9:30 p.m. GRAND DINING ROOM - Sun, Live Hawaiian Music and Hula Performances 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Makena Beach & Golf Resort - 5400 Makena Alanui, 808-875-5888. MAKENA BEACH & GOLF RESORT - Sun, Live Music 9 a.m.-1 p.m. The Shops at Wailea - 3750 Wailea Alanui, 808891-6770.

Westin Maui Resort & Spa - 2365 Kaanapali Pkwy., 808-667-2525.

THE SHOPS AT WAILEA - Wed, Marti Kluth 6:30-8 p.m.; Wed, Jamie Lawerence and friends 6:30-8:30 p.m.

ONO BAR & GRILL - Sun, Raz Shaggai 6-9 p.m.; Fri, Brian Haia 6-9 p.m.; Sat, Keali’i Lum 6-9 p.m.; Wed, Scott Baird Duo with James DeBose 6-9 p.m.

KUMU BAR & GRILL - Daily, Hula Dancing 6:30-9 p.m.

on mauitime.com

TIKI TERRACE RESTAURANT - Sun, Ka’anapali Champagne Brunch 9 a.m.-1 p.m.

WARREN & ANNABELLE’S - Mon-Sat, Warren & Annabelle’s Magic Show 5 p.m.

Grand Wailea Resort & Spa- 3850 Wailea Alanui Dr., 808-875-1234.

TROPICA - Tue, Steve Sargenti 6-9 p.m.; Every Wed, Thu & Fri, Benny Uyetake 6-9 p.m.; Every Mon & Sat, Mitch Kepa 6-9 p.m.; Sun, Keali’i Lum 6-9 p.m.

SOUTH MAUI Fairmont Kea Lani - 4100 Wailea Alanui Dr., 808840-8402. FAIRMONT KEA LANI - Daily, Live Music 5:30-9:30 p.m. POLO BEACH GRILLE & BAR - Daily, Live Music 4-5:30 p.m. Four Seasons Resort - 3900 Wailea Alanui Dr., 808874-8000.

Wailea Beach Marriot Resort & Spa - 3700 Wailea Alanui Dr., 808-879-1922. MELE MELE LOUNGE - Daily, Live Music 9-11 p.m.

EAST MAUI Hotel Hana-Maui - 5031 Hana Hwy., 808-248-8211. HOTEL HANA-MAUI - Fri, Hula dancing 7-8 p.m. PANIOLO LOUNGE - Every Sun, Wed, Thu & Sat, Live music 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Fri, Live music 6-9 p.m.

Events. .com

August 26, 2010 27


Kula Kid

My Early Stuff ARY R O P M CONTENTRY HITS COU

SIGNAL 24/7 STRONG NO BULL! A DIVISION OF

&217$&7 86 72 $'9(57,6( ‡

With the dog days of summer comes the slow month of September. When tourist vacation season wraps up, that will be your time to attract the year round Maui folks into your business. The Taste of Maui is your chance to tell MauiTime readers about your specials. If you're willing to offer a half off special for an entree item at least one day per week, then you qualify for special pricing and a FREE listing in this special issue. Deadline for listing is August 27th, email to food@mauitime.com

Please fax or email this form no later than Friday, August 27, 2010 to 808-244-0446 or food@mauitime.comRESTAURANT NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: CONTACT PERSON: EMAIL: HALF PRICE DEAL DAYS & TIME: HALF PRICE DEAL:

28 August 26, 2010

FAX: TITLE: WEBSITE:

“I’m a joker/I’m a smoker/I’m a midnight toker/I sure don’t want to hurt no one/’Cause I’m a picker/I’m a grinner/I’m a lover/And I’m a sinner/I play my music in the sun...� - Steve Miller

W

hile I want desperately for each of my homemade movies to be Cecil B. DeMented-esque, shot-on-the-y genius, alas, not one is even worthy of preservation (read: the tapes have all been destroyed for the world’s sake, lest they kill unsuspecting viewers, a la The Ring). Then again, I suppose I may have given up a little too early. The last independent camcorder venture I can recall was a so-called music video for the Steve Miller Band’s “Space Cowboy,â€? made by me and middle-school pal Leiana. I don’t think we did much but dance around my living room wearing rubber alien masks and cheap, wrinkled children’s kimonos, but we could not have been more plainly ridiculous. (It didn’t help that Leiana was an elďŹ n bean pole and I looked like a raised-by-wolves couch potato.) Mouthing lyrics we didn’t really know, the soundtrack is primarily overdubbed with our incessant schoolgirl giggles and the tinny air of a cassette-playing boombox in the background. Merely reecting on that sad affair turns my stomach in shame, though I understand that kids these days actually try to look stupid in their videos (which they certainly do not produce on giant, one-eyed shoulder robots that only record on full-sized VHS tapes), and that there’s some sort of incentive for their antics on YouTube. As for me, I’m glad to be (just) old enough to not care about those modern things, and to have imbibed enough substances to permanently cast a comfortable shadow on the shameful memory of my childish cinematic indiscretions. More than moviemakers, Leiana and I fancied ourselves musicians. While we had neither instruments nor know-how, we formed a band with mutual friend Erica. Her parents let us wash their cars repeatedly and perform other odd jobs, and after less time than

it should have taken, we managed to purchased a drum set. From JC Penny. With Erica on drums, we’d then hold band practice with me and my starterkit acoustic Fender, which I chose over hula lessons, and the bass Leiana borrowed from her big brother. Since none of us knew how to play anything at all, “band practiceâ€? was not much more than extensive snacking and gossiping about boys. But the coolest thing we did—in our quest to do, well, whatever it was—was hike to “Rainbow Ridgeâ€? in Olinda and lay in the ďŹ eld where Jimi Hendrix had allegedly held a concert, in a long ago time we didn’t really understand but still wished we were a part of. We thought that by being there we might channel Jimi’s lingering energy and miraculously learn how to play our instruments. Leiana ended up going to high school at Seabury, while Erica and I were off to King Kekaulike. We got in some sort of argument over that dumb JC Penny drum set, and I never much spoke to either of them again. But I do think of them fondly, about as often as I think of rekindling my pursuits in ďŹ lmmaking and guitar playing. Maybe it’s not too late to discover my hidden genius. â–

Read more Kula Kid at mauifeed. com/kulakid. You can also follow her on Twitter at @anuheayagi To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/1410k


by Caeriel Crestin

Horoscopes

sign.language.astrology@gmail.com VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) The show must go on, they say, and performers dedicated to this principle have endured tremendous hardship in order to make sure their team isn’t let down by their mishap. How much of your suffering can you put aside to spare others its consequences? How much are you willing to? Those are this week’s questions. Answer them honestly. It’s admirable to put aside some of your own well-being for the greater good of many. However, know ahead of time where and how to draw the line, so that you don’t realize you’ve reached your limit in the middle of the “show.” Calling in an understudy at that point is very awkward—doing so before you’ve begun, however, is perfectly acceptable.

SIGN

AGE LANGU

QUIZunderstood answers 1. King David Kalakaua (“The Merrie Monarch”); 0 2. A. 3. C.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) Not everyone is attuned to the same reality you are. In fact, you’re probably sometimes quite shocked at just how differently someone else might perceive a situation you see in quite a specific way. Here’s the problem: neither of you is “right.” That is, you’re both wearing certain filters that skew the scenario in certain (probably different) directions. Neither of you is technically wrong; you’re both actually perfectly correct—for yourselves. Understanding just how malleable reality is—and accepting that there is no one “real” reality— is the key to enjoying your week, and not getting stuck in a conflict that has no other resolution.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) We all appreciate the higher standard you hold yourself to most of the time. But occasionally you need to be willing to set aside that ideal and cut yourself some slack, in the name of getting things done. When you’re miserable, everyone around you is, too, so try not to get yourself to that state of dejection or disappointment. Normally, I’d say go for a good, self-pitying wallow if you need to, but there are more important things afoot. That means letting yourself off the hook, and being content with merely a job done satisfactorily, instead of brilliantly .

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21) Just because a dream is achievable shouldn’t make it less exciting. In fact, because its fruition is right around the corner, you ought to be thrilled. Try not to feel let down by how ultimately easy it was to get to where you wanted to go—that speaks to how ready you were, not how simple it was. For someone else, this might have been an impossible challenge. Don’t worry—there will be plenty more challenging goals. Some of them will prove unachievable. Enjoy this one, even if it was a no-brainer, no-contest piece of cake.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19) You know you need to try a different approach. Given all the paths you’ve already pursued, you probably have a pretty strong inkling about which new method will work best to achieve your goals. You’re dragging your heels because that place is just somewhere you’ve been reluctant to go. However, you’ve tried every other way you could think of, and hit impassable obstacles. I think it’s time to finally acknowledge that there may be no better way, and swallow your distaste long enough to give it a try. Perhaps some success will assuage your antipathy.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) Your cynicism tells you that although people can change, they don’t do so very often. Sometimes, in an effort to be realistic, you unwittingly lock people into old behaviors. Even if they normally would act differently, you create parameters that encourage or even require them to behave just as they would have in the past. That’s hardly fair. Can you bring yourself to a place where you will at least allow for and at best actively promote transformation and evolution? Although it goes against the grain of your most pessimistic habits and fixed nature, that, my dear, is this week’s goal.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) You’re like a daddy long legs spider who’s lost a few legs. You can still function with five, but losing another might prove disastrous. It’s time to stop taking so many risks and just play it safe for a while. I like you when you’re bold and take chances, and I appreciate how you’ve courageously forged on even when some of those risks haven’t panned out (perhaps buoyed by the successes of all the ones that paid off). However, this week take a break from that approach and stick to the tried and true. When it’s time to boldly take another great gamble again, you’ll know.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) Consider the message, not how it was delivered. It’s all too easy to ignore what you’re trying so hard not to hear, and focus instead on the problems with the methods used, which are less than ideal (and might even be cruel, sneaky, or passive-aggressive). However, the only reason people are going to such lengths to communicate in such a roundabout way is that surely this is something you don’t particularly want to acknowledge, and they were afraid of how you’d react if they said it to you directly. Put aside the lousy conveyance and take the time to hear those things you desperately don’t want to, but desperately need to.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) Is this deal-breaker as much of a deal-breaker as you thought? Yes, you always told yourself that if you got to this crossroads, you’d know which way to turn. Yet, now that you’re here, the path isn’t as obvious as you thought it would be. This may be because your judgment is clouded; however, it could be that what you thought was so desperately important (in theory, at least) isn’t anymore, or never really was. To ensure that you don’t make a foolish decision because you’re bewildered by hormones, lust, or clever words, however, enlist the aid and advice of a trusted friend.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20) When someone’s behavior skews wildly off course, it could be mental illness, drugs, or any number of other problems. However, consider the possibility that this is only new to you. Young adults who come out of the closet may surprise some of their friends and family, for example, but it’s hardly a revelation for them. This week, you need to put aside your own shock, judgment, or distaste for whatever’s been revealed to you, and consider what may be behind it, and how difficult it might have been to get to this place. Then, react with as much compassion as you can muster.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) It’s funny how sometimes, even when they have all (or most) of the power in a situation, some people can be fooled into thinking they have little or none. That ought to sound familiar, although I wouldn’t be surprised if you don’t think so. Ask yourself: Isn’t the ball in your court? Don’t you have a hold of the long end of the stick? You have all the leverage, and yet you’re behaving as if you must do exactly as you’re told. This week, please realize, finally, just how much power you actually have, and take ownership of it. It’s always been clear to others that you have the upper hand—once you figure that out, all that’s left is for you to decide what, exactly, you want to do with it.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) You don’t usually have trouble setting boundaries. Ask anyone who knows you; it’s very hard to get a Leo to do anything she doesn’t want to do. However, every once in a while, it’s good to allow those boundaries to get trampled on a little. They could be in the wrong places. People change, after all. What once was off limits might now be something you enjoy—and the only way you’d figure that out is by letting someone cross that line. This isn’t about adopting an “anything goes” attitude. However, this week, please notice which walls have stood unquestioned for way too long, and consider taking at least a couple of them down.

August 26, 2010 29


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