Culture

Anthony Bourdain
Culture, Hawai‘i Island

“Lava House” resident on Anthony Bourdain show OK

You ask. We answer. Reader Joy Jones asks about Jack Thompson, one of the last remaining residents in the Big Island’s lava-inundated Royal Gardens subdivision. Her main concern: Was Thompson OK, and was his home still standing? She’d been watching Anthony Bourdain’s food travelogue No Reservations that aired Monday on Travel Network.  Bourdain visited Thompson […]

IMG_1591
Culture, Food

POG lives!

You ask. We answer. Reader Joyce Beers wrote to us with a question about her beverage of choice when she’s in Hawaii: POG. POG is a blend of passionfruit, orange and guava juices. Joyce read in HAWAII Magazine’s current issue that Guava Kai Plantation on Kauai had shut down, and wanted to know if POG 

JackLord
Culture, Oʻahu

On the trail of “Hawaii Five-O”

Many people dig reruns of Hawaii Five-O. Myself included. The over-the-top line readings. The ham-fisted dialogue. Square-jawed Jack Lord’s studied, emotion-free imagining of Det. Steve McGarrett. His solid team of creatively-named partners in Hawaii crime-fighting Kono Kalakaua, Chin Ho Kelly, Duke Lukela, Ben Kokua and, of course, Danny “Danno” Williams. What’s not to love? The

Hinadolls
Culture

Today is Girls’ Day in Hawaii

In Japan they’ve officially done away with Girls’ Day, having turned Boys’ Day, May 5, into Children’s Day. But in Hawaii, we still know how to show a girl a good time. In Hawaii, Hinamatsuri (Girls’ Day) is celebrated on the third day of the third month, mostly by Japanese and Okinawan families. In case

RaymondKane
Culture, Oʻahu

Slack-key guitar legend Raymond Kane dies

The art of slack-key guitar has lost one of its greats. Raymond Kane died yesterday in Honolulu. He was 82. Long a renowned performer and teacher of the open-tuning Hawaiian guitar style, Kane was one of the first artists signed to George Winston’s Dancing Cat record label in 1994. Like his cousin Aunty Genoa Keawe—who

ceremony
Culture, Oʻahu

The Dragon’s Gift

It’s the opening week of the Honolulu Academy of Arts’ three-month “The Dragon’s Gift: The Sacred Arts of Bhutan” exhibit. What else is in it for you—besides a glimpse of Bhutanese art works dating from the 8th to 20th centuries—if you visit through Friday? Monks dancing. They are Buddhist monks, from Bhutan, one of the

meadow
Culture

We want your Hawaii photos

Do you have an awesome shot of Hawaii? If you’ve been to our islands before, we know you took some pictures. Maybe even some great pictures. E-mail one or two of those to us and it could be selected as our HawaiiMagazine.com Photo of the Week. Check out the right-hand corner of our home page.

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Culture, Oʻahu

Hawaii music legend Aunty Genoa Keawe dies

Much beloved Hawaiian music legend Aunty Genoa Keawe has died at age 89. Aunty Genoa passed away this morning in her sleep at her home on Oahu. A renowned Hawaiian falsetto vocalist, she was a “living treasure” of Hawaiian music. Her more than 70 years of performances and recorded works were influential for many Island

DonHo
Culture, Food, Oʻahu

From “Tiny Bubbles” to “Margaritaville”

Musician Jimmy Buffett is starting construction on his first Hawaii restaurant in Waikiki.   That may mean nirvana for Parrotheads planning a trip here. But it also quietly marked the end of an era for fans of the late great Hawaii crooner Don Ho. Jimmy Buffett’s at the Beachcomber—a $15 million dining, entertainment and retail venue

karen
Culture, Oʻahu

Who gets a free trip to Hawaii?

Karen De La Vina of Phoenix, Ariz., come on down! To Hawaii, that is. Karen is the winner of HAWAII Magazine’s 2008 Shop a Le’a trip for two to Hawaii, plus a shopping spree. What does Karen get? • A round-trip for two to Honolulu on Hawaiian Airlines.• A $500 Ala Moana Center shopping spree,

JackJohnsonRollingStone
Culture, Oʻahu, Travel Tips

Jack Johnson gets Rolling Stone cover

North Shore of Oahu resident Jack Johnson made the cover of Rolling Stone this week. Nothing new to report—beyond Johnson’s new album Sleep Through the Static spending a second week at No. 1 in Billboard. (It debuted in the top spot last week.)There was also this Honolulu Star-Bulletin story about tickets for Johnson’s annualKokua Festival being resold by Mainland ticket buyers for upwards of

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