“These writers really know Hawaii.” What made you think it?
Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2022 9:35 am
What scene gave you the feeling of authenticity--that the MPI writers know Hawaii intimately?
Doing the show in Hawaii doesn't guarantee authenticity. Anyone with a plane ticket and camera can do a Hawaiian show. But not necessarily well. So let me start off.
On my first trip to Hawaii I curiously found out about Haole despite the land is in the U.S. of A. It's very real--this matter--because the scene I describe I sent a vid of it to my friend living there. I was curious. He must have felt or had a Haole sense because obviously it must be an important issue in Hawaii. Well, friends, the issue is so sensitive apparently for him that he gave me no reply. Subsequently he evaded the topic.
Oh, well.
The scene is TM & TC driving to North Shore through the countryside to hunt up a Kahuna, living in a native hamlet. On the way TC reads aloud for TM a cultural guidebook about Kahunas. Good God we are all American citizens but it's like they are about to enter a foreign land. (Please, please dispense any
impulse to go "multicultural" with me because I've lived successfully in various foreign cultures. Excuse me, for the PC crowd, in my view, go so extreme that they ignore reality. I quite understand cultural difference but similarity exists as well.
)
They pull up to an isolated, run-down looking ma & pa store but outside they see a menacing-looking native Hawaiian or two who peer at them. Both our heroes express fear. Wow, it impacted me because first, it is the U. S. of A. and we should be familiar with each other.
Second, being a stranger is a real experience found nearly everywhere. Third, the screen writers appear to be well aware of the actual intercultural friction on the islands. For example some Haole children complain of bullying by native Hawaiians at school. This friction is all encapsulated by this short scene and TM's handling of it superb. This scene more than other made me feel, "these guys really know Hawaii."
How about you? Any particular scene make you feel that way? (BTW, I wanted to upload a vid of the scene but I guess we can't do so here.)
Doing the show in Hawaii doesn't guarantee authenticity. Anyone with a plane ticket and camera can do a Hawaiian show. But not necessarily well. So let me start off.
On my first trip to Hawaii I curiously found out about Haole despite the land is in the U.S. of A. It's very real--this matter--because the scene I describe I sent a vid of it to my friend living there. I was curious. He must have felt or had a Haole sense because obviously it must be an important issue in Hawaii. Well, friends, the issue is so sensitive apparently for him that he gave me no reply. Subsequently he evaded the topic.

The scene is TM & TC driving to North Shore through the countryside to hunt up a Kahuna, living in a native hamlet. On the way TC reads aloud for TM a cultural guidebook about Kahunas. Good God we are all American citizens but it's like they are about to enter a foreign land. (Please, please dispense any


They pull up to an isolated, run-down looking ma & pa store but outside they see a menacing-looking native Hawaiian or two who peer at them. Both our heroes express fear. Wow, it impacted me because first, it is the U. S. of A. and we should be familiar with each other.

How about you? Any particular scene make you feel that way? (BTW, I wanted to upload a vid of the scene but I guess we can't do so here.)