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Air Date: Sat, Jan 11, 2014 7:30 PM
Korean Immigrant Christine Camp rose from poverty to create her own development company, the Avalon Group, of which she is President and CEO. Leslie Wilcox talks with Christine about the struggles of adjusting to America and growing up with "tough love" from her mother, which led to her running away from home at age 15. Christine also discusses working for several well-known companies where she gained the experience to launch her own business.
Air Date: Wed, Jan 8, 2014 7:30 PM
Leslie Wilcox talks with Susanna Moore, Punahou graduate and author of the novels In the Cut and The Whiteness of Bones. Susanna talks about how her mother's mysterious death affected her as a child and into her adult years.
Air Date: Mon, Jan 6, 2014 7:30 PM
illiam S. Richardson recalls growing up in a house his dad built along a dirt lane in Kaimuki. When the family moved there from Palama, they had so few possessions they simply took what they had on a streetcar. Those were simpler times for the man who would go on to be Lt. Governor (under John A. Burns), Chief Justice of the Hawai‘i State Supreme Court and Bishop Estate Trustee. Popularly known as CJ, for Chief Justice, William Richardson is also the man for whom the law school at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa is named. CJ Richardson joins Leslie Wilcox for an engaging conversation on Long Story Short.
Air Date: Fri, Jan 3, 2014 7:30 PM
Leslie Wilcox talks story with Ryan Higa, also known as "Nigahiga" on YouTube. His self-produced online comedy videos led to the Hilo native's inadvertent, meteoric rise to national fame. Ryan reveals how he first started using video cameras, his thoughts on the entertainment business and a deal that tested his integrity.
Air Date: Sun, Jul 1, 2012 8:14 PM
Leslie Wilcox talks story with the dean of the Hawai'inuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge at the University of Hawaii at Manoa about how her culture and her grandparents' influence guided her through life.

This month marks 60 years of telling Hawaiʻi’s stories and the start of a year-long commemoration of that milestone.

To mark this special anniversary, we’re saying mahalo with a new thank-you gift that looks back — and celebrates how far we’ve come.

These snapshots from the 1960s and ’70s capture the many hands that helped shape local storytelling on screen.

Take a look at the oldest program guide we have in our PBS Hawaiʻi archive.

Series like ‘ONO! Hawaiʻi’s Food Culture reflect the heart of what PBS Hawaiʻi strives to do every day: share the stories that shape life in the islands.

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