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PBS Hawaiʻi Live TV
This episode of What School You Went? examines the highs and the lows of reaching aunty and uncle status. Listen to the audio podcast now.
Homegrown Hawaiʻi investigates why Hawaiʻi imports an estimated 85 to 90 percent of the food consumed here and asks, "Can we reverse this?" Farmers and ranchers from all four counties and reveal the risks, challenges and rewards of farming and ranching in Hawaiʻi. Directed, shot and edited by Lynn Beittel of Visionary Video.
If you know you know - the late night Molokai Hot Bread Run. Listen to the audio podcast now.
Invasive species are nothing new
but the urgency of how to deal with
them has increased dramatically
in recent years. Is there a plan to
address these menacing problems?
Kulāiwi step up to the PBS Hawaiʻi Song Challenge!
We revisit our talk with cultural practitioner and waterman Pohaku Stone about the death-defying Hawaiian tradition of hōlua, or lava sledding.
For centuries, loko iʻa, or fishponds, were a vital part of the Native Hawaiian food system, connecting freshwater sources to the ocean, using rock-wall enclosures to raise and eventually harvest fish. In recent decades, there has been a resurgence of this indigenous way of aquafarming.looks at how four fishponds on Oʻahu are being restored.
In this election year, what are the priorities for the state lawmakers as they convene another session? Will it be help for Maui following the devastating wildfires last summer or requests associated with Gov. Josh Green’s emergency proclamation on affordable housing, or both or something else. What are your priorities? Join the discussion as we preview the 2024 Legislative session Thursday at 7:30 pm on Insights on PBS Hawaiʻi.
On this episode of HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawaiʻi, watch a special collection of stories from Hawai‘i’s New Wave of Storytellers’ first round of shows this season.
A vintage in-studio concert, Keola Beamer plays alongside his mother, the late Aunty Nona Beamer and his wife, Moana Beamer.