fresh pacific  By  cover art

fresh pacific

By: Noe Tanigawa
  • Summary

  • Award-winning artist/journalist Noe Tanigawa interviews artists, organizers, thinkers, doers, people you want to know with fresh perspectives from Oceania, the Pacific, Moananuiakea. Noe is based in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. We invest, we regenerate, we know our place in an abundant world. Aloha mai kakou!🌺 Find Noeʻs stories for Hawaiʻi Public Radio: https://www.hawaiipublicradio.org/people/noe-tanigawa Find Noeʻs artwork here https://www.noetanigawa.com/
    Noe Tanigawa
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Episodes
  • Glimmers and Wala’ao with Florence
    Nov 13 2023

    This program is, uncharacteristically, about me. After two shows working with Honoluluʻs unsheltered community, I made some paintings now at Bās Bookshop in Honolulu through 11/26/2023.

    Wednesday 11/15, Erin Yuasa and I will be there at 5:30 to talk about work, and making. She’ll demo the handsome lei she makes from repurposed t-shirts. Please do come by. I feel like making the whole night about how we in Hawai’i can contribute to a unified world.🌺

    And because of this show, my UH Manoa grad school studio mate, Florence Matsuoka, got the idea to interview me. Argh!

    Plus, to make it an episode in my Fresh Pacific podcast.

    See her twisting her long mustache…all part of a diabolical scheme! Florence, I find out has ascended to become General Manager at Hawaiian Graphics, the venerable and indispensable art supply store on Beretania. They’re mobilizing their facebook page, hoping to be a link for artists around the state. Hear about that, and reminiscences of Helen Gilbert and Prithwish Neogy in the new Fresh Pacific podcast.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Pacific Perspectives on Climate Rescue with Kamanamaikalani Beamer
    Oct 29 2023

    “We’re the last generation that has a chance to solve the climate crisis.” Hear a Hawaiian view of where we are and how to proceed.

    Kamanamaikalani Beamer applies a Hawaiian perspective to our future on this planet, incorporating environmentalism, economic justice, and indigenous knowledge. Author, thought leader, professor in the Hawaiʻinuiakea School of Hawaiian Knowledge and with the Richardson School of Law at the University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa, Beamer introduced me to the idea of "circular economies" in 2019. Itʻs one of those "duh" concepts that we seem to have forgotten. In this conversation he presents the concept of Degrowth, an expanding movement, especially in Europe. Kamana talks about how solving the climate crisis connects to reforming our economic system. The idea of not pursuing growth at all cost seems anti-capitalist. Yes, every part of the natural world is calling for profound and immediate change.

    This episode closes with a song by U’ilani Tanigawa-Lum, U’ilaniʻs song celebrates the taro farmers of Waioli on Kaua’i, who organized to bring their crops and their lifestyle into the 21st century.

    Itʻs from Huliamahi Volume I, a recording of contemporary songs celebrating the challenges and legal victories that preserve cherished land parcels and life ways. The entire album satisfies on so many levels. Proceeds from the recording benefit the Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation.


    http://www.kahulileolea.org/huli257mahi-vol-1.html

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Lessons from Kahoʻolawe with Noa Emmett Aluli, Davianna McGregor and Franco Salmoiraghi
    Dec 7 2022

    Aloha kakou! In this episode we are remembering a Hawaiian leader, Dr. Noa Emmett Aluli. A family physician and servant-leader, he shares valuable lessons about how resistance bears fruit and progress can be made. Among other things, Aluli was co-founder of a movement demanding that the Navy stop using a Hawaiian island for target practice. 

    Right now, Oʻahu is ramping up efforts to protect its drinking water from contamination by the Navy. (Toxic foam spill reported 12/6/22, UHWO guide ) It happens that challenging the U.S. military has been successful in Hawaiʻi. 

    How did the bombing of Kahoʻolawe stop? Was it logic? Not really--- it took an amazing confluence of forces. Professor Davianna McGregor of the Protect Kahoʻolawe Ohana explains.

    Also, it was a heartbreaking loss that shook Hawaiʻi, Aluli recounts as much as is known about what really happened to George Helm and Kimo Mitchell in those rough seas off Kahoʻolawe.  Importantly, Aluli and McGregor chart the spiritual and cultural foundation for Aloha ʻAina. Their colleague and friend, photographer Franco Salmoiraghi, begins the discussion with frank talk about landscape and the nautical introduction he got to Kahoʻolawe. Mahalo to Native Books/Arts and Letters and the Puʻuhonua Society for creating the occasion for this interview. Mahalo to Hawaiʻi Public Radio, where segments of this interview first aired.

    #kahoolawe #protectkahoolaweohana #shutdownredhill #kukiaiwai #oahuwaterprotectors #maunakea #wearemaunakea #alohaaina #hawaii #servantleaders #hawaiianhistory #kakou 

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    46 mins

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