Episodios

  • Episode 179 Photos by Kaikai (Sports Photographer)
    Apr 13 2026

    She’s shooting University of Hawaii games, building trust with athletes and coaches, and still choosing the harder road. We talk story with Photos by Kaikai as she pushes past the “big fish in a small pond” trap and chases real growth in sports media and sports photography.

    We get into how her athlete background shaped her eye and her work ethic, plus the exact moment she decided to stop waiting and start reaching out. That one email to ScoringLive turns into credentials, constant reps across multiple sports, and the confidence to keep leveling up. Kai also explains why the Hawaii photography community feels different, how she learns through YouTube and mentors, and why being yourself matters more than copying someone’s edit style.

    Then we go deeper on the craft and the business: planning shoots ahead of time, narrowing down thousands of photos, and keeping edits clean with Lightroom and Photoshop so the image speaks for itself. She shares what it’s like to photograph elite events, including getting the chance to shoot an NBA game and capture Steph Curry up close while following media rules that protect your future access. We close with her dream assignments like pro volleyball and the NFL, plus advice for any creator trying to break in.

    Subscribe, share this with a friend chasing a goal, and leave a review to help more people find the show. What’s one uncomfortable move you know you need to make next?

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    1 h y 6 m
  • Episode 178 Malia Tsuchiya (Early Childhood Policy and Advocacy Coordinator Hawaii Children's Action Network)
    Apr 6 2026

    Hawaii feels more expensive every year, but the breaking point for a lot of families is childcare. When preschool tuition rivals rent and infant care can hit $2,000 a month, parents get trapped between working to survive and paying just to keep working. I sit down with Malia Tsuchiya from Hawaii Children’s Action Network to talk about what’s driving that pressure and what’s actually moving at the Hawaii State Legislature to make life more livable for local families.

    We get into the real story behind early childhood education and why preschool is not babysitting. Malia explains what kids are learning from ages 0 to 5, how play builds language, self-regulation, and learning readiness, and why early investment can change a child’s whole path. We also talk through major policy efforts like Preschool Open Doors, how subsidies work for community-based preschools, and why expanding income eligibility matters for the “too much to qualify, too little to afford it” families.

    Then we zoom out to civic engagement and power. Malia breaks down how bills are drafted, how public testimony can change outcomes, and why election years make accountability real. We also touch on federal funding cuts that threaten programs like SNAP and Med-QUEST, plus the ripple effects on Native Hawaiian education and health resources, and what Hawaii can do when federal dollars shrink.

    If you care about childcare affordability in Hawaii, public pre-K, paid family medical leave, or simply keeping local families from having to move away, hit play. Subscribe, share this with one parent who needs it, and leave a review telling us what issue you want lawmakers to hear next.

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    1 h y 7 m
  • Episode 177 BRITTNI PAIVA ( Recording Artist, Composer, Producer )
    Mar 30 2026

    We talk with the Hoku Award winning ukulele artist Brittni Paiva about how she went from classical piano training at age three to committing to ukulele at eleven, learning by ear, and stepping into major festival stages while still figuring out who she wanted to be as a performer.

    We also get practical about the modern music grind. Brittany breaks down her home studio approach, why she works in Logic Pro, and how her songwriting process changes depending on the goal, from ukulele-forward releases to sync licensing for film, TV, and commercials. If you’ve ever dealt with writer’s block, tight deadlines, or the pressure to sound “perfect,” you’ll hear a grounded system for stepping away, saving ideas, and coming back when the timing is right.

    Then the conversation turns real. Brittany shares how homeschooling and autism shaped her need for routine, how health and fitness support life on the road, and why staying humble matters in an industry that can pull artists off course. She also opens up about stepping away from music, addiction, and getting sober in 2019, plus the role support systems and faith play in building a steady life and career.

    Listen now for ukulele inspiration, music production insight, and a story you’ll be repeating to your friends. If you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with someone who loves Hawaiian music and ukulele, and leave a review so more people can find it.

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    1 h y 2 m
  • Episode 176 JORDAN FONG ( Photographer & Jeweler )
    Mar 16 2026

    Pearls on men used to get laughed at. Now they’re a quiet flex for anyone who understands style. We sit down with Jordan Fong, a Hawaii-based jeweler and photographer from the Bay Area, to talk about how he built a look, a network, and a creative life by staying true to what he likes even when it wasn’t “normal.”

    We start with jewelry and fashion, including why pearls became his signature, how custom pieces come to life, and what it means to be different without trying to be louder than everyone else. Jordan breaks down the real value of personal style: it’s not about clout, it’s about self-respect, consistency, and the connections you create when you show up as yourself. If you’re curious about custom jewelry in Hawaii, men’s pearl necklaces, and building a niche that actually fits you, you’ll get practical insight and mindset in the same conversation.

    Then we shift into photography, where Jordan shares nearly two decades of experience and how shooting sports trained his eye for timing, emotion, and the moment. We talk about capturing strong images in camera, keeping edits minimal, collaborating with clients before the shoot, and using Instagram marketing to grow without losing the human side of the work. We also get real about competition, gear, and why the hustle never replaces having an actual point of view.

    If you’re building your own creative path, press play, then subscribe, share this with a friend who needs confidence, and leave a review. What’s one style or creative choice you’ve held back on because of other people’s opinions?

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    1 h
  • Episode 175 PACO LOCO : SPORTS MC, DJ, COMEDIAN
    Mar 9 2026

    What does it take to turn a quiet gym into a memory people carry for years? We sit with Paco Loco—Philly-born, Hawaii-made—who built a career at the crossroads of sports, comedy, and DJ culture. From ushering the wildest sections at Lincoln Financial Field and riding with Eagles legends to announcing Kobe Bryant’s final summer-league game before the draft, Paco shows how a single voice can set the tone for an entire room.

    We dive into his playbook: how to pronounce every name with respect, when to fire the arena cannon and when to switch to “library mode,” and why music programming by BPM (not genre) keeps crowds moving without crossing lines. He breaks down the reality of clean edits, the power of communal dance tracks, and the surprising songs that still explode with Gen Z. Then we explore stages you might not expect—STEM robotics finals, esports showdowns, and Special Olympics nights—where the same energy, timing, and care make people feel seen.

    Comedy sharpened everything. Paco dissects writing premises, stacking examples, reading sensitive rooms, and coaching young comics to use voices and detail to make stories land. Along the way, we trade Philly lore, from the Allen Iverson “practice” moment to early Kevin Hart crowd work. The thread is consistent: excellence without an audience cap. Show up like the building is full, because someone who matters might be watching.

    If you love sports culture, live events, and the craft behind a truly great in-game experience, this one’s for you. You’ll leave with practical ideas for crowd energy, music curation, and on-mic presence—and a renewed belief that the right word at the right moment can change a night. Subscribe, share with a teammate or coach, and drop your favorite pump-up song in a review.

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    1 h y 20 m
  • Episode 174 Megan Taniguchi Influencer / Caregiver
    Mar 2 2026

    Caregiving rarely arrives with a manual. When Megan Taniguchi’s grandmother survived a heart attack and then a stroke, Megan walked away from her job, moved in, and learned how to keep her family together—one blood pressure reading, one bath, one prayer at a time. We invited Megan back to share the unfiltered truth: the daily routines that stabilize fragile health, the medical skills she picked up from generous nurses and a rare doctor who took time to teach, and the mistakes that became lessons, like how an overstrict diet can send sodium and potassium spinning.

    We dig into what dignity really means when care gets intimate, how tempers cool and repairs happen fast, and why a tight, three-person unit—grandma, mom, and son—can become a quiet fortress. Megan opens up about single motherhood, the logistics and cost of youth sports, and the creative fundraising it takes to show up on the sidelines without dropping the ball at home. Along the way, she describes how therapy, small social moments, and candid communication keep her from burning out, and how simple systems—pill organizers, shared calendars, visible checklists—turn chaos into a plan.

    Faith threads through every scene. After years of drifting, Megan returned to church, chose re-baptism, and started talking to God daily. Not ritual for ritual’s sake, but a living relationship that reshaped how she sees responsibility, provision, and endurance. That shift didn’t erase the hard parts; it gave them meaning. The episode is a guide for caregivers, single parents, and anyone standing at the edge of a hard decision, offering practical caregiving tips, mental health tools, and a reminder to say thank you now, not later.

    If this conversation moved you, tap follow, share it with someone carrying a heavy load, and leave a review with your best caregiving tip so others can learn from you too.

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    Aún no se conoce
  • Episode 173 SHANG ONG ( Videographer-Shang Hi Media )
    Feb 23 2026

    Stadium lights. A turn of the head. A breath held before the snap. We sit with the founder of Shang Hi Media to unpack how self-taught skills and a deep love for community transform youth sports into stories families keep for life. What begins as a COVID-era creative outlet becomes a craft rooted in respect—reading plays before they form, catching the quiet moments people miss, and stitching them together with music that carries the weight of a season.

    We talk process without the fluff: shooting 4K at high frame rates, managing terabytes of footage, choosing songs that set emotion, and building edits that feel inevitable. He admits missing shots and shows how presence, anticipation, and luck all play a part. Access matters too; we cover earning sideline credentials, staying safe, and filming with empathy so no one becomes a punchline. You’ll hear how he avoids gear FOMO, why he sticks with Final Cut Pro, and how today’s autofocus and sensors let vision take the lead over specs.

    What makes this conversation special is the why. Social media is the distribution engine, but the mission is local: highlight Hawaii’s athletes, give parents goosebumps, and help a recruit get seen. Confidence grows when a student hears “I saw your clip” in the hallway. Communities rally when a championship run is captured with dignity and heart. We dig into collaboration over competition, advice for new videographers, and the discipline required to find flow state without burning out your life outside the edit bay.

    If you care about storytelling, sports, or building something from the ground up, this one delivers practical insights and honest perspective. Listen, share it with a parent or athlete who needs a lift, and if it resonates, follow the show, leave a review, and tell us the moment you’d want on film.

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    1 h y 13 m
  • Episode 172 RAPPA NUI (Hawaii Recording Artist)
    Feb 9 2026

    The story of Hawaii’s hip hop isn’t a straight line—it’s a flow that bends through island reggae, battle rap, day parties, and studio nights that run past last call. We sit down with Rappa Nui to trace that path from Puna to Oahu, where a poetry-loving kid grew into a meticulous writer who prefers the booth to the spotlight but still knows how to light a room when it counts.

    We dig into process first: how stacked notes turn into finished verses once the right beat shakes the walls, why he sometimes shifts from pure rap to island reggae textures, and what it takes to “shop” for a studio sound that feels like home. Along the way we give flowers to local pillars—Fiji, Angry Locals, Osna—and unpack how battle rap made sharper writers and braver performers in Hawaii long before algorithms could push a clip. There’s a standout chapter on collaboration too: the Kanaka Fire link-up that became a radio moment and proof that one hook can move from Hawaii to global feeds in a day.

    It’s not all highlight reels. Rappa Nui is candid about industry and the discipline it takes to keep the art clean: family over everything, clarity over chaos, and humility as a strategy, not a slogan. We trade top-five island vocalists and essential tracks, talk nightlife then vs now, and kick around a “verses” concept for island reggae that would pack any venue. He shares goals—bigger collabs, stronger reach, and songs that carry Hawaii’s voice without dressing it up for export—and drops practical advice for up-and-comers: shake every hand, learn from doers, and keep going when platforms reset.

    Cue up this conversation if you love craft talk, local-to-global stories, and the sound of a scene leveling up without losing its roots. Stream, follow, and share with a friend who needs a spark. If it hits, leave a quick review and subscribe so you catch the next drop.

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    1 h y 19 m