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Hawaii softball team's 9 seniors have moment amid losses on senior day

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Hawaii softball team's 9 seniors have moment amid losses on senior day


HONOLULU — It was only a moment, but the look on Maya Nakamura’s face said everything.

A tearful Nakamura stood in front of the Hawaii dugout, put her hands together, and bowed slightly toward the field where she excelled and the fans in front of whom she’d performed for the last five years.

The injured Rainbow Wahine captain’s brief fifth-inning appearance at first base drew applause from all corners of Rainbow Wahine Softball Stadium, including Cal State Fullerton players and staff.

First-place Fullerton otherwise owned the day in a 4-0, 8-0 doubleheader sweep of UH on its final home date of 2024 on Saturday. 

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The Titans won the nightcap via the mercy rule in the sixth inning.

[Note: See below for more photos of senior night.]

Coach Bob Coolen got all nine seniors into the game in the late innings. Nakamura and reserves Piper Neri, Chloee Agueda and McKenna Kostyzyn joined starters Xiao Gin, Dallas Millwood, Mya’Liah Bethea, Haley Johnson and Ka’ena Keliinoi.

Nakamura greeted teammates in the circle and remained in for a single scripted pitch, thrown well off the plate.

“She willed that to happen because she’s been working so hard,” Coolen said of Nakamura, who injured her knee covering first base against Cal Poly last month. “She could’ve disappeared, stepped away from the team, took care of herself. But she was around us. She was in the weight room, she was at practices, she was encouraging the girls, giving speeches after we gave speeches as coaches. The players wanted to hear her more than us.”

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Friday night’s walk-off, 10-inning victory over the Titans proved to be the emotional high point of the weekend for UH (20-23, 13-9 BWC). CSUF (34-16, 20-4) was in control from the outset Saturday to set up a showdown series with Long Beach State (24-27, 19-5) on the final regular-season weekend.

Coolen was fretting about how he’d get his largest senior class on the field. It included a few COVID-19 fifth-year players.

“I didn’t know how the game was going to go, if we were going to be competitive or non-competitive,” he said. “Some senior games, you go, how am I going to get people in there? But then it unfolded the way it did. To get them all out there … in front of their families, that was my goal.”

Despite the score, the senior day celebration was a lively affair.

“It was so surreal just seeing how many people love us,” said Millwood, the Kamehameha alumna from Mililani who plans to join Rich Hill’s UH baseball staff as a graduate assistant next year. “There’s so many people here to support us. My family, my friends.”

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Nakamura, a Roosevelt alumna and three-time All-Big West honoree, will be one of the best second basemen in program history.

She is within a few weeks of surgery but is already beginning to walk around without crutches. She is considering remaining with UH as a graduate manager for next season, after which she plans to go into teaching.

“I’m very fortunate and privileged  … and lucky to have this opportunity to play here, in front of family and friends and having that opportunity to stay home,” Nakamura said this week. “A lot of girls nowadays want to leave the islands … but to be here, I’m just so lucky, so fortunate. My heart is full.”

Keliinoi, a Waianae native and a member of Saint Francis School’s final high school graduating class, adapted to a number of positions over her five years at UH – catcher, outfield, and most recently, third base.

“Everyone has a role on this team and for us just to all collectively come together as one team has been great memories,” Keliinoi said. “Over the past five years, I’ve got to meet so many great people and so many people that come from different places. To be able to represent Hawaii across my chest – as a little girl I always strived for that.”

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Fourth-place UH can finish as high as third with one week left, a series at UC Davis (18-29, 9-15) starting Friday.

Bob Coolen and the nine Hawaii seniors. (Courtesy photo)

Hawaii left fielder Mya’Liah Bethea connected on a pitch. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Senior Ka‘ena Keliinoi reacted toward the UH dugout after being hit by a pitch. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Senior Chloee Agueda took her first at-bat of the season. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

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Senior McKenna Kostyszyn threw the final 1 1/3 innings on senior night. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Senior Piper Neri made a catch in left field. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Seniors Ka‘ena Keliinoi and Dallas Millwood greeted Maya Nakamura in the pitching circle. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.



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Hawaii

10th annual Hawaii Comedy Festival celebrates AAPI stories

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10th annual Hawaii Comedy Festival celebrates AAPI stories


HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The 10th annual Hawaii Comedy Festival is celebrating AANHPI month with improv, sketch, musical, and stand-up comedy by an all-star cast of talent from across Hawaii and the continent.

Kimee Balmilero, founder of the Hawaii Comedy Festival, Will Choi, founder of comedy troupe Asian AF, and Anette Aga, founder of comedy troupe Polynesian AF, joined HNN’s Sunrise to talk about their special variety show and workshops happening today.

The Hawaii Comedy Festival Variety Show starts at 7 p.m. tonight at the Honolulu Museum of Art’s Doris Duke Theatre, 900 S. Beretania St. Tickets are $35.

Parking is available behind the Honolulu Museum of Art School, 1111 Victoria Street, for $5 for the first 5 hours. $2 for every additional 30 minutes. Cash only.

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The Hawaii Comedy Festival is also hosting workshops today. Tickets are $35 each:

  • Characters Workshop: Albert Franz Dance Studio, 419 South St., Suite 140, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
  • Write a Comedic Song: Improv Hawaii’s Tiny Stage, 419 South Street. Suite 163, 12-2 p.m.
  • Intro to Musical Improv Workshop: Albert Franz Dance Studio, 419 South St., Suite 140, 2-4 p.m.
  • Improv Openings Workshop: The Honolulu Museum of Art’s Doris Duke Theatre, 900 S. Beretania St., 2:30-4:30 p.m.

For tickets and information, visit hicomedyfest.com and follow @hicomedyfest on Instagram.

The cast includes:

  • Alfred Aquino II (Filipino AF, Netflix is a Joke, Dropout, UCB LA)
  • Allyn Pintal (Filipino AF, UCB LA, Wong Fu Productions, Earlwolf Presents: Dragons AF)
  • Anette Aga (Polynesian AF – producer, Improv Hawai’i, Kumu Kahua Theatre)
  • Daryl Jim Diaz (Filipino AF, Gaysian AF, UCB LA, Quick and Funny Musicals)
  • Elexis Draine (Polynesian AF, Kumu Kahua Theatre)
  • Gilbert Galon (Filipino AF, Tiger Belly, UCB LA)
  • Jiavani (Filipino AF, Gaysian AF, Between Two Ferns: The Movie, Cartoon Network, Reno 911: Defunded)
  • Jose Ver (Filipino AF, Improv Hawai’i, Magnum P.I., Waikikii PD)
  • Joy Regullano (Filipino AF, Barry, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Modern Family, Supportive White Parents)
  • Kaliko Fase (Polynesian AF, Improv Hawai’i, Magnum P.I., Hawai’i Five-0)
  • Kay Kaanapu (Filipino AF, San Francisco Sketchfest)
  • Kimee Balmilero (Filipino AF, Hawai’i Comedy Fest – founder, Hawai’i Five-0, Doogie Kamealoha)
  • La Fa’amausili-Siliato (Polynesian AF, Diamond Head Theatre)
  • Marni Ramirez (Polynesian AF, Improv Hawai’i, Waikiki PD)
  • Matt Soriano (Improv Hawai’i, Yes, And Dragons)
  • Arinex Poasa (Polynesian AF, Improv Hawai’i, Next Goal Wins)
  • Ryan Okinaka (Polynesian AF, Improv Hawai’i, Hawai’i Five-0, Doogie Kamealoha MD)
  • Sarah Claspell (Asian AF, UCB LA, Brooklyn Nine-Nine)
  • Shilpa Das (South Asian AF, UCB LA, Quick and Funny Musicals, Laugh Factory)
  • Vince Yap (Filipino AF, The Rookie, General Hospital, American Horror Stories)
  • Will Choi (Asian AF – co-founder, BoJack Horseman, Bob’s Burgers, Central Park )
  • Sean Joseph Choo (Polynesian AF, Improv Hawai’i, Magnum PI, Kumu Kahua Theatre)
  • Alex Song-Xia (The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, Rick and Morty, High Maintenance, Dimension 20)





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When ‘Stop the Steal’ becomes your motto

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When ‘Stop the Steal’ becomes your motto


There is a good chance that Donald Trump’s polling lead in the 2024 presidential election is more fragile than it looks.

The most immediate problem for him is the fact that he’s on trial in a criminal case. Even if Trump isn’t convicted, the trial keeps him away from the trail.

There is also the issue of the campaign itself, which is a smaller affair than his 2020 effort, with fewer resources. “The situation has alarmed GOP officials in key states, like Arizona, Georgia and Michigan, who have yet to receive promised funding, staff or even briefings on the new plans since the Trump team took control of the Republican National Committee in March,” The Washington Post reports.

Trump could very well hold his lead through the summer and into the fall but still fail to turn stated preferences into actual votes. What looks solid in the numbers could turn out to be ephemeral in the final tallies.

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It’s much too early to say whether the polls are right or wrong. What we can say, however, is that the former president and his allies are already laying the foundation for an effort to contest — or even try to overturn — the results of the November election if voters don’t return Trump to the White House.

For Trump, a man who seems to live in the eternal present, “stop the steal” never actually ended. He maintains, as he did Nov. 3, 2020, that he won the presidential election that put Joe Biden in the White House. Last month, he told an audience in Wisconsin, “We won this state by a lot.” (He lost it by 20,682 votes.) He told Time magazine, in a recent interview, that he “wouldn’t feel good” about hiring anyone who believed that Biden was the legitimate winner of the last presidential election. Asked if he would accept the results of the 2024 election, Trump said that he would, “if everything’s honest.”

Of course, for Trump, if he doesn’t win, then it isn’t honest.

But it isn’t just Trump priming Republican voters to reject the results of the November election if Biden prevails. His allies are doing the same.

Sen. JD Vance of Ohio told CNN on Sunday that in a “free and fair election,” he and every other Republican “will enthusiastically accept the results.” Meaning that if Trump does not win, then the election will not have been free and fair. Vance, who is so eager to serve as running mate to Trump that he made a pilgrimage Monday to the Manhattan courthouse where the former president is on trial for paying hush money to cover up his affair with a porn actor, has also said that if he were vice president in 2020, he would have told states to submit alternate slates of electors.

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Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., has said that she will accept the results if they are “constitutional,” and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has said that he will accept them if “there’s no massive cheating.”

Now what, for this crowd, would constitute an unfair, unfree, unconstitutional election in which the results were shaped by “massive cheating”?

Recall that after the 2016 presidential election, Trump blamed a wave of illegal voting for his popular-vote defeat. “In addition to winning the Electoral College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally,” he said on Twitter.

Illegal voting was a useful boogeyman for a president-elect who ran on the fantasy that the United States had been besieged by illegal immigrants. It remains a useful boogeyman as the former president revs up his supporters with spittle-flecked attacks on immigrants, who he says are “poisoning the blood of our country.” If one set of Trump allies is spreading the notion of an unfair election, another set is building out what that might mean by placing the specter of illegal voting by migrants and immigrants living in the country without legal permission at the center of their rhetorical agenda.

“We all know intuitively that a lot of illegals are voting in federal elections, but it’s not been something that is easily provable,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said last week at a news conference he called to support a new bill that would ban immigrants living in the country without legal permission from voting in federal elections. This is already illegal under existing federal law, but Johnson insisted on the measure as necessary prevention in the face of uncertain information.

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Johnson, who voted in 2021 to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, was joined at the news conference by Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, two so-called constitutional conservatives who initially urged the White House to try to contest and overturn the 2020 results in the weeks leading up to Jan. 6. “We owe it to ourselves, to each other, most importantly to the American people, to make sure that those making decisions on behalf of our government and who’s going to serve in government in elective office are indeed empowered to make those decisions,” Lee said, validating the fiction that recent U.S. elections have been shaped, even stolen, by rampant illegal voting.

Also present was Stephen Miller, the MAGA apparatchik behind some of the former president’s most viciously anti-immigrant rhetoric, who railed against noncitizen voting in characteristically apocalyptic fashion. “Democracy in America is under attack,” he said of the “wide-open border and obstruction of any effort to verify the citizenship of who votes in our elections.”

With all of this, we are getting a first look, of sorts, at the next “stop the steal.” Yes, Trump could win the November election outright, in which case, there is no need for an elaborate conspiracy to explain the results. The election, as Vance said, will have been “free and fair.”

But let’s say Biden recovers lost ground. Let’s say he wins the Electoral College with narrow victories in key swing states as he did in 2020. Let’s say that a few of those margins are exceptionally slim — a few thousand votes here, a few thousand votes there. We know what will come next. Trump will cry out “illegal voting,” and most of the Republican Party will follow suit. They’ll say that Democrats encouraged it with “open borders” and demand that states overturn the results. And Trump, notably, has not ruled out the use of violence to get what he wants.

If the Republican Party could, for a moment, break itself from Trump’s influence, it would see that there’s a much easier explanation here: that Trump, for all of his bombast, is not actually an electoral juggernaut and that the solution to this problem is just to put him out to pasture.

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Most of the time, when their standard-bearers can’t close the deal with the voting public, U.S. political parties move on. Not so with this Republican Party. It can neither move on from Trump nor accept that he’s a divisive and unpopular figure for a large part of the American public.

Some of this, it’s true, comes from the fact that much of the party is caught in the snare of the former president’s cult of personality. But some of it runs much deeper. The Republican Party never moved on from Richard Nixon’s “silent majority,” from the notion that it alone represents the supposedly authentic people of the United States. Democrats, no matter how many votes they get or how many elections they win, cannot, in this view, legitimately claim to represent the nation.

From the Tea Party to Mitt Romney’s “47%” to Trump’s make-believe tales of fraud and illegal voting, Republicans treat Democratic voters and Democratic majorities as not quite right — not quite real, not quite American. No matter how many votes they earn or how many elections they win, Democrats cannot, in this view, legitimately claim to represent the nation.





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Miss Hawaii crowned Miss USA after previous winner resigns

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Miss Hawaii crowned Miss USA after previous winner resigns


HONOLULU — Savannah Gankiewicz of Hawaii was crowned Miss USA 2023, more than a week after the previous titleholder resigned for mental health reasons.

Born and raised on the island of Maui, Gankiewicz is a model who leads a female empowerment nonprofit organization. Gankiewicz, who was the first runner-up at the pageant last September, accepted the title on Wednesday during a special coronation attended by Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, Hawaii News Now reported. She will hold the title until August.

Miss USA 2024 is scheduled to take place from July 24 to Aug. 4.

Gankiewicz told KHON-TV she received backlash for deciding to take on the remainder of the title’s term. “But I wanted people to know that I’ve taken this title because I feel like it is a responsibility and an opportunity to make a positive change from within, and I can only do that from inside the organization and not standing out,” she said.

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Gankiewicz replaces former Miss USA 2023 Noelia Voigt, a former Miss Utah who stepped aside May 6, citing her mental health. In a statement, Voigt thanked her fans and wrote, “Never compromise your physical and mental well-being.”

Miss Teen USA, UmaSofia Srivastava, also resigned her title within days of Voigt’s resignation, dealing a shock to the Miss Universe Organization, which runs both pageants.

Srivastava, the former Miss New Jersey Teen USA, wrote in a statement that her “personal values no longer fully align with the direction of the organization.”



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