Hawaii
Livvy Dunne Is A Mermaid Hard At Work In Hawaii, Diego Pavia’s Mom Wants A Heisman & Notre Dame Dropped 70
We spread it across two Saturdays, but we got it done
The Christmas decorations, the indoor ones anyway, are up. Does my wife have too much? Yes. Is that going to be changing anytime soon? Not a chance. She’s worked hard over the years building up this collection.
We usually knock this out in a day and a half or so, but this year we didn’t have consecutive days in a half available to do it in. So we dragged it out over a couple of Saturdays and still managed to get them up before Thanksgiving, as is tradition.
The leaves are all blown into a giant pile for me to tackle and work off my Thanksgiving, then we’ll start worrying about the outdoor decorations which I’ve been told we are dialing down this year.
With a busy Saturday of knocking out the Christmas decorations, I had the multiview going, but didn’t get a chance to watch too much of the action.
I did see that Penn State put another one in the win column, handing Matt Rhule and Nebraska their fourth loss, which you really hate to see.
I also caught that No. 1 Ohio State allowed Rutgers to score 9 points on them. That has to be concerning heading into Saturday’s game against No. 18 Michigan with an undefeated record on the line.
Rutgers should have never crossed mid-field. And the Buckeyes only put up 42? I wouldn’t be too confident rolling into Ann Arbor next weekend.
No finger guns or nose wiping in the NFL
Use finger guns and nose wiping in the NFL at your own risk. We know how dangerous both of the celebrations are and during the offseason the league decided to crackdown on such behavior.
After all, what if little Billy saw that while watching a game? What if he then did that while playing in one of his youth wrapped in bubble wrap games? The NFL doesn’t want his mom blaming them.
You finger gun or nose wipe, flagged or not, and you’re parting ways with $15k. The NFL isn’t having it. You have that sort of fun on your own time when the children aren’t watching.
Dipping
– Jim T in San Diego writes:
I’m not much for wings, TBH. Most “Buffalo style” recipes I’ve had were all heat, no flavor.
But if you’re going to dip in bleu cheese, while Ken’s is fine (per reader Guy from Buffalo), Bob’s Big Boy still sells their salad dressings even though all but one of the original restaurants are gone – https://www.flavorofcalifornia.com/products
If you can find it at your grocery store, it beats Ken hands down.
SeanJo
Hey Jim, thanks for the recommendation. I am a garbage disposal and will eat just about anything, dip or not. If I have a choice between blue cheese and ranch, I go with blue cheese, and I’m not alone in that.
The poll I put up had 60 percent going with blue cheese.
216,206
– Jim in San Diego continues:
That’s the final odometer reading on our 2008 Toyota Sienna. Father Joe’s Villages, the local Catholic homeless program, is coming by the pick it up in a few minutes. I took it for a final spin last night to get a couple cheeseburgers.
I never thought I’d own a minivan – much less get sentimental over one. I mean, I had a ’67 Mustang fastback in college, along with a Yamaha SR 500 cafe racer and an RD200.
But 17 years ago, newly remarried and with a bonus baby on the way, the Taurus wagon blew a head gasket.
So we went to test drive a RAV-4 through the Costco fleet buying program (no haggling!). But the third-row seats were a joke – the seat fronts were so close to the seat backs of the 2nd row, nobody could possibly sit back there (we had 4 kids already, plus the one on the way). And it handled horribly. The salesman could see we weren’t going to buy the RAV4, so he said, “What if I could get you last-year’s model Sienna for the same price as this year’s RAV4?
There was zero chance I was buying a minivan, but my very preggers wife said we should at least test drive it while we were there.
Three Boy Scout summer camps, a cross-country trip to see family in Maryland, moving two kids to college, daily commutes to four different jobs later …
It made me realize that when I bought that ’67 Mustang from a neighbor in 1983, it was 16 years old – but seemed far older.
The Sienna is older now than the Mustang was when I bought it. And I definitely owned the longest of any car I’ve ever had.
Not sexy, not classic, not cool.
But it brought our youngest home from the hospital after she was born, got us to innumerable Scout meetings and youth sports games, carried cases of Girl Scout cookies and Boy Scout popcorn. One time, I got some 40 Costco pizzas in the back to feed volunteers at Scout Fair.
Couldn’t have done that in the Mustang.
SeanJo
That minivan had a hell of a run. We had a couple over the years when the two older kids were little, and they were great. We didn’t do 200,000 with one, but we were pleasantly surprised that we didn’t mind the minivan once we had one.
– Gene in the Rock writes:
Many years ago, the wife of one of my bosses told me at an office Christmas party, “It takes a great brain to be a great dumb blonde.” She whispered it like a secret, but it wasn’t one for those of us who worked with her husband. She was a perfect archetype, Marilyn Monroe looks (even at almost 50) disguising a mind like a Siberian bear trap. Hubby plainly knew he had married a weapon and used her on clients and associates like a stiletto in a back pocket. They had the most amazing rapport, and needless to say, it was often great fun to sit back and watch. People who assumed they were dealing with a simple minded trophy wife were in for the rudest of surprises.
Kudos to all the not-so-dumb blondes out there, including Paris. You go, girls.
– Jayson writes:
Chuck could have gotten Andrew to stand in and take the nipple shot . . . . . For the Team.
Bigfoot
– Gene writes:
So, in the age of cell phone cameras that EVERYONE carries, this guy couldn’t get a picture? C’mon, this is why Bigfoot is known as the Hide-and-Seek world champ.
SeanJo
It’s almost as if they don’t exist. Almost. I’ve never seen any evidence personally, and I’ve never had a chance to either not pull out my phone to document an encounter or snap a blurry picture of a shadow or bear either. Hopefully, one day I get that chance.
Smoked turkey
– Guy writes:
Early Thanksgiving dinner. 5 hour smoke.
SeanJo
It looks great, Guy. Thankfully, I am never stuck with the responsibility of preparing one. This year will be no different. We’re heading over to my brother’s house.
If you are the one that is responsible for preparing the turkey, be careful if you’re deep-frying that bad boy.
———
That’s all for this Sunday. It’s Thanksgiving week already. It’s hard to believe it’s here, but it is. We’ll be staring down Christmas in a few short days.
I’ll be back on Screencaps duty, I believe, on Wednesday. Until then, enjoy an NFL Sunday and a couple of hopefully light days of work.
Send your Thanksgiving Day menu. If you don’t have turkey, what do you have, and what are your go-to sides and desserts?
As always, I want to see you meat. Send it and anything else you’d like my way sean.joseph@outkick.com. Follow me on Twitter or over on Instagram.
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Hawaii
Former teammates will square off as coaches for Hawaii and Cal in the Hawaii Bowl
HONOLULU — A pair of former college teammates will face off when Hawaii takes on California in the Hawaii Bowl on Wednesday.
Hawaii coach Timmy Chang and Cal interim coach Nick Rolovich were quarterbacks at Hawaii and teammates for two seasons in 2000-01.
Chang made 50 career starts in four years, while Rolovich started 12 games over two seasons.
“I’m grateful to be here with Timmy, so much great history with us,” Rolovich said on Monday.
He pointed out that the 15,000-seat Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex where they’ll play on Christmas Eve sits on what previously served as the Rainbow Warriors’ practice facility, Cooke Field, where Rolovich was first introduced to Chang.
“I think that makes it even more special, that the game’s not only played in Hawaii, but played kind of right there in that spot,” Rolovich said.
Chang, in his fourth year leading Hawaii (8-4), said he and Rolovich were roommates on the road in their playing days.
Hawaii head coach Timmy Chang in the first half during an NCAA football game against Arizona on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025, in Tucson, Ariz. Credit: AP/Rick Scuteri
“We ended up building a close bond,” he said. “I got to learn so much from this guy here, just watching him go through everything that a college student-athlete goes through, the ups, the downs. There’s so many things that I learned from Rolo. … (We were) just kids at 18 to 20, 21 years old, coming together and now look at us here. It’s special, it really is.”
Bowl-ing season
Hawaii will be making its 15th bowl appearance and its 10th in the Hawaii Bowl. The last postseason appearance for the Rainbow Warriors came in 2019, when they beat BYU in the Hawaii Bowl. They earned a bid to their hometown bowl in 2021, but were forced to withdraw due to COVID issues within the program.
Cal (7-5) will be playing its 27th bowl game. It earned bids to the LA Bowl in each of the past two seasons, but lost to Texas Tech in 2023 and UNLV a year ago. The Golden Bears are seeking their first eight-win season since 2019.
Inside the numbers
Both teams have found success passing the ball this season. Hawaii ranks ninth in the FBS in passing offense at 289.7 yards per game, while Cal’s average of 270.8 yards ranks 21st. Opponents have averaged 197.1 passing yards against the Golden Bears, the 37th best mark in the country, while Hawaii has surrendered an average of 218 yards through the air (62nd in FBS).
Cal ranks last (134th) in rushing offense at a mere 76.5 yards per game. Hawaii’s 104 rushing yards per game ranks 125th nationally.
Southpaw slingers
Both starting quarterbacks are left-handed and hail from neighboring towns on the west side of the island of Oahu. Cal’s Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele, who has passed for 3,117 yards with 20 total touchdowns, is a true freshman from Ewa Beach, while Hawaii’s Micah Alejado calls Kapolei his hometown. The redshirt freshman has logged 2,832 yards through the air and tallied 22 total TDs.
All-Americans
Cal defensive back Hezekiah Masses and Hawaii placekicker Kansei Matsuzawa each received All-America recognition for their respective senior campaigns. Masses recorded five interceptions, 18 passes defended and 43 tackles en route to an AP second-team selection, while Matsuzawa converted 25 of 26 field goals and all 37 of his extra-point attempts to earn AP first-team honors.
Change at the top
Rolovich was named interim coach after Justin Wilcox was fired on Nov. 23. Just six days after the coaching change, Cal upset then-No. 21 SMU 38-35 with Rolovich at the helm. On Dec. 4, the school announced the hiring of Oregon defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi as the program’s coach. Rolovich will remain on staff for the Golden Bears as quarterbacks coach and assistant head coach.
Hawaii
Hawaii Bowl attendees advised to take public transit to avoid traffic, parking
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Planning to go to the Hawaii Bowl? City leaders are encouraging fans to utilize public transportation.
The Hawaii Bowl will take place Christmas Eve in front of a sold-out crowd at the University of Hawaii at Manoa’s Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex.
Kickoff is set for 3 p.m.
To help attendees get to and from the game, the city Department of Transportation Services (DTS) is ramping up bus services that connect Skyline’s Ahua Lagoon rail station and the UH Manoa campus.
“We want fans focused on the game, not on traffic or parking. TheBus and Skyline offer the safest and easiest way to get to UH Manoa and back home to celebrate the holiday with family,” Mayor Rick Blangiardi said.
Regular TheBus U Line service (Ahua Lagoon Drive Skyline Station–UH Manoa via the H-1 Freeway) will operate throughout the day.
To improve travel for game attendees, DTS will also run additional U Line service every 15 minutes between 12:15 p.m. and 2:45 p.m.
Along with the U Line and Skyline, the A Line (Ahua Lagoon Drive Skyline Station – UH Manoa) will be running regular weekday service between the Ahua Lagoon Drive Station and Sinclair Circle at UH Manoa.
Fans can also reach UH Manoa on Routes 1, 1L, 4, 6, and 13.
DTS encourages riders to plan ahead using the Transit App to map out routes, check arrival times, and stay on top of travel options.
Regular fares will be in effect for Skyline and TheBus. All annual and monthly fares are valid for Skyline and TheBus.
Copyright 2025 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
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