Posted 01 September 2006

Hawaii 2050 Rebroadcasts

The August 26 Hawaii 2050 kick-off event will be rebroadcast on public access channels throughout the state over the next few weeks. The footage from the conference was edited to remove all of the breaks, so the final running time is just under four hours.



On Oahu, rebroadcasts on `Olelo are as follows:



Monday, September 4, 2006

9:30 am

Channel 54



Tuesday, September 5, 2006

12:01am

Channel 54


Thursday, September 7, 2006

10:30pm

Channel 49


Saturday, September 9, 2006*

2:00 pm

Channel 53

*Tentative – may be pre-empted by live broadcast

Neighbor Island Broadcasts. The edited program will be sent to the neighbor island stations (Akaku, Na Leo O Hawaii, Ho`ike) via HITS on Tuesday, and we will send you the rebroadcast schedule for the neighbor island stations as soon as it is available.
2 Comments:
At 11:02 PM, Blogger 4parawag2 said...  
I watched the broadcast of the hawaii 2050 kickoff event, and frankly 4 hours is a long time to hold attention.

The components of the show were credible as stand-alone pieces.
Presentations :
* The Honorable Russell Kokubun, Hawaii State Senator and Chair, Hawaii 2050 Sustainability Task Force
* The Honorable George Ariyoshi, Governor of Hawaii 1973-1986
* Ramsay Taum, Co-facilitator, Sustain Hawaii
* Makena Coffman & Brent Dillabaugh, Kanu Hawaii
* Dr. Jim Dator, Hawaii Center for Futures Research Studies, University of Hawaii at Manoa
* Waianae High School Searider Productions

also included was footage from two of the four immersive futures, and segements of the 40 minute facilitated discussion periods.

I think that if these segments were partitioned and made selectable from a central menu, people would be able to expereince the kickoff event in a much more enjoyable manner.

However,
hats off to the 'olelo productions team who put this piece together!!! It brought home the urgency of the issues and showed the Hawaiian community working together passionately.

THANK YOU 'OLELO and all other participants.
At 11:52 AM, Blogger David Fisher said...  
Agree with the idea of chunking the four hours into ~20 minute segments. Also, it should be put up on YouTube or some other on demand server for the many of us who do not have cable TV.
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