PBS Hawaii - HIKI NŌ Episode 106 | Hosted by Ke Kula Nihau O Kekaha PCS | Full Program
Premiere Airdate: April 11, 2011
This sixth episode of HIKI NŌ will be hosted by Ke Kula Niihau O Kekaha Public Charter School in West Kauai in their native Niihau dialect, with English subtitles. Stories from reporting schools will be in English. Students from Saint Francis School in Manoa on Oahu will pose the question—can grandmothers learn the ins and outs of Facebook? Students from Kapolei High School in West Oahu will tell the story of a football player’s amazing comeback. Students from Kealakehe High School in Kailua-Kona on Hawaii Island will show how education is much more than reading, writing and arithmetic; and students from Punahou School in Makiki on Oahu will report on the dangers of cellphone use while driving. Other schools reporting include Kaimuki Middle School (Kaimuki, Oahu), Hana High and Elementary School (East Maui), and Connections Public Charter School (East Hawaii Island).
Pen Pineapple Apple Pen ✒????????✒ PPAP
watch: HACKER CAUGHT ON CAMERA --~--
This song is stuck in my head... I have a pen, I have an apple, pineapple pen… Another BRAINWASH song!!
▶ WATCH ALL MY PARODIES -
Watch the original by 公式ピコ太郎歌唱ビデオチャンネル PPAP Pen Pineapple Apple Pen: OR CHEE YEE Teoh
I'm Chad Wild Clay and I love roasting YouTubers, rapping diss tracks, YouTuber impressions, YouTuber parodies, and singing parody songs. Chad with me here:
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LYRICS
PPAP
I have a pen
I have an apple
Apple Pen
I have a pen
I have pineapple
Pineapple pen
Apple Pen
Pineapple pen
Pen Pineapple Apple Pen
Pen Pineapple Apple Pen
Cavemail Episode 14 – Woah!
Woah!
(This was filmed just after my show on the 4th May. I'm back from tour now. It was cool as hell. You'll see a vid about it all soon-ish)
** MY P.O. BOX IS NOW CLOSED**
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Links:
Website ~
Merch ~
Tour Dates ~
Spotify ~
Instagram ~
Twitter ~
Tumblr ~
Bandcamp ~
Soundcloud ~
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Microphone: Audio Technica AT2020 USB
Camera: Canon EOS 60D
Lens: Sigma 30mm f/1.4
Electric guitar: Fender Telecaster
Bass guitar: Ibanez miKro
Acoustic guitar: Freshman, steel string
Electro-acoustic guitar: LAG, steel string
Concert Ukuleles: Kauai electro acoustic, Kauai acoustic, Nices acoustic, Adele acoustic
Interface: Roland Duo-Capture Ex
Video Editing Software: iMovie
Audio Editing Software: Logic Pro X
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Business contact:
Zack Zarrillo | Synergy Artist MGMT | zack@synergyartistmgmt.com
PBS Hawaii - HIKI NŌ Episode 501 | Hosted by Aliamanu Middle School | Full Program
Premiere Airdate: October 3, 2013
TOP STORIES:
From the Kona side of Hawaii Island,students at Konawaena High School show us how a community of local students and artists were inspired to paint a mural at Konawaena Elementary in remembrance of the twenty students and six teachers killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy. The community project provided students and adults with an opportunity to heal and process very difficult thoughts and feelings brought on by the tragedy.
Wheeler Middle School in Central Oahu reveals the immense amount of planning and the numerous details and moving parts involved in the daily creation of Hawaii public school lunch.
ALSO FEATURED:
Chiefess Kamakahelei Middle School on Kauai looks at why traffic is so congested on the Garden Isle; Maui High School asks, Do we really know all there is to know about e-cigarettes?; Moanalua High School looks at the pros and cons of smart phones and other mobile devices in the classroom; and Waianae Intermediate tells the story of a teacher who is bullied by students then gains the support of other students who see the injustice of the way he was treated.
PBS Hawaii - HIKI NŌ Episode 618 | Hosted by James Campbell High School | Full Program
This episode of HIKI NŌ is hosted by James Campbell High School in Ewa Beach in West Oahu.
Top Story:
Ewa Makai Middle School on Oahu introduces us to P.E. for the 21st century. When students take physical education at this high-tech middle school on the Ewa plain, they don’t just play dodge ball or run laps around the track. We learn how their innovative P.E. program is using computer technology to help students get fit both physically and digitally.
Also Featured:
Maui High School on the Valley Island explores the challenges of designing schools to provide a healthy learning environment while keeping out intruders. Architect Charles Kaneshiro, president of Group 70 International based in Honolulu, shows the design elements he incorporated at Puʻu Kukui Elementary School in Wailuku, Maui, to provide “zones of supervision” throughout the multi-building campus.
On Hawaii Island, Hawaii Preparatory Academy students Mason Dupont and Jacob McCafferty researched, designed and created a remote-controlled boat that can be used to study marine life such as whales. The boat wasn’t created for a traditional class in engineering or science, but for a self-directed, independent study project.
Kapaa High School on Kauai tells us about a new program created by the Kauai Humane Society to encourage the adoption of dogs. Volunteers take dogs from the Kauai Humane Society on field trips to various places on the island to help them meet potential owners.
Kamehameha Schools Kapalama on Oahu takes us into a classroom that takes 21st century skills to a new level as students learn the intricacies of cell division, land ecology and geographical mapping through the popular video game, Minecraft. Students experience hands-on interaction with the land, exploration of their Hawaiian culture, and, of course, video gaming! The results: collaboration that combines creativity, communication, critical thinking – and a little bit of chaos.
Students of Kapaa Middle School on Kauai show us what makes their May Day program different from others in the state, and reveal what it takes to prepare for this beloved Hawaii tradition.
The Ladybug Love-In: A Valentine's Special | Deep Look
Ladybugs spend most of their lives alone, gorging themselves on aphids. But every winter they take to the wind, soaring over cities and fields to assemble for a ladybug bash. In these huge gatherings, they'll do more than hibernate-it's their best chance to find a mate.
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DEEP LOOK: an ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Get a new perspective on our place in the universe and meet extraordinary new friends. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small.
Read more on ladybugs:
Where do ladybugs live?
In California, ladybugs spend most of the year on crops in the Central Valley, or on domestic garden plants, feeding on aphids. When the weather starts to turn chilly, however, the aphids die off in the cold. With food becoming scarce, the ladybugs take off, flying straight up. The wind picks them up and carries them on their way, toward hills in the Bay Area and coastal mountain ranges.
What do ladybugs eat?
Ladybugs spend most of the year on crops or on domestic garden plants, feeding on aphids.
Are ladybugs insects?
Ladybugs belong to the order Coleoptera, or beetles. Europeans have called these dome-backed beetles by the name ladybirds, or ladybird beetles, for over 500 years. In America, the name ladybird was replaced by ladybug. Scientists usually prefer the common name lady beetles.
Why are some ladybugs red?
The red color is to signal to predators that they are toxic. They truly do taste bad. In high enough concentrations, they can be toxic, said Christopher Wheeler, who studied ladybug behavior for his Ph.D. at UC Riverside.
More great Deep Look episodes on biology:
Where Are the Ants Carrying All Those Leaves?
Watch Flesh-Eating Beetles Strip Bodies to the Bone:
Nature's Scuba Divers: How Beetles Breathe Underwater:
See also another great video from the PBS Digital Studios!
It's Okay to Be Smart: Why Seasons Make No Sense
If you're in the San Francisco Bay Area, In the Bay Area, one of the best places to view ladybug aggregations is Redwood Regional Park in Oakland. Between November and February, numerous points along the park's main artery, the Stream Trail, are swarming with the insects.
KQED Science:
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Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, which is also supported by HopeLab, the David B. Gold Foundation, the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, the Vadasz Family Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Smart Family Foundation and the members of KQED.
#deeplook