
1618 - HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawaiʻi 2025 Spring Challenge
Season 16 Episode 18 | 26m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
The winning entries of HIKI NŌ’s 2025 Spring Challenge competition.
On this episode of HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawaiʻi, our hosts reveal the winning entries of HIKI NŌ’s 2025 Spring Challenge competition. For the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge, the call was for videos based on the prompt “New Beginnings.”
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HIKI NŌ is a local public television program presented by PBS Hawai'i

1618 - HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawaiʻi 2025 Spring Challenge
Season 16 Episode 18 | 26m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
On this episode of HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawaiʻi, our hosts reveal the winning entries of HIKI NŌ’s 2025 Spring Challenge competition. For the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge, the call was for videos based on the prompt “New Beginnings.”
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship[intro music] HIKI NŌ, Hawai‘i's New Wave of Storytellers.
Aloha and welcome to this episode of HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i.
My name is Hailey Cañete-Gómez.
And I'm Riah Sabado, and we're seniors at James Campbell High School on O‘ahu.
We have a packed show for you tonight.
We get to reveal the winning entries of HIKI NŌ's 2025 Spring Challenge competition.
Each season during the school year, HIKI NŌ challenges student reporters to produce stories in the span of a few days.
These contests are called challenges.
For the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge, the call was for videos based on the prompt, New Beginnings.
Usually, students have weeks to work on projects for HIKI NŌ and lots of help from our teachers and industry mentors.
During this competition, students had just a week to search for story ideas and people to interview, film and edit their videos.
In these competitions, HIKI NŌ judges look for stories produced with technical skill and storytelling finesse.
They also have to meet the prompt.
Now, it's our pleasure to share the winning entries with you.
Let's start with an honorable mention in our high school division.
In the high school division of the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge receiving honorable mention is Maui High School located in Kahului, Maui.
Congratulations.
Student reporters interviewed members of their school men's volleyball team to discover what is behind their recent spring season winning streak.
I think every season is a new beginning, and this year we're really trying to walk in and, like, trying to get better, and like, show that we're the best team on Maui so far.
The Maui High School volleyball team's journey to success hasn't always been smooth, but with resilience and teamwork, they've managed to maintain an undefeated season.
I think definitely, volleyball is a sport you can't get down on yourselves, because you're gonna get new guys every single season.
Some freshmen will come up, or some seniors will leave.
You know, maybe a little more experienced players are gonna come up, so you have to put the pressure on them.
Can't go easy on them, especially because once we leave, they're gonna be the guys here.
So, you'll have to figure out the new team every time, be able to adapt to what people you have and be able to succeed and go as far as you can go.
[cheers] The last year's season, we didn't do that good.
We were teammates, and this year, we're friends.
A big thing with us was connection, and then this year, we bonded a lot more.
We're a lot closer.
It just allowed us to play a lot more as a team, and if we play to the top of our ability, we are the best, and we can beat the best.
but the team faces a tougher season.
The seniors sadly have to start their own new beginnings.
It's definitely very sad for me.
You know, I love all my teammates.
They're like, close friends to me.
I do think college will be a new beginning for me.
It's gonna be sad to leave these guys and move on.
Let's go.
Take care of your team.
You know, they're your family.
If you have beef between your teammates, it's gonna create a bad atmosphere.
You're not gonna be practicing or playing good.
Though, winning 8-0 without losing a single set, their main goal is to - Win MIL and go to states.
We played Baldwin last night, and it was a tough fight, and I think a lot of it was just because we went in there thinking we're gonna win no matter what, and they almost beat us.
If we get cocky, we start thinking we're the best, we can't lose, a team will come by, they'll sweep us, and we won't even know it, but it's a great feeling, and we want to stay undefeated.
Being humble, but yet being aggressive at the same time.
Sometimes you don't know what you don't know until you actually go through the experience.
We have to develop the younger underclassmen, the JV, and work with them and get them up to speed with what the varsity is doing.
We just got to keep doing the same thing that we're doing now, find out new things that they can get better at, and then work on those things.
Once the seniors leave, the responsibility shifts to the juniors, and the pressure is on them to step up.
Definitely gonna them, you know, really valuable to team, right now especially.
I definitely take a lot of responsibility, especially the captain, like, lead the team.
We gotta be able to not, like, get down on ourselves even when we're losing.
We gotta be able to keep looking for the future and make sure that we're looking for those wins.
Volleyball is much more mistake game.
You got to be able to keep like, succeeding and not be able to focus on your losses, because everyone makes mistakes.
I think we'll have a little more seniors next year, so we'll all need to share the responsibility, but it's gonna be good leaders next year.
As they continue to face challenges this season, their unity and dedication will be tested and perhaps lead them into even greater accomplishments, despite their senior players' departures.
This is Kallysta Miguel from Maui High School for HIKI NŌ, on PBS Hawai‘i.
In the high school division of the 2025 HIKI NŌ PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge, receiving third place from the island of O‘ahu is Kālaheo High School.
Congratulations.
This story provides an insightful look at the kickoff of girls flag football in the state of Hawai‘i.
[whistle blows] To most of the audience, that whistle was the sound of a new game, but to the players on the field, it was much more than that.
It was the sound of a new beginning.
On March 25, 2025 the OIA flag football season started.
This meant that girls from across the state could now participate in flag football.
So, I joined flag football because I thought it would be such a cool opportunity.
I'd previously done cheerleading at Kālaheo before, and a lot of my cheer friends were going to do flag football.
So, it was mainly just a big group of friends deciding, hey, this is a cool new sport that the school is introducing, and it might be a really cool opportunity.
So, flag football has impacted my life by basically just helping me become a better person.
I made our Coach Lee, he's awesome.
He's not only teaching us the fundamentals of flag football, but he's also teaching us, like life skills and how the real world is going to impact us.
So, not only is it helping me become more athletic in like my athletic abilities, but it's definitely helping me become a better, well-rounded person.
I think that, because it's the first season, and nobody has really ever played before, that everyone is a little more uplifting towards each other.
Everyone cares more, and there's just a bigger sense of community within the team and within the entire state.
Like, all of the schools, I noticed that compared to other sports, all of the schools have just been a lot kinder to each other.
There's been a lot less arguments on the field, fighting, like and just everyone knows that it's everyone's first time, so they're being patient.
Flag football really, like, we do a lot of conditioning, so it's really been testing my endurance and making me realize that I'm a lot stronger than I think, and that when I'm tired, I just gotta keep pushing myself and always do my best.
It's kind of a new sport, so it's definitely had some challenges.
But I just give it my all.
My teammates give it their all.
I am really excited to continue next year, because I'm determined to, like, make a name for Kālaheo flag football, and I really enjoy the girls doing it, and the coaches, and just how I can come out here and work hard and feel the support.
I'm gonna do the sport next year 110% just because the community is amazing, the people are amazing, the coaches are amazing, and it's so much fun.
To most of the audience, that same whistle marks the end of the game.
To the players on the field, it meant more than that.
It marked a chance to try something new, a chance to meet different people, a chance to become a part of a rapidly growing community.
And above all, it marked the start of a new beginning.
This is Emma Wittig from Kālaheo High School for HIKI NŌ, on PBS Hawai‘i.
Taking second place in the middle school division in the 2025 HIKI NŌ Spring Challenge is Moanalua Middle School on O‘ahu.
Congratulations.
These students interviewed the new coach of the Moanalua High School boy's baseball team, who has some history with the team himself.
Moanalua High School's baseball team has a new beginning with a familiar face.
Todd Takabuki, a former pitcher and infielder, made his way home as this year's head coach.
In 2011, we were able to win the first OIA championship for the school, and that's something that's still very vivid in my mind.
Playing baseball in high school, we want to make memories, right.
Wins and losses happen.
We want them to be able to talk about and have lifelong relationships, right, with each other.
[chants] So, after college, I got a job as a teacher Kailua High School.
The coach here asked me, like, "Hey, do you want to coach here?"
And I was like, "Oh, you know, it's keeps me around the game."
So, I was like, oh, that's kind of something I wanted to do.
All right, find the way on.
Find the way on.
This is the start of Todd's new position in the field, working under Kailua veteran Head Coach Corey Ishigo.
I've been there for nine years, so I was a JV head coach there for four.
So, that's been something that's been really good experience-wise.
So, a lot of the things that I learned that I want our kids to know he's never going to take credit for them doing well, right?
He's going to take the blame.
In 2023 Todd applied to be the new head coach of Moanalua High School, but he'd have to wait one more season before he got his chance.
Don't give up on that.
Just stay with him and make sure, right.
If I got that job when I did apply for it two years ago, maybe I wasn't ready, and then maybe I wouldn't be as prepared as I am now.
I think that's something that is like, the blessing in disguise.
Giving up is not a part of Coach Todd's playbook, and it's this mentality that he wants to instill in his new team.
We talk about it a lot, about getting 1% better every day.
I think if they have that mindset, then that's something that we're gonna grow as a team and individually.
From whatever they've done in the past, it doesn't matter.
Whatever I've done in the past doesn't matter, right?
For both of us, it's gonna be a fresh start.
It's still kind of new to me and new to him, but just so far, he's been a really good coach.
I feel like we have a better connection with each other compared to previous years.
And I'd say so far, we've just been playing overall, like better as a team.
He's gotten really close to the team, and I feel like the program's in really good hands now.
Over my time here, right, I want this to become more of a family, and I think that's something that we're working towards, right?
I have to gain their trust, right, not as a coach, but as a person as well.
And I think over time, this family idea is going to get better and better.
[cheers] This is Maile Liu from Moanalua Middle School reporting for HIKI NŌ, on PBS Hawai‘i.
In the high school division of the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge, receiving second place is H.P.
Baldwin High School on Maui.
Congratulations.
These student reporters share the story behind a program that encourages the next generation of filmmakers.
They even scored an interview with a celebrity Hollywood director who was born and raised on Maui.
I think everybody has creativity, and sometimes I think you just need a reason and somebody telling you to make something, and I think in large part that's what we're offering this whole kind of support system.
Located on Maui, a new, up and coming organization, is helping young creatives turn their ideas into powerful stories, one film at a time.
Hisako Film Lab is a brand-new organization, which started with our summer lab program.
We've been able to replicate that into seasonal programs where we go through the entire process of making a short film, from pitching ideas to writing it, to casting and filming all over the island, and then editing it and then finally premiering it.
First and foremost, when we started, we wanted to find just kind of like, the best way to support filmmakers.
There's a lot of really cool things happening in the schools, and we also wanted to kind of fill in the gaps where we could offer something unique.
Founded by Maui Director Destin Cretton, Hisako Film Lab was created to inspire the next generation of storytellers through hands-on filmmaking.
Our goal is to really nurture the students that are right in front of us, and to give the young people on Maui specifically an opportunity that didn't exist otherwise.
Teach me how to craft a story and enjoy the process of making a film.
I think that has pushed me to want to do it more and giving me a better foundation to start something new.
It's helping me find a new journey, discover something different, and pave a path that I wasn't sure if I ever wanted to complete.
At the Lab, each film starts as a fresh idea, and for students, it's the beginning of something bigger: confidence, connection and creativity.
Every time you finish a project, there's this huge kind of push to exert yourself to finish something and get through to the finish line, and then as soon as you're done, you're always starting back at the blank page, and always kind of like, taking what you learned on the last thing and applying it to the next one.
The Hisako Film Lab is based on that early experience of creativity for me, and my hope is, by giving that experience to other students on Maui, be able to point to that, that moment entering that lab as their beginning for their creative process of their life.
That is the real beating heart of the Hisako Film Lab.
This is Miya Suzuki from H.P.
Baldwin High School for HIKI NŌ, on PBS Hawai‘i.
Coming in first place of the middle school division of the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge is Maui Waena Intermediate School on Maui.
Congratulations.
Students take us behind the scenes of a local Maui shop that has a unique purpose to employ people with disabilities.
This is a place where we all can just be us.
Though the community often overlooks the abilities of people with special needs, behind these doors, they find new beginnings.
We are a gift and retail store called Depo market that employs adults with disabilities.
So, I have an autistic brother.
His name is Chris, and we started this business because Chris really wanted a job but wasn't able to apply for the jobs that he would actually want to work at.
And so, we started doing pop ups for three years, selling his jewelry on Maui.
And then we eventually opened this store to help other adults in our community that are experiencing the same thing, so that they can have a job and earn money doing something that they want to do.
For these, I designed these.
In addition to helping her brother, Depo Market has opened new pathways in life for others with similar challenges.
Yeah, whenever I would go look for jobs, they said that I couldn't work there.
It was challenging to find jobs that would suit or fit me.
Although Jules, who was born with Williams Syndrome, a rare genetic disorder which impacts ability to learn and behave, had previously struggled with getting a job, she was granted an opportunity at depo market to showcase her abilities.
Yeah, it's hard to find employers like Tiffany who will let you work in places because of your special needs.
It helps them find a suitable job for them to feel happy and feel at home.
So, opening the store has created new beginnings I think for everybody involved.
It's created new beginnings for me; I've never had employees before or managed a retail store.
So, that's been really empowering, and I've learned a lot.
It's been a new beginning for my brother, who's has never had work experience before, especially in a professional setting.
And same with all of our employees.
everyone's been able to meet new people.
[paper bag crunches] Most importantly, it's a really good new beginning for our community overall, so that they aren't confused or scared when they meet people like Chris; so that they can come here and interact with people that are different, that they might not normally interact with.
You want us to do another strand, Kayla?
Yeah, this feels like home.
Depo Market, a store that started from an experiment and ended with success, will continue to give these people with different abilities a fresh new start.
This is Layla Magsayo from Maui Waena Intermediate for HIKI NŌ, on PBS Hawai‘i.
Receiving first place in the high school division of the 2025 HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i Spring Challenge is Kapa‘a High School on Kaua‘i.
Congratulations.
These students produced an outstanding story about their school's auto mechanics class and the successful program they've launched to refurbish golf carts.
People want to get rid of these golf carts that they think, "Oh, it's garbage already.
It's no worth in fixing."
We take them in, we soup them up like this, painting on them, give them wheels, rims, tires, lift light, sounds.
The Automotive Technology Pathway at Kapa‘a High School is now giving old golf carts new life.
We wanted to have some kind of a project that was a small scale of working on a vehicle, something that the students could stretch their skills on, something that they could work on, something we could, you know, modify and tune without having problems on the road.
We decided, and we had this idea of using golf carts.
Having older carts already on campus provided a starting point.
And the head custodian, he offered his golf cart as the prototype for us to go.
It was bone stock, and we took it apart down to the frame, cleaned it up.
You know, we did a whole bunch of things, from rust treatment, body work, paint, suspension, tires.
It was a lot of fun, and that was kind of breaking the ice for us.
So, these are more delicate and more fragile.
They'll break into about five pieces before you can even get another tool to it.
If you try one tool, the bolts strip, and you gotta go through a hassle of undoing the strip bolts.
Fixing any older machine requires problem solving skills.
When you work in the shop or working on a vehicle, they have to find answers that are not in, like, the obvious places.
They have to ask around.
Things break and they kind of go wrong.
That causes the students to kind of make a choice where, like, are we going to give up?
Are we going to get it done?
There's a group of us that works on these challenges, and I learned do it right the first time, or read the instructions better, because you read the instructions good the first time, you can go farther.
Refurbishing the carts is only the first step in providing a full-scale service.
And what I had the students do is I had them write a business plan and kind of lay out the steps needed to get to the end goal, as well as the material and the costs involved.
We're pretty much flipping these carts.
We fix them up, we sell them, and then whatever money we get from the carts, we put back into the shop, like tools, consumables, and other parts for future golf carts.
And I'm proud to say, maybe just last year, we were able to create a vehicle for auction that went as a fundraiser.
So, we're kind of trying to tie the circle back in and just keep it rolling.
I'd say one of the neatest things about it is when we see the golf carts driving around, security is using it, maintenance using them, there's a sense of pride the students have because they're providing something that wasn't there before.
This is Hailey Hadley from Kapa‘a High School for HIKI NŌ on PBS Hawai‘i.
It's amazing that these students took the challenge to discover stories, conduct interviews, and edit professional pieces to the best of their ability during these whirlwind contests.
They couldn't do it without the guidance of their teachers.
Let's meet one of the dedicated HIKI NŌ teachers behind the Kapa‘a High School's winning student production team.
Our media production teacher and HIKI NŌ advisor is Mr. Chris Sanderl.
This is his third year teaching at Kapa‘a High School, and before that, he was the HIKI NŌ advisor at Kapa‘a Middle School.
He always ensures our projects have the highest possible production value to keep our audience engaged.
This keeps us pushing toward perfection.
Mr. Sanderl and his wife just welcomed their first child into the world only a few weeks ago.
They are enjoying this time together as a family and look forward to their first trip to the beach with their new little girl.
Congratulations to all of the student teams who worked so hard under the pressure of a professional deadline.
They really stepped up to the challenge.
Stay tuned for an extra segment after the credits to get to know HIKI NŌ teacher Chris Sanderl even more.
We hope you've enjoyed the work of Hawai‘i's New Wave of Storytellers.
Don't forget to subscribe to PBS Hawai‘i on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok.
You can find this HIKI NŌ episode and more at pbsHawai‘i.org.
Tune in next week for more proof that Hawai‘i students HIKI NŌ, can do.
[outro music] My name is Chris Sanderl.
I teach at Kapa‘a High School on Kaua‘i, and I'm currently teaching film and media production.
My favorite thing about participating with HIKI NŌ is giving students a real-world opportunity with film and media production.
Yeah, I surf, I do CrossFit.
I'm always outdoors at the beach, getting outside as much as I can.
I gotta say my house.
I think living on Kaua‘i, the thing I love most about it is the community.
Hardest thing about living on Kaua‘i for me is being at a distance from my family on the mainland.
Breathing underwater.
Malasadas.
Saimin is my favorite local snack, if you call it a snack.
I call it a meal.
Obviously, my wife and kid.
Watching my daughter smile is my favorite thing about being a dad, making her laugh.
But I guess I could also say the ability to take photographs.
Early Bird.
Being a dad too, early bird, night owl no longer exists.
Anything sweet, chocolate, donuts and ice cream.
Staying up late, although I am an early bird, or I need to be.
Love to laugh.
[cricket chirps] I'm pretty good at the yoyo and I can juggle.
My mom kind of helped train me as a street entertainer from a very young age, so I always had a backup plan.
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HIKI NŌ is a local public television program presented by PBS Hawai'i