tripe. that looks good. spam and bitter melon. now we are talking. oh, that s awesome. i just call it local food. right. but local just, like, covers, like, a wide net. when i look at this table, again, i just get hawaii. it s got portuguese, japanese, you got okinawan, world war ii, i don t know some type of korean. korean, japanese, hawaiian, love child plate of awesomeness. right. the food is some bone-deep hawaiian stuff, my friends, which is to say a delicious mash up of well, look. take taco rice, it s a dish created in okinawa to approximate tex-mex for homesick american g.i.s that was then appropriated in a post-ironic way by younger generations of okinawans and japanese and has now found it s way back to hawaii. got that? going right in there. wow.
andrew: korean, japanese, hawaiian. love child plate of awesomeness. anthony: right. the food is some bone-deep hawaiian stuff, my friends, which is to say a delicious mashup of, well, look take taco rice, it s a dish created in okinawa to approximate tex-mex for homesick american gis that was then appropriated in a post-ironic way by younger generations of okinawans and japanese, and has now found its way back to hawaii, got that? andrew: goin right in there. anthony: wow. mark: identifying and seeing my best friends who are native hawaiian helped me to realize the pride of being from hawaii. understanding the hawaiian culture, living it. but also being very proud of being japanese. anthony: there s still a movement to a sovereign, uh, a sovereignty movement. so if fighting broke out in the streets, which side are you on? mark: i m getting tear-gassed. anthony: you re getting tear-gassed. you don t even have to think about that. mark: well, you know what s funny.
mainland japanese husband yoichii. daughter minaka, who i guess would be japanese-okinawan-american slash hawaiian. and son-in-law robert who is, of course, mexican. mark: it s the pig feet. anthony: oh, nice, that s pretty. oh, wow look at that! that s the tripe. mark: that s the tripe, that s the tripe. anthony: that looks good. [ laughter ] mark: spam and bitter melon! anthony: now we are talking. oh that s awesome. andrew: i just call it local food. anthony: right. andrew: but local just, like, covers, like, a wide net. when i look at this table, again, i just get hawaii. it s got portuguese, japanese. you got okinawan. world war ii, i don t know some type of anthony: korean. andrew: korean, japanese, hawaiian. love child plate of awesomeness. anthony: right. the food is some bone deep hawaiian stuff, my friends, which is to say a delicious mash up of, well, look take taco rice, it s a dish
love child plate of awesomeness. anthony: right. the food is some bone deep hawaiian stuff, my friends, which is to say a delicious mash up of, well, look take taco rice, it s a dish created in okinawa to approximate tex-mex for home sick american gis that was then appropriated in a post-ironic way by younger generations of okinawans and japanese, and has now found its way back to hawaii, got that? andrew: goin right in there. anthony: wow. mark: identifying and seeing my best friends who are native hawaiian helped me to realize the pride of being from hawaii. understanding the hawaiian culture, living it. but also being very proud of being japanese. anthony: there s still a movement to a sovereign, uh, a sovereignty movement. so, if fighting broke out in the streets which side are you on? mark: i m getting tear-gassed. anthony: you re getting tear-gassed. you don t even have to think about that. mark: well, you know what s funny. i always joke about it. it s like, i
when i look at this table, again, i just get hawaii. it s got portuguese, japanese. you got okinawan. world war ii, i don t know some type of anthony: korean. andrew: korean, japanese, hawaiian. love child plate of awesomeness. anthony: right. the food is some bone deep hawaiian stuff, my friends, which is to say a delicious mash up of, well, look take taco rice, it s a dish created in okinawa to approximate tex-mex for home sick american gis that was then appropriated in a post-ironic way by younger generations of okinawans and japanese, and has now found its way back to hawaii, got that? andrew: goin right in there. anthony: wow. mark: identifying and seeing my best friends who are native hawaiian helped me to realize