He Said, She Said

Republican
Sen. Fred Hemmings could have been a Sean Hannity for Hawai’i. Conservative talk-radio
station KHNR offered him his own morning show, but Hemmings didn’t want to fly
solo. He insisted the station add a Democratic co-host to balance out the show.

“I didn’t want it to be just me, ranting about political issues,” he says.
“I thought it would be better to have a Democrat to give another side.”

KHNR
brought on Sen. Donna Mercado Kim, a Democrat who is as outspoken a politician
as her Republican co-host. The pair went on air in August with Equal Time, billing
it as “the morning talk show of opposites.” A few minutes into the show, listeners
can see why.

Sens.
Fred Hemmings and Donna Mercado Kim Photo: Jimmy Forrest

Kim
and Hemmings clash on nearly every topic-from light rail (she fully supports it,
he calls it a waste of taxpayer money) to why African Americans tend to vote Democrat
(she says her party represents their needs, he angrily dismissed a black guest
as a liberal). And while Hemmings does his best Hannity impersonation, Kim is
no hard-hitting Alan Colmes. She plays good cop to his bad cop, always rational
no matter how riled her co-host gets.

“Sometimes, it gets kind of hot on
the show,” Kim says. “If we fight, they love it. We had one guy call up and say,
‘I don’t care what you guys say, as long as you’re fighting!'”

Topics ranging
from substance abuse to gambling elicit almost nonstop calls to KHNR’s switchboard.
Equal Time’s popularity convinced the station to stretch its original one-hour,
four-day-a-week schedule to two hours, five days a week-a pace that Hemmings and
Kim will keep up even as the 2005 legislative session starts this month.

But
lest you despair of our local Democrats and Republicans ever getting along, take
heart. In person, this pair is downright amicable-scribbling notes to each other
during long-winded call-ins and cracking jokes during commercial breaks. They’re
just as entertaining off the air as they are on.

“We probably disagree about
60 percent of the time,” Hemmings says. “We agree about 40 percent of the time,
because she’s a fiscal conservative. I think Donna and I have a good relationship-even
though she’s still the wicked witch from the north.”

Kim rewards him with
an eye roll and a reply, “And you’re an ogre from the south.”

This time,
neither of them is really right. Both were born and raised in Honolulu, and Hemmings
represents East and Windward O’ahu, while Kim’s district covers Kalihi to ‘Aiea.

Who knew politics could be this much fun?

Equal
Time

Monday
through Friday, 7 to 9 a.m. KHNR 97.5 FM
Formerly the frequency of KPOI, which
moved to 105.9 FM


Recommended

dvd

Alan
Wong, chef/owner of Alan Wong’s, the 2005 Hale ‘Aina restaurant of the year, recommends
Shall We Dance, the original Japanese version. “If you enjoyed the American
version, with Richard Gere and Jennifer Lopez, you will fall in love with the
original one. It’s a revealing look at Japanese culture, showing one businessman’s
boredom with his routine until he finally gathers up enough courage to step into
a dance class. You will laugh, and the ending is great.”Walt Disney Home Video,
1996.


cd

Burton
White, Hawai’i Theatre’s artistic director and theater manager, recommends Hawai’i’s
Mahi Beamer
, Beamer’s debut album, newly re-released on compact disc. “A falsetto
singer like Mahi Beamer comes along once in a lifetime. One needs only to listen
to a song like “Kawohikukapulani,” written by his grandmother, to understand that
his interpretation comes from a place so internal that it becomes eternal.” Hula
Records, 1959, re-released 2004

Book

Maile
Meyers, owner of Native Books Na Mea Hawai’i, recommends Managing with Aloha,
by Rosa Say. “I save this book for the end of my day, when I can sit and take
it in, one page at a time. It’s so good, it makes me smile just thinking about
it-a management book that celebrates the values of the Hawaiian people, acknowledges
the uniqueness of Hawai’i and, in true Hawaiian style, invites all to share …
such aloha!” Ho’ohana Publishing, 2004.