Aloha Hawaii

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A Tourist Trap episode whereby the cast packs up and vacations in Hawaii, land of Hula and Luaus. Often a thinly veiled excuse for a Beach Episode, if not outright inexplicable considering how expensive traveling there can be for mainlanders. Expect to see a huge amount of native Hawaiians, even though they make up less than a quarter of the population, and a majority of Hawaiians are Asian or part-Asian. Hawaii-themed episodes seemed to reach the peak of their popularity back in the '70s and '80s, when shows like Hawaii Five-O, Fantasy Island, and Magnum, P.I. were on the air and going strong.

A subtrope of the Vacation Episode.

Examples of one-shot Hawaii-themed episodes include:


Anime and Manga

  • Urusei Yatsura, complete with Gratuitous English.
  • Minako was hoping to have one of these in one chapter of Codename: Sailor V, but the plane ended up going to Greece instead.
  • Sazae-san had a TV special where the family goes to Hawaii.
  • The manga GALS! ends with almost everybody taking a vacation to Hawaii, for a wedding. (The anime of the manga, Super GALS!, didn't last long enough to reach the end of the manga.)

Film

Literature

  • Towards the end, the main character of Clone Republic takes a vacation to Hawaii with a friend.

Live-Action TV

Music

Newspaper Comics

Web Comics

Western Animation

Video Games

  • The Phantom Thieves of Hearts vacation in Hawaii during the events of Persona 5.

Real Life

  • A popular honeymoon destination.
  • The Polynesian Resort at Walt Disney World is an entire vacation resort based on this stereotype: all of the buildings are modeled on massively oversized longhouses and various "Hawaiian" music is played (often ukelele tunes) throughout the resort. All of the hotel buildings are named after Pacific islands and chains like Hawaii, Tonga, and Tahiti. Guests entering the Great Ceremonial House (the main building) are often given a lei and a fire dancing/torch lighting ceremony is held every day just before evening. This is only the tip of the iceberg.
    • Nearby resorts have been doing something similar for quite a while as well, with paid luaus.
  1. A tiki idol has a prominent role in the TV episode(s).