11/24/24 - The News

Sunday, November 24, 2024

Mick Fleetwood plays to the future in Maui

November 24, 2024 0

 The island of Maui is a mere dot in the enormity of the vast Pacific Ocean, but it's not hard to see why millions visit every year, and why there are some who never want to leave. Fleetwood Mac founder Mick Fleetwood fell in love with Maui decades ago, and put down deep roots. "Long story, a long love affair," he said.



"But it really is your heart and your home?" I asked.

"Uh-huh. People often think, 'Oh yeah, how often are you on Maui?'" Fleetwood said. "This is my home. No other place."

As a young man he'd dreamed of a place, a club, where he could get his friends together, and 12 years ago he made it happen in the west Maui city of Lahaina:  Fleetwood's on Front Street. The menu was eclectic – they served everything from Biddie's Chicken (just like Fleetwood's mom, Biddie, made it) to cookie dough desserts dreamed up by his children. It was also a place where Mick and friends could play. "We created, I created, a band of people under a roof," he said. "Instead of a traveling circus, it was a resident circus at Fleetwood's on Front Street."


The island of Maui is a mere dot in the enormity of the vast Pacific Ocean, but it's not hard to see why millions visit every year, and why there are some who never want to leave. Fleetwood Mac founder Mick Fleetwood fell in love with Maui decades ago, and put down deep roots. "Long story, a long love affair," he said.

"But it really is your heart and your home?" I asked.

"Uh-huh. People often think, 'Oh yeah, how often are you on Maui?'" Fleetwood said. "This is my home. No other place."

As a young man he'd dreamed of a place, a club, where he could get his friends together, and 12 years ago he made it happen in the west Maui city of Lahaina:  Fleetwood's on Front Street. The menu was eclectic – they served everything from Biddie's Chicken (just like Fleetwood's mom, Biddie, made it) to cookie dough desserts dreamed up by his children. It was also a place where Mick and friends could play. "We created, I created, a band of people under a roof," he said. "Instead of a traveling circus, it was a resident circus at Fleetwood's on Front Street."

A wind-driven fire tore through western Maui, killing more than a hundred people, and consuming more than 2,000 buildings. Fleetwood was in Los Angeles when the fire started, and he hurried back to a scene of utter devastation. 

And his beloved restaurant? A charred sign was about all that was left.  

fleetsoods-on-front-st-sign.jpg
The burned sign of Fleetwood's on Front Street. CBS NEWS

I said, "I understand your not wanting to be, 'Me, me, me,' especially in light of the lives that were lost, the homes that were lost; you don't want to make too big of a deal out of a restaurant."

"No."

"But at the same time, this was your family. This was your home. That must've been a huge loss."

mick-fleetwood-1280.jpg
Mick Fleetwood.CBS NEWS

"It was a huge loss," Fleetwood said. "And in the reminding of it, that wave comes back. Today knowing we're doing this, I go, like, Okay, this is gonna be … a day."

We took a walk with Fleetwood down the street where his place once stood: the last time he was here, the place was still smoldering. "Literally, parts of it were still hot," he said.

More than a year later, the Lahaina waterfront is still very much a disaster zone.

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Correspondent Tracy Smith with Mick Fleetwood on Front Street in Lahaina. CBS NEWS

The decision about what to do with the land is still up in the air; the priority is housing for the displaced residents. But Fleetwood says he's determined to rebuild, just maybe not in the same place.

Asked what he pictures in a new place, he said, "For me, it has to encompass being able to handle playing music. There has to be music. We had it every day. That's a selfish request!"

But before anything is rebuilt, there's still a massive cleanup that needs to be completed here.

"We will see," he said. "You have a blank [canvas] to paint on, and there's a lot of painting to do.

"You have to be careful, even in this conversation, of going like, 'How sad that was,' when really it's about, 'Yes, but now we need this.' In the end you go like, it happened. And what's really important is absorbing maybe how all these things happened, and can they be circumnavigated to be more safe in the future, and be more aware? Of course that's part of it. But the real, real essence is the future."

Fleetwood's ukelele is one of the few things that survived the fire, and he's hoping his dream survives as well.

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Game show host Chuck Woolery of 'Wheel of Fortune,' 'Love Connection,' dies at 83

November 24, 2024 0

 Woolery died at his home in Texas in the presence of his wife, Kristen, his friend and podcast co-host Mark Young told The Associated Press. Along with his wife, Woolery is survived by his sons Michael and Sean and his daughter Melissa.



"Chuck Woolery was without doubt the Real Deal. Our 7 years as the original host and hostess on Wheel of Fortune were like magic," Susan Stafford, who was Chuck Woolery's co-host on "Wheel of Fortune," said in a statement to Fox News.

Our deep friendship continued after our time on the show," the statement continued. "He was an original. There was no one like Chuck. He had so much energy and was the same warm caring genuine person offstage as he was on. He was very spiritual and we shared a true love for God which made it even more worthwhile. So grateful to know I will see him again."

COLIN PETERSON, BEE GEES ORIGINAL DRUMMER, DEAD AT 78

Chuck Woolery

Game show host Chuck Woolery attends the Meow Mix Think Like a Cat Game Show Premiere on November 12, 2008, in Hollywood, California. (Getty Images)

Woolery was inducted into the American TV Game Show Hall of Fame in 2007 and earned a daytime Emmy nomination in 1978.

In 1983, Woolery began an 11-year stint as host of "Love Connection," during which time he coined the phrase, "We’ll be back in two minutes and two seconds." In 1984, he began hosting "Scrabble," simultaneously hosting both game shows until 1990.

Other shows he hosted include "Lingo," "Greed" and "The Chuck Woolery Show," as well as the short-lived syndicated revival of "The Dating Game" from 1998 to 2000. In 1992, he played himself in two episodes of "Melrose Place."

PAUL TEAL, 'ONE TREE HILL' ACTOR, DEAD AT 35

Woolery

Chuck Woolery at the "Game Show Networks 2003 Winter TCA Tour" at the Renaissance Hotel in Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2003. (Getty Images)

Woolery was the subject of the Game Show Network's first attempt at a reality show, "Chuck Woolery: Naturally Stoned," which premiered in 2003 and lasted six episodes.

Woolery began his TV career on "Wheel of Fortune," which debuted Jan. 6, 1975, on NBC.

"Wheel of Fortune" started life as "Shopper’s Bazaar." After Woolery appeared on "The Merv Griffin Show" singing "Delta Dawn," Griffin asked that he host the new show with Stafford.

NBC initially passed, but they changed it to "Wheel of Fortune" and were approved. After a few years, Woolery demanded a raise to $500,000 a year, or what host Peter Marshall was making on "Hollywood Squares." Griffin rejected the request and replaced Woolery with Pat Sajak, who, along with Vanna White, are most commonly associated with the show.

Game show host Chuck Woolery

Chuck Woolery performs at the "Game Show Networks 2003 Winter TCA Tour" at the Renaissance Hotel in Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2003. (Getty Images

Woolery, who was born in Ashland, Kentucky, served in the U.S. Navy before attending college. He played double bass in a folk trio before starting the psychedelic rock duo, The Avant-Garde, in 1967 while he worked as a truck driver to support himself as a musician.

Following his TV career, Woolery began podcasting. He told The New York Times that he described himself as a gun-rights activist, a conservative-libertarian and constitutionalist, noting that he had not revealed his politics in liberal Hollywood over fear of retribution.

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