24 Facts About Tiki culture

1.

Tiki culture is an American-originated art, music, and entertainment movement inspired by Polynesian, Melanesian and Micronesian cultures.

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2.

Tiki culture initially extended to decorate themed bars and restaurants, catering to Americans' views of the South Pacific.

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3.

Tiki culture changed over time, influenced by World War II and the firsthand exposure hundreds of thousands of American servicemen gained during that conflict.

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4.

Tiki culture is the first human in Maori mythology, and a wooden image of him.

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5.

Tiki culture began at the end of Prohibition in 1933 with the opening of Don's Beachcomber, a Polynesian-themed bar and restaurant in Hollywood, California.

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6.

Tiki culture's restaurant featured Cantonese cuisine and exotic rum cocktails and punch drinks, with a decor of flaming torches, rattan furniture, flower leis, and brightly colored fabrics that looked like imagery out of the popular movies that were helping to fuel the desires of the average American to travel the Pacific.

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7.

Excitement surrounding Thor Heyerdahl's 1947 Kon-Tiki culture expedition, followed by the book in 1948 and a movie in 1950, helped promote tropical exploration.

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8.

Tiki culture opened a Don the Beachcomber there, along with the Dagger Bar and created a treehouse office in the top of a giant banyan tree that oversaw a complex of multiple thatch-roofed buildings and huts that sold a variety of goods from around the tropical world.

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9.

Tiki culture was the first restaurateur to focus an entire drink menu on the mixing of flavored syrups and fresh fruit juices with rum, which he called "Rhum Rhapsodies" and were served in fancy glasses, hollowed out pineapples, and drilled coconuts.

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10.

Tiki culture ultimately had longer staying power than Beach and over time created nearly as many additional cocktails.

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11.

Tiki culture is especially known for creating the Fog Cutter cocktail and Scorpion bowl, as well as the quintessential Mai Tai.

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12.

Establishments that were part of or influenced by tiki culture eventually served at least some of their cocktails in decorative ceramic mugs, which came to be known in the 1950s as tiki mugs because the barware started to bear the shape of a tiki or "faux tiki" approximation.

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13.

Tiki culture would sing at large luaus being put on by Donn Beach.

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14.

Tiki culture's went on to play in minor film roles, such as Secret of the Incas.

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15.

Tiki culture's appeared on the first 12 Martin Denny album covers, 16 overall, and became a lasting iconic association with both the genre and tiki culture.

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16.

Just as Bergeron and others in tiki culture had done before him, Pandit invented a new persona by claiming to be a French-Indian musician from New Delhi when he was in fact born in the United States and would be considered by some to be African-American.

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17.

Hawaiian politician turned actor Tiki culture Santos was born on Abraham De Los Santos and was a recurring minor role character on Hawaiian Eye and went on to make appearances in other shows such as the sitcom McHale's Navy .

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18.

Tiki culture played the role of Chief Watara in episodes such as "The Dart Gun Wedding", sitting in a large wicker "throne" behind a large tiki mask.

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19.

The Chin Tiki culture, which had been permanently closed in 1980 and falling into disrepair, was finally torn down in Detroit near the turn of the century, just as tiki was beginning to stir on America's west coast.

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20.

Tiki culture became an influential artist known for his burnt wood carving style and making of homemade tiki mugs, an early catalyst for getting tiki's revival off the ground.

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21.

Tiki culture was inspired by his artistic parents and a large tiki given to his family by his surfer uncle.

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22.

Tiki culture became known for carving tiki necklaces and starting a mail order tiki business in the early 1990s.

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23.

In California and elsewhere, the re-exploration of rat rod and Hot rod culture melded with tiki, tattoo history, and rockabilly music to create new cultural hybrids such as "lowbrow" that manifested itself in music, art, and a new breed of tiki bars.

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24.

Tiki culture Magazine was launched, and large tiki-themed conventions began being held.

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