This track was born from a real headline: The March 2026 Kona Low storm hitting Hawaii with 44 inches of rain in Kula Maui, 135 mph summit gusts, and the dramatic rescue of 4 people and a dog from bridge pillars near Kaimuki High School. Muckraker's electronic production gives the story the weight of a front-page exclusive — journalism you can feel in your chest. Lines like "Forty-four inches falling on the slopes of Kula town," anchor the track in specifics that generic coverage misses. The mood — dramatic — reflects the emotional reality behind the numbers. Every Majik's Studio news track exists to make you feel the story, not just read it.
[verse 1]
Forty-four inches falling on the slopes of Kula town,
Maui underwater, rivers tearing highways down.
Kona Low came creeping from the south Pacific deep,
Turned the island paradise into a flooded sweep.
Summit gusts at one-three-five, Haleakala screaming loud,
Palm trees bent like paper clips beneath the angry cloud.
Streams became white rapids cutting through the valley floor,
Residents on rooftops, never seen this kind of pour.
Then the call came in from Kaimuki, bridge near the high school side,
Four people and a dog clinging where the current tried
To pull them from the concrete pillar, water at their chest,
First responders launching boats, putting courage to the test.
Helicopter spotlight cutting through the rain and dark,
Rescue swimmer in the flood—that's the bravest spark.
One by one they pulled them up, the dog came last but safe,
All of Hawaii cheering for that bridge-side act of faith.
[chorus]
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Forty-four inches and the rivers overflow.
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Maui standing strong through the undertow.
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Rescued from the bridge, heroes stole the show.
[verse 2]
The video went viral—four million views by dawn,
A golden retriever on a stretcher, soaking on the lawn.
The firefighter held the dog and both of them were shaking,
But the crowd erupted cheering, every heart was breaking.
Kula looked like Venice with the mudslides running brown,
Families in shelters, half of Upcountry shut down.
The surfers said they'd never seen the ocean rage like this,
Waves at Peahi hitting sixty, nature's angry fist.
But Hawaii does what Hawaii does—community came through,
Neighbors helping neighbors, nothing they won't do.
Canoe clubs running rescue missions up the flooded roads,
Uncle Kimo's pickup truck was hauling heavy loads.
The governor declared emergency, FEMA on the way,
But the locals didn't wait—they started saving lives that day.
And that dog from the bridge? Yeah, his name is Koa now,
The firefighter adopted him, and the internet said wow.
[chorus]
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Forty-four inches and the rivers overflow.
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Maui standing strong through the undertow.
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Rescued from the bridge, heroes stole the show.
[bridge]
Four people on a pillar in the middle of the night,
Water rising, current pulling, holding on with all their might.
Then the spotlight hit the bridge and help was finally there,
Aloha spirit stronger than the storm's despair.
Koa barking from the stretcher, tail still trying to wag,
Hawaii proved that even in the flood, love won't drag.
[chorus]
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Forty-four inches and the rivers overflow.
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Maui standing strong through the undertow.
Kona Low, Kona Low,
Rescued from the bridge, heroes stole the show.
[outro]
Kona Low... Kona Low...
Maui battered but unbroken, watch the aloha glow.
Kona Low... Kona Low...
Koa's home, the people's safe—that's the only thing to know.