Only in Manila….the begging showdogs :)

Dogs

I was hurrying to work yesterday when I saw these two dogs. They were too cute to ignore. On impulse, I took my digicam from my bag to take a picture until I was nudged by a cigarette vendor to “donate” five pesos. Aha! That was what the baskets were for :D

Dogs

Mind you they’re just askals (street dogs) but looks like they were trained well. I bet they can stay in that position for hours…. while wearing shades of course!

Soon enough, the dogs’ trainor ( I failed to get his name) let one hold a gun (gasp!) while standing on all fours. I was certainly impressed. The doggie’s tag read “Overall 1st Place” while the other one had inscribed “Most Talented Dog.”

Dogs

Too bad I didn’t stay long enough to see what more of their talent was. But I hope to see them in the same spot some other time. What a breather. Only in Manila! ;)

Dogs

Nakakawindang, nakaka-iyak

Nawindang naman ako sa sagot ng tatay ni Jan-Jan Estrada, ang anim na taong batang nasa gitna ngayon ng kontrobersya dahil sa kanyang nakakabagbag damdamin na itsura habang sumasayaw ng “macho dancing” sa Wiling-Willie.

Binabatikos ngayon kaliwa’t –kanan si Willie Revillame sa sinasabi ng marami na pambabastos at panga-abuso sa bata para lamang mabenta ang kanyang show sa TV5. Nangyari ito noong Marso 12 ngunit itong linggo lang talagang nakatawag pansin sa “middle class” dahil sa video ng show na kumalat sa internet.

Makikita sa video na mangiyak-ngiyak si Jan-Jan habang tumatawa si Revillame at marami sa audience sa pagsasayaw ni Jan-jan na gionagawa ng mga kalalakihan sa mga bar. Binigyan ni Willie ng P10,000 si Jan-Jan.

Kinundena ni Social Services Secretary Dinky Soliman ang ginawa ni Revillame. Ganun din ang Commission on Human Rights sa pamumuno ni Etta Rosales. Sa Lunes, magmi-miting ang Hearing and Adjudication Committee ng Movie and Television Review and Classification Board tungkol dito.

Sumulat si Soliman sa may-ari ng TV5, ang negosyanteng si Manuel V. Pangilinan. Humingi ng pasensya ang TV5 at si Revillame ngunit sinasabi nila na wala naman daw silang intensyun na abusuhin ang bata. Baka hindi alam ang ibig sabihin kung ano ang pang-aabuso .
Ito ring tatay, hindi naman daw nabastos ang anak. Marami pa nga daw natuwas. “Talent ‘yun ng anak ko, simula nung 4 years old sinasayaw nila ‘yun, kahit sa school pa. Ako’y tuwang-tuwa. Napaluha ako sa tuwa.”

Hindi naman daw naiiyak yung anak niya. ““Hindi siya naka-smile kasi wala siyang ngipin. Kaya naman siya umiyak kasi natatakot siya kay Kapre Balingit!” (Si Kapre Balingit ay kasama sa staff ng Willing-Willie.)

Hindi raw bastos ang macho-dancing ni Jan-Jan:“Sa akin hindi bastos. Basta sayaw ‘yan. Hindi alam ng bata kung bastos. Hindi bastos ‘yun sa magulang. Kaya gusto ko makaahon sa hirap. Maging artista di ba?”

Natuwa siya na maraming natuwa raw sa anak niya at pasalamat siya kay Revillame:“Maraming natutuwa. Ang daming nagpapapicture sa kanya, after makita siya sa Willing Willie. Ganun katindi! Pasalamat nga ako kay Willie.”

“Wala akong narinig na hindi maganda. Kahit mga kamag-anak ko sa abroad.Tumawag sila sa akin. ‘Jojo, napaiyak kami sa tuwa sa ganda ng ginawa ng anak mo,’”dagdag pa niya.

Tuwang-tuwa siya sa P10,000 na binigay ni Willie at gusto pa raw niya bumalik ulit sa Willing-Wilie> Bumalik nga sila noong Lunes at sabi ng mga nakapanood, sumayaw daw ng parang Michael Jackson si Jan-Jan ulit.
Naiiyak ako.

Has anybody seen Kat Romana?

Update: Kat has returned. http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/metro-manila/04/04/11/facebook-draws-prodigal-teen-home

If you see her, please bring her to her family

This is an appeal from Money Romana posted in her Facebook wall:

Our daughter Catherine C. Romana has been missing March 26. She is not with her friends that we know. She may have ran away please help us. She is 14 years old, has a learning disability, does not communicate very well and knows little about going around. If you have seen her–last seen wearing green t-shirt, shorts and a pink back pack please contact us. Mony Romana-

3453974/09209057259

Please help us.

Mony Romana
Contact details: 3453974/09209057259

Reality Radio

Penman for Monday, March 28, 2011


FURTHER TO my piece on music last week, let me tell you what else I’m listening to. I’ve long been a follower of AM radio; as a writer, nothing brings me closer to what’s really on people’s minds than radio commentators and their phone-in listeners. Granted, much of what’s out there is highly opinionated if not bigoted blather, but that comes with the territory. I usually switch to something else after five minutes of this toxic dose, and that something else could be a legal or medical advice program from which I can actually learn something.

Half the legal questions I monitor seem to have to do with the division of property following, in effect, the division of families, and the most popular ailments seem to involve pains in the joints and other typical afflictions of the working stiff. What rights do I have as an illegitimate child, asks one caller; why do I get a throbbing headache every time I take the bus ride from the office, asks another. Past midnight or early in the morning, when I’m driving home from one of my poker binges, I catch the lonely and the lovelorn, calling in from as far as Saudi Arabia, asking for advice or, more often, just for sympathy as they try to explain why they’ve fallen for a Filipino nurse at the company clinic despite having a wife and six children back in Pangasinan.

I suppose you can call this “reality radio,” not so much a new genre as a modern rebranding of what radio has been doing all along and done rather well. It’s arguably done this even better than TV, in that classic, pre-teleradyo radio’s a cross or a halfway house between the printed word and the visual image: you can hear the words and imagine the speaker and his or her situation. With no pictures in the way, you latch on more to what’s being said and how, to every tremor and inflection. Radio’s a medium for which your active imagination has to work overtime, while TV, the remote control, and the La-Z-Boy provide pure passive entertainment.

I was born in the ‘50s, meaning that I grew up during the infancy of the TV age in the Philippines—something akin, I suppose, to being born in the ‘80s, just before the Internet and cellular telephony swept nearly everything away like a tsunami. Pre-TV, we relied on reading and listening for our education and entertainment; “watching” was something we did in school once in a while, when the teacher put on a 10-minute McGraw-Hill film on a clackety spool about something exotic like outer space or the Kingdom of Tonga. When TV came to a neighbor’s house, we flocked to it in droves, leaving a mountain of slippers at the doorway. And soon I, too, would drift away from radio, trading “Erlinda ng Bataan” and “Eddie, Junior Detective” for “McHale’s Navy” and “The Green Hornet.”

Unfortunately (or maybe not), much of radio’s magic is lost to today’s young Pinoys. There’s the FM band, of course, but it’s mainly music of the same kind you can put and get on your iPod. On the other hand, the good thing about FM, aside from its relative clarity, is that your tuner doesn’t go off into the far side of the moon when you enter the underpass, and you don’t have to pull out and brandish your car antenna like a fishing rod to get a signal.

This brings me to my happy discovery of recent weeks—a station that brings the best of AM and FM together: 92.3 News FM, also known as “Radyo 5,” the radio arm of the revitalized Channel 5. For years, I’d been stuck on the far left side of the AM band, where the two major TV-radio networks reside.

There’s some ear-worthy material there, especially on DZMM—I’ve enjoyed Ariel Ureta’s mid-morning banter with co-host Winnie Cordero, especially when they take up a word for the day, culled from one of our many Philippine languages, and have listeners phone in on what it means in their own language or locality. On Sundays, Boots Anson-Roa and Willie Nepomuceno walk me down memory lane; early and late most days, the team-up of Gerry Baja and Anthony Taberna keep me informed and amused.

But it’s hard to shake off the impression that one of the two top stations specializes in a machine-gun-style delivery of the news, and the other in a hysterical, vein-popping delivery of almost anything. I know the old wisdom about TV being a cool medium and radio being hot, and maybe announcing every little bit of news thunderously like Moses had just turned up at the corner with two stone tablets does get people’s attention according to the focus groups. But it grates on the ears, and worse, it reduces all the news—big and small, from earthquakes that kill thousands to Starlet X’s newest boyfriend—to the same sensory register.

Enter the alternative. My car radio defaults to AM, if only because I know I can rely on it for up-to-the-minute news and traffic updates, but I must’ve had too much of it one day and switched to FM, where I stumbled on 92.3. I’ve been parked there since.

Why? Let me give you two words: intelligence and moderation. Paolo Bediones co-hosts a program (“Sakto Kay Paolo, Sakto Rin Kay Cheri”) with Cheri Mercado from 7 to 9 pm, and they’ve been a pleasant revelation as far as these two qualities go. They’ve treated current issues with taste and sensitivity, not pretending to be know-it-alls but asking the right questions in a manner and tone of voice that put you at ease but keep you engaged. I can say the same for the hosts of the early-afternoon “Relasyon,” Atty. Mel Sta. Maria and Luchie Cruz-Valdez, who prove that you can have interesting programs with broad appeal without pandering to the least common denominator. Even the station’s tagline for its news updates, “Ikwento mo,” is clear and simple, and the reporters don’t feel obliged to recite an ad for the network with every extro.

Not everything is perfect on 92.3. I thought I’d left a “public service” personality behind at another station, a guy whose talent seems to consist in haranguing and cursing public officials he has adjudged guilty—but he’s here, drafted by the station bosses. I’m sure he gets things done his way better than schoolboy politeness will, and I realize what an ugly world it is out there, but I’m clinging to my old-fashioned belief that people in the broadcast industry (and, for that matter, in academia), like the very same public officials they excoriate, should be models of manners. Thankfully every radio has a tuner and an off button.

One of these days, or the next time you cruise down the expressway or get stuck in a traffic jam, give your radio a serious listen. (While I’m at this, check out our university station, DZUP as well, at 1602 on the AM band, for a refreshing kind of programming.) It isn’t as sexy as the Internet or cable TV, but for better or worse, there’s nothing more powerful as a molder of public opinion, and I’m glad that some stations know what to do with that kind of responsibility.