Friday, February 24, 2006

The Philippines in a state of flux

The only thing worth noting in Aeon Flux (aside from Charlize Theron's great bod) is its message of HOPE. Yes. Hope that someday beyond our two dimensional gilded cages we shall realize that what we do impact on our neighbors' lives and maybe...just maybe...we shall begin to care.

So here I am listening to Virna Lisa's rendition of MAGKAISA. My recollection of the great hope that was EDSA People Power begins not 20 years ago but 3 years ahead of 1986. It was 1983. We were but new transplants in the City of Pines, uprooted for around 4 months from the concrete ghetto that was Cubao. My large playground of a busy road was replaced by a more idyllic hill from which one can get a good view of the "other hills" (reminiscent of Rome!). And so it was that we settled into the routine of accustomizing our bodies with the cold temperature (at that time it was still necessary to wear bulky sweaters, socks and bonnets) and with the great pasttime of everyone - Mahjong! Our house was a den for my grandparents' friends to spend the afternoons and nights playing this game of Chinese origin. Although I was fascinated by the tiles etched with colorful Chinese characters, I actually was silently grumbling as having players inside our house meant I would not be able to watch television in the large set in the living room (They didn't know they were actually depriving me of my pasttime!). In any case, it was one such lazy day that everyone's bearings were shaken to the core. I do not remember how exactly it began but what I do remember was that my mother getting the small transistor radio from my grandparents' room, bringing it into the sala and then putting it on in highest volume. It was strange that suddenly everyone began crying. They were all stating "Pinatay si Ninoy". Heck, I was 9 years old and I didn't know who Ninoy was. I think my dad then tried opening the television but there was only static. So everyone was practically glued to the radio, trying to digest on their own the meaning of what had happened. For the utterly innocent (meaning me!), the next few months would be a testament to what people can do if they really want to empower themselves. The parade of people that lined the streets to greet Ninoy's body evoked some sense of volcanic anger waiting to explode. But as geology would teach us, one can never predict exactly when an eruption will occur. Who knew that it would take another 30 months for the fury to reach the boiling point.

Fast forward to EDSA people power 1986. As an elementary student, I had greeted the elections with glee as classes were suspended. The suspension lasted more than what I expected. For the moment everyone had been waiting for had finally arrived. The people had awakened from their stupor and decided it was time to get rid of the tyrant. After ruling for a score, Marcos eventually got what he bargained for. I was envious of the fact that people in Manila were gathering in EDSA and having a fiesta (I was really naive to the dangers posed by the military) while we were all but mere spectators. I can vividly remember the inspiring moments - when the Comelec employees walked out of the counting, when Marcos was vainly trying to reassert his authority (his face was swollen because of lupus and his voice was already weak), when the people were trying to offer the soldiers on top of the tanks with flowers, the Cory magic weaving its powers as the people went into Malacanang, etc.

So another score passed. And here we are on the throes of a third EDSA (after the second one triumphantly got rid of Erap in January 2001). Some say why have another? It is futile they say, attempting to make a change when the new leaders themselves forget early on why they were put their in the first place. But thats exactly the point. It hurts more to see those that you thought believed in the right principles and could do something betrayed everything (and I mean everything). At least Marcos did not have any pretensions of not being despotic. The ultimate sacrifice currently lies not in those leaders who want to perpetuate themselves in power but in the people, that they, in the midst of their daily rantings about how miserable their lives have become will at least have a fit, or put their feet down and say "no more". Tama na, Sobra na, Palitan na. Or have we become so poor in spirit as to even think that we no longer have the capability to change our fates?

Friday, February 17, 2006

Am now hyperventilating . . .

THE INTERVIEW!!!!!

The ice kings






The handsomest men in the Torino Olympics are not the hockey players, the skiers, the speedskaters, the snowboarders, etc etc. Mix beauty, agility and grace and voila - you have a figure skater!

A crooked line can be straightened


The movie was a nostalgic walk through the sound of the 50s - from Elvis (played by Tyler Hilton of One Tree Hill!) to Jerry Lee Lewis to June Carter and Johnny Cash. It was an age defined by the rise of rock and roll and the not so good things that went with it.

Discovery of the year: Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon have great voices. Hail Commodus!

Is there no cure?

If the government does not do anything to improve the educational system, pretty soon the Philippines will be the cellar dweller (again!) in the global market for talent.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Game, set and match


Match Point is undoubtedly Woody Allen's best film to date. It leaves you to ponder - does luck win over talent? Is the hunger for greed greater than lust? Amorality has never been this searing. (Although for a minute there I thought the film was transcending into The Sixth Sense genre)

Monday, February 13, 2006

V Day the Star Wars way


After 2 years of searching, I was finally able to find a free copy of the short film George Lucas in Love. Hilarious!!!

T.I.I.S

The fascinating lowdown on the four letter word ...

On the lighter side

*The American VP Dick Cheney shot a companion while hunting for quail. Talk about small targets.

*JD Fortun not only bagged the plum role of INXS vocalist but he also is reaping the rewards of the rock and roll lifestyle - a model girlfriend in the person of former Chanel model Estella Warren! Their new song Afterglow is pretty cool too.

*What's in a hit song? It seems what you like to hear is dependent on what your friends like to play in their iPods. And pretty soon, you will be getting your dose of popular music not in Tower Records but in Starbucks!

*Did you know that Susan Sarandon was one of the Olympic flag carriers in the opening ceremonies of the Torino Winter Olympics?

Saturday, February 11, 2006

For the crazy Boyos


The stupidest show I have ever seen is this MTV produced UK series Dirty Sanchez. The stunts are unbelievably idiotic! It makes Jackass look like the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Things you didn't know about Lurpak country


1. The Danes speak good English.
2. They have a good sense of humor (a whole lot friendlier).
3. The mermaid is definitely not little.
4. Kobenhaven has such pretty modern buildings.
5. The Danish Chinese restaurants prefer offering cheap eat-all-you can buffets.
6. There are so many palaces in the capital city.
7. European royalty (or at least the existing houses) all descend from one common Danish ancestor.
8. Denmark is a rich country. The proof? Their tourist information office was simply unbelievable.
9. The 0 with a slash in the middle is actually a letter in their alphabet.
10. Greenland is actually a part of Denmark.
11. Butter cookies are indeed their specialty.
12. Hamlet is not a Dane.

Be the flame not the moth


...a delightful farcical comedy that had me in stitches.

Francesca Bruni: Oh give me a man who is man enough to give himself just to the woman who is worth him. If that woman were me I would love him alone and forever.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

When it's pesto it must be good

Craving for my mom's carbonara, I decided to whip up my own version of pesto pasta, that is just pouring bottled pesto sauce over the noodles and garnishing some cheese over it. I have developed the ability to do everything (meaning cook and eat) in around 30 minutes due to lunch time constraints. Yum yum! As my friend Celest would say, anything with pesto is good! (And I do miss City Grill's pesto chicken!)

Food for thought: Did you know that it was the Chinese and not the Italians who invented pasta? I wonder how this prehistoric pasta tasted like.

Nests of hornets

Being at the receiving end of the !@#$% actions of followers of the so-called volkish movements (whew!) comes as no surprise to me, more so in the place where it actually originated. But still one wonders how can people ever be cruel in their treatment of others. Is insensitivity really a matter of race or religion? Do cultural differences justify the way we view things? Of course, naysayers will always declare that this is a democratic world and they have the right to do what they want. But they seem to forget that there is such a thing as a hierachy of rights. Under a system that promotes the rule of law, a balancing of interests must be made. In a way, it can be said that some rights are higher than others. And that is a fact which should be recognized by those who purport to be rational human beings who want to be respected in return.

Scores of columnists have written about the Wowowee stampede and how sadly it reflects the state of the nation. Most of them said it was bound to happen. Crowd control has really never been a priority in such events. I can remember attending the Bon Jovi (yes a long long time ago) in the Rizal Coliseum. Can you imagine little old me trying to squezze myself through the bars as the organizers (misrepresentation!) simply could not control the unruly crowd. As for this recent catastrophe, the finger pointing will continue. Hearings will be conducted on the matter. After which, everybody will immediately acquire amnesia and forget the lessons. One writer has said that "But what I truly find tragic is the fact that this country has become so poor, so destitute and hopeless that in the process most of its people have forgotten the value of hard work and diligence. Subsisting merely on instant noodles, does it still come as a surprise to you that most people now rely only on instant fortune and among the youth instant fame through those artista searches as their means to embrace financial comfort? That we have gotten this low is the biggest tragedy of them all." I beg to disagree. The greatest misfortune is never learning from our mistakes. We Filipinos are fated to subsist in a "groundhog day" state of mind.

I watched Memoirs of a Geisha, Brokeback Mountain and Munich. Love was the central theme of all three movies, whether it be Sayuri's unrequited love for the Chairman, Ennis's repressed passion for Jack and the love for home (the promised land) unequivocally declared by both Israelis and Palestinians.


"Three passions have governed my life:
The longings for love, the search for knowledge,
And unbearable pity for the suffering of [humankind].

Love brings ecstasy and relieves loneliness.
In the union of love I have seen
In a mystic miniature the prefiguring vision
Of the heavens that saints and poets have imagined.

With equal passion I have sought knowledge.
I have wished to understand the hearts of [people].
I have wished to know why the stars shine.

Love and knowledge led upwards to the heavens,
But always pity brought me back to earth;
Cries of pain reverberated in my heart
Of children in famine, of victims tortured
And of old people left helpless.
I long to alleviate the evil, but I cannot,
And I too suffer.

This has been my life; I found it worth living."


BERTRAND RUSSELL