Saturday, April 28, 2012

Spiderman and The Avengers



New Spiderman (Andrew Garfield)
The Avengers
Thor vs Ironman
Ironman and Loki
Thor
Thor and Capt America


Loki and Nick

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

April 21-27




The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Filipino Celebrities

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Filipino Celebrities


This story originally appeared in Philippine Panorama, November 20, 2011


Stephen Covey gifted the world with his invaluable insights on the hallmarks of successful people. We celebrate his ideas by giving a toast to today’s brightest stars who exemplify those qualities.

            A true winner is:

1)  A self-starter. To be proactive means taking the initiative and venturing out of your comfort zone. Eugenio “Boy” Abunda, the King of Talk of Philippine TV and founder of Backroom Entertainment, does not rest on his laurels. He has branched into product endorsements and movie production through the indie film Astig.

            But wait, there’s more! Just last April, he went centerstage as he was conferred his Master’s Degree in Communication Arts from the Philippine Women’s University.


2) Goal-oriented. Beginning with the end in mind means knowing what you want to achive in life. Christian Bautista, certfied Asian superstar, started as a contestant in a singing competition on local TV. He didn’t get the first prize but his first single, The Way You Look At Me, was a monster hit. He wanted to expand his horizons, and now he’s one of the stars of the Singapoeran TV series The Kitchen Musical. Meanwhile, his Indonesian movie, A Special Symphony, opened August in Manila with him singing the theme I Am Already King.


3) Organized. Putting things first means focusing on the essentials. Enrico Raphael “Rocco” Nacino, star of the Cinemalaya 2011 film Ang Sayaw Ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa, is passionate about a lot of things but he knows what he loves most.

The turning point was December 2009: he was studying for the medical board exam, practising Jiu-Jitsu and Muay Thai everyday in preparation for his first MMA (mixed martial arts) amateur fight and he was a finalist for StarStruck V – on the same night! It has always been his dream to enter show business, so he made a decision, and the rest is history.



4) Creative. Thinking “Win-win” means thinking out of the box to find the best course of action. Eugene Domingo became a box-office phenomenon with Kimmy Dora and she cemented that with the blockbuster follow-ups Mamarazzi and Tanging N’yong Lahat. Genius will always shine but an artist should never be complacent. Even with her mainstream star status, she appeared in a highly original indie film Ang Babae Sa Septic Tank, one of the top grossers in the 2011 Cinemalaya – and for which she won Best Actress


Eugene Domingo wins Best Actress
People's Choice Awards, Asian Film Awards 2012



5) Prepared. Seeking first to understand before being understood means doing your homework. Jericho Rosales, star of the Hollywood film Subject: I Love You, is one of the finest actors of his generation. But he also wants to be accepted as a serious musician and as a director, going as far as taking a filmmaking crash course at the New York Film Academy. So far, so good: Echo has released his third album Change, conceptualized his concert And I Love Her, and written and sang the theme from his soap opera Green Rose. Coming full circle, he is now hosting I Dare You, a new reality show about people achieving their dreams against all odds.


6) Efficient. To synergize is to get more work done with less effort. Emelio “Chieffy” Caligdong, co-captain and left winger of the Philippine Azkals, grew up with a supreme passion for football and the over-arching dream of making it the number one sports in the country. One way he does that is to show how exciting the game could be: Chieffy made the first goal vs Kuwait for the World Cup Qualifier, 2 goals vs Timor-Leste for our first ASEAN championship – not to mention the spectacular “nutmeg” goal between the legs of Mongolia’s goalkeeper for the AFC Qualifier.

The Azkal’s daily endurance training is super-human but Chieffy feels even more energized because he’s doing what he loves most. One crucial aspect to the Azkal’s meteoric success is the bond and synergy beween the players because, after all is said and done, victory in football – and in life – is all about cooperation and teamwork.


            7) Well-Rounded. Sharpening the saw means achieveing balance in life. Mikee Cojuangco-Jaworski chose marriage and motherhood over her successful careers as an actress and as an equestrian gold medalist – but she is still in full control of her life. The key, she says, is balance. Her family is her priority but she continues to pursue  her passion for horse-back riding by teaching young riders at the Manila Polo Club. Children are also the focus of her advocacies: she just recently led 15 media stars to tape AnakTV public service announcements for free to be shown on board ships and buses. With Magic Palayok and the Promil Pre-School i-Shine Talent Camp, she’s back in showbiz too!






Featured Artists




 

Huggybear’s Favorite Never The Stranger (English) Song



Moving Closer

Moving Closer Close-Up Extended Version

Huggybear’s Favorite Semisonic Songs


Chemistry
Chemistry in CSI

Closing Time



Saturday, April 14, 2012

April 14-20






Angelo Castro Jr.
The Azkals
Pine Trees of Baguio
The Bloomfields
The Hansons

Remembering Angelo Castro Jr. 

I always tell people I'm happy to be a teenager in the 90s. I loved watching those intelligent, English-language public affairs shows on ABS-CBN then: The Inside Story with Loren Legarda on Tuesdays; Assignment with Teddyboy Locsin on Thursdays; Dong Puno Live with Dong Puno on Wednesdays; and of course, the late night news The World Tonight, anchored by Loren and Angelo Castro Jr.

I felt sad when I heard he died last week; he was such a part of my teen years. It was the passing of an era.

I remember a TV Patrol news clip years back: Angelo celebrating his birthday, with Carly Simon's Nobody Does It Better playing in the background. No song could be more appropriate. For delivering the news with intelligence and credibility, nobody does it better than Angelo Castro Jr.




Why The Azkals Are Being Kicked

When The Azkals was first formed, a lot of Filipinos was riding on their Pinoy lineage. Now that two members, Lexton Moy and Angel Guirado, are accused of sexual harassment, The Azkals is being demonized. Even their European ancestry is being used against them.

It's one thing to express an opinion, it's another to make self-righteous personal attacks. Some people in this country doesn't seem to know the difference. That's the dark side of the Filipino character.



What If I Become A Billionaire Who's So Freaking Bad?

The pine tree is the soul of Baguio. It gives that unmistakable sense of place, that character that makes Baguio really special. Now they're being cut down to make a carpark for SM Baguio.SM is fast becoming the symbol of environmental and social irresponsibility.

I'm thinking: What if I'm a billionaire owner of mall chains around the country? Will I become greedy enough to make the world an uglier place? Will I even care about the non-income-generating environment? How much will satisfy my greed? Why will I listen to the treehugging "little people" if I can buy government permits?




Featured Artists





Huggybear's Favorite The Bloomfields (English) Song


 It's Complicated 

See also Express Highway

Huggybear's Favorite Hanson Songs




MMMBop

I Will Come To You

Where's The Love



Saturday, April 07, 2012

April 7-13





Ramon Avanceña
















The Times and Triumphs of Ramon Avanceña


I am happy to get a copy of the coffee table book Chief Justice Ramon Q. Avanceña: His Stories of A Young Nation, by Ricky Avanceña, edited by Carmen Guerrero Nakpil and with foreword by Chief Justice Hilario Davide. My passion to share it actually lifted my months-old writer’s block. This is the story of one of the greatest men who ever lived.


            Ramon Avanceña was born on April 13, 1872 in Iloilo. His parents Don Lucas and Doña Petra owned a fleet of cargo ships. His sisters Jovita and Ramona founded the famed Colegio de Sta., and were awarded with the Pro Ecclessia et Pro Pontifice Medal by Pope Pius XI.


            Avanceña went to the University of Sto. Tomas at the height of the Propaganda Movement in Europe. One day, our teenage hero ran into the most terrifying professor in school. Where is Señor Avanceña going and why is he in such a rush? To study these papers sir, the boy replied truthfully, but not adding that those were smuggled excerpts of Jose Rizal’s Noli Me Tangere, possession of which is punishable by death.


            The young patriot joined the war against foreign rule. At 26, he was the Secretary of State for the Provisionary Government of the Visayas. He helped overthrow the Spaniards led by Diego de los Rios from Panay. But a few days later, American war ships attacked. Avanceña and company valiantly defied them, but he was captured – and tortured mercilessly.


            How would you feel if gallons of water were pumped down your throat until your entire body becomes a bloated mass of pain? Can you bear the agony as your tormentors jumped down your swollen belly to expel the water? What if they do it again? And again?


            Ramon Avanceña suffered beyond imagination, but he steadfastly refused to betray the rebel forces. He almost died, but they cannot break him.


            Upon his release, Avanceña founded the Instituto de Enseñanza Libre (Institute of Free Education) in his hometown of Molo, and also went on to become a law professor at the Liceo de Manila. He joined the Bureau of Justice, and in 1905, after 3 years of excellence, he was promoted to Attorney General – the chief legal adviser of the government – but he declined, saying he wasn’t ready yet.


            So instead he was appointed Judge At Large for Visayas and Mindanao. During this time, he married Flocerfina Abad and they would be blessed with 6 sons. Another promotion made him Judge of the Court of first Instance for the 13th Judicial District. In 1913, he was again offered the post of Attorney General, and this time he accepted.


            But his independence jarred the Establishment. Governor General Francis Burton Harrison, the country’s de facto ruler, got a more agreeable replacement and made Avanceña an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.


            On April 1, 1925, Ramon Avanceña was elevated as Chief Justice.


            The baptism of fire was ignited by the epic battle between Senate President Manuel Quezon and Governor General Leonard Wood. But the issues have evolved when it reached the 6-man High Court: Can the Senate President and the Speaker of the House vote on the stock shares of the Philippine National Bank and the National Coal Co., alongside Wood, as members of the Board of Control? It has always been that way, but the 5 American Justices said it was unconstitutional, thus evicting the appointees of Quezon and Speaker Osmeña.


            The lone dissent came from the lone Filipino in the tribunal. Chief Justice Avanceña ruled that it was already implied that the American Congress ratified the Board of Control when it did not annul it. Also, those corporations are private and remain so, even if the government is a stockholder. Furthermore, membership to the Board is not a public office.


            In the Inaugural of President Manuel L. Quezon, it was Avanceña who administered the oath. They were the best of friends since their school days at the Letran although their personalities are polar opposites; Avanceña was the epitome of cool, while Quezon’s fiery temper was legendary. But what they had in common were infinitely more significant – their deep patriotism, the sense of honor to not let their closeness affect public policy, and the mutual trust and respect that withstood the crucible of war and the test of time.


            But anarchy was looming. The Court of Appeals upheld a lower court’s decision to deny benefits to a laborer who died while on duty. The President denounced the judges; the media had a field day. Since the case was already under review by the Supreme Court, both Quezon and Avanceña were in a bind. In a gesture of supreme statesmanship, Avanceña offered to resign – together with all the magistrates who rallied behind him – rather than compromise the reputation of the Judiciary. Quezon won’t retract, nor would he allow a constitutional crisis, but he left them alone.


            The Chief Justice himself deliberated on the case. The heat eventually died down, and the Supreme Court reversed the previous ruling and ordered the employer, Barredo, to compensate the family of the laborer, Cuevo. The independence of the Judiciary stood tall and untarnished.


            Ramon Avanceña served his beloved country with the sterling integrity that had become his trademark. He was looking forward to his 70th birthday and quiet retirement after 25 years in the Supreme Court, as Chief Justice for 16.


            Then the Japanese attacked.


            The President declared Manila an Open City to shield the citizens and moved the government’s command center to the impenetrable island fortress of Corregidor, which also became the headquarters of the American forces headed by Gen. Douglas McArthur. Avanceña once again responded to the call of duty by agreeing to relinquish his powers immediately to his successor, the equally honorable Jose Abad Santos, to maintain political stability even if the hostilities worsened.


            Then Quezon gave an order that would change their lives.


            The President instructed Justice Secretary Jose Laurel and Executive Secretary Jorge Vargas to stay in Manila and do whatever it takes, short of pledging allegiance to Japan, to protect the civilians. Gen. Masami Maeda forced them to create a council to serve as a bridge between him and the people – and if they refuse to cooperate, then all men, woman and children in the countryside will be massacred. Vargas organized the remaining Commonwealth officials and asked Avanceña for help.


            Avanceña and the other Filipino leaders hostaged by the invaders would, time and again, through subterfuge, sabotage Imperialist plans. They were effective because in public they seem to cooperate but in private they would meet with Quezon’s emissaries and expose inside stories.


            Then Avanceña was stricken with cancer. Liberation came during his operation at the PGH. McArthur instigated their arrest for “treason.” Intelligence dossiers on Avanceña confirmed his unparalleled nationalism, and a U.S. Major, out of respect, came alone to fetch the ailing old man from his home in Pasay, and brought him to Bilibid Prisons. His health deteriorated, and he was confined to a hospital under guard, but his sentries respect him so much that they never wore their guns. The People’s Court dropped the charges for lack of evidence. Ramon Avanceña was now free – and vindicated by history.


            Avanceña gave his last full measure of devotion. At President Elpidio Quirino’s request, he came out of retirement to serve as senior adviser, but had to leave, out of delicadeza, because his old friend Laurel ran against the latter. He was hospitalized again, and the winner of the next election, the charismatic Ramon Magsaysay, visited him and asked him to his own personal adviser when he got well again. But a few days later, the President died, and the Chief Justice did not recover.


            Ramon Avanceña died on June 12, 1957. The new President, Carlos P. Garcia, paid his last respects and was surprised that the late Chief Justice, as was his request, had already been buried the same day at the La Loma. Chief Justice Manuel V. Moran, in his eulogy, distilled the essence of Ramon Avanceña: “Era un santo.”


            “He was a saint.”







Featured Artists