Friday, January 20, 2012

Hide and Seek With Corona


"If you can find [the properties], you can have them."

The words of Corona ring out to Filipinos everywhere. You never thought that a man with his credentials (and age) would play hide and seek with you. Corona has about Php 200 M worth of properties according to the Land Registration Authority (LRA) - most are undeclared in the SALN of Corona.

Corona denied the allegations, but the prosecution team is determined to push through with it. The lack of declaration in Corona’s SALN will be Article II of the impeachment case filed against Corona.

Corona’s properties are found in high end subdivisions and condominiums in Metro Manila. These places are found in Taguig, Makati, and Quezon City and were acquired between 2004 and 2010. You won’t expect a chief justice to own these kinds of lots. Corona, however, still denies the allegations.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Boss Mike Enriquez

Magandang-magandang-magandang-magandang-mafkjghiufdlghdlbfklhglkjhvb hapon po mga Kapuso! Ako po si Mike Enriquez. AHIHIHIHI Meron po tayong balita na kapapasok lamang. Metro Manila, binuhusan ng malakas na ulan!

Malakas po ang ulan ngayon. Nako po mga Kapuso! Magingat kayo sa paguwi ninyo. Madulas ho ngayon ang daanan. Malamig din ngayon oh, oh mga Kapuso?! Bilisan ninyo ang inyong paguwi at uminom ng isang mainit at masarap na Great Taste. Tiyak na mawawala ang lamig ng panahon. Great Taste Premium Roast Coffee.

Mga Kapuso, tayo po ang number one network station sa Metro Manila. Maraming salamat sa inyong pagtangkilik. Kami ay nagseserbisyo, bente quatro oras! Walang kinikilingan, walang pinoprotektahan, serbisyong totoo lamang. Hindi ho totoo yan, mga Kapuso. Kitang-kita po na may kinikilingan ang network na ito! Magingat kayong mga may kapangyarihan sa media! Kapag hindi kayo tumigil sa mga panloloko niyo. HINDI NAMIN KAYO TATANTA.... *cough* Excuse me po! HINDI NAMIN KAYO TATANTANAN!

Friday, December 2, 2011

News/Blog. Different?

Sir Oliva told us to choose our favorite news website and news blog, and we have to compare (and possibly differentiate) the two. So here it is...

AS YOU CAN SEE. Advertisements follow you wherever you go!
Inquirer.net is my favorite news website. I would have chosen CNN.com or BBC.com, but content is more important to me than the layout itself. Inquirer.net is full of Filipino news we can see on today's or tomorrow's newspaper (as it is supposed to be), and it is much more applicable to my situation than the news CNN or BBC offers. Inquirer.net, however, is poorly layouted. A lot of advertisements are hanging on the sides, as is typical with most Filipino sites. That is mostly my complaint, the important information they give is being overshadowed and overpowered by the advertisements that float with you as you scroll (well done, advertiser friends...). There are also too many texts cramped together in a tight space which makes you feel frustrated when you search its content.


Inquirer.net, however, serves its function. It extends its newspaper online. Which makes it my favorite. What makes it different from mb.com.ph or interaksyon.com? Well, Inquirer is the number one newspaper for me. So it also is the number one news source for me on the internet.

Pretty biased, eh? Who cares? I don't. Up next, news blogs.

I must admit, I don't read news blogs nor have I taken any interest in finding one. However, since this is required, Google (no offense, sir) is my friend. I searched Google and there it is! Surprise, surprise... http://ph.omg.yahoo.com/blogs/omgphnewsblog/ showed up.

News? Blog? BLOG! It's all KC here.
I browsed through the blog posts of OMG. Obviously, these are your entertainment news blogs. What differs this from news websites is the nature of reporting. In one post (KC: I think I’m not the one Piolo needs in his life), the one-sided nature of the news blog is very obvious as the side of [baklang?] Piolo was never taken in this post. The layout is also much more attractive than traditional news websites - which don't focus on layout but rather content.The comments are also of note. What's striking about Yahoo is its very interactive community. The commentators tend to bash each other more here than in other website communities.

The lines of traditional news and blogging may be thinner now. After all, blogging still gets the message across. What's different is the discipline that traditional news offers. Bloggers run the risk of being unethical, as I was told. This does not exempt the bloggers from being ethical, though. In fact, I am inclined to think that they are more ethical than some journalists. News blogging is probably the next step in Journalism. It only needs a little more support (and probably monitoring) from traditional news followers.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Joana, It's A Small World After All

The old kids' song is true! It's a small world after all!

I have a chatmate today. Her name is Joana.

Joana is a 3rd year Economics major, but her first choice was Journalism. Her initial plan was to stay in the School of Economics (SE) for 1 year and shift to her first love. She discovered later that SE offers a lot of electives. She chose that path and decided to take up Journ electives.

This is where I met her. Joana and I are classmates in J117. In the 10 minutes we were given, we were able to share a few things about each other. (yes, even my past academic life... oh no!) I got to know that we had been through the same teacher in Econ. I also found out that she wanted to minor in Journ, but then her choice of electives got mixed up that she is not able to fulfill her desire.

Joana is from Baguio and is from Benguet State University. She is a Christian and is a member of Lifebox, a Christian organization in UP. I realized how small this world really is as Joana and I are part of the same community in UP - the UP Christian Community.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Thoughts on "Junk VFA" Protest

http://www.gmanews.tv/story/238691/nation/student-leader-disrupts-clinton-forum-in-manila

The Philippines has been subject to foreign rule for virtually all of its years in recorded history (well, at least for some people). From 1521-1898, the Spaniards have been in the Philippines. The Spanish colonized the Philippines until the end of the 19th century. We were then handed to the United States of America (USA) through the Treaty of Paris. The Americans colonized the Philippines until World War 2. The Japanese had a short stay when they invaded the Philippines during the war. This has been the pattern for the Philippines before it attained freedom from any foreign rule. Or is it the case?

It has been argued, especially by the left leaning sectors of our society, that the Philippines never achieved freedom. They never had sovereign rule over their own state. This argument is due in large part to how the Philippine leaders succumb to the demands of the Americans who are flexing their muscles in today's highly political world. The Philippines has a mutual defense agreement with the USA which requires both parties to support each other when either side participates in a war. The mutual defense treaty (MDT) paved the way for the visiting forces agreement (VFA) to be signed. The provisions of the VFA allow American soldiers inside Philippine soil.

MDT is in its 60th year this year, and the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has come to the Philippines for the anniversary. During one of her forum, a student leader disrupted the forum by shouting protests at her. That student leader is Marjohara Tucay, editor-in-chief of the Philippine Collegian, a University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman publication.

"Junk VFA!" While it is true that the VFA is not a fair agreement, it was never right for Tucay to have shouted and disrupted a forum like that. Democracy has provided us with the freedom of expression. This is what all of us bank on to if we want to express our sentiments against the government. For every freedom, though, comes a great responsibility. We should handle it carefully. We should not abuse the freedom given us. In this case, while Tucay's points are very valid, he is in no position to abuse the right of expression provided him by the constitution. While it may be a UP tradition to hold rallies and demonstrations in events such as the freshmen orientation and graduation, Tucay should know his place. He is outside the grounds of UP.

As a student leader from UP, Tucay should have been more responsible in how he handled his ideology and emotions. As an editor-in-chief, he should have written his sentiments in his publication instead. He could send a letter to the leading broadsheets of the Philippines. The possibilities are endless. By limiting his means to disrupting a peaceful assembly, he has put an unwanted stereotype on the UP students community.

If we want genuine change to happen, we need to go beyond what we are now. We need to realize that rallies will do nothing. In fact, it will have an opposite effect at times. Defensive walls will be put up, and our simple requests will not be answered. Concrete actions from all affected sectors need to be taken in order for this country to grow.

Joshua Kelly Ngo
2007-07869
BA Journalism