You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Tuesday, August 6, 2024

GOSSIP GIRL: The ‘90s: A decade of band scene history in one book

BY GISELLE SANCHEZ


AT A GLANCE

  • “Tugtugan Pamorningan” by Susan Claire Agabayani chronicles the Philippine music scene from 1990 to 1999.


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The author at the backstage of the Electric Fun concert of the Eraserheads in March 1996. (Photo by Eddie Boy Escudero) 

Nothing will ever beat the band scene back in the 1990s. If you are a fan of the Eraserheads, Parokya ni Edgar, Razorback, Intorvoyz, Wolfgang, After Image, The Dawn, or even solo musicians like Francis M, Gary Valenciano, Martin Nievera, Nonoy Zuñiga, Basil Valdez, and Lani Misalucha, you need to buy this book, which chronicles every band and musician during the ‘90s. “Tugtugan Pamorningan” by Susan Claire Agbayani chronicles the Philippine music scene from 1990 to 1999.  

The title is befitting of the era  where both me and Agbayani would be rocking out in the audience in Club Dredd - Agbayani as the head of the  public relations of most  bands during the nineties….and me as the official and only approved “groupie”  (I did the approving as well) of my husband Emil Buencamino, who was the drummer of Aftermath (an alternative band he shared with Rommel Sanchez, now the fifth member of Eraserheads. Aftermath’s career was short-lived.) 

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The author is flanked by Gary Valenciano and Martin Nievera in mid-1990s.

I asked Agbayani what her main goal was in documenting the Philippine music scene of the 1990s. “I wanted to push forward the truth that the 1990s was one of the golden ages of Philippine music or OPM. There was so much musical production and consumption during this decade or era. Hataw rin ang live music.” As a “dalagang ‘90s," I totally agree with the author! 

Agbayani’s research process was long and tedious, with many challenges. Agbayani tells Gossip Girl,  “I wrote the book one story at a time, from 1990-1999. All 68 stories. More stories should be part of this collection, but we couldn't find them during the production of the book….stories that couldn't be seen because they were never digitized; some publishing firms where I wrote didn't have the vision to archive their publications; the sad fact that the internet is not forever as many of my archive stories are now lost.

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The author with Wency Cornejo, the energetic vocalist of Afterimage in mid-1990s at  Chatterbox 

I crowdsourced stories and pictures, but the villains were: anay, baha (Ondoy) and sunog. Lastly, the back and forth with the record labels took two months. I asked permission to publish album covers, sleeve jackets, and pictures. It was challenging work to chronicle everything. My advice to aspiring writers who want to document cultural history, particularly in music, is to see the big picture and see what the gaps are. What needs to be written about? Or what needs to be written about more. Doing so indirectly contributes to nation-building by investigating who we are through our culture and music history.”

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The Halloween Party organized by Claire Agbayani for 70s Bistro in 1995. With the author is Put3Ska vocalist Myra Ruaro (now Skarlet), Vikki Cayago; and Ronnie Vivar of GASI

Agbayani shares several personal memories, experiences, and anecdotes in the book, especially with Eraserheads, as she dedicated an entire chapter to them. I asked why dedicate a whole chapter for E-heads when in other chapters, five bands have to share a chapter in her book.  Agbayani answers, “Why not? The Eraserheads made the most significant impact on the Philippine music scene during the ‘90s.  In the preface, I explained that in 1994, record labels went on a signing frenzy in their bid to duplicate the success of Eraserheads. In early 1994, 7 songs of Eheads (from the ultraelectromagneticpop! album) were being requested and played on radio stations.

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The author unboxes the Eraserheads' 'The Head Set' memorabilia from Sony BMG executives with a family friend in January 2012

I wanted to pick Agbayani’s brain all day. Still, my editor would kill me if I hoarded all the space of Manila Bulletin for my column, so my closing question was, 'What was the most rewarding part of writing Tugtugan Pamorninga?' She answered: “The moral support the literary and academic community gave me? I did not expect such love, warmth, and support! Ricky Lee, the National Artist for Film and Broadcast Arts, wrote my foreword. How amazing is that! The support of established literary writers, professors, historians, and photographers is humbling! Some professors asked me for copies of the manuscript before the book was published because they wanted to use the contents for their classes! What was unexpected was that those who vetted the grant the book received from UP Likhaan Institute of Creative Writing (funded by the UP Diliman Chancellor's Office) recognized the importance of such a book. Also totally expected was the warm reception and patronage the book received from the reading public. The book goes out of stock in Lazada or Shopee. Those who rate it give it a 5. Talaga lang ha?!” Aside from Lazada or Shopee, Tugtugan Pamorningan is also available in the UP Press online store.   

Monday, August 5, 2024

Regal Entertainment's Mother Lily Monteverde passes away, 85

BY ROBERT REQUINTINA


AT A GLANCE

  • Mother Lily's demise came six days after her husband, Remy Monteverde, passed away on July 29. He was 86.


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Lily Monteverde (Dondon Sermino)

Film producer Lily Yu Monteverde, popularly known as Mother Lily, passed away early Sunday morning, Aug. 4. She was 85.

Mother Lily's demise came six days after her husband, Remy Monteverde, passed away on July 29. He was 86.

She is survived by her children Winston, Meme, Roselle, Dondon and Goldwin; in-laws Stephen and Grace and granddaughter-in-law Winni; grandchildren Keith, Theo, Bridget, Matthew, Redwin, Jewel and Kristen; and great-grandchild Mikayla. Mother Lily's death was confirmed by her family in an official statement released on Sunday, Aug. 4. The. cause of her death was not revealed.

The wake and memorial service for her will be held at 38 Valencia Events Place in Quezon City beignning Aug. 5, 3:30 p.m. to 12 midnight; and Aug. 6-Aug. 9, 10 a..m. to 12 midnight.

The daily novena will be held at 5:30 p.m. and mass at 7 p.m.

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Regal Entertainment's Mother Lily, a beloved showbiz figure, pioneered a significant era in the entertainment industry, producing blockbuster movies in the 70s and 80s.

Mother Lily, CEO and President of Regal Entertainment, was reponsible for the popularity of many stars known as Regal Babies including Maricel Soriano, Snooky Serna, Dina Bonnevie, Gabby Concepcion, William Martinez, Albert Martinez, 

In 2022, during an interview for pep.ph, Mother Lily said she wished to live up to 100 years old.

Then in 2000, she received the Lifetime Achievement Award from Cinemanila International Film Festival. 

Mother Lily also received the Fernando Poe Jr. Lifetime Achievement Award in the 37th Luna Awards in 2019.

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In 2021, Regal Entertainment ventured into television when it partnered with GMA Network.

“Regal Entertainment has always kept a cordial and happy relationship with GMA-7. Not only as a business partner but as a friend. Through so many years of our film production, GMA has always been an ally, the supporter of our endeavors. 

"That is why it is only fitting that in these more crucial and critical times, we remain together. We are strong together in providing the kind of entertainment that our audiences need. 

"Thank you for giving us this opportunity, to affirm our friendship and alliance. Thank you for believing in Regal Entertainment in reaching out to our Filipino audience to share the wealth of our years of film production. 

"Thank you for giving the next generation the bigger chance to see Regal and GMA go together through this extraordinary period and
on to their post pandemic times. Maraming salamat po.”

With a $97M second weekend, ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ sets a new high mark for R-rated films

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS


AT A GLANCE

  • Hollywood closed July with its best month in a year and its first $1 billion month since July 2023.


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Deadpool and Wolverine (AP) 

NEW YORK (AP) — After 10 days in theaters, “Deadpool & Wolverine” is already the highest-grossing R-rated movie ever, not accounting for inflation.

In its second weekend, the Marvel Studios blockbuster starring Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman continued to steamroll through movie theaters, collecting $97 million according to studio estimates Sunday. That raised its two-week total to $395.6 million, pushing it past the long-reigning top R-rated feature, “The Passion of the Christ,” which held that mark for 20 years with $370 million domestic.

Worldwide, the Shawn Levy-directed “Deadpool & Wolverine” has quickly amassed $824.1 million in ticket sales, a total that already surpasses the global hauls of the first two “Deadpool” films. The 2016 original grossed $782.6 million worldwide; the 2018 sequel collected $734.5 million. 

The weekend’s primary challengers both struggled.

M. Night Shyamalan’s latest thriller, “Trap,” managed a modest opening of $15.6 million at 3,181 theaters for Warner Bros. The film, starring Josh Hartnett as a serial killer hunted by police at a pop concert, didn’t screen for critics before opening day and scored lower in reviews (48% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) than Shyamalan’s films typically do. Audiences gave it a C+ CinemaScore.

With a budget of about $35 million that Shyamalan largely finances himself, “Trap” didn’t need a huge opening. But it may struggle to break even.

“This is a soft opening for an M. Night Shyamalan suspense crime thriller,” wrote David A. Gross, a film consultant who publishes a newsletter for Franchise Entertainment. “The writer/director’s movies out-earn other original thrillers by a wide margin, and that’s true here, but this start is not on the level of recent Shyamalan films.”

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The live-action “Harold and the Purple Crayon,” adapted from the classic kids book, also didn’t make much of a mark in theaters. Th,e Sony Pictures release debuted with $6 million. It, too, got dinged by critics (28% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes), though audiences (an A- CinemaScore) liked it more. “Harold and the Purple Crayon,” which stars Zachary Levi, cost about $40 million to make.

“Twisters,” the Universal Pictures disaster film, continues to kick up a storm at the box office. It held in second place with $22.7 million in its third weekend. Lee Isaac Chung’s sequel to the 1996 original, starring Glen Powell, Daisy Edgar-Jones and Anthony Ramos, has racked up $195.6 million domestically. While it has made less of an impression overseas, “Twisters” is holding particularly well in North American theaters, down just 35% from the week prior.

Hollywood closed July with its best month in a year and its first $1 billion month since July 2023. While comparisons to last year aren’t favorable — July was when “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” launched — a pair of Walt Disney Co. releases in “Inside Out 2” and “Deadpool & Wolverine” (the two top films of the year) powered a banner month for the movie industry.

There will still reminders, though, of harder times in cinemas earlier in the spring and early summer, when a sparse release calendar and a few notable flops put the box office at a deficit. On Friday, AMC Theatres, the largest North American chain, posted a $32.8 million loss for the second quarter of 2024.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. “Deadpool & Wolverine,” $97 million. 

2. “Twisters,” $22.7 million.

3. “Trap,” $15.6 million.

4. “Despicable Me 2,” $11.3 million.

5. “Inside Out 2,” $6.7 million.

6. “Harold and the Purple Crayon,” $6 million.

7. “Longlegs,” $4.1 million.

8. “A Quiet Place: Day One,” $1.4 million.

9. “Daaru Na Peenda Hove,” $615,782.

10. “Bad Boys: Ride or Die,” $600,000.

Friday, August 2, 2024

NewJeans returning to the Philippines in September

 


Kristofer Purnell - Philstar.com

August 2, 2024 | 1:13pm


MANILA, Philippines — Korean girl group NewJeans is coming back to the Philippines after being unveiled as the headliner of Coke Studios' "Ultimate Fandom Concert."

The event will take place in Mall of Asia Arena on September 5, with more performers to be announced.

As of writing, fans can have a chance of winning tickets if they are part of the Top 100 spenders on e-commerce company Lazada's Coca-Cola Flagship Store during promotional periods: July 28 to August 1, August 7 to 12, and August 13 to 17.

"Top spending" will be based on accumulative spend per sales during the promotional periods. Orders must be fully delivered with no cancellations and winners can only win once.

NewJeans first visited and performed in the country last December for the Asia Artist Awards held in the Philippine Arena, meaning, their appearance this September will be the group's first Manila show.

The group composed of Minji, Hanni, Danielle, Haerin, and Hyein won Singer Of The Year and Song Of The Year for their hit track "Ditto."

The K-Pop act is also known for its songs "OMG," "Super Shy," "Hype Boy," and "ETA."


Do Filipinos point with their lips?

 

Profile photo for Ghemma Marie
Ghemma Marie
A wanderer who thinks Middle East is the new heaven.
515 followers
153 following

Hard-core introvert, fierce but compassionate, partly IP, a self-proclaimed advocate for Indigenous People, a proud Cordilleran.

I love to pour my heart out through writings, in it I can laugh, I can cry, I can scream my heart out.

I didn’t intend to offend, but I’m not inspired to flatter either. Genuine friendship is rare.

I value people who respect people no matter how they differ physically, intellectually, who doesn't see social status as a hindrance for genuine friendship.


I'm not offended, rather I found this question amusing.

Yes. We do lip-pointing like this.

Or this:

To point at something using our index fingers, is sometimes mistaken as being rude.

Like this:

I remember asking my mother where did she put my keys, and without a word moved her body towards the direction she's pointing to, pointing with her puckered lips.

“Over there!”

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Disclaimer:

I'm receiving negative feedback from some people claiming they’re Filipinos. IMO, lip pointing isn't meant to degrade Filipinos, on the contrary, this is to show that we do see funny positive things in every day to day situation. I want to reiterate that lip pointing is an informal way of pointing at something. Specially if someone is busy at the moment(most mothers), most scenario are if both of her hands are occupied/doing something. But common sense, we don’t do it like this if we are in a formal event, or if we need to point at something to strangers/ formal people.

Formally, we do hand gestures like this:

Rhian Ramos on overcoming fear: Be scared, but do it anyway

BY ROBERT REQUINTINA


AT A GLANCE

  • “When the World Met Miss Probinsiyana” brings hope, inspiration, and dreams coming true in cinemas starting Aug. 7.


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Rhian Ramos (Facebook)

Actress Rhian Ramos unveiled her unwavering determination, emphasizing that being told she cannot do something only fuels her drive and willpower.

During a recent media conference at Robinsons Galleria for her upcoming movie, "When The World Met Miss Probinsyana," Rhian said that she shares a similar quality with Marjorie Aviso, who is the CEO of Telework PH and President of Global Impact Production, the character she portrays in the advocacy film. Rhian emphasized that determination is one of the qualities she has in common with Marjorie.

"If I have something in common with Marge, kapag sinasabihan ako ng hindi kaya, hindi bagay or hindi niya mapu-pull off yan, mas lalo akong ginaganahan. Mas lalo akong na-cha-challenge. 

"I give myself a pep talk. Of course may mga time na naniniwala ako sa sinasabi nila but it's about overcoming that. It's like saying, 'Be scared, but do it anyway,'" said Rhian.

Marge also served as producer of the film, which is based on her life story.

"As a first time producer sabi ko wow ganito pala ang mundo (ng showbiz). Bakit ko ba pinasok ito? On the flip side, I realized bayanihan pala rito, and people put in effort because they believe in the cause. I think that's where the power is," the business process outsourcing (BPO) executive said.

Director Jenny Pearl Ninalga hopes "Miss Probinsyana" will serve as a voice to the voiceless. "We want to be the voice for the voiceless. Yun ang sinasabi namin sa film." 

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FROM LEFT: Marjorie Aviso, who is the CEO of Telework PH and President of Global Impact Production; Rhian Ramos, Lance Raymundo, and Director Jenny Pearl Ninalga 

Marge was impressed by Rhian's acting abilities and unwavering professionalism.

"Nagulat ako how she portrayed my character. Everyone I knew would say Rhian captured your personality. Ikaw na ikaw yung nakita namin. She also supports causes like women's empowerment. So yun ang dalawang factors for choosing Rhian. She's a star," she also said.

Rhian said she's honored to have portrayed the character of Marge.

"I'm very flattered para mabigyan ka ng tiwala ng isang tao especially playing a character na isinulat para sa akin. But it's her life, feelings and experiences na kailangan kong gawing klaro. Just the fact na pinagkatiwalaan nila ako at kaya kong gawin yun, it feeds me as an actor," the actress said.

"When The World Met Miss Probinsyana" tells the story of Marge, a determined woman from the province, who ventures into the competitive arena of the BPO industry, a world dominated by men, where she emerges as a beacon of innovation and empowerment.

Returning to her roots with a mission to uplift her community, she faces the ultimate challenge: establishing her own BPO business amidst the skepticism of traditional norms.  

Alongside her supportive partner Wil, Marge navigates the complexities of entrepreneurship and personal growth, striving to balance her aspirations with the realities of societal expectations. 

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Rhian Ramos and Sam Verzosa

"When the World Met Miss Probinsyana" is a story of resilience, empowerment, and the relentless pursuit of dreams, challenging viewers to rethink the boundaries of success and the power of returning home to make a difference.

Director Jenny recalled that the idea to make the film started when Marge was interviewed for the TV show World Changers. "When I learned about her story, deeper issues, and struggles, I told her I am an advocate myself, and your story is worth telling."

Reacting to Jenny's statement, Marge said: "I asked her if my story was worth telling. I feel like my story is not super extraordinary. For me, it's ordinary. Pero sabi nga nila yun nga yun eh. What's ordinary is very relatable to the masses. Working in the province is also not always available. But they knew there was an opportunity and let them know it was happening. Even if you are in the province, you know it's available and don't have to leave the country."

Sid Lucero, as Wil, Marjorie’s supportive partner, completes the cast, along with Lance Raymundo, James Marco, Joshua Zamora, Camille Rose, Jyra De Guzman, Kristin Abbey, Kristal Luistro, and Ayah Sarmiento at Rowie Cardona.

Drago Cruz Munoz, Mabel Reyes, Janina Lorelei, Julien Antonuccio, Sarah Ansari, Stephan Anderson, Aaron Hewson, and Hamsa Omar are also in the movie.

The artistic and production team of “Miss Probinsyana ” are screenplay writers Eligio Ninalga Jr and JP Ninalga. Director of Photography Logie Ninalga. Executive Producers: Marjorie Aviso, Lyn Baynosa/ Production by Impact Media Convergence Inc. Presented by: Global Impact Productions Inc. Music by Jonaf Del Fierro and M2arje.

“When the World Met Miss Probinsiyana” brings hope, inspiration, and dreams coming true in cinemas starting Aug. 7.