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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Saturday, September 28, 2024

2024 Asian Academy Creative Awards

Winners to represent the Philippines at the Grand Awards in Singapore this December



AT A GLANCE

  • The Asian Academy Creative Awards (AAA)honor the best of the best from 17 countries, representing the region’s content industry, every December in Singapore to celebrate world-class storytelling in the Asia Pacific region.


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ABS-CBN won eight major awards as the National Winners in the 2024 Asian Academy Creative Awards, with the winners going against the best in the region for the Grand Awards in Singapore in December.

The mystery-thriller series, “Linlang,” which first streamed on Prime Video, bagged the most honors—winning in multiple categories such as Best Drama Series, Best Actor in a Supporting Role for JM de Guzman, and Best Supporting Actress for Kaila Estrada.

Box-office queen Kathryn Bernardo also secured the Best Actress in a Leading Role award for her blockbuster comeback movie, “A Very Good Girl.” 

Meanwhile, the Kim Chiu and Paulo Avelino starrer, “What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim,” a Viu original adaptation produced by ABS-CBN, was recognized in the Best Adaptation of an Existing Format (Scripted) category. 

Mae Cruz-Alviar also emerged with top honor—winning the Best Direction (Fiction) award for "Can't Buy Me Love."

ABS-CBN’s entertainment programs, “It’s Showtime” and “ASAP Live in Milan,” also emerged victorious, winning in the Best General Entertainment Program and Best Music or Dance Program categories, respectively.

The Asian Academy Creative Awards (AAA) honor the best of the best from 17 countries, representing the region’s content industry, every December in Singapore to celebrate world-class storytelling in the Asia Pacific region.  

The awards celebrate works from Australia & New Zealand, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Chinese Mainland, Hong Kong SAR, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Bini understands they have a responsibility to fans


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K-pop was once the stuff of dreams for Filipinos, but P-pop is now a reality, thanks to people behind and at the front and center of groups such as Bini.

The P-pop girl group has invaded the mainstream OPM scene with the catchiest of hits, including “Pantropiko,” Salamin, Salamin” and “Cherry on Top.” Their songs and dance steps have gone viral—just check TikTok and the number of people who are dancing to them.

Friday, September 27, 2024

How this designer is continuing her grandma’s 90-year-old brand

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For those who have never heard of the brand, it may seem like the “Romack” name lives in whispers, spoken in cherished tones among those in the know and, let’s face it, those who can afford it—like a benediction reserved purely for the favored.

Romack exudes exclusivity, boasting a largely generational clientele, from lolas to mothers to daughters and now apos whose families have been going to Tina Romack Lirag’s family for their fashion needs for decades. For some, that has been since her grandmother Pilar Ver Romack first put up New Yorker Gown Salon in 1935, to sell imported clothes. The shop was eventually renamed New Yorker PVR and, later, just Romack, and has since pivoted completely to made-to-order.

Hurricanes, storms, typhoons... Is September wetter than usual?

Emilie Bickerton - Agence France-Presse

September 27, 2024 | 11:29am

Residents wade through heavy flooding along Felix Avenue and inner roads at the boundary of Cainta and Pasig City due to intense rain brought by tropical storm Enteng and the enhanced Habagat on Sept. 2, 2024.

The STAR/Miguel de Guzman


PARIS, France — With typhoon Yagi, locally in the Philippines as Enteng, battering Asia, storm Boris drenching parts of Europe, extreme flooding in the Sahel and hurricane Helene racing towards Florida, September so far has been a very wet month.

But while scientists can link some extreme weather events directly to human-caused global warming, it remains too early to draw clear conclusions about this sodden month.

"You will always have some sort of extreme weather events, but their intensity has been magnified by global warming, especially in the context of rainfall," Paulo Ceppi from Imperial College London's Grantham Institute told AFP on Thursday.

"That's probably one of the common drivers of these different events in very different parts of the world."

Early indications from monthly data show some record-breaking precipitation levels in the regions affected.

In central Europe, the torrential rains accompanying storm Boris were "the heaviest ever recorded" in the region, according to the World Weather Attribution (WWA) network of scientists, inundating homes and farmland.

Global warming has doubled the likelihood of severe four-day downpours since the pre-industrial era and the costs of climate change are "accelerating", WWA said in a report published Wednesday.

Meanwhile in Japan's city of Wajima, more than 120 millimetres (4.7 inches) of rainfall per hour from typhoon Yagi was recorded on the morning of September 21 -- the heaviest rain since comparative data became available in 1929.


Hotter, and wetter?

"Attributing different weather patterns around the world at the same time to climate change is very challenging," said Liz Stephens, science lead at the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre.

"But the fundamental principle remains that for every 1 degree Celsius of warming the atmosphere can hold seven percent more moisture," she told AFP.

With global warming on track to exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times "you can do the math pretty quickly and that will have a measurable impact," said Ceppi from the Grantham Institute.

The 2024 northern summer saw the highest global temperatures ever recorded, beating last year's record, according to the EU's climate monitor Copernicus.

A hotter planet, in other words, could also signal a wetter one.

The sweltering summer in the Mediterranean this year "gives a lot of extra evaporation, pumping more water vapour into Europe if the conditions are right and allowing for all that moisture to be dumped in certain places," Ceppi said.

"The global temperatures -- both over the land and the ocean -- were anomalously high during August-September despite La Nina-like conditions evolving in the Pacific," Roxy Mathew Koll at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology told AFP.

"Anomalously high temperatures assist in supplying additional heat and moisture for storms and weather systems to intensify."

La Nina refers to a naturally-occurring climate phenomenon that cools the ocean surface temperatures in large swathes of the tropical Pacific Ocean, coupled with winds, rains and changes in atmospheric pressure.

In many locations, especially in the tropics, La Nina produces the opposite climate impacts to El Nino, which heats up the surface of the oceans, leading to drought in some parts of the world and triggering heavy downpours elsewhere.

Currently, "neutral" conditions prevail, meaning neither El Nino nor La Nina are present.

Large swaths of South America and Southern Africa suffered from drought in 2024.

The global September update from Copernicus is due early next month and will provide hard data on precipitation levels.

Radiohead reworks Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' for new stage production

 


Agence France-Presse - Agence France-Presse

September 27, 2024 | 11:21am


LONDON, United Kingdom — Shakespeare will meet Radiohead in a new stage production of "Hamlet" due to premiere next year, set to a reworked version of the band's "Hail to the Thief" album.

Alternative rockers Radiohead had a string of best-selling singles in the 1990s and early 2000s including "Creep," "Paranoid Android," and "No Surprises."

Frontman Thom Yorke's lyrics for the 2003 album were originally a response to the election of George W. Bush as US president and his "war on terror" that followed the September 11 attacks.

The singer-songwriter is deconstructing and reworking the album for the production, which will be performed by a cast of some 20 musicians and actors.

Yorke, who is working with Tony- and Olivier award-winning designer Christine Jones and director Steven Hoggett, said in a statement it was an "interesting and intimidating challenge."

"For years I've wanted to see the play and album collide in a piece of theater; eventually I shared the idea with Thom, who was intrigued," said Jones, who conceptualized the idea.

She had been struck by the "uncanny reverberances between the (Hamlet) text and the album", she said. "We've found that the play haunts the album, and the album haunts the play."

Radiohead, comprising former school friends Yorke, brothers Jonny and Colin Greenwood, and Ed O'Brien and Philip Selway, formed in Oxfordshire, southern England, in 1985.

"Creep" was their 1992 debut single and remains their most successful, with over a billion views on YouTube. By 2011, they had sold more than 30 million albums worldwide.

The band, which has also campaigned passionately for environmental causes, was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2019.

"Hamlet Hail To The Thief" will stage its world premiere in Manchester, northwestern England, in April 2025 before transferring to the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-Upon-Avon in June.

The STANDS - An INQUIRER Sports Newsletter September 27, 2024

 

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September 27, 2024

 

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John Abate and the UE Warriors rock the UAAP with an upset of La Salle(UAAP PHOTO)

 

Hey there sports fan,


The PBA Governors' Cup quarterfinals has just started so let's get into that once action really picks up—or the issue about the tournament format further heats up.


Although, to kick things off, you can try to answer this trivia question:  Which player holds the record for most assists in the PBA? Check out the answer at the end of this email.


For now, let's head over to the varsity scene starting in the UAAP, where a major upset rocked the men's basketball tournament and an end of a long losing run was finally ended. And those feats emanated from one campus: University of the East.


The Red Warriors defeated defending champion La Salle to send the first tremors across the men's division, and coach Jack Santiago said one of the major benefits of that victory was felt inside the UE dugout. 


The defeat stunned the Green Archers, for sure, but Topex Robinson reached for a team rule to help his team get over the upset and bounce back into the win column with a close triumph over stubborn Far Eastern U.


The Lady Warriors, on the other hand, ended a 40-game slide by holding off the Lady Archers. That win featured a record-breaking and -tying feat that we'll discuss later.


Over at the NCAA, while people are taking notice of teams like St. Benilde, San Beda and San Sebastian, Perpetual Help is making some noise, largely due to a super rookie who is benefiting from his decision to stay home.


The Altas, which is using this season to lay down the foundation of a program under new coach Olsen Racela, have somehow notched victories that pushed it near the top of the standings early in the league's centennial season.


Meanwhile, if you want suggestions on good sports reads for the week, I have a few. There's a story about friends who have seen their school go through the worst of times and are now hoping for the best this season. There's the story on National U's Lady Bulldogs focusing more on a different number other than their 5-0 start to the women's tournament. 





 

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Forward it to your friends and let them know that they can sign up here.

 

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Luisa San Juan now shares a UAAP record with a very legendary name. (UAAP MEDIA)

 

Meanwhile on Plus...


Sean Chambers' young Far Eastern U Tamaraws could have easily been 4-1 (win-loss) in UAAP men's basketball this season. Instead they are 0-5, including four losses where breaks did them in. Cursed? The legendary PBA import and now college coach doesn't think so.


La Salle's Luisa San Juan broke a women's record for three-pointers in a single game and tied two men for the UAAP event record. One of those men, a legend in every way, took notice.


The UP Maroons are gobbling up the opposition and it seems like only a match against defending champion La Salle will test them. How does UP keep sharp while awaiting that duel with the Archers? A win against NU was revealing.


What we're up to next:


We'll continue covering the UAAP basketball scene, both men's and women's. We'll also do a deep dive on the PBA Governors' Cup quarterfinals as the four series gets deeper into their showdowns. We'll also continue monitoring the NCAA and keep an eye on a preseason volleyball tournament.



Number of the Week: 3


Players who have hit at 10 triples in a single UAAP game. Luisa San Juan of La Salle was the latest to do so.

 

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK


“It's going to be a highlight of their season, playing against us.”


—Topex Robinson, La Salle coach, on FEU giving his team a scare in a recent UAAP match.

 

Hi ,

Have feedback? We're happy to hear it. Give Suggestions

 

Robert Jaworski. That's the answer to the trivia question above. Think you can ace the rest of our weekly sports quiz? head over to our Viber community and try the test out!


Buy the Inquirer at newsstands, subscribe to our digital edition, Inquirer Plus, visit our online site and follow us on socials (Twitter: @inquirersports; FB: facebook.com/inquirersports) for more stories and updates—or to send us questions or suggestions of stories you'd want to read.


See you next Friday!


Francis



Francis T. J. Ochoa is the Sports Editor of the Philippine Daily Inquirer. For comments, suggestions and questions, hit him up on Twitter (@ftjochoaINQ).

Philippine businesses to face higher DHL Express shipping costs in 2025

BY MANILA BULLETIN


International logistics and shipping firm DHL Express announced upcoming price adjustments for its services in the Philippines, set to take effect next year.

In a statement on Friday, Sept. 27, Nigel Lockett, DHL Express Philippines country manager, said the average price increase will be 5.9 percent, effective Jan. 1, 2025.

Next year's adjustment is higher than the 4.9 percent hike implemented on Jan. 1, 2024.

Lockett said that this adjustment is necessary to sustain DHL Express’ commitment to provide reliable and efficient services in light of ongoing global challenges.

“We are committed to delivering stable and dependable services globally despite the ongoing impact of geopolitical dynamics and supply chain disruptions on the logistics landscape,” Lockett said.

“With the annual price adjustment, we can continue to invest in our network to enhance its resilience and adaptability, ensuring consistent support for our customers’ businesses regardless of external circumstances,” he added.

DHL Express adjusts its prices on an annual basis to factor in inflation, currency fluctuations, and administrative costs associated with regulatory and security measures. 

National and international authorities routinely update these regulations across the more than 220 countries and territories served by DHL Express.

“Depending on local conditions, price adjustments will vary from country to country,” DHL Express said.