Friday, August 10, 2012

...the Kamikazee goes Japanese


Japanese Band Breathes New Life Into Kamikazee’s ‘Narda’


By ROWENA JOY A. SANCHEZ
August 10, 2012

MANILA, Philippines – A visual kei band from Japan has performed their own version of “Narda,” one of the biggest hits of local rock group Kamikazee.

Yes, they're singing in Filipino: Uchusentai Noiz in their video for 'Narda' (Screengrab from YouTube)
Yes, they're singing in Filipino: Uchusentai Noiz in their video for 'Narda' (Screengrab from YouTube)

Uchusentai Noiz, a five-piece band, recorded and even shot a video for the song, which was uploaded on YouTube on Aug. 7. While some groups would tend to translate foreign songs into their vernacular, Uchusentai Noiz’s vocalist Angel-Taka sang “Narda” with its original Filipino lyrics—though with a thick Japanese accent. The video has so far spawned 160,000 views on YouTube.
“Narda” is the carrier single off Kamikazee’s sophomore album “Maharot,” which was released in 2006. The song serves as a serenade to classic comic book heroine Darna and her “normal” persona, Narda.
Kamikazee lead singer Jay Contreras has also seen the video and tweeted about it on Aug. 9.
“RT @hilarion @jomalee @jaykmkz Nakita niyo na 'to? Haha kulit eh. youtu.be/lde76arEmGA – hehehehe,” he posted.
Gabby Alipe, vocalist of another rock band Urbandub, is likewise impressed by Uchusentai Noiz’s rendition.
“PANOORIN NYO! Coolest thing! @jaykmkz @jomalee @chitomirandajr @RosariOko: Japanese band NOIZ (Uchusentai NOIZ)http://youtu.be/lde76arEmGA,” he tweeted.
Chito Miranda of Parokya Ni Edgar, who had done numerous collaborations with Kamikazee, responded, “hehe! ayus no?!”
Formed back in 1999, Uchusentai Noiz is composed of vocalist Angel-Taka, guitarists Kotaro and Masato, bassist Kyo, and drummer Yamato. Their genre, visual kei, is usually identified with Japanese rock music, and a type of fashion characterized by heavy make-up as well as flamboyant hair and costumes—reminiscent of glam rock.
The group is scheduled to perform shows in Manila and Davao in September. Meanwhile, a Japanese-language YouTube clip that’s been uploaded December last year sees Uchusentai Noiz also in Davao where they are shown going to the beach and even doing some form of charity work, personally giving out toothbrushes to children as well as singing for them.

...the International Children's Peace awardee

Pinoy nominated for Int’l Children Peace Prize

08/10/2012
Kesz Valdez, one of the three nominees for the International Children's Peace Prize 2012. Photo from childrenspeaceprize.org

MANILA, Philippines – A Filipino is one of the three nominees for this year’s International Children’s Peace Prize, which is awarded by a Nobel Peace Prize winner to a child who has made a significant contribution to advocating their rights.

Kesz Valdez, 13, was recognized for helping provide the basic needs of over 10,000 street children through an organization called “Caring Children,” which he set up when he was seven years old. He grew up being abused – he was forced to scavenge at the dumpsite at age two, and sustained burns on his arms and back when he was three.

Valdez, who hails from Cavite, was then taken under the care of CNN Hero Efren PeƱaflorida. In an interview with ABS-CBN News, the young teen said he is happy that their efforts to promote children’s rights are being recognized.

He believes that one does not need to reach a certain age or achieve financial success to make a difference on the lives of others.

The other two nominees are 15-year-old Amina from Ghana and 16-year-old Anwara from India. Amina founded an organization that defends the rights of children, particularly those related to education, while Anwara has been fighting girl trafficking and early marriage after being forced to do domestic labor.
Their last names were not mentioned by organizers.

On September 19, Nobel Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu will present the International Children’s Peace Prize to one of the three nominees in The Hague, Netherlands.

“The International Children’s Peace Prize is a very important award because it gives children who have made a significant contribution to a more peaceful world easier access to an international platform. Day after day, these three brave nominees fight for the children in their country, sometimes even in dangerous circumstances,” Tutu said in a statement. “Children are the future, but they are not always heard.”

The International Children’s Peace Prize was launched by Dutch children’s rights organization KidsRights in Rome in 2005, during the Nobel Peace Laureates’ Summit.

An independent expert committee assesses the candidates, with the winner getting 100,000 euros to be spent on projects connected to his or her area of work.

He or she will also receive financial support for his or her education. – With a report from TJ Manotoc, ABS-CBN News

...the Softball World Champion

Filipinas Big League Softball World Series champions


By Cedelf Tupas
Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOOD NEWS FROM KALAMAZOO Forget the forgettable Philippine campaign in the London Olympics. Manila softbelles wave the Philippine flag and whoop it up after winning the 2012 Big League World Series Softball finals at Vanderberg Park in Kalamazoo, Michigan, on Thursday. PHOTOS COURTESY OF KALAMAZOO GAZETTE
The team that almost did not make it to the tournament for lack of funds ended its campaign in a blaze of glory.

And in a tribute to its compatriots back home, the team said it was dedicating its victory to the tens of thousands of Filipinos suffering from the onslaught of devastating floods.

Conquering challenges both on and off the field, Team Manila captured the Big League Softball World Series title on Wednesday (Thursday morning in Manila) with a powerful 14-2 victory over the United States-West bet, Westchester, California, at  Vanderberg Park in Kalamazoo, Michigan.

The victory was a fairy tale ending for the Manila girls, who were doubtful starters for the
16-18 age-group tournament a few weeks ago as team officials scrounged for resources to pay for their tickets to the United States.

“We’re happy all our hard work paid off,” said pitcher Rizza Bernardino, who held the opposing team to just five hits in five innings in the final.

“It all boiled down to the players’ determination to win,” team manager Rafael “Che” Borromeo, who is the Manila Little League president, told the Inquirer over the phone.

Second crown

It was the Philippines’ second title in World Series tournaments, which is spread over four age groups and played in different cities in the United States.

The Philippines’ first title came in the girls’ 13-14 age group, or the Junior League division, courtesy of Bacolod City, in Kirkland, Washington, in 2003.

Breath of fresh air

It was also a breath of fresh air for the Philippines, which had failed to make its mark in the London Olympics and which was ravaged by floods the past few days.

Manila coach Ana Santiago said the win was dedicated to the flood victims. “This championship is dedicated to Filipinos who are experiencing tough times because of the flood,” she said.

The team, made up of varsity standouts from Adamson, University of Santo Tomas, University of the East and Polytechnic University of the Philippines, had been worried when it heard about the floods.

Hot bats

Manila had been to the finals in three of the last four years, including last year, when the Philippine Daily Inquirer helped raise funds for their trip. The girls came to grief in those trips to the championship match.

But there was no heartbreak this time. Wielding hot bats, the Filipinos peppered the California squad with 14 hits on their way to an abbreviated victory. Owing to the “mercy” rule, matches are stopped if the team is ahead by more than 10 runs after five innings.

Championship game jitters, which hounded Manila in the last two years as they suffered one-sided losses, no longer existed this time—a remarkable feat considering the team had nine newcomers in the lineup.

Display of power

Team Manila scored early with three runs at the top of the first inning, before adding four in the second. A five-run binge in the fifth all but wrapped up the crown for them.

While Bernardino, a veteran of the last two championships, sparkled on the mound, Mary Joy Floranza, Queenie Sabobo, Michelle Lentija and Krisna Paguican belted two hits each in an awesome display of firepower before a raucous crowd made up mostly of Filipinos in Kalamazoo and Chicago.

Lentija opened the scoring with a double that scored Paguican. Then  Sabobo’s single brought in Bernardino and Lentija.

The second inning was highlighted by a two-run homerun by Bernardino.  Glesyl Opjer hit a single down the line to score Kristine Joy Lacupa in the third as Manila kept its relentless form.

‘Almost perfect’

Also contributing solid games were Baby Jane Raro, Mary Jane Fabellar, Andrea Mae Gonzales, Gene Joy Parilla, Charmaine Joy Oria and Mari Luna Amparo.

“If we wanted to be champions, we should play like champions and we did,” said Santiago, who had rued the errors committed by the team in past games. “It was almost perfect. And the support by the crowd was just overwhelming.”

The Manila team steadily improved as the tournament went on. And while Santiago said the team wasn’t as individually talented as the ones she had coached in their last trips to the finals, this one had better teamwork and chemistry and was the most disciplined.

“They had no Internet, no cellphone during the week of the tournament,” Santiago said. “That was how focused they were for this tournament. They deserve this.”

Manila endured a tough start in the Series, losing its first two games with players still recovering from their 36-hour journey from the Philippines.

The team could have opted for a faster journey to Kalamazoo but it would have meant additional expenses, Borromeo said.

To save on expenses, the team bought a flight that had a nine-hour stopover at Narita in Japan and an 11-hour stop in Honolulu, Hawaii. Then they took a flight to Chicago and had to travel another three hours by bus just to reach the competition venue.

Borromeo said the initial plan was to send only 10 players to the tournament just so they could compete. But Santiago convinced him to bring one more player, stressing it would be difficult to be competitive with a 10-man lineup in such a strong tournament.

Mountain to climb

Two of the players—Opjer and Joy Parilla—got sick on the eve of the tournament, prompting Santiago to again request Borromeo for two more players. With the help of a sponsor, Borromeo was able to fly with Amparo and Fabellar, who made it just in time for the start of their first game.

But the long hours in the air and on the road took a toll on the players as they bowed to Westchester, California, and to Puerto Rico—a team they were traditionally beating in the competition.

That left the team with a mountain to climb as they needed to win six straight to gain a shot at the title. Making the task difficult was the fact that they still had to meet former champion and traditional favorite Kalamazoo and two-time defending champion Grand Rapids.

But with the Filipinas’ game picking up, the two Michigan teams proved no match against the Manila girls.

Blessing in disguise

“I think the first two losses turned out to be a blessing in disguise because it woke up the girls,” said Santiago, who also coaches the Adamson University softball team. “After beating the two Michigan teams, we knew we had a solid chance of going all the way.”

The long road to the World Series title for Manila actually started in the Philippine Series at Clark Field in Pampanga last April. By winning that tournament, the team gained the right to represent the Philippines in the Asia-Pacific championships in Jakarta.

Funding has been a perennial problem as Little League remains a private endeavor. The Philippine Sports Commission—the government’s sports funding arm—has chipped in to help in the past, but was not totally inclined to spend for the campaign as its focus is solely on national team athletes.

Manila ruled the Jakarta tournament with ease. To help meet expenses, Little League International gives out a $10,000 subsidy to the Asia-Pacific champions for their World Series campaign.

Still, it wasn’t enough as the cost of the 15-member delegation’s tickets was estimated to be $35,000-$40,000, Borromeo said.

Time to celebrate

Among those who helped the team were former President Joseph Estrada, Manila Vice Mayor Isko Moreno, Representative Amado Bagatsing,  Philippine Charity Sweepstakes, Megaworld, Martin Cojuangco and Philippine Amusements and Gaming Corp.

Borromeo said he had asked a Manila-based travel agency to defer payment for the tickets of the players as he continued to raise funds. The team still owes the travel agency $16,000 for its tickets.

Through it all, Santiago said the players were shielded from the funding problems.

“When it came down to training, they concentrate in training,” Santiago said. “Now is the time for us to celebrate.”

...the best Pavilion in Korean expo

PH Pavilion bags best  exhibit award in Yeosu Expo

Posted at 08/09/2012 

MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines not only showed visitors at the Expo 2012 in Yeosu, South Korea why its more fun to visit the country. It also bagged one of the nine prestigious awards being given by the EXHIBITOR Magazine’s Expo 2012 Awards.

The Philippine Pavilion, which worked on the theme Islands of Diversity/Seas of Connectivity, won the Best Exhibit award.

"The Expo 2012 Award winners and honorable mentions represent some of the world’s best examples of how experiential design, technology, presentation, and storytelling come together to effectively communicate compelling messages," said Travis Stanton, editor of EXHIBITOR magazine.

The competition honored the most impressive work from the 2012 World’s Expo in Yeosu.

"These examples will hopefully inform and inspire today’s exhibit and event professionals — along with the next generation of face-to-face marketers. Because whether you’re creating an immense international pavilion or a small 10-by-10-foot exhibit, it’s often about making an impression, and the work on display in Yeosu does that in truly monumental and memorable ways," Stanton added.

Meanwhile, the Philippines also held a National Day presentation at the event that featured Filipino talents.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

...the tweeter nations

Philippines has 9.5M Twitter users, ranks 10th

By: Paolo Montecillo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
 
 
 
FILE PHOTO


The Philippines has once again been recognized as one of the world’s social media capitals, ranking 10th in the list of countries with the most number of users on website twitter.com.

Data from social media monitor Semiocast showed that 9.5 million out of Twitter’s 517 million users were from the Philippines, placing the country in the 10th spot in the worldwide rankings,  trailing Spain but ahead of Turkey.

The feat was achieved despite the fact that only 30 percent of Filipinos have access to the Internet.

The Filipino Internet user’s affinity with social media was nowhere more evident than at the height of torrential rains that inundated most of Metro Manila this week.

“At the height of Tuesday’s intense rain and flooding all over the country, hundreds of thousands of Filipinos trooped to Twitter to spread critical flood information, as well as to mobilize rescue and relief operations,” Smart Communications, the country’s leading mobile network, said in a statement.

“Even as the torrential rains rendered several families stranded and helpless, with flooded homes and without electricity, we saw how people found their mobile phones–and mobile Internet–especially useful to stay connected,” Smart chief wireless advisor Orlando Vea said.

Smart said about 93.9 percent of the country’s Internet users were also active on social network facebook.com. Filipinos are able to access the Internet, Vea said, due to the availability of cheap mobile devices and affordable access rates.

“This is certainly good news, but, frankly, not really surprising. Filipinos have always been active in social media and we are increasingly using mobile phones to tweet or post on Facebook,” he said.

“With a strong and resilient network like Smart, you’re sure to receive every tweet, every update, and you can rely on your network not dying out on you when you need connectivity the most,” Vea said.

The PLDT group, of which Smart is a part of, ended the first half of the year with 3.1 million Internet

...the youth's chalkie products

Six Pinoy students win intl tilt with chalk from eggshells, taro hotdog

 
August 9, 2012
 
 
Six high school students have advanced to the regional finals of an international competition — the FedEx Express/Junior Achievement (JA) International Trade Challenge (ITC) — with unique products that include taro hotdog and chalk made from eggshells.

The regional finals will be held in Hong Kong from August 26 to 29.
The six winning students included:
 
Team 1
Colegio de San Juan de Letran
Jann Ankaa Samantha Jumamil
Ma. Teresita Andrea Gonzales
Product: Glowee Shoe Polish (made from banana peeling)
 
Team 2
Manila Science High School
Alyssa Anne Arcayena
Mary Joy Dimatatac
Product: Chalkie Talkie (chalk made from eggshells)
 
Team 3
St. Jude Catholic School
Marvin Kaiser Sy
Lance Yeung
Product: Eddo Gabi (Taro Hotdog)
 
They presented their winning market-entry strategies in the recently concluded FedEx/JA ITC Philippines competition at Miriam College in Quezon City.
 
Out of 240 participants, only 10 teams of two participants each were selected to present their plans to a panel of judges during the Philippine leg of the competition.
 
The teams were asked to develop a product and create an original international marketing plan for an overseas market.
 
The winners were chosen for their understanding of the significance of market research, creativity, planning, and entrepreneurial skills in entering new markets
 
The three winning teams from the Philippines will compete against 24 other teams from Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
 
To prepare for the finals, FedEx employees mentored the budding entrepreneurs by giving them an overview of international trade and tips on how to improve their presentation skills.
 
The ITC is sponsored by FedEx, one of the world’s largest transportation company and organized by JA Philippines.
 
It is designed to help students learn about international trade. It provides them with an opportunity to set up a mock business and develop a plan to export a product to an overseas market.
 
The ITC also aims to educate and inspire young people in the Asia Pacific countries showing them how entrepreneurship can improve the quality of their lives and community.
 
Ingenious creations
 
According to a news release on the website of the Colegio de San Juan de Letran, Team 1's “Glowee Shoe Polish” is purely made from biodegradable materials like banana peeling. 

Jumamil and Gonzales explained to the judges that the biodegradeable materials make their product safe, nature-friendly, and economical.
 
“We believe in our product. It has high quality, thus very effective and yet affordable,” Gonzales said.
 
The panel of eight judges tested the product by applying a portion to a leather bag, which became shiny after a few minutes.
 
“We went there in the grand presentation to convince the judges that our product will be worth buying and will be a boost to the country’s economy because we plan to export it eventually to neighboring Asian countries,” Gonzales said. - VVP, GMA News
 

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

...the Living Legend of Hiphop awardee

Fil-Am group Jabbawockeez receives Living Legend of Hip Hop award

 
August 8, 2012
 
 
The Filipino-American dance group Jabbawockeez  recently received the Living Legend of Hip Hop Award at the World Hip Hop Dance Championship Finals at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas.
 
 
 
The prestigious award was conferred to the group on August 5 in front of an audience of 6,000 including the world’s best dance crews from over 40 nations.
 
Hip Hop International (HHI) President, Howard Schwartz said that the Jabbawockeez made history by being the first dance crew to receive the prestigious award in 11 years, a news release posted on the the HHI website said.
 
“The dance crew’s unmatched mystic and captivating performance style launched the group from street credible to world famous through live performances and high profile media attention,” Schwartz said.
 
“In the process, they have inspired many of their fellow street dancers to pursue careers and reach for their dreams in dance,” he added.
 
The HHI is the organizer of the USA and World Hip Hop Dance Championships and also created “Randy Jackson Presents America’s Best Dance Crew” where the Jabbawockeez were the champions of the first season of the show.
 
The Living Legend of Hip Hop Award is given to individuals for their contribution to the world of hip hop culture.
 
Some popular awardees include Randy Jackson, Mc Hammer, DJ Kool Herc and Boogaloo Sam to name a few.