Saturday, April 28, 2012

...the Pinay Miss Earth UK

Pinay beauty a contender in Teen Earth Girl UK pageant

 
April 28, 2012
 
 
Jerizza Avancena, a 16-year-old Filipina who has been living in the United Kingdom (UK) since she was a young girl, is one of the candidates for Teen Earth Girl UK this year.

In 2001, when she was only five years old, Avancena migrated to the UK with her parents. They are currently living in Leeds, West Yorkshire.

Avancena excels both in academics and sports.  She is taking up aviation operations at the Leeds Aviation Academy while studying Physics and Maths at another college.

According to the official site of the pageant, Avancena won 2nd place at a seven-school basketball competition in 2010 aside from "many netball tournaments."

In an interview with GMA News Online on Saturday, Avancena said she loves to travel and wants to become a pilot someday.

On her profile on the pageant website, she said: "What's also important to me is that I one day have a loving and happy family of my own along with a successful career as an airline pilot to give them the experiences that I have enjoyed and appreciated throughout my life."

"I would love to learn more languages but as of now, I know how to speak in Tagalog, English, and French. I also know some Spanish and Ilokano. I would like to see more places, experience new things, meet new people and taste new foods from around the world!"

Avancena definitely has not forgotten her Filipino roots. When asked over the phone if she knew how to speak in Tagalog, she replied: "Opo."

When asked if there was a Filipino she looked up to, she said: “Opo, si Shamcey Supsup kasi po yung personality niya is very thoughtful and inspirational. She is also very beautiful.”
 
Supsup was the Philippines' bet in the 2011 Miss Universe pageant where she was declared the third runner-up.

Avancena said: “I like the people of the Philippines. They are not only generous but also very cheerful.”
 
"I went to Tagaytay in 2008 and I really liked the place because it was very beautiful. I also visited the Palace in the sky and it was wonderful,” she said.

Avancena also expressed her gratitude to the Filipinos who are supporting her. “I just like to thank all the people supporting me especially in my hometown in San Jose del Monte, Bulacan. I would also like to thank my family and friends,” she said.
 
“Sana po masuportahan niyo ako habang sumasali ako sa pageant at sana makapagdala ako ng karangalan sa Pilipinas at mga kababayan natin,” she added.
 

Asked why she decided to  join Miss Earth Teen UK, she said: “Well, I was surfing the internet and nakita ko siya sa website ng Miss Earth and I thought it was fun so I joined.”
 
She said the difficult parts of preparing for the competition were "dieting and going to the gym."  

"It takes a toll on your body,” she said.
 
On the other hand, she said the fun part of getting ready for the pageant was “shopping for the clothes!”
 
The Miss Earth Teen UK competition will be on September 1 this year.

On the pageant website, she said: “It is our responsibility as habitants of this world to raise awareness to the people in the world.
 
“Without knowledge people can not act and without action, there will be no improvement. Therefore, I believe that it is also our responsibility to raise awareness, preserve and protect the environment in order for us to be able to pass this beautiful world that we take for granted to the next generations to come,” Avancena said.
 
“By taking responsibility in our personal actions, we can overall achieve enormous differences that will affect every living thing in our home!” she added. - VVP, GMA News

...the 2012 Telly awardee

Telly Awards

MYX TV’s variety show wins bronze in 2012 Telly Awards

 
REDWOOD CITY, California—Variety show variety show, MYX-Rated won the coveted bronze Telly Award for its episode on “Making MYX-Rated: The Documentary,” besting nearly 11,000 entries from 50 states.
 
The first series of MYX TV, the premier Asian American entertainment network in the United States, shot entirely in high definition features everything Asian and awesome from pop culture to music, fashion, and events, and is hosted by comedian Joey Guila and Keiko Alingas.

The award-winning episode gives viewers an in-depth, behind-the scenes look at the creative process of the show’s production. MYX-Rated first premiered on MYX TV in March 2011 and has run for two full seasons. Currently, it airs on Thursday nights at 10pm.

“We started the show because we wanted to introduce something new and cutting edge to the channel,” says Roland Posadas, producer and director of MYX-Rated.  “I’m especially honored that the documentary episode won a Telly Award because it displayed the hard work and passion that our cast and crew has for making the show – a testament to the vast array of talent that we were able to showcase both behind and in front of the camera.”

MYX-Rated has hosted celebrities such as Far East Movement, Naughty by Nature, DJ Q-Bert, UFC fighter Mark Munoz, The Bangerz, ABDC champions Jabbawockeez and IaMmE, and Justin Beiber’s World Tour vocalists, Legaci. Rising entertainers online David Choi, Ryan Higa, Clara C, Lil’ Crazed, and Erin Paula are no stranger to the show either.

The show has likewise brought on board movie stars like John Cho and Kal Penn for A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas, Vanessa Hudgens for Sucker Punch, Vin Diesel and Duane “The Rock” Johnson for Fast 5, and Tom Cruise for Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol.

The Telly Awards was founded in 1979 and is the premier award honoring outstanding local, regional, and cable TV commercials and programs, the finest video and film productions, and online commercials, video and films.  Winners represent the best work of the most respected advertising agencies, production companies, television stations, cable operators, and corporate video departments in the world.

“The Telly Awards has a mission to honor the very best in film and video,” said Linda Day, Executive Director of the Telly Awards.  “MYX TV’s accomplishment illustrates their creativity, skill, and dedication to their craft and serves as a testament to great film and video production.”

“When we set our goal to redefine Asian American entertainment, we understood that we were going set the standard for excellence in our field,” said Miguel Santos, Associate General Manager for MYX TV. “Our team continues to do just that and wave our community’s flag with pride.”

...the NBA Philippines portal


NBA.com Philippines site launched

(The Philippine Star)
 April 28, 2012




Photo is loading...
Present during the launch of NBA.com Philippines website at the SMX Conventiion Center are (from left) Francesco Suarez (NBA Asia VP-global marketing partnership), Sheila Rasu (NBA Asia marketing communications director), Dan Rosen (NBA Asia director-digital), Kevin Belmonte (president and CEO, Philstar.com), Enrique Gonzalez (president and CEO, X-Play), Carlo Singson (NBA Asia country manager, Philippines) and Tomoi Kouchi (NBA Asia manager-digital). NBA.com Philippines is the official online site designed specifically for NBA fans in the Philippines. JOEY MENDOZA | Zoom
MANILA, Philippines - The National Basketball Association yesterday announced the launch of the NBA.com Philippines, an exciting localized website featuring everything that Filipinos love on the global site – plus sections created specially for the local audience, improved social media and online community features and easy access to NBA content.

NBA.com Philippines is developed in conjunction with X-Play Online Games Inc. (X-Play), the casual gaming subsidiary of Philippine online publisher IP e-Game Ventures Inc., and Philstar.com, the online arm of The Philippine STAR.

“The NBA has a long history in the Philippines, and we are always looking to deliver bigger and better content to the millions of Filipino NBA fans,” said Carlo Singson, NBA Asia’s country manager for the Philippines. “We are excited to launch NBA.com Philippines where there is a good blend of local commentary, global content and event information all in one place, and IP e-Games’ expertise and reputation in the market make them the perfect partner for what we want to achieve.”

“It’s a great honor to be a part of this endeavor, knowing that we will be helping Filipino fans get their regular dose of NBA content – this time through NBA.com Philippines,” said Philstar.com president and CEO Kevin Belmonte. “Being a basketball-crazy nation and one of the major markets for the NBA in Asia, the Philippines deserves to have its own localized NBA website – a place on the Web that Filipino NBA fans can call their home.”
Philstar.com, as a partner, will boost NBA.com’s online presence in the Philippines through its real-time online reporting and social media networks.

The online news group will also provide support in maintaining NBA.com by publishing more game results and multi-media content, including action-packed photos and videos.

Enrique Gonzalez, president and CEO of X-Play, added: “Filipinos know the NBA stars and teams by heart. This recognition by the NBA means that we’ve left an indelible mark and a lasting impression on this sport. We’re making history here with this launch. NBA.com Philippines is for the millions of fans out there who’ve watched and supported the NBA for decades.”

NBA.com Philippines, the official online site designed specifically for National Basketball Association fans in the country, was launched at the SMX Convention Center at the SM Mall of Asia yesterday. Photo shows (from left) Francesco Suarez, VP, Global marketing partnership, NBA Asia; Enrique Gonzalez, president and CEO, X-Play; former Chicago Bulls center Luc Longley; Kevin Belmonte, president & CEO, philstar.com; Carlo Singson, country manager-Philippines, NBA Asia; and Dan Rosen, director, Digital NBA Asia. JOEY MENDOZA
NBA.com Philippines is an enhanced NBA.com site, hosting information, events and updates in the NBA with additional sections and localized content. These include:

• NBA local events – Dedicated sections for on-ground NBA events in the Philippines;
* NBA dance teams – All the latest news on the NBA dance teams around the league;
• League news – The latest updates on your favorite NBA stars on and off the court;
• NBA.com Philippine polls – Fans can participate in polls that matter to NBA Filipino fans;
• Sports columnists – Opinions of the best local sports writers and analysis of NBA developments, among others.

Additionally, there will be improved social media interaction to support the million-strong online community.

Filipino fans can join the dedicated NBA Philippines Facebook Fan page and Twitter feed to post comments and participate in online discussions.
There will also be special online events and columns by NBA luminaries and celebrities.

The local destination will also feature new developments which will give Filipino fans access to exclusive content, videos and more.

To commemorate the start of NBA.com Philippines, NBA, X-Play, IP e-Games and The Philippine STAR held an exclusive launch affair for both media and trade partners yesterday.

NBA legend and three-time NBA champion Luc Longley, NBA executives and local celebrities graced the event.

The Philippines is the third highest international originator of traffic to NBA.com.

In February 2012 alone, NBA.com attracted approximately four million monthly unique visitors from the Philippines, generating 56 million page views.

On social media, the global NBA Facebook page has more than 1.1 million fans, ranking the country second in the world behind only the United States.

Similarly, the Philippines ranks second in the world in NBA followers on Twitter, also behind the United States.
For more information visit NBA.com. Philippines at www.nba.com

...the Journey

Filipino films flourish at Tribeca Film Festival

AJPress
 
 
 
Arnel Pineda

It is that time of the year again, when filmmakers and film-lovers from around the globe converge in New York City to attend the much-awaited Tribeca Film Festival.

This year is promising to Filipino and Filipino-American filmmakers and performers as there are various films that feature (or were megged by) them.

On top of that list is director Ramona Diaz and her documentary Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey, which will be having its world premiere this week. It is the story of Arnel Pineda, a charismatic Filipino singer from the slums of Manila whose videos of his cover band are posted on the video-sharing site YouTube, and soon he’s fronting an iconic rock band.

Indeed, it sounds like a dream, a fairy tale even. It sounds crazy, but it is how Pineda achieved his dream as the new lead singer of the iconic band Journey. The pressure’s on Pineda as this rocking documentary follows Journey’s dizzying world tour — can a man who has already overcome so many obstacles deal with the demands of his newfound fame?

Then there’s Graceland, directed and written by Ron Morales. Morales graduated from Parsons with a photography degree and from NYU film school. He directed his award-winning debut feature Santa Mesa, starring Melissa Leo, at age 29. He has gone on to create a number of short films, commercials, and promotional and music videos.

Graceland is the story of a family man, Marlon Villar, a longtime chauffeur of prominent politician Manuel Chango. While he and his daughter accompany his boss’ preteen daughter home, Marlon is ambushed and the wrong girl is kidnapped.

Suddenly the unassuming driver is propelled into a horrifying downward spiral and, as events in his life unravel, Marlon, Chango, and their families become entangled in a game of deceit and betrayal that will leave no one innocent.

For the short narrative, there’s Prima, written and directed by Miguel Calayan. The film, which is part of the ‘Escape Clause’ shorts program, will showcase a ballerina alone in a brightly lit studio, as she recalls her old choreography, leaping and spinning in front of an invisible audience.

Prima is one of 2,800 short films submitted, and only 60 were accepted. Out of those 60 short films, it will be one of 26 world premieres. “I am so proud to be able to share this very special film with the world. I hope it will inspire others like it inspired me,” shared Shannon Roberts, a real-life ballerina and star of the short film. “It was my first experience working on camera and also choreographing. I really connected with this role because it reminded me to enjoy every time I dance.”

Born and raised in the Philippines, Calayan moved to San Francisco in 2008 to study Cinematography at the Academy of Art. While his main focus is in lighting and shooting, he also directs his own short films and commercials. His work has been recognized by the Nashville Film Festival, as well as San Francisco’s Epidemic Film Festival where he won Best Documentary both in 2010 and 2011.

There’s also a short documentary called Beauty Culture and it features Filipina supermodel Anna Bayle. The film investigates our collective obsession with beauty and the influence of photographic representations on female body image. Film subjects, aside from Bayle include actress Jamie Lee Curtis and director Lauren Greenfield, hail from diverse points on the beauty landscape. “Fashion photographers, child pageant stars, bodybuilders, teenagers, and intellectuals engage in a provocative dialogue that addresses the persistent “beauty contest” of daily life,” the press notes explain.

Director-Producer-Writer Ramona Diaz is a filmmaker whose credits include Spirits Rising, an hour-long documentary about women’s role in the 1986 People Power revolution in the Philippines. Spirits Rising received a Student Academy Award, the Ida Lupino Director’s Guild of America Award, a Golden Gate Award from the San Francisco International Film Festival, a Certificate of Merit from the International Documentary Association, and a Gold Apple from the National Educational Media Network. Spirits Rising has been screened internationally and it has been broadcast on public television stations in the United States and Australia.

Diaz’s first feature-length film, Imelda, about the former First Lady of the Philippines, garnered the Excellence in Cinematography Award for documentary at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival and the ABCNews Videosource Award from the IDA. The film was released theatrically in the United States and the Philippines, screened in over fifty film festivals around the world, and was broadcast on US national public television in May 2005.

Diaz’s The Learning, a documentary film that follows several Filipino teachers in Baltimore City across two school years, chronicling the sacrifices they make as they try to maintain a long-distance relationship with their children and families, and begin a new one with the mostly African- American students whose schooling is now entrusted to them. The film was funded by ITVS, Sundance Documentary Fund and the Center for Asian American Media and was broadcast on POV in 2011.

Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey, a feature length documentary film about the iconic 80’s band, Journey, and their new lead singer, Arnel Pineda is the director’s latest.

Born and raised in the Philippines, Diaz lives with her husband, Rajiv Rimal, in Baltimore, where they are raising their American-born daughter, Sabina Diaz-Rimal, who is now a ninth grader. Diaz is a graduate of Emerson College, Boston and holds an MA in Communication from Stanford University.

“It was the winter of 2008 and I had just finished shooting a documentary that took two years to film and I was facing the daunting task of sifting through 6 terabytes of footage.  The Internet was a great source for avoiding what ultimately had to be done,” Diaz said, recalling how the Journey project was conceived.
As she was procrastinating, an email from a cinematographer friend from Manila caught her attention.  It was titled “Best US Embassy Visa Application Story I’ve Ever Heard.”

“As a Filipino living in America, I was very familiar with these sometimes funny but mostly sad stories of trying to get to the promise land.  I read it and was in stitches,” Diaz said.

The email was actually written by one of the immigration agents at the American Embassy in Manila and it was about this guy Arnel Pineda who said that the reason he was going to the US was that he was invited by the band Journey to audition for lead vocals.

“Journey?  The rock band Journey?” the immigration agent asked Arnel, who nodded meekly producing some flimsy emails and correspondence from the band.  In a dubious voice, the agent asks Arnel to sing “Wheel In the Sky.”

Arnel belts it out loud enough for the entire waiting room to stop and listen to an amazing rendition of an old classic.

“Look sir, there isn’t a person in this Embassy who would believe that story– going to try out for Journey! So I tell you what, I’m giving you that visa. You’re going to try out. And you’re going to make it,” the immigration agent told Arnel.

The email ends with a link to the YouTube clip of Arnel singing Faithfully.

“As I watched the clip, I got goose bumps.  I googled Arnel and discovered that he DID get the gig and was now about to record and go on tour with Journey.  I forwarded the email to a manager friend in Los Angeles, Peter McHugh, with a note saying someone should really make a documentary film about this,” Diaz said.
McHugh emailed her right back with “You should.  I will track down their management.”

At first, the director was a little hesitant.

“After tussling with Imelda Marcos (the former first lady of the Philippines about whom I had made a film) in open court for sullying her “good name” even though she had signed an airtight personal release, I swore I would never make a film about anyone famous again,” she said. “And on top of that – Journey?  The thought of music rights clearances was already making my head hurt.”

Long story short, and after multiple meetings between her team and the band, Diaz was officially on board. After filming Arnel for one day, all her doubts were put aside.

“I found him to be profoundly articulate about his inner life and a genuinely nice person with an extraordinary personal history,” Diaz shared.

The next challenge came about, and it was about the film’s funding. There was none at this point. Capella Fahoome Brogden, an established producer based in Baltimore, got in touch after seeing the sample Diaz submitted.

“She had a little put away and she was willing to gamble what she had to start the process. So with a lot of trepidation and a gigantic leap of faith – I had never made a film without funding in place – we crewed up and joined the band on tour,” the dynamic director added.

That was four years ago this summer.

“It’s been tough going all these years.  With our limited resources and family members who would invest small amounts of money in the film, and armed with our mantra, yes you guessed it – don’t stop believin’ – we now find ourselves preparing for our premiere at Tribeca,” Diaz said.

(The Philippine Consulate General New York will celebrate the artistry of the Filipino filmmakers, cast and crew exhibited in this year’s Tribeca Film Festival with a cocktail reception hosted by Consul General Mario L. de Leon, Jr. on Friday, April 20, 2012 at the Philippine Center.)

...the Dutch film fest top awardee

Pinoy documentary bags top award in Dutch film fest

04/28/2012
 
 

Marty Syjuco, director of documentary film "Give Up Tomorrow"

NETHERLANDS - A documentary film about a Filipino-Spanish teenager who was convicted in the 1997 massacre case in Cebu won the highest award in the "Movies That Matter" film festival in the Netherlands.

Pinoy producer Marty Syjuco's "Give Up Tomorrow," a documentary film with a controversial and sensitive theme, won the Audience Choice Vara Awards in
The Hague.

Syjuco was coy but very happy to receive the award.

“This is my first film. I was not a filmmaker prior to this film. We are so honored and grateful,” Syjuco told ABS-CBN Europe News Bureau.

“Give Up Tomorrow” centers on the case of Paco Larranaga, one of the 7 who were convicted for the kidnapping and murder of sisters MaryJoy and Jacqueline Chiong in 1997.

Paco, the son of Spanish pelotari Manuel Larranaga and a member of the influential Osmena clan in Cebu, has been serving a life sentence for 15 years now.

It was on Feb. 3, 2004 when Paco and his other six co-accused were sentenced to death by lethal injection in a Manila court.

His death penalty was then commuted to life when capital punishment was abolished in the Philippines two years later.

Paco was then transferred to a prison in Spain in October 2009 under the Transfer of Prisoner Treaty between Madrid and Manila.

Apart from the Supreme Court of the Philippines, Paco’s appeals for a reinvestigation of his murder case and release reached the Fair Trials International and different human rights bodies in Europe.

The documentary film attempted to show the many loose ends in the trial of Paco’s case.

A young Dutchwoman who watched the film at the festival was very touched.

"I think he [Paco] is innocent especially if you look at what Amnesty International said and what the U.N. said about it and I believe he should be free,” said Jorinde.

Syjuco is related to Paco because his brother is married to Paco's sister.

Syjuco said that the VARA award is very meaningful because it comes from the very prestigious Movies that Matter Festival, which is associated with Amnesty International and one of the biggest and most important human rights festivals in the world.

“It also brings further attention to the injustice that Paco continues to suffer and our ‘Free Paco Now’ campaign. To receive the award in the international city of peace and justice is incredible, especially since we have a campaign to bring justice to an innocent man,” Syjuco said.

“Also this award means that our film will have a television broadcast in Holland and we're so thrilled that the entire country will get to see our film,” Syjuco added.

The documentary film received a huge amount of support from those who are petitioning for the pardon and release of Paco.

During the Movies That Matter festival, the “Free Paco Now” petition collected 500 signatures.

...the new (planned) Metro face


MMDA eyes radical changes in the metro

 
 
 


To develop Metro Manila, it may be necessary for the city to move out.

Metro Manila Development Authority chairman Francis Tolentino said Friday that to make a better Metro Manila, there must be radical changes, which might include relocating the seaport to Batangas.

The old seaport space could then house a new Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

Speaking before the Philippine Tour Operators Association, Tolentino said Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan have airports by the sea. "It's only here where the airport is inside a subdivision," he said.

In a related development, Transportation and Communications Secretary Manuel Roxas II said over DZMM on Friday that air operations may also have to be moved to Clark in Angeles because the runways in NAIA are congested.

Clearing the seaport will also remove container vans and large trucks in the port and San Marcelino areas, Tolentino said.

However, to execute such a plan and to extend planned Roxas Boulevard all the way to Navotas, require a large-scale relocation of residents, he said.

Metro Manila will also have to expand to parts of Rizal, Bulacan, and Laguna, he said.

A six-lane Skybridge from Quezon City to Makati is also being eyed. Tolentino said the Skybridge is expected to reduce 40 percent of traffic from Epifanio Delos Santos Avenue.

A planned extension of train lines to Cavite and Antipolo is also expected to decongest Metro Manila, which has around 14 million residents.

He said these proposals are part of Metro Manila Greenprint 2030, a long-term development plan that seeks to raise the standard of living in the metropolis.

Greenprint is currently being formulated and a final development plan is expected by June next year.

"The model here is to relocate little by little our government center," he said.

He said the same was done in Malaysia, where government offices were moved to Putrajaya from Kuala Lumpur in 1999. 

Brazil also founded Brasilia in the 1960s to replace Rio De Janeiro as the capital.

"We can retain the current spaces for heritage, residential, and mixed-use purposes," he said, but Manila has to move away from the center.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

...the young Pinoy scientists

Young Pinoy scientists showcase work in nanotech, genetics, chemistry

April 26, 2012
GMA News
 
 
The three finalists of the National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) Talent Search for Young Scientists presented their research to the media at the awarding ceremony of the NAST-Hugh Greenwood Environmental Science Award at the Hyatt Hotel Manila on April 23.
 
The NAST Talent Search is a competition meant to encourage young scientists (aged 35 or below the year the award is given) to pursue a career in science. The authors of the best three scientific papers submitted will be awarded trophies and cash prizes.
 
This year, the finalists are Dahlia C. Apodaca of the Institute of Chemistry, University of the Philippines Diliman, for her paper “Electropolymerized Molecularly Imprinted Polymer Films of a Bis-Terthiophene Dendron: Folic Acid Quartz Crystal Microbalance Sensing”; Mario A. Tan of the Research Center for the Natural and Applied Sciences of the University of Sto. Tomas, for his paper “Isolation and Total Syntheses of Two New Alkaloids, Dubiusamines-A and -B, from Pandanus dubius”; and Marcos B. Valdez of the School of Science and Engineering of Ateneo de Manila University, for his paper “Differential Development of Sex-related Characters of Chickens from the GSP and PNP/DO Inbred Lines After Left Ovariectomy.”
 
Dr. Apodaca, who has a PhD in Chemistry, is focusing on nanotechnology (working with matter on the molecular to microscopic scale). “There is a very wide application for it,” she says.  In the Philippines, nanotech research is focused on developing nanostructured solar cells and energy storage devices, nanomaterials for packaging and construction and nanosensors for rapid detection of food contaminants. Apodaca’s work has been on the Molecularly Imprinted Polymer (MIP) sensors, which are detection devices that are simple, low-cost, reusable and recoverable and which can be used in a number of applications, from detecting land mines to toxic substances in food. 
 
Dr. Tan, who has a PhD in Pharmaceutical Sciences, is working on identifying new alkaloids from the pandanus (pandan) plant. The ones identified by Tan and his colleagues so far provide materials of pharmacological and ecological relevance and are used to develop sedatives and diuretics. The antioxidant, anti-tubercular, anti-infective and antioxidant properties of the plant also make it a vital source of medicines to treat illnesses, diseases and disorders such as tuberculosis, leprosy, rheumatism, headaches, urinary tract infections. 
 
Dr. Valdez, who has a PhD in Animal Genetics, is working on chicken sex reversal—even creating a chicken with one female side and one male side—as a viable way to preserve the germline (the sequence of cells that contain genetic material that will be passed on to offspring) of chicken varieties. Now that the genome of the domestic chicken has been completely mapped, says Valdez, “We are on the road to attaining a wealth of knowledge from its analysis.” 
 
After their presentation, the finalists were interviewed by the NAST board of judges. The winner will be announced at an awards presentation to be held on July 12.
 
Earlier at the event, the NAST-Hugh Greenwood Environmental Science Award was presented to botanist Dr. Virginia Castillo-Cuevas for her work in curing crop disease. — TJD, GMA News

...the fastest growing market for smartphone

Philippines fastest-growing market for smartphones—GfK Asia

By: Paolo G. Montecillo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
 
 


MANILA, Philippines—Two out of three new mobile devices sold in Southeast Asia today are application-rich, Internet-enabled smartphones, fueling the exponential surge in data services, according to the Singapore-based research firm GfK Asia.

The Philippines was noted as the fastest-growing market, with the value of smartphones sold growing by 402 percent in the first quarter of 2012 over the same period in 2011.

“The smartphone revolution is in full swing,” GfK Asia digital technology account director Gerard Tan said in a statement on Thursday.

“In developing Southeast Asia where smartphone penetration is still nowhere near saturation levels, we can be sure that the current sales spurt will carry on for at least the next few years,” he said.

With much of the populace still not owning a mobile phone, there is no better place for global mobile phone brands to focus their sales and marketing efforts,” he said.

GfK Asia’s latest report surveyed Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines, and Cambodia, where the smartphone sales grew by an average of 62 percent.

The size of the smartphone market in the Philippines, however, remains small compared with its neighbors.

Smartphone penetration in the country at the end of March was pegged at 29 percent, less than half the penetration rate in Indonesia. The region’s most mature markets were Malaysia and Singapore, where penetration rates were at 90 percent for both countries.

“The largest smartphone market in this region expectedly is Indonesia, which has a smartphone penetration rate of 62 percent and enjoyed sales exceeding $1.4 billion last quarter,” Tan said.

In an e-mail to the Inquirer, GfK Asia said smartphone sales in the Philippines were at $265 million in the first quarter of the year.

For users in the region, GfK noted an increasing preference for touch devices like Apple’s iPhone and countless other devices running on Google’s Android operating system, showing a shift in preference from the once-popular BlackBerry devices sold by Canada’s Research In Motion.

The research company said seven in 10 smartphones sold in the region on Thursday had “touch-only” interfaces, as opposed to BlackBerry devices that mostly feature physical keypads.

Another interesting development, GfK Asia said, has been the brisk sales enjoyed by the increasing number of smartphones equipped with advanced camera features.

“Over 35 percent of all smartphones sold in Southeast Asia in the first three months of the year were equipped with a camera of eight megapixel or more, as compared to figures one year ago which was only 12 percent,” GfK said.

...the Mexican filmfest winner

'Thelma' wins at Mexican film fest, to compete in Madrid

 
By JULIEN MERCED C. MATABUENA
April 26, 2012
Manila Bulletin
 
 
'Thelma' is Time Horizon Pictures' first project (Photo courtesy of the 'Thelma' Facebook page)
'Thelma' is Time Horizon Pictures' first project (Photo courtesy of the 'Thelma' Facebook page)



MANILA, Philippines – The Paul Soriano-helmed indie flick, “Thelma,” was among 10 films that bagged the Bronze Palm Award at the 2012 Mexico International Film Festival.


“Thelma” was part of the festival’s Feature Film Competition. The nine other winning films as listed on the festival’s official website are “Dia de Preto” by Marcial Renato, Marcos Felipe Delfino, and Daniel Mattos; “Guadalupe the Virgin” by Victoria Giordana; “Nijiiro Hotaru” by Kounosuke Uda; “Random 8” by Kathryn Millard; “Salsa Tel Aviv” by Jorje Weller; “Teenagers” by Paul Verhoeven; “The Custom Mary” by Matt Dunnerstick; “The Last Cry” by Reza Ghassemi; and “The Pact” by Matt Toronto.


Time Horizon Pictures that produced the movie wrote on its website that the film won “for demonstrating excellent and outstanding film-making.”


More, also from to the THP website, “Thelma” will be competing at the 2012 Madrid International Film Festival in June, where it scored Best Feature Film and Best Cinematography nominations. In August, it will be screened at the 3rd New York City International Film Festival.


Prior the MIFF win, “Thelma” clinched three awards at the 28th PMPC Star Awards for Movies held in March: Digital Movie Screen Writer of the Year (Froilan Medina and Paul Soriano), Digital Movie Director of the Year (Soriano), and Digital Movie of the Year.


The Maja Salvador-starrer based on the lives of Filipino runners had also been invited to various international film festivals since its release on September 2011, including the 22nd CineQuest Film Festival, the 36th Cleveland International Film Festival, and the 31st Hawaii International Film Festival.

...the "coming out" party

Garment companies in China relocating to PH: Purisima

04/26/2012
 
 
ADB meeting is "coming out party" for Aquino administration
 
MANILA, Philippines - Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima sees more foreign investments coming into the Philippines.

In an interview on ANC Headstart, Purisima said some garment companies are starting to relocate from China to the Philippines, due to rising labor costs in China.

He added electronics companies, which have been affected by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan and the flooding in Thailand last year are starting to look at the Philippines.

"The stock market is getting a lot of investments from foreign funds. Obviously we want the more productive type of investment and we're starting to see it. For example, garment companies that are starting to relocate from China, where the wage costs are increasing, back to the Philippines. Electronics companies realized last year that they cannot be just in one place... They're starting to look at the Philippines. The Department of Trade and Industry is managing a lot of inquiries right now. There are concrete plans for plants to be built in the Philippines," Purisima said.

This is why, Purisima said, the government has to improve the country's infrastructure to meet the standards of foreign investors.

"We are accelerating our efforts to build our infrastructure because infrastructure is important to make sure we're as efficient as our neighbors -- our ports, airports, power, mass transit, the whole work," he said.

"Coming out party"

Infrastructure will be the main topic in the upcoming 45th Annual Meeting of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which will be held in Manila next week. Purisima said there will also be discussions on poverty alleviation, disaster management and climate change, which are all relevant for the Philippines.

Purisima said a record number of participants are attending the ADB event, which will be a "coming out" party for the Aquino administration.

"We're going to make this more fun," he said, referencing the Philippines' tourism slogan "It's more fun in the Philippines."

The ADB meeting in Manila, Purisima said, will be more personal than previous conferences.

"We're also going to make it true knowledge-sharing. I've attended other ADB conferences, and its very impersonal. We want this to be personal, an experience for all attendees... So far, we have 4,300 participants -- a record. This is the highest ever so far and over half will be coming from abroad. These are not just ordinary tourists, these are decision-makers, leading bankers, fund managers, leaders in the NGO community converging in Manila," he said.

The Finance Secretary expressed hope these opinon leaders, who will visit Manila, will spread the good news about the Philippines.

"When they go back home, hopefully they will spread the good word that finally, the Philippines has gotten its act together. We have a leadership that believes in good governance, truly cares and want to build a better Philippines," he said. - With ANC

...the AI rocker

Fil-Mexican Jessica Sanchez rocks 'American Idol' with 'Bohemian Rhapsody'

 
April 26, 2012
GMA News
 
 
Incredible. That's how "American Idol" judge Randy Jackson called the latest performance of Filipino-Mexican Jessica Sanchez, one of the six remaining contestants on the reality singing competition.

According to a report of the news site Examiner on Thursday morning (Wednesday evening in the United States), Sanchez "set out to win Queen week" on American Idol.
 
"Her weapon of choice was the British band's anthem called 'Bohemian Rhapsody,'" the Examiner said.

"American Idol" contestants this week had to perform songs by Queen, a British rock band formed in London in the 1970s.

The Examiners said "American Idol" judge Steven Tyler, was thrilled with the performance of Sanchez, saying that the late Queen lead singer Freddie Mercury "would have been proud" to hear her sing.

The third judge, singer Jennifer Lopez, said she felt every word that Sanchez sang.

Two weeks ago, all three judges had opted to save Sanchez when she was almost eliminated from the competition after getting the lowest number of votes from the audience.

The judges used their one and only "save" for the season to keep Sanchez from being booted out of the competition.

Support from kababayans

Sanchez, 16, born in the United States, is the daughter of Editha Bugay Sanchez, a Filipina married to a Mexican.  

As Editha hails from Bataan, people from the province have been rooting for Sanchez to win.

Bataan is the home of her grandparents from her mother’s side — retired US Navy man Eddie and Virgie Bugay — of Samal and Orani towns.

Just last Monday, during a program celebrating "Araw ng Balanga," emcees Melody Ortiguerra and Jonel Llanes made a pitch for Sanchez.
 
To drum up support for Sanchez, Llanes said: “Palakpakan para kay Jessica Sanchez! Kung kayo ay may kamag-anak sa Amerika, sabihan sila na suportahan ang one of the best singers in America.”
 
Ortiguerra added: “Magaling talaga, congratulations Miss Jessica Sanchez! We are proud of her na kababayan natin sa Bataan.”
 
Second best achievement so far

So far, among the contestants with Filipino blood, Sanchez has the second best achievement.

Filipino-American Jasmine Trias ranked third in "American Idol’"s third season. 
 
Before Sanchez, latest "Idol" contestant of Filipino descent was Thia Megia who finished in the Top 11 of last year's competition.

Before Megia came Ramiele Malubay who placed 9th in the seventh season. - with Andrei Medina, VVP, GMA News

...the celebrity vegetarian

13 Pinoys in running for ‘Sexiest Vegetarian Celebrity’

04/26/2012
 
 
MANILA, Philippines – Thirteen Filipinos have been nominated for the title of Sexiest Vegetarian Celebrity of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), an animal rights group.
 
They are sexy cover girls Alicia Mayer and Geneva Cruz, former beauty queen Sandra Seifert, actresses Yasmien Kurdi, Chin-Chin Gutierrez and Juliana Palermo, actors Carlos Agassi and Raymond Bagatsing, singers Lougee Basabas and Nityalila Saulo, models Isabel Roces and Raya Mananquil, and columnist RJ Ledesma.

The Filipino vegetarian celebrities were placed alongside international stars and politicians such as Natalie Portman, Tobey Maguire, Jared Leto, Anne Hathaway and former United States President Bill Clinton.

Internet users may vote for their favorite celebrities at PETAAsiaPacific.com until May 15. PETA said the winners will be based on the number of votes received, the celebrity’s attractiveness and commitment to vegetarianism, as well as their personality.

The Sexiest Vegetarian Celebrity contest is part of PETA’s efforts to encourage people to stop eating meat.
The group claims that healthy vegetarian diets can help lower the risk of heart disease, cancer and stroke.
Russell Brand and Kristen Wiig were crowned sexiest vegetarian celebrities last year.

In the Philippines, the award was given to Geneva Cruz, who became vegetarian at age 15.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

...the Pacman's influence

Pacquiao is fourth on Forbes’ ‘Most Influential Athletes’ list



By NR RAMOS
April 25, 2012
Manila Bulletin

The Pacman
The Pacman


MANILA, Philippines – Filipino pugilist Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao
continues to hold influence over the Americans, landing at fourth place in this year's Ten Most Influential Athletes list compiled by Forbes magazine.


Pacquiao ranked below popular race car driver Jimmie Johnson and quarterbacks Tim Tebow and Peyton Manning who made it to numbers one, two, and three, respectively.


Pacquiao garnered a 20 percent influential score and a 59 percent likeability level to beat other famous athletes like NFL players Tom Brady (5th), Aaron Rodgers (6th), NASCAR racer Dale Earnhardt. Jr., Drew Brees (8th), Eli Manning (9th); and NBA’s Jeremy Lin (10th).


According to information from the website, the ranking was based on an athlete’s likeability and whether they’re considered “influential,” which it said is an important quality for marketers.


The poll was conducted by Nielsen Media Research and E-Poll Market Research among 1, 100 respondents.


Candidates were limited to pro athletes who are currently active and who score at least 20% “awareness” with the general public.


It was the first time for the millionaire congressional representative from Saranggani to make it to the list.


Prior, in 2009 and 2010, he ranked 57th and 55th respectively on the magazine’s “Celebrity 100” list.

..the Swiss threater actress

Pinay in theater play in Switzerland

04/25/2012
 
 
KREUZLINGEN, Switzerland - The group “Culture in the Shop” and the Free Theatre Turgau, staged a theatre play about the life and the origin of the Kreuzlingern or migrants and refugees.
 
The theme of migration was tackled by actors and actresses while cooking on stage.
Six professional and amateur actors and actresses played the roles of migrants and refugees. Each one related how they were able to reach Switzerland.

One of the main actresses in the theater presentation is Filipina Teresita Papa.

Like her, large numbers of Europeans--mainly Spanish, Portuguese, Greek, Irish and Italians--chose to move abroad due to economic pressures back home.

Some have travelled to Switzerland, joining family members, friends or entrusting their fate in the hands of one of many job agencies.

The theater play likewise pictured how migrants find it hard--although not the same way--to adapt to the language, the social structure and the way of life of their host country.

Play Director Jean Grädel and author Peter Höner incorporated in the play the different factors that make it difficult for migrants to integrate easily:
  • the foreigners' social and cultural background;
  • their education and their adaptability to a foreign environment;
  • their plans for the future,
  • the political and legal situation in the host country;
  • the local population's acceptance and tolerance and respect for a foreign culture.
The fact that 75% of all foreigners in Switzerland possess a residence permit can be considered positive. However, it does not necessarily mean that they are familiar with the local language and way of life.

“I observed that a big barrier for Filipinos like me living in Switzerland is the language itself. Switzerland is a small country with a total population of only 6 million people. Yet, the country boast’s four official languages: French, Italian, Romanesque and German, which is the dialect spoken by a majority of its inhabitants,” Papa said.

Papa maintained that learning the language is the key to faster integration.

...the best country for business English

PH: World's best country in business English







GlobalEnglish noted that a country’s business English capability is an indicator of its economic growth and business success.

“It is not surprising that both the Philippines and Norway—the only two countries in the top five in both 2011 and 2012—are improving their economies, based on the latest GDP data from the World Bank,” it added.

Meanwhile, struggling economic powers (Japan, Italy and Mexico) and fast-growth emerging markets (Brazil, Columbia and Chile) scored below a 4.0 in business English proficiency, placing them at a disadvantage when competing in a global marketplace, the study said.

It also pointed out that shifts in global talent have put even English-speaking countries at risk.

“Surprisingly the BEI score for global workers in the U.S. declined from 6.9 to 5.09 since the original 2011 BEI benchmark, which is attributed to a majority of test takers being foreign-born engineers and scientists,” the report said.

Rest of the world ranked beginner and basic level

Based on a scale of 1-10, the average 2012 BEI score across 108,000 test takers around the world is 4.15 which is lower than last year’s 4.46.

Nearly four out of 10 (38.2 percent) global workers from 76 countries were ranked as business English beginners, meaning that, on average, they can’t understand or communicate basic information during virtual or in-person meetings, read or write professional emails in English or deal with complexity and rapid change in a global business environment, the study said.

Meanwhile, the majority of global workers (60.5 percent) from the represented countries scored between a 4.0 and 7.0, below an intermediate level, indicating an inability to take an active role in business discussions or perform relatively complex tasks such as presentation development and customer or partner negotiations, it added.

GlobalEnglish stressed that the 2012 BEI which showed a lack of business English proficiency is threatening the productivity of companies, industries and country-specific economies this year.

“Poor Business English skills are bad for global businesses and this year’s Business English Index suggests that many companies will be hard-pressed to achieve their desired performance goals during 2012,” said Tom Kahl, GlobalEnglish President.

“Addressing English skills gaps and ensuring that employees can immediately perform at the necessary proficiency level should be viewed as a strategic imperative for multinational businesses, as Enterprise Fluency, the ability to seamlessly communicate and collaborate within global organizations, can deliver significant financial upside,” Kahl added.

Headquartered in Brisbane, California, GlobalEnglish works with multinational companies – including Cisco, Procter and Gamble, HSBC, Phzer – to support performance in business English across the workforce around the world.

Here's the list of the 10 best and worst countries in the world for business English proficiency based on GlobalEnglish's 2012 BEI:

10 Best Countries:
Philippines
Norway
Serbia
Slovenia
Australia
Malaysia
India
Lithuania
Singapore
Canada

10 Worst Countries:
Armenia
Cote d'Ivoire
Taiwan
Honduras
Columbia
Chile
El Salvador
Saudi Arabia
Israel
Brazil

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

...the Volcano rank

PH Volcanoes up 17 places in world rankings

04/24/2012
 
 
MANILA, Philippines – The Philippine Volcanoes made a significant jump in the world rugby rankings following their stellar performance and victory in the Asian 5 Nations Division 1 championship in Manila.
 
Based on the International Rugby Board (IRB) rankings, the Volcanoes climbed 17 rungs up the world rugby standings after taking home the Division 1 title.

Before becoming Division 1 champions, the Volcanoes were ranked No. 72.

Three victories over Singapore, Chinese Taipei and Sri Lanka catapulted the Philippines to No. 55.

The Philippine side earned a promotion to Top 5, which means a qualification to compete in the 2013 Asian 5 Nations Top 5.

Philippine Rugby Union (PRU) President Alvin San Diego said he expected the high placing for the Volcanoes especially after their win over the higher-ranked Sri Lankans.

He said the Volcanoes, made up mostly of Filipinos who have mixed heritage, placed the Philippines on the rugby world map.

“This whole series is all being about three things for the Volcanoes: respect, discipline and Pinoy pride.”

...the achievers in New Zealand

Seven Pinoy achievers feted in New Zealand

 
April 24, 2012
GMA News
 
 
Seven New Zealand-based Filipinos were feted for promoting the best of the Philippines at an event at the Philippine Embassy on April 13.
 
Philippine Ambassador Virginia Benavidez hosted the event dubbed an “Evening to Remember and Recognize Filipino Talents and Creativity” as part of the embassy’s cultural diplomacy.
 
In a news release on Monday, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said the event “showcased the positive image of the Philippines as the home of world-class talents and raised the profile of the Filipino community as among the best immigrant groups who have integrated themselves well in the local communities throughout New Zealand.” 
 
Those feted during the event were:
 
  • Sylvia Shirin Zonoobi, the first Filipino to be appointed Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for Services to Refugees and Migrant Communities in the New Year Honors List of New Zealand for 2003;
  • Dr. Antonio Noblejas, Queen’s Service Medal Awardee for Services to the Filipino Community in New Zealand’s 2008 New Year Honors List and Recipient of the “Banaag Award” of the Commission on Filipinos Overseas’ 2008 Presidential Awards for Individuals and Organizations Overseas 
  • Anita Mansell, Queen’s service medal awardee for services to the Filipino community in New Zealand’s 2011 Queen’s Birthday
  • Oscar and Miriam Batucan, the first ever Filipino-New Zealand couple to be awarded the Benemerenti Medal given by Pope Benedict XVI on July 20, 2009
  • Ivy Rose Padilla, Best Actress in a Leading Role – Musical North Area Performance Theatre Awards for 2011, and
  • Josephine Garcia-Jowett, finalist of the Open Section, 2007 and 2010 World of Wearable Arts Awards Show, Commended in the Red Section of the  2003 World of Wearable Arts Awards Show and AKLnzPINOYS, Print Journalism Awardees in the 1st Media and Migration Advocacy Awards of the Commission on Filipinos Overseas for 2011.
 
Benavidez also tendered a thanksgiving dinner for the honorees and their families.
 
Those present during the occasion were Cora Noblejas, Ken Mansell, Patrick Padilla, Carlo and Rhodora Jaminola representing the AKLnzPINOYS, Mico Santos, Cultural Officer Liza Jane Estalilla, and Cindy Santos.
 
The awardees conveyed their deep appreciation to the Philippine government for the acknowledgement of their inspiring testimonies to the good traits of Filipinos in New Zealand.
 
“They are the Philippine Embassy’s valuable partners in promoting the welfare and interests of Filipinos in New Zealand, supporting programs to highlight the rich and varied cultural, artistic and spiritual heritage of the Philippines and contributing, in their respective ways, to growth and progress in the Philippines,” Benavidez said. - VVP, GMA News

Monday, April 23, 2012

...the high tech exporter


Manila exporting more high-tech equipment

By Delon Porcalla
The Philippine Star
Updated April 23, 2012



MANILA, Philippines - While the progress of some countries puts the Philippines in an awkward situation, one major source of pride for President Aquino is the fact that Manila exports more hi-tech equipment than its far more advanced neighbors.

He cited the case of the oil-rich Middle East, where the country “trades from them in basic energy supplies, petrochemical products (for instance), dairy products and the like.”

“We, in turn, export to them all of these, shall we say, more high-tech products, maybe the electronic outputs, from projectors to assemblies and automotive parts and so on and so forth. That is a major source of pride,” Aquino said.

The Chief Executive made the remarks in Friday’s 108th General Membership Meeting of the 17th World Electronics Forum (WEF) and Semiconductors Electronics Industries of the Philippines Inc. (SEIPI) that was attended by more than 200 chief executive officers in Cebu.

Aquino also took the opportunity to praise Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala for giving assurance that the government will soon be a rice exporter after the country had been importing rice for the last decade.

“He is telling us that we would probably be a net exporter by 2013, not of the basic varieties but of the higher-end varieties of rice. Just two years ago, we were conditioned to believe that we need to import at least 1.3 million tons of rice a year. And roughly about a little over two and a half years into our term, we will now be exporting,” he said.

He also mentioned his previous experience when he was “embarrassed” to hear from his Asian counterparts about their success stories in growing rice “primarily because a lot of their senior ministers and experts were educated in our country.”

“So, they learned how to plant rice from us, they imbibed the lessons really well; we go to them to import the rice which we can’t grow. And that was obviously a major source of embarrassment,” Aquino admitted.

...the best dive site for Japanese

PHL voted among top 3 dive destinations in Tokyo tilt

April 23, 2012
GMA News
 
 
The Philippines has been voted one of the top three dive destinations in the Marine Diving Fair 2012 in Tokyo, Japan, the Department of Tourism said Monday.
 
In a news release, the DOT said the Philippines was the only member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in the top three, which also included Palau and Maldives.
 
This comes after an international travel website earlier this month cited Tubbataha Reef in Palawan and Puerto Galera’s The Canyons as two of the world’s 50 best dive sites
 
The DOT also said Blue Coral was named the favorite dive operator for 2012 in the Tokyo tilt, while the Good Dive Shop, another dive operator, was included in the top 10 for the same category. 
 
Since 2006, the Philippines has been consecutively included in Marine Diving Fair’s top five "Best Overseas Destinations,” said DOT. The country has also been consistently awarded as one of the top 10 "Dream Destinations."
 
Also, it said that since the Philippines' participation in the event in 2000, it had been continuously recognized as one of the top five dive destinations.
 
The DOT said these awards were given after subscribers of Marine Diving Magazine, one of the most prestigious dive publications in Japan, cast their votes.
 
It added the Marine Diving Fair 2012, one of the largest diving and beach resort exhibitions in Asia, attracts over 50,000 visitors annually.
 
For this year, the event had 200 exhibitors from 50 different countries.
 
The Philippines' colorful booth inspired by the DOT's slogan “It’s More Fun in the Philippines” drew crowds at the event.
 
It had five aquariums and marine life paintings, and attracted visitors to discover what makes diving “more fun” in the Philippines.
 
The DOT said its participation at the event aimed to maintain the high profile of the Philippines as a premier and competitive dive destination among Japanese overseas divers.
 
For his part, DOT Secretary Ramon Jimenez Jr. said the Philippines once again proved it is a must-see dive destination by garnering awards in all four major award categories.
 
“Our partnership with the private sector dive tour operators has paid off nicely.  We encourage more suppliers to keep raising the bar for service excellence to grow this market segment,” he said.
 
Japan is among the top three sources of foreign tourist arrivals visiting the country in 2011. –KG, GMA News

...the artist in Saipan

Pinoy places first in Saipan art tilt

 
April 23, 2012
GMA News
 
 
A Filipino artist in Saipan — Eduardo “Edong” Elenzano — recently won first place in the 3rd "CNMI (Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands) Bridge Capital Art Competition."

According to a report of the news site Marianas Variety, Elenzano won $1,500 for his painting of a father and son at the beach.

Wood carver Michael Finey won the grand prize or "Best in Show" along with a $2,500 prize for his artwork depicting navigators at sea.

The other winners included:

  • Joseph Weaver, second place and $1,000 prize for his painting titled “Peek-a-Boo,” about a huge turtle surfacing in the sea, and
  • Robert Hunter, third place and a prize of $500, for his painting “Managaha Bound,” depicting a boy on a boat.
Marianas Variety said there were over 40 entries in the adult category.

The awarding ceremony was held on April 21 during the Flame Tree Arts Festival, according to the website of Bridge Capital, LLC, sponsor of the competition.

Bridge Capital said the competition aims to "promote and support" CNMI artists. - VVP, GMA News

Sunday, April 22, 2012

...the rugby boys

Phl Volcanoes spew fire, rip Sri Lankans

 
 
MANILA, Philippines - They bled for every point.

And when the dust settled, the Philippine Volcanoes were rewarded with a 28-18 victory over fancied Sri Lanka and a coveted slot in the 2013 HSBC Asian 5 Nations Championship.

No rugby team representing the Philippines has ever reached the Asian 5 Nations event, and last night’s victory at the Rizal Memorial Stadium made sure one would get there.

“This blood is for the country,” said 26-year-old center Justin Coveney, still bleeding from the nose, as the rest of the Volcanoes celebrated their hard-earned victory.

Coveney, who sealed the win for the Volcanoes with a try on the 31st minute, banged bodies with the Sri Lankans all night. He was bruised all over by the end of the final match for this Asian 5 Nations Division 1 tournament.

“Opportunities only come when you totally put yourself into it. This is a team effort. But now we’re in Asia’s top five. Watch out for the Volcanoes,” he said.

“Tonight we put the Philippines in the rugby map.”

In the Asian 5 Nations, which offers a slot to the 2015 Rugby World Cup in England, the Volcanoes will be pitted against teams they’ve hardly thought of facing before:  Japan, Hong Kong, United Arab Emirates, Kazakhstan and Korea.

But now it’s a reality that the Volcanoes have crashed Asia’s top five.

“I’m speechless. But this is the best ever. We’ve been working on this for a long time. There’s no better feeling than playing for the Philippines,” said Jaime Urquijo, who plays lock.

As the Volcanoes continued to celebrate, the Sri Lankans headed to their dressing room, and one of them, burly and standing perhaps 6-foot-5, was seen crying.

The Philippine Volcanoes celebrate their historic 28-18 victory over Sri Lanka in the Asian rugby eliminations last night at the Rizal Memorial Stadium. Jun Mendoza
 
It was a painful defeat for the Sri Lankans, once ranked 49th in the world. They are now in 56th place, eight notches higher than the Philippines.

But Sri Lanka had been to the Asian 5 Nations Championship, and its players, two of them sons of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, took great pain in the loss.

The pre-dominantly Filipino crowd led by the Zobel de Ayalas erupted after the final whistle, and the Volcanoes whooped it up like they’ve won the World Cup.

They chanted, “Vol-ca-noes! Vol-ca-noes!”

“We knew that the only thing that could beat us was us,” said team captain Michael Letts, who kept the team glued throughout the match.

The Volcanoes broke the ice with three minutes into the match, a penalty kick by Oli Saunders. He added two more kicks and gave his team a 9-0 lead with 17 minutes gone.

Letts then reached in for a try in the 29th minute, and adding a field goal to it gave the Volcanoes a 16-0 lead. By halftime, the lead had gone up to 23-0.

But the Sri Lankans opened the final 40 minutes of play with the aggression that was missing in the first half, and slowly they chopped the lead.

The Sri Lankans came close at 18-23, and in fact had so many chances to even up or take the upper hand. But the Volcanoes hung on till the end.

“Discipline! That’s the only thing that’s stopping us,” the Volcanoes’ field coach blurted out from the sidelines. “Composure! Composure!”

The Vocanoes responded, and sealed the victory in the 32nd minute when Coveney broke loose for the try he will never forget.

It’s time to put those sizzling billboards back up. - By Abac Cordero (Philstar News Service, www.philstar.com)