Gia and Jenna

Originally written June 2016

In the Philippines, the importance of beauty is never underemphasized. Past beauty queens such as Pia Wurtzbach have received attention commonly reserved for astronauts and Olympic medalists in countries such as the United States. Regularly scheduled programming is interrupted by news tickers flowing at the bottom of television screens across the country featuring updates of pageant results. Not only is the pageant circuit a desirable career and lifestyle path for women, but it is also a viable option for many born male.  As many boys traditionally aspire to become athletes, in the Philippines, a country ridden in socioeconomic disparity, success as a beauty queen offers a fast track from poverty to fame and fortune.

Homosexually and/or transvestitism /transsexuality/transgenderism is perhaps more accepted – if not more apparent – than in many western countries, not because of laws and legal provisions that protect sexual minorities, but by the prevalence of GBLTQ culture. Unlike the United States where many gay events remain on society’s fringe, celebrities such as Vice Ganda and Boy Abunda are television personalities often seen on television…

Continued in registered free member section…

NBA Stars Opt to Play in the Philippines

The Philippines is one of the most basketball-crazed countries in the world.  From Baguio to Caguyan de Oro, basketball has virtually become the nation’s national pastime. Professional basketball players such as Doug Kramer are household names throughout the archipelago nation and are subjects for reality TV.  The once-popular Team Kramer highlighted the family life of Kramer and celebrity wife Cheska Garcia in weekly episodes, however, little is known of the PBA (Philippine Basketball Association) player internationally.  Outside the Philippines, arguably the most famous player in the Philippine league, ironically, is not a basketball player, but a boxer:  5’5” (1.66 m) Manny Pacquiao.

The NBA takes notice of basketball’s undeniable popularity in the Philippines by bringing exhibition games to the Philippines and having All-Star teams complete against the PBA’s best. Despite the NBA’s goodwill visits to the Philippines, which continues to feed the nation’s insatiable appetite for the sport, few players, if given the opportunity, would opt to play in the PBA perhaps until now.

The International Business Times reports the exciting possibility of two NBA stars considering stints in the PBA. In a Saturday, July 29 post, John Tan reports former Los Angeles Lakers Lamar Odom and Jordan Clarkson’s interest in playing for a PBA franchise team.

Clarkson, a nationalized Philippine citizen, thus far, has represented the Philippines in last year’s Asian Games but has yet to play extensively in the Philippine league.  Five years removed from the NBA limelight, Lamar Odam looks to revive his career after being ousted from a 3-on-3 league due to poor health.

Can Odam and Clarkson make a splash in the PBA and make the league a viable option for international players?  Only time will tell.

Queen of Mamalakaya Results

Following up on posts to last week’s Mamalakaya Festival, the Miss Queen of Mamalakaya was a success, according to event organizer Kit Flores.  Yheng Lavitoria of Tarlac was crowned queen at last Saturday’s event at Wawandue Barangay’s Covered Court.  Competing to a packed crowd, Amika Montero of Olongapo City took the last spot as the fourth runner up, Dimple Tan of Manilla placed third, Castillejos native Lian Domingo reached second runner-up status, and placing first was Bataan’s Jenna Maria.

Kit welcomes you to next year’s Mamalakaya Festival, featuring activities and performances for people of all ages.

  

OLONGAPO: QUEEN OF MAMALAKAYA 2019 (Update)

This is an update on the 2019 Mamalakaya Festival. As mentioned previously, Kit Flores is coordinating the Queen of Mamalakaya Pageant scheduled for Saturday, July 20 at Wawandue Barangay’s Covered Court at 8 p.m.

Flores will be the organizer of the gay event. Approaching its third year, a high turn out is expected for this highly-contested pageant. Open to entries from across the Philippines, the Third Annual Queen of Mamalakaya is expected to be a highly-contested event. Qualifiers will receive the cash prize of ₱300 (6 USD), the fourth-place finisher will receive ₱1000 (20 USD), the third-place finisher will receive ₱3000 (60 USD), the runner up will receive ₱5000 (98 USD), and Miss Mamalakaya 2019 the grand prize totaling ₱10,000 (200 USD).

Contestants interested in entering the pageant may apply the day of the event.

For more information about the upcoming event, contact Kit with the following contact information:E-mail: kit_flores22@yahoo.com

Tel: +639453904134

Sponsorship and contributions for the gala are much appreciated. If you or your business is willing to help in making this event become a success, contact Kit and/or send money via PayPal using the contact address provided.

Kit looks forward to seeing you witness the spectacle of the crowning of a new queen for this year’s Mamalakaya Festival.

Olongapo: ‘Queen of Mamalakaya 2019’

As part of the Subic/Olongapo area’s Mamalakaya Festival, celebrating the region’s strong fishing tradition, Kit Flores will be organizing the Third Annual Queen of Mamalakaya Pageant, slated for Saturday, July 20, at Wawundue Barangay’s Covered Court at 8 p.m.

Performance from the 2017 Malalakaya Festival

Open to entries from across the Philippines, the Third Annual Queen of Mamalakaya is expected to be a highly-contested event. Qualifiers will receive the cash prize of ₱300 (6 USD), the fourth-place finisher will receive ₱1000 (20 USD), the third-place finisher will receive ₱3000 (60 USD), the runner up will receive ₱5000 (98 USD), and Miss Mamalakaya 2019 the grand prize totaling ₱10,000 (200 USD).

Contestants interested in entering the pageant may apply the day of the event.

For more information about the upcoming event, contact Kit with the following contact information:

E-mail: kit_flores22@yahoo.com

Tel: +639453904134

Sponsorship and contributions for the gala are much appreciated. If you or your business is willing to help in making this event become a success, contact Kit and/or send money via PayPal using the contact address provided.

Kit looks forward to seeing you witness the spectacle of the crowning of a new queen for this year’s Mamalakaya Festival.

Mia and Rosa

Pampanga sisters Mia and Rosa sit and relax
Pampanga sisters Mia (left) and Rosa (right) sit and relax

Originally written June  2016

“If she is from Pampanga, she must be a good cook,”  Filipinos often say about the women from this area because of its internationally-renowned cuisine. Before the closing of Clark Air force base in 1991, US servicemen indulged in the food and natural beauty of this province, situated between metro Manila and the coastal province of Zambales. Clark’s closing put the local economy under pressure, make diversification essential. Presently, Clark serves as an international airport and designated economic zone and the provincial economy is driven by tourism and the manufacturing of furniture and other goods and services.

Sisters Mia and Rosa are Pampanga natives. They are two of seven siblings from a tight-knit and hard-working family…

Continued in registered free member section…

‘Quezon’s Game’: The Philippines’ ‘Schindler’s List’

 Schindler’s List was a film based on the true story of Oskar Schindler, a German businessman who employed Jews in Nazi-occupied Poland during WWII.  Directed by American motion picture icon Steven Spielberg, Schindler’s List was a big-budget film backed with the all the “American-muscle horsepower” typical of a Hollywood film: music originally scored by John Williams, an internationally-renowned cast featuring Oscar-winning cast members such as Ben Kingsley, and cinematography shot with cameras valued equal to the price of a modest-sized home.

  

The “list” was comprised of over a thousand people detained in concentration camps, selected for work in Schindler’s enamelware and ammunition factory.  Though many often consider Schindler to be more opportunistic entrepreneur than altruistic humanitarian, names listed on the historical documents were also lives spared from extermination camps such as Auschwitz. Presently, over 8,000 people trace ancestry from the Jews rostered for work in Schindler’s factories.

 Where Oskar Schindler made history with a list, former Philippine President Manual Quezon made history with a game.  During WWII, Manuel Quezon regularly played card games with foreign dignitaries and businessmen from around the world. Some of the dignitaries the president dealt hands with Quezon included the likes of Jewish businessmen and then-US-General Dwight D. Eisenhower. During these card games, commanding general of US forces in the European theater, Eisenhower brought to the attention the plight of the Jews. Compelled, Quezon devised plans for a Jewish diaspora to the Philippines. 

Starring Raymond Bagatsing, Quezon’s Game is arguably considered a Filipino equivalent to Schindler’s List with the former Philippine president as focal point.  Directed by Mathew E. Rosen, this ABS-CBN Star Cinema production was budgeted meagerly, valued at $500,000 compared with Universal Picture’s Academy-Award winning production estimated at $22 million in 1993. Released the end of last month in cinemas across the Philippines, Quezon’s Game is causing a buzz throughout the nation.

This Rappler.com review originally posted Sunday, June 2, gives Oggs Cruz’s take of the biopic currently showing in cinemas across the Philippines.       

Benigno Aquino III Steps In

According to this South China Morning Post article posted June 22, 2019, friction continues between the Philippines and China over the collision that had occurred over a week ago in a disputed maritime area off the coast of the Philippines.   Duterte’s strongman image is softened as he dismisses the collision which put the lives of 22 fishermen in harm’s way as “just a collision,” however, former Philippine president Benigno Aquino III has a different perspective of the incident.  Since the incident, Aquino has been vocal and contends that the captain of the Chinese vessel had a moral and legal obligation to help the stranded fishermen.

According to statistics, this may not be an isolated incident as President Duterte has stated. Between 2014 and 2016, 10 ramming incidents have been recorded and have been met with outrage by the governments of neighboring countries.  Amid the controversy, there have also been a history of skirmishes between Filipino fishermen and Chinese coast guard officials which involved the use of weapons and explosives.

Chinese officials have vowed to investigate the incident, but Aquino disregards the possibility of Philippine officials entering into a joint investigation because the two countries do not have “joint sovereignty” over the area of water.     

The Importance of Being Miss Universe Philippines

America’s beauty pageant circuit often flies under the radar, usually gone undetected by mainstream and social media. Despite nationally-televised broadcasts of pageants such the “Miss America” and “Miss Universe,”doubts arise if the woman crowned queen will receive, as American pop artist Andy Warhol would put it, her “15 minutes of fame.” The story may headline only the most obscure section of newspapers, such as “Lifestyle,” but will seldom become front-page material. Unlike sporting events such as the Superbowl or Wimbledon, the chances of hearing colorful recollections at work or in school yards of contestants from pageant’s past are as slim a snowman’s survival in the Sahara heat. They are destined not to become subjects for topics of million-dollar questions on game shows, nor will the pageant winner’s images be immortalized on the breakfast-cereal boxes that stand on the tables in American households.

Ironically, the best way to achieve fame and fortune as a beauty queen is through becoming the center of scandal. In 1983 ,Vanessa Williams became the first contestant of African American descent crowned Miss America. Representing New York, Vanessa Williams captivated audiences during the pageant gala. During the talent portion, Williams sang her rendition of the roaring-twenties song “Happy Days Are Here Again.” Her above-average singing ability was evident, but was her network-television debut as beauty queen enough to spark superstardom? After nearly a year as the reigning Miss America, unauthorized photos surfaced of Williams in September, 1984 issue of Penthouse Magazine. The epitome of sapphic erotica, the black and white spread featuring Williams captured on film, “in the throes of passion,” with a female co-model were euphemistically reported by news outlets as “nude photos.” 

Amid publicity surrounding the publication’s release, pageant officials urged Williams to step down as the reigning Miss America. Forced to return her $25,000 in scholarship money, Williams publicly announced her resignation.  After nearly a year of fulfilling duties as pageant ambassador, her name was erased from official records and replaced with the name, “Suzette Charles.”     

Though the name Suzette Charles is officially written somewhere in pageant history as Miss America ’84, in the minds of Americans who have experienced the tail end of the last century will recall, or insist, Vanessa Williams was the one and only Miss America that year, and years past and since. She rebounded from the scandal amassing more fame and fortune than any contestant of the pageant’s illustrious history in the entertainment industry as a world-renown singer and actress.  

Across the Pacific, in the Philippines, beauty pageant contestants receive the same status reserved for Olympic-gold-medal athletes or star NBA players in the US. Like some boys aspire to become the next LeBron James, in the Philippines it is not uncommon for boys to aspire to become Gazini Ganados, Miss Philippines 2019. On a brief visit to the Luzon province of Pampanga, a loud beeping from my hotel-room television prompted my undivided attention. “Oh no!” I thought. “Is there a tropical storm on the way? Has President Aquino just been shot?” Turning my face to the television, I noticed floating from left to right at the bottom of the screen was a ticker-tape news bulletin:  “Venus Raj has been reinstated as Miss Philippines in the 2010 Miss Universe Pageant. Stay tuned for more news after regularly-scheduled programming.”  The bulletin was not centered on an assassination, a natural disaster, nor was on the achievement of an Olympian, but an update of the status of a beauty queen’s eligibility!

From the small barangays nestled deep in the provinces to the big cities of Cebu and Manila, beauty pageants play a significant role in a cross section of Filipino culture.  Many girls, and boys who identify as female, view the glamour and pageantry of the events as an escape from the harsh realities of a life marginalized by poverty and limited opportunity. Throughout the archipelago, people gather by televisions, shopping-mall promenades, and the street-side stages to witness the spectacle, inspiring some to one day enter the pageant circuit as a participant . 

Not only are pageants such as the annual “Binibining Pilipinas” a big draw nationally, but pageants such as the “Miss Amazing Philippines Beauties” and the “Super Sireyna International.”  Often slotted for prime time television, these pageants receive an equal share of mainstream-media coverage.  Many outsiders insist the Amazing Philippines and Super Sireyna contestants are the most strikingly beautiful matched against Binibining Pilipinas contestants, but are later surprised to find that contestants from the Miss Amazing Philippines and Super Sireyna have something in common that precludes them from entering the Binibining Pilipinas: the gender printed on their birth certificate. The competing queens of the Miss Amazing and Super Sireyna were born male.

When American comedian Steve Harvey hosted the 2015 “Miss Universe,” unfamiliar with the elimination process, mistakenly named Ariadna Gutiérrez, Miss Colombia, as the winner over Miss Philippines, Pia Wurtzbuch, most Americans were dismissive, commenting in social media forums that “it was just a beauty pageant.” In the Philippines and Colombia, however, the slip up took people to the streets . To worsen matters, Harvey later tweeted a public apology, misspelling the country’s names with the following statement; “I want to apologize emphatically to Miss Philipians and Miss Columbia.”

Presently carrying the “torch,” handed down from Wurtzbuch is former Miss Philippines and current Miss Universe, Catriona Gray. With the upcoming “2019 Miss Universe” around the corner, Filipinos place high expectations on their current representative, Gazini Ganados.

This Rappler.com article posted June 12, 2019, gives insight on the Cebuano beauty queen who insists the work of a pageant contestant is no easy task.

      

Troubles in Disputed Waters

After living in Asia for nearly a decade, I realized how much the dominance of China and Japan in the continent cannot be understated. While working in the Republic of Korea, I mentioned a body of water separating the Korean Peninsula with Japan. “The Sea of Japan,” I said of the maritime area off the eastern coast of Korea. The instant the name was uttered, I was certain it would be met with resentment. The face of the teenaged boy standing beside me reddened and his eyebrows raised. “No, no, no! The East Sea,” the pimple-faced teen protested.

With China to the west and Japan eastward, many Asian countries would agree that Korea is geographically disadvantaged, “stuck between a rock and a hard place.” South Koreans insist the sun always rises in Korea on the Isle of “Dok Do,” while Japanese contend the sun sets over Japan on the Isle of “Takeshima.” Dok Do and Takeshima: same island; different name. On the peninsula’s western coast, without regard to international law, Chinese fishing boats often trespass Korean waters, depleting catches of Korean fishermen.

Since president Rodrigo Duterte took power two years ago, the Philippines was moving in the direction of severing its ties with the US and aligning itself with China in an effort to improve Filipino-Sino Relations.

Taking a leap backward in relations between the two countries, the Philippines made allegations against China, claiming a vessel collided with a Philippine boat in the water of the contested “South China Sea” or as the Philippine’s argue the “West Philippine Sea,” jeopardizing the lives of 22 Filipino fishermen on board.

Though there is no consensus of the area’s name, three years ago, an international tribunal in The Hague reached the verdict that the area in question was the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone. The US Secretary of Defense backed the Philippines, urging China to follow a “rules-based order” in the disputed waters.

A New York Times article posted today describes unfolding events in more detail.