The Magazine for the International Filipino
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Inaugural Issue 2006
he nternational ilipino Debunking The Filipino Stereotype DUBAI: THIS IS NOT THE MOVIE The Philippine Terno Re-invented REDISCOVERING MAKATI Remembering the Filipino First LOVE PINOY STYLE: LOVE MARKS THE ANNIE B.(BATOBALANI) CHRONICLES TOP SUZARA: SOLO & BACK ON ‘TOP’
ILLUSTRADO C O M M U N I C AT I O N S
Publisher & Editor Lalaine Chu-Benitez Associate Editor Ina Crisostomo Creative Consultant Mon Benitez Art Director Paula Lorenzo Contributing Writers Philippines Carlito Viriña David Llorito Cesar Viriña Mike Martin Jan La’O David Poarch United Arab Emirates Maripaz Febrero Giselle Estrada Dawn Almario Sonny de Guzman Antonella Andrada United Kingdom Cecile Samson-Aquino Contributing Photographers Philippines Ben Chan United Arab Emirates Pot Ph Mac Antonio Joel Guerrero Contributing Stylists United Arab Emirates Zekundo Chu Gilbert Oñate Advertising Sales Michael Maguigad Pinoy Network Retail Sales Cid Gloria PUBLISHER Illustrado Communications FZ-LLC 2nd Floor, CNN Building Dubai Media City, U.A.E. Email: illustrado@inbox.com illustrado.net DISTRIBUTORS Emirates Printing Publishing & Distribution Co. Dubai Media City, U.A.E.
PRINTER Rashid Printing Press Ajman, U.A.E.
Annual Subscriptions: UAE, Gulf and International Illustrado Communications FZ-LLC illustrado@inbox.com Copyright Illustrado Communications 2006. All rights reserved. No part of this magazine may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of Illustrado Communications FZ-LLC.
EDITORS’ NOTE
Thenternationalilipino has arrived Are you tired of hearing only masamang balita? Do you feel like wala kang maipagmamalaki? Do you wish you could live in a global environment without feeling out of place? After over a decade of working and living in the Gulf, overwhelmed by negative perceptions brought by relentless doses of bad news and scandals from our home country, and the lack of native inspiration locally, we thought it’s high time that we fuel some positive and progressive thinking in our community. Illustrado, the magazine for ‘The International Filipino’ is here to promote and uplift the image of Filipino expatriates around the world by cultivating national pride and celebrating our accomplishments and"Ka-pinoyan" through positive journalism. The word illustrado literally means “enlightened”. Inspired by the legacy of Dr. Jose Rizal, the quintessential ‘Illustrado’, the Illustrado magazine aspires to bring forth the true essence of being ‘enlightened’ regardless of socio-economic status - embracing global values gained as members of the Filipino international community and using these to improve the Filipino way of life. The Illustrado name also reflects the look and feel of the magazine, spirited and bold...capturing in vivid images the life and times of Filipino expats around the world. And most importantly, Illustrado is not about being an executive as opposed to being a domestic helper; modern versus makaluma; or jet-set against probinsyano. We are all from the same native mould and we owe it to ourselves to nourish our Filipino identity; to rise above it all, with our acquired global savvy and confidence, while celebrating our quirks and eccentricities - our love for tuyo, fishball and videoke! Let us all help the ‘Filipino’ flourish, by cultivating a global vision while nurturing our native soul. So this time, tama na ang masamang balita. Enough too, on small thinking, as we acquire a more progressive and hopeful outlook. And it’s about time that we made an effort to step out of our restrictive communal shell, and enjoy mixing with the rest of the interesting people in this cultural melting pot that is the world. A new way of thinking has begun...the International Filipino has arrived. Taas Noo, Filipino!
Lalaine Chu-Benitez Publisher/ Editor
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CONTRIBUTORS
Lalaine Chu-Benitez
Fun and intrepid Lalaine Chu-Benitez is the glue that holds Illustrado together. With over 16 years of media, public relations and marketing experience, Lalaine has relinquished a distinguished career as Category Marketing Manager in the Gulf Region for a leading multinational pharmaceutical firm, to focus on her passion for creativity and the Pinoy cause. “If I can do what I love to do, and consequently boost the community, that’s the best high, ever”.
Ben Chan
Ex-La Sallista Ben Chan is one of the brightest and youngest in Manila’s professional photographers’ circle. Recently featured in Manila Bulletin On-Line as a ‘young disciple of advertising photography’, Ben works for leading ad photography agency, AdPhoto Philippines and specializes in corporate and industrial subjects. An introvert, Ben’s radiates enthusiasm when he talks about his work, referring to it as his first love.
Mike Martin
It’s madness over method for this mercurial angst-ridden poet, aspiring author and ‘closet writer’. Each month, Illustrado lives vicariously through Mike, while he checks out the quirks of metro nightlife in ‘Manila Trippin’, to give you an account of the cool, weird, and wacky goings on in the city’s nooks and crannies.
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Lito Viriña
Writing is definitely in the blood. Carlito comes from an illustrious family of writers lead by mom Loida Virina, scriptwriter of many a blockbuster TV series, including the epochal ‘Gulong ng Palad’. After a successful stint in the Manila and Dubai ad circuit, Carlito now heads his own advertising company in Makati. In our column ‘Wish You Were Here’, Carlito updates us on the Manila ‘soupe du jour’ complete with his acerbic wit and twisted sense of humor.
David Llorito
David Llorito is a researcher at the Business Mirror, a Manila-based daily newspaper. He has more than a decade of experience in socioeconomic research, policy analysis and business economy journalism in the Philippines. Dave is also the recipient of both the Jaime Ongpin Awards for Excellence in Journalism (Explanatory Category) and the Australian Ambassador's Choice Award 2006 for his story on globalization and the transformation of labor management relations in the Philippines. He enjoys blogging, drinking coffee, writing poetry and walking in the rain.
Mon Benitez
Driving the magazine’s aesthetic values and polished style is down-to-earth Mon Benitez. Ten times I.A.A. (International Advertising Awards) Middle East gold awardee, Mon is an Associate Creative Director for the Gulf’s leading multinational ad group and is behind some notable regional campaigns. A dreamer obsessed with design, ice cream and banana cue, Mon affirms his aesthetic philosophy, a contradiction of sorts to the unseasoned – that simplicity is boldness.
Joel Guerrero
Architect by discipline, freelance photographer, self-confessed techno-junkie and regular Joe on the street – that’s Joel Guerrero in a nutshell. As a contributor, multitalented Joel photographs interesting Filipino expat personalities for Illustrado and talks to the average Juan de la Cruz to answer this issue’s niggling ‘Usapang Kanto’ question.
Dawn Almario
New York Ad Festival silver-awardee Dawn Almario is a diligent Senior Art Director by day and a professional gimikera by night. As our Pinoy About Town, Dawn samples the joys of living in a cultural melting pot that is the UAE, and steps out of the proverbial ‘kabayan box’, beyond Pinoy cafeterias and videoke.
Zekundo Chu
Versace forever! Illustrado stylist Zekundo Chu swears by Gianni Versace’s signature luxurious glam when it comes to his preference in fashion. “I could never be a minimalist, I believe in the design philosophy that more is more.” Zekundo, who hones his designing talent as a Senior Visual Merchandiser for one of the most fabulous airport duty frees in the world, also creates ambient media and loves to collect fashion accessories, while keeping abreast with what’s happening in the global fashion stage.
CONTENTS
naugural Issue Features
Debunking the Filipino Stereotype
6
Revolution from Beyond is Transforming the Philippines Dubai: This is not the Movie Famous Filipinos
14
12
10
Columns Wish You Were Here
40
Love, Pinoy-Style: Lovemarks
50
The Annie B. (Batobalani) Chronicles Usapang Kanto
54
Fashion & Design The Philippine Terno Re-Invented Dubai’s Design Geniuses
33
53
20
Mutya ng Pilipinas 2002 Second Runner-Up Frances Margaret Arreza, lends her warm and optimistic persona as an “inspirational face” to the Filipino community, in Illustrado’s maiden issue.
Filipiniana Arts & Culture Filipino First
35
Hermes Alegre’s Love Affair with the Filipina Filipinisms
52
36
People & Places Illustrado Profile: Filipinos in Fitness
18
55
Illustrado Face of the Month: Raine Pamintuan Almost Filipino: Ishwar Chugani – Dugong Bumbay, Utak Pinoy
48
Pinoy About Town: What’s Hot
44
45 Bakasyon Grande: Rediscovering Makati 42 Pinoy Planet: Switzerland 46 Manila Tripping: Capone’s Italian Bistro
Food, Shopping & Entertainment 62 Ukay-Ukay in the City 59 Food and Nostalgia
Manila’s Hot Releases – Books & CDs BJ Forbes: It’s ToLits!
61
Top Suzara: Solo and Back on “Top”
58
61
Ingwa Melero Exclusively at Ginger & Lace India Court, Ibn Battuta Mall, Dubai, U.A.E. Tel: +971 4 368 5109
FEATURE
Debunking the Filipino Stereotype By Lalaine Chu-Benitez Photography by Joel Guerrero, Mac Antonio & Ben Chan
It is certainly not easy to be a Filipino – especially for one living outside our typical “patis-jeepney chaotic but familiar comfort zone” back home. Just as language confusion is a reality one has to live with when residing in a cultural melting pot, stereotyping due to non-familiarity between people is almost always a given.
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FEATURE What is the Filipino stereotype all about? When one thinks "overseas Filipinos" one invariably remembers Flor Contemplacion and Sarah Balabagan, or Angelo dela Cruz – domestic workers, construction laborers. Filipinos have been typecast as such, due to the first wave of immigrants who sought work outside the homeland. In some parts of the world, the word 'Filipina' conjures images of opportunistic women seeking their ticket out of poverty, as popularized by 'Mail to Order Brides' or ‘bar girls’ featured on the Internet. When one talks about the global job market, one cannot ignore cheap Filipino labor, "brain drain", or how 100,000 healthcare professionals, most of them with full scale medical degrees, have been leaving the Philippines in the last 10 years, mainly to work as nurses instead of doctors in the US. Though Filipinos are generally seen as pleasant, trustworthy, hardworking people, we still fall prey to such negative labeling that is very limiting and at worst, damaging. The derogatory labels are so clear – desperate, helpless, poor people. Are these labels well-deserved?
stampede at Ultra...disturbing headlines that sensationalize an already helpless state of affairs.
But are we also to blame? Are we Filipinos instrumental in propagating our own notoriety? Spelling our own doom? Our homegrown media has done a great job of promoting the country's ongoing fixation with scandals and sensationalism. In newspapers, magazines, TV and the Internet, major focus is given to the sex scandals of politicians, celebrities and mere schoolgirls, government corruption, and heinous crimes, which have become the staple of daily reading and viewing for both young and old. Unfortunately, these contribute greatly to our negative image in the international arena. Inversely, it is very rare that one hears of genuine good news from the country, which is supposed to be our pride and joy. Being colonized for so many years, most Filipinos are also driven by an insular attitude, retreating into our own cultural shell instead of sharing with the international community at large. We somehow tend to keep to ourselves, perhaps for reasons of timidity. We also take so much pride in humility that we systematically underestimate, undervalue and therefore, undersell ourselves. As Nick Joaquin in his essay, "A Heritage of
Though Filipinos are generally seen as pleasant, trustworthy, hardworking people, we still fall prey to such negative labeling that is very limiting and at worst, damaging. Bad press hound filipinos around the world Recent news items do not help paint a better picture. In the last couple of years the Asian section of international publications have been full to the hilt with the “Garci-gate” scandal, calls for impeachment, coup threats, and jueteng allegations – cementing the Macapagal-Arroyo, and consequently the 'Filipino' name in the world's ”hall of shame”. Elsewhere, reports document Filipinos deported due to immigration law violations, cases of illegal employment, overstaying and sex trafficking in foreign host countries. Then, there are the Filipino victims of disasters (both natural and man-made), like the ”dead-count” from Leyte, the Wowoweee
Smallness" so rightly questioned – "Are we not confusing timidity for humility and making a virtue of what may be the worst of our vices?" Some of us have also become apathetic to the stereotype, distancing ourselves, not caring much, doing nothing. Most concerning is that some of us have already sunk into this mold, accepting the stereotype and saying – “Filipino lang kasi ako.”
But what are we, really? At face value, you cannot find a race as uniquely eclectic as the Filipinos. According to American Anthropologist Dr. H. Otley Beyer, the Philippines
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FEATURE
At face value, you cannot find a race as uniquely eclectic as the Filipinos. According to American Anthropologist Dr. H. Otley Beyer, the Philippines is the only country in the world with Asian, European, American and Latin/Hispanic/Mexican heritage.
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is the only country in the world with Asian, European, American and Latin/Hispanic/ Mexican heritage. Our race and geography may be Asian, however, the Spaniards and the Americans have contributed greatly to our colonial history. This unique mix, which makes us cultural hybrids, has enriched our arts, religion, fashion, architecture, our values system and traditions. Proudly, Filipinos are also known for their captivating smiles and warmth, as well as an innate joie de vivre, on top of being creative, patient and hardworking. How else can we still muster a laugh on top of all the welgas, political turmoil and catastrophes?
A nation of achievers We truly appreciate our kababayans – the humble nannies, laborers, and nurses, for creating a niche of incomparable services bar
none globally. It is, however, a disservice to the Filipino community to stop at that, without acknowledging our fair share of exceptional contributions to the world. From the fields of journalism, arts, entertainment, sciences, sports and even beauty, Filipinos have proven their worth and capability.Among our notable kababayans are Pulitzer Prize winners, scientists and inventors, international beauty queens, athletes, artists, as well as distinguished diplomats. In the global work front, as the 3rd largest country for immigrant creation after China and India, our kababayans are making an indelible mark worldwide, excelling from entry level to high-profile positions, in different industries and disciplines, that span from London to New York, Hong Kong, to Dubai. Understanding all these enables us to appreciate our strength and limitless potential as a people.
FEATURE Debunking the stereotype Indeed, there‘s more beyond the Filipino stereotype – bigger than the image of exceptional provider of domestic services and cost-effective labor...nobler than its political misfortunes. What we are is a unique and resilient people, unfazed by countless hardships, who can still smile inspite of it all. A people with a rich heritage and a great land. A race that can be proud of its great achievements and contributions to the world.
How can we make a difference today? The key is to know who we are, proclaim it and live by it. Because it is by knowing that we understand, it is by proclaiming that we are empowered, and it is only in living it, do we become. Let us celebrate and share our triumphs and our strengths.
Taas noo, Filipino! From the fields of journalism, arts, entertainment, sciences, sports and even beauty, Filipinos have proven their worth and capability.
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FEATURE
The Philippines, it appears, is out of the boom and bust cycles that we used to experience following the Edsa Revolution in 1986. In the last 10 quarters, the Philippines has shown capable of growing within the 5-6 percent range.
REVOLUTION FROM BEYOND IS TRANSFORMING THE PHILIPPINES By David L. Llorito
Photography by Ben Chan & Mac Antonio
It used to be that the streets of Ayala and Ortigas, as well as the central business districts of Cebu and Davao, were silent as a tomb after 8 pm. These days, 8 pm is the beginning of a new cycle of the country's economic life: young people arriving in blazers, jackets, with their Ipods and MP3s. They are call center agents, one of the major segments of a US$2 billionstrong business process outsourcing (BPO) business that is growing robustly in the last five years—at the rate of 70% a year! Outsourcing per se is simply just the poster boy of the fast-growing service sector that currently accounts for 44% of the country's gross domestic product. It's one of the major economic forces that are transforming the Philippines for the better. Thomas Friedman, in his book Lexus and the Olive Tree, calls it "revolution from beyond." This is happening right now in the Philippines. In simpler terms, revolution from beyond is the dramatic and structural changes unleashed by external economic forces we now call globalization.
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So if you are looking at MalacaĂąang or Congress to divine the future of the Philippines, you are dead wrong. The Philippines is no longer the same place that it used to be 10 or 20 ago. If you are watching the numbers, you could see several positive trends. First, the Philippines, it appears, is out of the boom and bust cycles that we used to experience following the Edsa Revolution in 1986. In the last 10 quarters, the Philippines has shown capable of growing within the 5-6% range. Why? For several reasons. One, the services sector has been buoyant at close to 6-7%, people are flocking to the malls, Henry Sy is constructing malls like there's no tomorrow, people are buying cell phones, and banks are growing at double digit rates. It's supposedly a poor country but people don't seem to run out of money to spend. Well, the money comes from the dollar remittances from overseas workers (about US$12 billion a year and still counting), the recovering farm
sector, the payroll of the outsourcing companies totaling at least PHP4 billion pesos each month, and the recovering manufacturing sector. And why the recovery in the manufacturing sector? The answer again lies with the dollar remittances and the gains in the farm sector. The money from these sectors translates to higher demand for manufacturing products, primarily food, beverage, tobacco and appliances. That explains why for several months now, the average capacity utilization of the manufacturing sector has stood at a high 80% since April 2005, indicating that factories are busier than ever.. Second, high tech sectors are becoming the main drivers of the economy. In 1975, about half of the Philippine exports are agriculturebased, mostly coconut products, pineapples and bananas. Today, about 70% of the country's exports are electronics and semiconductors. The Philippines has graduated from exporting coconut chips to microchips
FEATURE found in most Nokia handsets and hard disks of laptops! Eight of the world's largest chipmakers are operating in the Philippines —Texas Instruments, Intel, Philips, Fairchild Semiconductors, Analog Devices, Sanyo, On Semi, and Rohm. Four of the largest producers of hard disk drivesToshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, and NEC—are also operating in the country. Amkor and Epson are also here, plus a host of Filipino electronics companies. In fact, the recent trend in the industry is the rise of purely homegrown companies like Integrated Microelectronics, Ionics, PSI Technologies, Fastech, and Team, producing various electronic time recorders, automatic voltage regulators, power supplies, alarm systems, electronic ballasts, testers, global positioning system trackers, and automated toll collection systems, among others. Overall, Filipino companies account for 28% of the total cumulative investments in the industry. The rest are shared by Japan (30%), Korea (9%), United States (9%), Europe (7%), Taiwan (4%), Singapore (2%), Malaysia (2%), and others (8%). All in all, these electronics and semi-conductor companies produce 72 million magnetic heads, 36 million digital signal processors, 11 million liquid crystal displays, and 8 million optical disk drives each year. The industry exports US$27 billion each year and employs 400,000 direct workers. For every one direct employee, seven other indirect jobs are created. And still counting. From 2006 until 2010, the Philippine electronics industry needs 600 masters-degree levels and 400 PhDs in engineering. That means the industry is set to grow even bigger. The forecast is about US$50 billion worth of cumulative investments and one million jobs within four years! Currently, the fastest growing generators of jobs are outsourcing industries comprising activities like call centers, shared services, software development, animation, engineering design, among others. These are technology intensive industries that are providing hopes to a lot of fresh graduates. These days one could seldom see huge political demonstrations from the youth sector. One should not wonder why: they are busy earning a living. Definitely, the Philippines is a banana republic no more! And this is not just about foreign companies coming in to set up shop. The flipside to the outsourcing story is the emergence of some Filipino firms complimenting the foreign ones. Ambergris and TRG, for instance, started as
purely Filipino operations until foreign investors realized they need to put their money into these businesses. Other Filipino operations could be found especially in medical transcription, shared services, and legal transcription. Lately, there's a trend among Filipino companies like the Ayalas buying into foreign-owned companies like eTelecare. Third, the Philippine economy has started to develop a firewall of sort against the political noises. In the last five years, the Philippines had all the political problems that one could imagine: threats of coups, impeachment proceedings, electoral controversies, tales of graft and corruption in high places. Add to that are floods, landslides, typhoons—the list is endless. But the economy has remained resilient, growing at 5-6%. The reason: close to 70% of the Philippine's gross domestic product—the value of goods and services produced and traded within the country's borders—are globalized. This percentage is comprised of merchandize exports, service exports (outsourcing), and dollar remittances from overseas workers. In simpler terms, the growth drivers of the Philippine economy are those that are less affected by the whims and caprices of politicians. In a region where the standard performance is 7-9% growth rate, the Philippines' current growth levels are modest. However, experts say that growth figures suggest the country is out of the crisis and is set to achieve higher growth levels. Certainly, political stability is necessary to bring the country's economy to a higher level. Is that achievable given the continuing political strife? The answer is yes. It's a question of when but the Philippines is definitely getting there. The latest leading economic indicators (LEI), an early warning system developed by National Statistical Coordination Board, shows the economy is expected to continue on its upward path. That means continuing economic expansion, which should mean more jobs. In July, the latest results of Business Mirror's Jobs Monitoring Index shows that job advertisements rose by more than 35%, an indicator of continuing expansion of economic activities. Major job creators include cyber services (information technology and information technology-enabled services), construction and engineering, manufacturing, wholesale and retail, health and social work, and hotels and restaurants. By 2007, the
Philippines is going to have mid-term elections for local government and congressional positions. In her latest State of the Nation Address, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo outlined a PHP370 billion infrastructure program for several regions outside Metro Manila. Critics say that the program is politically driven to ensure victory of administration candidates. That may be true, however, that kind of expenditure would surely boost the economy in the near and medium term. Certainly, the Philippines still has lots of problems: 8% unemployment rate, 25% underemployment rate, and 24% poverty incidence. Countries in the Asia-Pacific Region that were able to address these issues are those that grew at 6-8% in the last two decades. Nevertheless, the Philippines has certainly gained important strides, building economic momentum since the last five years. That means the country, despite all the pessimistic outlook and political baggage, is enroute to a sustainable recovery.
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FEATURE
‘Dubai’ the movie, with its portrayal of star-crossed lovers Aga Mulach, Claudine and John Lloyd having the time of their lives in the city where East meets West, seems to have sealed the fate of Dubai. It has become the “it”city for the new recruits of the Pinoy By Giselle Estrada Photography by Mac Antonio When Claudine Barretto uttered her sweet “Hello!” to John Lloyd, with the backdrop of the bustling Dubai Creek beneath a clear blue sky, Pinoy fans swooned and dreamt of being there. ‘Dubai’ the movie, with its portrayal of star-crossed lovers Aga Mulach, Claudine Barreto and John Lloyd having the time of their lives in the city where East meets West, seems to have sealed the fate of Dubai. It has become the “it” city for the new recruits of the Pinoy diaspora.
The New Promised Land? To most foreigners, including Filipinos, the enticing picture of Dubai is a product of the aggressive marketing, which has turned the emirate in the last decade, into a first class tourist destination, a veritable regional business hub, and recently, an investment haven for both locals and foreigners. A lot of Pinoys would have heard about Dubai’s landmarks and ambitious projects – the world’s only 7-star hotel Burj Al Arab, The
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Palm, a massive real estate reclamation visible from space, and Burj Dubai slated to be the world’s tallest building among others. Combine these with world-class shopping malls, luxurious residences and hotels, the golden sand dunes and a cosmopolitan lifestyle, and you have a recipe for attracting people from all over the globe, especially Filipinos who would have had first hand information from Gulf-resident OFWs themselves. Judging by the number of our compatriots entering the country, it is evident that Dubai has become a favorite destination. According to published reports in early 2006, 800 Filipinos enter the UAE daily, a huge jump from last year’s estimate of 500. Most of these Pinoys, majority of them jobseekers, are bound for Dubai, the emirates’ most populous and exciting city. Now, whether it is the UAE government’s effective marketing campaign, or the political and economic situation back home, or the movie ‘Dubai’s portrayal of the easy life, as
some Filipino groups are pointing out, which has caused the sharp increase in Pinoy arrivals, is debatable and immaterial. The question of the hour is – have our ‘kababayans’ made the right decision in leaving their families and employment back home, to move to this seeming promised land?
Of Tough Beginnings The entry of most Pinoys into the UAE starts with great difficulty. Nowadays, most Filipinos enter the country on visit visa, a lot having had to pay up to PHP100,000 to visa traders and illegal recruiters. Under a visit visa, one is allowed to stay for a maximum of threee months during which one has to secure employment, which normally comes with a residence permit. Because jobs are not easy to come by, a lot of these visit visa holders end up doing the dreaded “visa run” – where one exits the country upon visa expiry, lands at a different port of entry, then enters the UAE again on a new visit visa. There are different exit options,
FEATURE but for the sake of economy, most Pinoys go to the Iranian free zones of Kish and Qeshm – a purgatorio of sorts where compatriots wait for the issuance of new visas. The mere mention of Kish or Qeshm, where people stay in rooms accommodating four to 20 people, and where horror-stories of stranded, hungry visa-less ‘kababayans’ abound, is enough to merit a pained-expression from any long time Pinoy Dubai resident. Unfortunately, a lot of ‘kababayans’ have to make several trips to these places due to visa difficulties. Expanding Career Choices and Drawbacks There used to be a time when it was easy to categorize Filipinos working in Dubai and in the larger Midde East – one was a domestic helper, a nurse, a service employee (saleslady or waiter), a petroleum engineer or an entertainer. Jobs were easier to find during the early 90s but choices open to Filipinos were very limited. Hence, it was commonplace to see teachers working as domestic helpers, or chemists or engineers working as sales ladies. As Dubai blossomed into the region’s business hub, attracting multinational companies to set up base and local companies to invest further, higher level jobs and wider career choices have been made available to expats. Furthermore, with more highly skilled professionals coming in from the Philippines, the range of employment options available to Filipinos has expanded dramatically. Now, Filipinos are present in different fields, not only in the service sector, in all levels including management positions, and are able to command decent salaries at par with the best of their Asian counterparts. Filipinos are also regarded as preferred employees not only because of their skills, but also because of their hard work and positive attitude, which has allowed them to compete side-by-side with different nationalities. In the last two years, however, the surge of Pinoy jobseekers has resulted in what appears to be an oversupply of manpower, consequently resulting to a more competitive Asian job market segment. Nowadays finding a good job, especially for new arrivals has become extremely difficult. Add to this the pressure of the visit visa situation; a lot of our ‘kababayans’ desperate for employment end up accepting very low pay, inevitably bringing down the Pinoy salary bar. Worse, some Filipinos end up working illegally accepting dodgy working conditions.
While the law requires that companies provide residence visas to their staff, some unscrupulous establishments are taking advantage of the desperation of many to get jobs, by holding out employment contracts and residence visa rights. According to published reports in Gulf News a UAE daily, a senior officer of the Philippine Consulate was quoted saying, “Filipinos working illegally in the UAE on a visit visa is the most problematic issue facing the consulate”. The Best and Worst of Times
have to make to sustain their employment here. The “easy-living”days in Dubai are seemingly over. In contrast to the penny-pinching existence of most Pinoys, on the other end of the spectrum are highly successful Filipinos living a decidedly comfortable life, with all the perks that come with a cosmopolitan city. Most of these successful Pinoys, who come from different business sectors, are the ones who managed to establish themselves in the mid-90’s when life in the city was not as tough.
Having a job with a residence visa in hand, one would then have to deal with the ‘teething pains’ of this city growing at such lightning speed. The amazing economic growth buoyed by the real estate sector boom, foreign capital and aggressive government projects have assured that Dubai is at par with the rest of the big prosperous cities of the world. However, together with business opportunities and employment options, comes inflation, which according to official sources has increased to 4.5%, business pundits, however, peg the rise to within 25% to 40%.
Just like any other developed country, which Filipinos have chosen as their second home, there will always be ‘kababayans’ who make it big, and those who will struggle. In a vibrant, booming and competitive city like Dubai, only those who are well equipped professionally, psychologically and financially will be able to leverage the available opportunities. Certainly, a Philippine diploma or work experience, the promised support of a distant relative and PHP100,000 visit visa fee will not cut it, in a place where Pinoys have to compete aggressively with the rest of world.
In the last year, the standard of living in Dubai has skyrocketed in tandem with the frenetic pace of construction around the city. According to Mercer Human Resource Consulting’s Cost of Living Survey Rankings 2006, Dubai has now become the 25th most expensive city in the world, jumping almost 50 places from last year.
As a people predisposed to finding greener pastures in foreign shores, we should make wise, well-informed choices, because this will largely determine whether Dubai will prove to be the land of milk and honey, or the parched desert of suffering.
Prices have escalated sharply in many areas – fuel, food, household goods, education, etc., most especially the cost of rent, which reportedly increased up to 50% since the last year. This staggering increase has many expat families scrambling to make ends meet, with much of their salaries taken up by rent payments.
And as a matter of good advice, don’t believe everything you see in the movies...even if Aga Mulach tells you so.
It has also led a lot of expats to opt for shared apartments. It is now commonplace to see Filipino families living in one bedroom, sharing with other families in a flat, or six bachelors sharing a single room, and anything from six to 20 people sharing a three-bedroom flat. Indeed, it is almost impossible for a courier, like the one played by Aga Mulach in the movie ‘Dubai’, to be able to afford his own flat. In some extreme situations, expats have also decided to send their families back home – a painful choice that some of our ‘kababayans’
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FEATURE
Famous Filipinos By Maripaz Febrero
Maraming sikat na Pinoy!
That’s what we discovered when we scooted up and down the information highway in search of good stuff on Pinoys – especially those who have managed to find fame and fortune outside the Philippines. We’re happy to report that we were stunned by the results of our research. Some of these Pinoys and Pinays you may already know about, while some may surprise you. Either way, we know that you will be proud. Ang galing-galing talaga ng Pinoy!
In the Ring
Manny ‘Pac Man’ Pacquiao
WBC International Super Featherweight Champion Considered as one of the world’s top pound-for-pound boxers in the world, this insanely popular athlete is the greatest icon of Philippine sports today. Born in Bukidnon 27 years ago, he began his professional career in 1995. In January, with an already impressive list of knockouts, the Pac Man methodically took apart the three-time world champion, Erik Morales, leaving the latter on his knees for the first time in his career, in the 10th round. This is one of Pacquiao’s biggest career victories. Having now stopped both Morales and Marco Antonio Barrera, Pacquiao has gained the reputation of a “Mexican Killer”. Above all, his recent triumphs have opened doors for many aspiring Filipino boxers.
In the White House
Cristeta Comerford
First woman Executive Chef for the Bushes First Lady Laura Bush was delighted that Cris Comerford, who has been a trusted Assistant Chef in the White House since the mid-90s, had accepted the job. Her passion for cooking can be tasted in every bite of her delicious creations, Mrs. Bush said. Cris, a naturalized citizen from the Philippines, has been preparing meals for official White House dinners, private parties and the First Family. She has a Bachelor's Degree in Food Technology from the University of the Philippines, studied French cuisine and worked in Austria. She was also a chef at two Washington hotels and collaborated with California chef John Ash to promote American game cooking. She lives in Columbia, Maryland. with husband, John, and young daughter.
In the Catwalk
Monique Lhuillier
Couturier to Hollywood Celebs
Monique Lhuillier and her husband, Bugbee, founded Monique Lhuillier and Company in 1996, quickly establishing the label as a leading bridal couturier. In 1999, the company launched its designer eveningwear collection, which was also met with great accolades. Monique has dressed many celebrities including Jennifer Lopez, Halle Berry, Angelina Jolie and Meg Ryan, and has a name that is mentioned on the red carpet as often as Vera Wang, Oscar dela Renta and Carolina Herrera. Born Diane Monique Lhuillier to French, Spanish/Filipino parents, Monique was raised in Cebu, deeply influenced by her mother's glamorous sense of style. At the tender age of 15, the well-traveled Monique left home to attend the prestigious Chateau Mont-Choisi boarding school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Then, to fulfill her dream of a fashion career, she decided to attend the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising (FIDM) in Los Angeles.
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Pinoy international showbiz scene-stealers: Beauty & Brains
Lea Salonga Gloria Diaz & Margarita Moran Our very own Miss Universes They were two very smart, witty, sexy, gorgeous Pinays when they made the whole country proud after having won the Miss Universe crown. Gloria won hers in 1969. Then, lightning struck once more in 1973. Margie, whom a lot of people felt was too mestiza to win, charmed the Miss Universe judges with her classic beauty. They were so impressed that they gave her the crown. These days, Gloria mostly plays beautiful onscreen mom, while, Margie revealed in an ad campaign recently why wrinkles don't bother her at all.
The Original 'Miss Saigon' Lea Salonga has performed and appeared in numerous musicals in the US, Philippines and around the world. An accomplished singer, performer and actress, she started her career at the age of 7. At 10, Lea recorded her debut album, ‘Small Voice’ which easily turned Gold. In 1989, she was discovered in Manila by the talent scouts for what became a West End as well as Broadway hit, ‘Miss Saigon’. Lea landed the lead role for which she received a Sir Lawrence Olivier Award in London, and a Tony, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Award in New York.
Rob Schneider
Renowned Comedian and Film Star The son of Marvin, a Jewish real estate agent, and Pilar, Filipina and former kindergarten teacher, Rob spent his childhood in the San Francisco suburb of Pacifica before zooming into international stardom. Check out the opening scene of his movie ‘The Animal’ where he is seen wearing a Baguio souvenir t-shirt.
Efren 'Bata' Reyes World Billiard Champion
Apl.de.Ap Pinoy dude of Black Eyed Peas
Precious Lara Quigaman Miss International 2005
Champion of the Humble Pinays. This beauty did not only wow the judges and audience during the Miss International 2005 pageant with her poise and elegance, but made waves around the globe by strongly lauding the virtues of the Pinoy nanny. “I take no offense on being typecasted as a nanny. But I do take offense that the educated people of the world have somehow denigrated the true sense and meaning of what a nanny is. Let me tell you what she is. She is someone who gives more than she takes. She is someone you trust to look after the very people most precious to you - your child, the elderly, yourself. She is the one who has made a living out of caring and loving other people. So to those who have typecasted us as nannies, thank you. It is a testament to the loving and caring culture of the Filipino people. And for that, I am forever proud and grateful of my roots and culture."
Having left the Philippines at the age of 14, Apl is still very proud of his Filipino heritage. His Tagalog rap, The Apl Song , one of the stand-outs in the Black Eyed Peas album Elephunk, is his interpretation of life's harsh realities in the country that he left behind. He rocked Dubai in September 2005 in a LIVE concert, with hundreds of proud Pinoys in the audience.
Efren Reyes has a ‘rags-to-riches’ story that began when, at the age of 5, he was sent to stay with an uncle who owned a billiard hall in Manila. There he worked as an attendant and earned the nickname ‘Bata’ (the kid). He started playing pool to support his family, joining and winning competitions in Japan and the U.S. where he started making serious money with the guidance of an American financier. It was, however, Jose Puyat, owner of AMF-Puyat billiard and bowling centers in Manila, who sponsored Efren in international tournaments that established him as a force to reckon with. Latest achievement: Winning the World Billiard Championship in the UK.
Celebs with Filipino Heritage (We won't say who embraces it and who's embarrassed by it!) Singer Heartthrob Enrique Iglesias Film and TV Star Tia Carrere Phoebe Cates of ‘Gremlins’ fame Metallica Lead Guitarist Kirk Hammett Mutya Buena of UK girl group Sugababes Ex-Mr. J-Lo Chris Judd Honorable Mentions from the US and Canada: Ben Cayetano, First Filipino voted as US Governor Drs. Jose and Stella Evangelista, Michigan Hall of Famers Tita Dioso Gillespie, Newsweek Magazine General Editor Angelita Castro Kelly, NASA Space Mission Manager Josie Cruz Natori, International Fashion Empress Dr. Rey D. Pagtakhan, Canadian Parliament Member Mel Red Recana, First Filipino Judge in the Western Hemisphere Dr. Neonilo A. Tejano, The ‘flying doctor’ of Kansas Eduardo U. Tioseco, Prominent Texan banker
O, kaya ba nila 'yan? Meron ba sila n'yan? Doesn’t it make you feel proud to be a Filipino? Dapat!
It has to be said, Pinoys are capable of greatness and they're out there making history somewhere. This article only scratched the surface, there are scores of Pinoys still to be acknowledged and applauded. We will be keeping you updated on famous, as well as infamous Pinoys as we go along. For Illustrado, this is only the beginning.
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ILLUSTRADO PROFILE Inspirations from the Pinoy Extraordinaire
FILIPINOS FILIPINOS FILIPINOS in in in FITNESS FITNESS FITNESS
From left to right: Roberto, Red, Ronnie, Divine, Rica, Loveleth, Ren and C.J.
By Lalaine Chu-Benitez Photography by Mac Antonio
When global giant Fitness First, the world’s largest health club operator boasting 1 million members worldwide, opened its doors in Dubai, the news created a buzz in the emirate’s fitness community. To Filipinos, what was even more groundbreaking was that majority of their world-renowned team of trainers are our ‘kababayans'. Illustrado profiles the group of eight committed and cheerful Pinoy trainers who truly make us proud.
Renuel Sanchez
Multi-talented Renuel Sanchez seems to excel in all the things he sets his heart on. The Fitness First Certified One-on-One Personal Trainer, who was among the top 10 in Fitness First Philippines, is also a consistent topnotch in Dubai. “I work hard and I like to challenge myself”, Ren says. As a 14-year-old Taekwondo yellow-belter, Ren won the League of Martial Artists of the Philippines Gold Medal in 1994, beating green and blue belters, in the 18 and below category. In school, it was another story. Ren and his friends formed the dance troupe ‘Campus Playboys’, gaining pop idol status in La Immaculada Conception School, in Pasig. “We were like the ‘Back Street Boys’ then”, he chuckles at the memory. Ren eventually took up Occupational Therapy, and secured a TESDA Professional Dancer’s license on the side. He got his first personal trainer assignment with Fitness First, Greenhills in 2004, where his medical background and previous experience paid off. The relocation to Dubai was his next career opportunity. To young Pinoys, Ren advises,“Study well, work hard and excel. It’s good to move away from your comfort zone for self-improvement.”
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They’re strong, amazingly active, well qualified, highly disciplined and at the forefront of today’s growing health and fitness trend. Most of all, they’re Filipinos and they serve fitness with a dose of our signature Pinoy smile. Meet the Pinoy Personal Trainers of Fitness First Dubai.
Rica Rodriguez
“It’s the best excuse to wear sneakers all the time!” says cute and sporty Rica Rodriguez about her work. But don’t let her petite frame and casual demeanor fool you, for this lady is very serious about her chosen discipline. A Sports Science graduate from U.P. Diliman, Rica was the quintessential college jock, competing in volleyball, Taekwondo, triathlons and runs, and was a member of the U.P. Track Team.“I’ve always wanted to be a trainer and I’ve been going to school to play”, she remarks tongue-in-cheek. These days, apart from personal training, Rica enjoys teaching RPM and Body Pump classes at Fitness First “I enjoy energizing people and making them feel happy. Fitness is a unique passion too good not to share”, she enthuses. Rica plans to further her studies and take up Sports Nutrition and Biomechanics. “One of these days, I’m going to have my own facility. I’m going to set up courses for trainers, with the help of my friends”, says the petite trainer with a big dream, and an even bigger passion to achieve it.
Loveleth Marie Andiano
Growing up in an active family headed by a father, who was in the army and a fitness-oriented mother, certainly set the pace for Loveleth Marie Andiano. “More than just exercise, our active life in our farm in Cotabato made us physically resilient.” As a scholar taking up Physiotherapy in Fatima College in Manila, Loveleth made working out nightly a regular hobby, enjoying the fitness bug with her friends.“I originally planned to take up aeronautical engineering, but with my active and outgoing lifestyle, Physiotherapy combined with fitness became a natural choice”, she remarks. After graduating, Loveleth operated her own physical fitness
rehab clinic at home and worked as Staff Physiotherapist in one of the biggest hospitals in the Philippines. She then landed a job at Fitness First Robinson’s Manila, one of Asia’s biggest health clubs, where she became a top trainer, her medical background proving of advantage. As fate would have it, Loveleth moved to the UAE in February 2006, to be near her fiancé, eventually joining Fitness First Dubai’s team.
Red Gulapa
Red Gulapa, a seasoned fitness pro with 15 years of experience, had his fair share of challenges in the name of fitness. He joined the gym at the age of 17 to improve his rheumatic heart condition. “I remember going to our neighborhood gym in Tondo owned by Crispin Perez, Mr. Philippines 1977”, Red reminisces. Being the clueless novice back then, he was picked on by the experienced body builders and neighborhood tough guys who frequented the gym.“I had a fever for two weeks because I was given a program which was extremely tough.” When he returned, he made an effort to study proper exercise techniques and vowed to assist gym beginners to avoid the trauma he went through. The persevering novice eventually claimed the gold medal, at the age of 37, at the 2000 Powerlifting Competition, a national open event, beating younger contenders from the Philippines, US, China and Australia. The rest is good fitness trainer history spanning the Manila Polo Club, KSA’s World Gym, and Le Meridien Al Aqah, where Red was promoted from Fitness Trainer to Assistant Recreational Manager, before he transferred to Fitness First Dubai in early 2006.
Inspirations from the Pinoy Extraordinaire ILLUSTRADO PROFILE C.J. Lim
It’s hard to believe that well-built Fitness First Certified One-on-One Personal Trainer CJ Lim was once a thin 18-year old before he got into a fitness program. “My head was getting too big for my body back then,” he laughs. The basketball-enthusiast joined the gym to develop his body, and soon found out that fitness is actually good fun, and not just hard work. With a stronger physique and self-confidence, as well as acquired fitness knowledge and an affinity for the active gym lifestyle, CJ was able to dabble in modeling and eventually focused on personal training. He got his first break in Slimmer’s World International Cebu, and then moved to Fitness First Ayala Mall, also in Cebu, before joining the team in Dubai. “I especially enjoy the interactive aspect of the job. I love meeting new people and helping them out”, CJ remarks. “If you have the commitment and are passionate about fitness, I totally recommend this job. It’s not even a job. It’s more like an enjoyable hobby.”
emotionally – because fit people are happy people.” Being a former track and field athlete and active body builder who loves to compete, Ronnie found a huge challenge in his chosen career as well. “I joined Fitness First, Eastwood in 2003 with no incoming customers to train, and was tasked to win clients from the regular members”, a predicament which is not easy for any trainer. It’s been three years since and from zero, Ronnie has been able to achieve the no. 1 Fitness First trainer status in Eastwood, and then held the no. 1 position in Asia for six months from September 2005 until February 2006, with a good deal of guts and hard work. Ronnie is now a consistent topper in Fitness First Dubai.“I like to challenge myself and I feel good that I can achieve something significant”, says the tireless trainer.
C.J. Lim
Roberto Polidario
Roberto Polidario is not your average fitness trainer – he is one uniquely gifted with healing hands. “I’ve always had the desire to heal, and I learned about massage and herbal medications at a young age, by assisting my lola who was an ‘abularyo’” he recounts. In parallel, his athletic family members influenced Roberto’s interest in fitness. His father was into Judo and Arnis, his uncle was a Judo coach for La Salle and he had cousins who were gym instructors. While working in technical jobs to help support his family, Roberto persisted on pursuing his main interest, taking up reflexology, health, fitness and stress seminars, to supplement his talents. He eventually landed a career as fitness instructor-cum-masseur in prestigious 5-star resorts in the Philippines, Hong Kong, Macau, then finally Dubai. During his stint in several countries, he added further fitness experience, Swedish and Chinese Sports Massage, to his portfolio, while gathering a number of top clients, which included sports celebrities. According to Roberto, “I’m successful today because of focus and hard work. It is important that one invests time and effort to learn his craft.”
Divine Masinsin
Divine Masinsin originally wanted to be a doctor. She took up three years of Biochemistry at UP Manila, before shifting to Physical Education in Diliman. “I wasn’t meant to work in a laboratory, I didn’t want its confined environment. I saw myself doing research and teaching.” The move complimented Divine’s athletic inclinations, which saw her competing in independent triathlon teams with friend Rica Rodriguez, and in walkathons as a member of the UP Track Team. Unsurprisingly with her graceful gait, Divine has also been into dancing since the age of 6, taking up ballet, modern, jazz, Hawaiian, Tahitian and other folk dances. The former Cream Silk model also has the distinction of winning several beauty titles, which include Makati Woman of the Millenium 2000. Divine became a Fitness First instructor in the Philippines four years ago, before moving to Dubai. She now conducts personal training, Body Balance and Body Jam classes. “Being in the fitness profession, I help prevent people from getting sick which is probably better than curing them. On top of that, I get to perform too!” What more can a young lady ask for?
Red Gulapa
Ren Sanchez
Rica Rodriguez
Ronnie Austria
Qualified physiotherapist, Ronnie Austria, turned to fitness training to shift his career from one treating injured people to a more cheerful job,“It’s a bit difficult seeing depressed injured people daily. Now, I love what I do and the fact that I can pro-actively help change people’s lives, uplifting them both physically and Divine Masinsin
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FASHION FEATURE
he hilippine erno –einvented When you think “quintessential Filipina”, the image of Maria Clara is the first that springs to mind. With a feminine demeanor that is both inviting and modest, Maria Clara’s sartorial statement is, perhaps, the most distinctive aspect of her character. Henceforth, the Philippine terno, our women’s national dress, has embodied the epitome of local traditions. And just like any Filipino art, which draws from a well of inspirations, the terno has evolved and endured in varied forms. Whether in its basic constitution or its modern day haute couture version, the terno retains its delightful contrast of innocence and allure that is close to the classic Filipina’s heart. In our first fashion feature, we juxtapose interpretations of our timeless national dress, with the enduring landmarks of Filipino design and culture.
oaring eauty Couture by REYNALDO GONZAGA Canary yellow terno of layered fabricated chiffon faux feathers
By Lalaine Chu-Benitez & Maripaz Febrero Fashion Photography by Pot Ph, Landmarks Photography by Ben Chan Styling by Zekundo Chu, Make-Up by Gilbert Oñate
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DESIGN FEATURE
Makati Skyline
The skyscrapers of Makati’s Central Business District reach for the big blue
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FASHION FEATURE The Philippine Terno Reinvented
ndigenous legance
Couture by JOSEPH CURIOSO Pucci-inspired royal blue iridescent taffeta lamè terno with emerald green lining, beige skirt and tail; accented by gold-finish coconut twigs and Swarovski crystals
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DESIGN FEATURE
Casa de Manila How did ManileĂąos live during the Spanish colonial era? Casa Manila Museum, housed in a faithful reconstruction of a 19th century Manila residence, gives you a glimpse of how life was back then. Each room is set up in period style and decorated with antique furniture, chandeliers, lamps, paintings, vases and bric-a-brac. Visitors can actually relive a bygone era as they make their way from the kitchen on the top floor, down the adobe staircase, past an old well, and enjoy some reflective moments at the main courtyard and fountain.
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FASHION FEATURE The Philippine Terno Reinvented
omanza spañola Couture by ROD BALINGIT Layered flamenco-inspired terno with lace appliqués and unfinished hemline, topped with modified shoulder-baring pañuelo with lace trim
DESIGN FEATURE
Manila Hotel
Ageless and elegant, the scene of many historic celebrations Since its opening in 1912, Manila Hotel has been an enduring landmark in the Far East. Presidents and royalty have stayed here and with good reason. Famed as the 'Aristocrat of the Orient,' the hotel embodies the city's rich cultural heritage. Its expansive gardens with bay views provide a tranquil sanctuary, while fine classic furniture and hardwood floors offer the ultimate in sophisticated ambience. The recipient of many prestigious awards, Manila Hotel is internationally regarded as truly one of the great hotels of the world.
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FASHION FEATURE The Philippine Terno Reinvented
estive ashion
Couture by JOSEPH CURIOSO Sculpted red metallic finish sinamay gown embellished with sequins, Swarovski crystals and sinamay cabbage roses, complemented by tulle skirt and sinamay headdress
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DESIGN FEATURE
Cultural Center of the Philippines Built in 1969, this imposing edifice still retains some of its original austere magnificence as envisioned by its architect, Leandro Locsin. The main theater seats 1,400 and serves as a venue for performances by local and visiting artists such as the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Philippines' own and world-renowned Bayanihan Dance Company. The Little Theater hosts more intimate recitals for an audience of 400, while the Huseng Batute Theater is used for experimental productions of budding stage artists. Visual artists exhibit at various galleries within the building.
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FASHION FEATURE The Philippine Terno Reinvented
arnivale ueen
Couture by JOEY BALUYOT Terno with molded papier mache bustier with a collage of atelier materials – buttons, stones and appliqué; serpentina ruffled skirt in emerald green tulle with gold highlights; detachable butterfly sleeves
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FEATURED DESIGNERS
Dubai’s
Design Geniuses
ROD BALINGIT
Dance, Fashion and Life
What do dancing and fashion have in common? Designer Rod Balingit and his passion for life. Lively Rod, stumbled into fashion design accidentally. His affinity for aesthetics started with his love for dancing, which blossomed into costume design. “Well you can’t tango or salsa without a rich and beautiful flowing dress. It’s just not done!” Rod laughs. Before he realized it, he was designing lavish wedding gowns for the local community. He eventually established his own couture shop, Al Gharasheeb, in 1990, and has since been spinning his colorful sense of style. He is greatly inspired by Valentino and Gianfranco Ferre, and this is evident in his flamboyant bold accessorizing and sensuous cuts, that enhance femininity. Rod Balingit’s designs are not for the bashful or self-conscious. His fashion is for the woman comfortable in her own skin and sensuousness, confidently celebrating her femininity – a true reflection of Rod’s joie de vivre.
JOEY BALUYOT
From Lengua to Lacroix
Whoever thought that a ‘cabalen butcher’ would end up as one of the countries’ popular couture designers? “When I started, it was just another job” Joey explains. Little did he know though that “just another job” would catapult him into a total turnaround, unleashing his innate talent for creating high style. Mentored by local couture masters, Butz Fuentes and Reynaldo Gonzaga, Joey sharpened his skills, enthusiastically taking inspiration from favorites Christian Lacroix and Roberto Capucci. Owner of Al Mariah Couture, and former proprietor of The Mayflower, a perennial favorite of Dubai’s racing set, Joey has dressed many of the city’s “ladies who lunch”, as well as members of the affluent Arabic community, with his opulent feminine creations. Jovial Joey, a devoted father of three, has remained unspoilt by success, and is very proud of his past. “I am very blessed to be where I am right now, and hope that my success could inspire budding talents out there”.
Creativity is certainly one facet of the Filipino personality that wins kudos in practically every aesthetic field – fine arts, architecture, interior design, advertising, and, of course, fashion. Filipino haute couture has always been a matter of national pride, with the genius of Pitoy Moreno, Ramon Valera, Ben Farrales, Inno Sotto, Auggie Cordero, Rene Salud and our other beloved fashion mavens still influencing many of our newer designers. Here in the Middle East, Filipino designers rule in the realm of couture. Everyone knows that a Middle Eastern royal family’s entourage is never complete without a Pinoy couturier spinning stylish enchantment in silks, brocades and Swarovski’s. Illustrado spoke to Dubai’s design geniuses who pay homage to the master of the terno, the great Ramon Valera, with their elegant and innovative interpretations in this issue’s fashion feature.
REYNALDO GONZAGA
The Dress Speaks
A Reynaldo Gonzaga couture original, in its signature understated elegance, has a life of its own. Unlike most high fashion creations, which rely heavily on embellishments and shock value for attention, Reynaldo’s gowns, with their measured restraint and focus on form, fluidity and technique, speak for themselves – a strong statement sans the brass of over-the-top current fashions. To mild-mannered soft-spoken Rey, a Dior, Madame Gres and Issey Miyake aficionado,“it’s all about substance and style”. Rey has lived in the UAE for over 15 years, and has had the pleasure of creating remarkable one-of-a kind pieces for members of the local royal family. Currently designing for local fashion house Scallini Haute Couture, Rey says he is energized by the Middle Eastern design milieu.“I love this market. Women are more experimental and fearless with their fashion statements. And that allows me freedom in artistic expression.”
JOSEPH CURIOSO
Curiosity and Ingenuity As his name implies, Joseph ‘the curious one’, astounds with his non-traditional approach to design. Joseph Curioso is a master of materials, and what better way to exalt the terno than by using indigenous fabrics and accoutrements? While other designers work on traditional fabrics such as chiffon, organza, brocade and etc. Joseph has expanded his choice of canvas and has relished sculpting humble sinamay. He also painstakingly worked on coconut tree twigs, instead of the usual Swarovski beadwork, to attain an authentic Filipino feel for this issue’s featured gowns. ‘I like the challenge’, remarks the humble designer. “If I can turn something normally used as a basket, or twigs considered as garden refuse, into beautiful elegant creations, then that’s really good design.’’ Joseph’s inspirations have been fuelled by the architectural and form-intensive Fausto Sarti designs, his favorite. Design virtuoso, Joseph, has been creating high fashion in the Philippines for glamorous silver screen stars since the 60’s, and is now privileged to be designing for a very prominent local family.
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FILIPINIANA
Remembering
Filipino First
The
(or how the author Leon Ma. Guerrero re-created Dr. Jose Rizal, The Philippines' National Hero) ARE you Filipino? A cookie, brown on the outside, white on the inside. An overseas worker such as a domestic helper in a global diaspora. A computer virus creator that some say put the Philippines on the information technology map. A singer opening doors to many like her by making it big in a world class musical. How do I know thee? Do I have to count the ways? You're Filipino when… Yet, in today's Philippines, how often do you hear the gripe that we Filipinos seem to be ignorant of anything Philippines, say, of our own civilization, history and geography? Even more, that we can't seem ever to get our act together? Perhaps, much too often for comfort. A medical doctor once diagnosed our country's ailment as amnesia of anything Philippines and prescribed total recall as cure. The man was no less than Dr. Jose Rizal. Award-winning Rizal biographer Leon Ma. Guerrero writes, for the first Filipino to remember our glorious past on our behalf is for him to dismember the myths conjured by the Spanish friar chroniclers on behalf of Spain. Rizal to liberate us from ignorance of our past had to turn nostalgic historian and write about the history of the Filipinos for the Filipinos. A first, thanks to his writings. Topping the list being his published critical notes to the classic Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas Since 1565, the virtual reality we gradually accepted was the myth of Spanish origin as the only face of civilization we ever had. "You're nothing but a second-rate, trying hard copycat", Spain seemed to slam-dunk in your face. Nothing could be farther from the truth, Rizal countered. He proudly showed our own face, our own roots, our own culture which we always had and inherited from our ancestors. In the process, we also saved face. He reaffirmed and expanded Morga's vision
of "an idyllic society of honest freemen organized on the basis of kinship. Much like your very own extended family and barangay. But, Spanish rule to be visible had to make the peoples of the archipelago invisible. Invisibility during the colonial era did not improve our lot, he contended, in contrast to our visibility in the ancient past. What do you make of all these? Rizal, perhaps, assessed it best in a letter to his close friend Ferdinand Blumentritt in 1888: "…Nobody should enter a neighbor's house and subordinate his neighbor's welfare to his own interests…" Rizal remembering, amid the environ of globalization, that our own identity and welfare still rule. Failing ever to get our act together is a social cancer, being a member of a Filipino nation is a cure. Dr. Rizal, attests Guerrero, was the first Filipino to prescribe the re-creation of the Philippines from a colony loyal to the Spanish king to a nation loyal to the Filipino people. He saw through the illusion that Spain and the Philippines were one and the same. You see the proof especially in his social realist novels Noli Me Tangere (1887) and El Filibusterismo (1891) and more importantly in La Liga Filipina, the all-Filipino organization he founded in 1892. Remember, all these at a time when Spain had the upper hand and the Philippines was invisible. When we were singled out as indios by the Spaniard from Spain and the Spanish 'Filipino'. Enough already of just being more than a hundred scattered and divided ethno linguistic groups. Rizal envisioned his people "to be something else, Filipinos who were members of a Filipino nation." Trouble is, are you a member of this Filipino nation? This translates as "moral, unselfish, responsible, based uncompromisingly on a general recognition of mutual rights and duties." Then and now, re-creation into a
nation demands a high price. The price of unity of all peoples in the Philippine archipelago. In these exciting days of the Republic, it involves removal of the patron hat for Filipinos who govern and the client cap for Filipinos who are governed. Not that it's a no-no for political leaders to have their political turf. Not that it's taboo for constituents to butter up. They should and they do. It's part of democracy. So, when do you draw the line? From the kanya-kanya (or each person to himself ) mentality. From the put-down or talangka mentality (apologies to the crab). From the not-in-my backyard mentality. From the feeling global outlook. Or is that the old colonial mentality rearing its ugly head? In a nutshell, from the family first or barangay first or ethno linguistic group first (popularly called regionalism) or even globalism first attitude. Anything, but… the Filipino first. In the years of living dangerously, Rizal encountered gahum (hegemony) in our country. The foreign occupying force, for instance, elicited the people's consent to "the Spanish friar's theory of double allegiance to Spain as Catholic and the Church as Spanish, 'the unbreakable keystone of national unity' in Governor-General Eulogio Despujol's decree. Realizing that the problem lay in both ruler and the ruled, the national hero responded with his own brand of kontra-gahum (counter-hegemony) such as during 1891-92 when he sought the unity of the Philippine archipelago and envisioned a 'compact and homogeneous' society anchored on common interests and 'mutual protection'. Leon Ma. Guerrero is the author of the definitive biography of Jose Rizal, The First Filipino. He was a fervent patriot, statesman and a Philippine Ambassador who spent 25 years of his life overseas. Among his other highly acclaimed works are the translations of Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo. In The Writing of the First Filipino, memoir author, his wife Margaret G. Guerrero, remembers the nationalistic writer - “Paradoxically, he lamented the fact that so many Filipinos were leaving their native country to live and work in foreign lands. “They don’t realize,” he said, “that they are leaving in the best country in the world”.
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ARTS & CULTURE
Hermes Alegre... dreaming of maidens Speak to the ebullient Hermes Alegre, and he will have no qualms gushing about his current passion – “The women of Daet are so interesting. They are more healthy here, they eat healthy and they swim uninhibited in the sea.” He is fascinated by the women’s facial expressions and is enraptured observing them even in the most mundane of moments – chatting at the local palengke. “They are pure, probinsyano, with no pretensions at all”. And then of course, there is his hometown, Daet, Camarines Sur, where life is wholesome, fresh fish is caught daily, and where the sea, sky and the horizon are endless, giving way to the fertile imagination and visual meanderings of this fine arts genius. Hermes Alegre, a celebrated modern day fine artist, is well-known in the Manila art circle, as well as abroad. He has graced some of the most prestigious art venues in the world and has the distinction of promoting the tropical beauty of Pinays to a larger audience. As a young man, he started humbly by selling his paintings of laing, gumamela and macopa, to see himself through college. Hermes has since earned pride of place in his chosen discipline – garnering fame and respect from art critics who compare him to masters Amorsolo, Bencab and Manansala. Such well-earned accolades are reflected in the excellent value of his works, as well as repeated attempts by “wannabe” painters to emulate his boldness on canvas.
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Hermes Alegre's Love Affair withThe Filipina By Lalaine Chu-Benitez Photography by Mano dela Rosa
“Maganda ang Pilipinas at ang Pinay ang pinakamaganda sa lahat.�
ARTS & CULTURE
A fascination for natural Filipinas He is mainly known for his portrayal of luscious full-lipped, brown-skinned women, mostly of the Mariang Makiling mold, embraced by a rich tropical background overflowing with a brilliant profusion of flora. Hermes’ women on canvas are always mysteriously erotic. They stare right back at you, beckoning you to drown in their eyes, their hypnotic stare transporting you to their beautiful wild alternative reality. Unsurprisingly, the painter has been largely influenced by his surroundings. Hermes spent a great deal of his professional life in an atelier in Los Baños at the foothills of Mount Makiling. “Inabsorb ko yung energy ng Mt. Makiling, yung kahoy, halaman, hangin at bundok”. This has spawned the Hermes Alegre signature Mt. Makiling look – the lush foliage, the woods, the glorious riot of tropical colors. Going back to his roots, he has recently settled in Daet, his hometown. As a child, he was always drawn to the beach, “Mas malawak ang tubig sa Daet, walang katapusan.” He spent a lot of his time sketching on the sand.
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Curiously, I asked him, “Why paint women?” To which, he chuckled, “Of course, because I am a man.” He then added, “Women are beautiful – I have always liked them, their character, their facial expressions.” True enough, Hermes displays a distinct appreciation for the fairer sex, especially for the great women of his life who inspire his day-to-day existence – his mother, his daughter Awit, and his wife, Helena. “I love women and I am surrounded by great females. My wife, especially, has been a major inspiration for my paintings – Helena’s eyes and lips are pervasive in so many of my works.”
Celebrating ethnic mystique The female visage, according to him, communicates so much more than the body can. “There is more beauty on the female face; the body has no expressions. And there are so many different expressions to be captured – a smile, a glance, a turn.” The mastery with which Hermes deals with the
face cannot be questioned. With bold brush strokes and acute angles he deftly portrays the archetypal Filipina expression – a curious mix of allure and mystery, erotic but not wanton, provocative yet restrained. “Ganoon namang talaga ang expression ng Filipina di ba? The Filipina way of smiling has a certain mystery, allure and shyness rolled into one. That is the natural Filipina expression.” Hermes Alegre also has a flair for the natural. “There is beauty in randomness – in the natural. It’s the same way with people”, he adds, “kahit super-educated ka, lalabas pa rin ang pagiging ethnic mo. And beauty is in ethnicity. Women who are natural are the most beautiful.” Exemplifying his penchant for naturalness and aversion to pretensions, he promptly recalled the time when he asked Helena’s parents for her hand in marriage, “Namanhikan ako na naka-tsinelas at sando, tapos may dalang isang bayong na gulay at isang bayong na isda. Ayokong mag-barong Tagalog, dahil hindi natural sa akin ‘yon. Gusto kong makita ng mga magulang ni Helena ‘yung natural ko.”
At a stage where he can relax and rest on his laurels, I asked Hermes what else is there in the future apart from his beloved art. He replied, “I am a typical Pinoy. My mission is to maintain the character of the Filipino, ibalik yung pagkaPinoy. Kahit sa New York pa o saan man, Pinoy pa rin tayo. Malalim ang ugali.” “Maganda ang Pilipinas at ang Pinay ang pinakamaganda sa lahat. Look at all those
foreigners marrying our women. Iba kasi ang aura ng Pinay, ibang klase. Her being hospitable, ang pagiging natural shines through.” Being one of the most popular of modern day Filipino painters, with scores of admirers and a reputation for being a Casanova on canvas with his seductive Filipina images, I ventured to ask, “So have there been a lot of women in Hermes Alegre’s life?” He answered, with his voice
bubbling like a naughty school boy, “Many, but not as much as you think.” With his laugh as spirited as his name – “Alegre” and his art as ebullient as the carefree women in his beloved beaches of Daet, Hermes Alegre’s affair with his muse, the Filipina, continues….
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Reef Mall 04- 2277308, Ibn Batutta Mall 04 -3685332, Abu Dhabi Mall, 02 - 6459770, Marina Mall - 02 6818944, City Centre Muscat - 00968 24558048, Hyatt Plaza - Doha - Qatar - 00974 4690476, Al Bahar Mall - Kuwait 00965 2670050
LETTERS FROM THE EDGE of the teeming Metropolis
By Carlito Viriña Photography by Ben Chan
Now Mr. Pink is going after jeepney drivers with body odor. Distributing sachets of tawas in jeepney terminals. I’m not kidding! Hey, bud! I’ve dusted off my umbrellas! I’m using my amoy tago sweaters and jackets everyday! We’re well into the rainy season! An incredible typhoon visited the country recently. Matched with an inter-tropical convergence zone, it rained buckets causing landslides in Baguio and flooding in Metro Manila. Classes and government offices were suspended. Coincidentally, or not, it started pouring hard without let up a few days after the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines surprisingly expressed their objection to the impeachment proceedings against Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. I think the gods must be angry! Because if you can’t turn to the church for help, who do you turn to? When I read the news item, I felt so much anger in me, I almost forgot about my beef with the MRT. Now I’m reminded about it I have a beef with the MRT, the EDSA train. They have just implemented the “first car for women, children and the elderly only.” I discovered this one recent Sunday. Sunday is probably the only time one gets to sit comfortably on the MRT. You rarely get a seat on a weekday. And Saturday feels very much like a weekday, so that’s out, too. That Sunday, I was stopped by a security guard from going into the first car of the train. I was directed to take any of the cars after, but not the first one. The three remaining trains were SRO, which was rare for a Sunday. Now I have nothing against women, children and the elderly getting
priority, but they should relax this policy during Sundays. And while they’re at it, if they did their math correctly, they should add another car for this purpose, if they know the number of commuters that ride the train, they should know that making one exclusive for women, children and the elderly would create havoc. I’m almost tempted to become a cross-dresser. Anyway, over a year back they started this policy in the LRT line. That’s the Monumento to Baclaran via Taft route. They did this because a mountain of complaints was coming from lady commuters against “tsansingero” kababayans. True to form, instead of going after the perverts, the DTC (Department of Transportation and Communication), decided to act by coming out with this “brilliant” policy. Ha-ha-ha, right? The perverts are still out there, bright boys! Yeah, our government seems to attack problems in quite unorthodox ways. Here’s another strange tale. The MMDA, headed by ex-Marikina mayor Bayani Fernando, I call him Mister Pink, is busy sprucing up the place with pink iron fences, pink urinals and monstrous pink and blue flyovers made of industrial steel. Here’s the latest pink story. The MMDA people decided, I guess to please Mr. Pink (or was it his idea?) to plant cadena de amor around the metropolis. Surely you still remember this wild vine (is it a weed?) with little pink blossoms that grow inside cemeteries that our fathers ordered us to uproot before All Saint’s Day. So by the time you go on vacation, some parts of Metro Manila may begin to look like a big cemetery.
Well, at the rate our compatriots are leaving the country, temporarily, or for good, planting cadena de amor may just be the proper thing to do. Now Mr. Pink is going after jeepney drivers with body odor. Distributing sachets of tawas in jeepney terminals. I’m not kidding! But what about passengers with sweaty, smelly underarms? Will he go after them, too? While my olfactory nerves have been bruised on numerous occasions by disarming whiffs of dreadful aroma escaping from sweat-drenched armpits, I don’t think anyone deserves jail time for not practicing proper hygiene. Heard you guys have an indoor ski lodge? Skiing in the Middle East?! Read about it somewhere. That’s awesome, man! Kaiinggit naman! A similar one was featured in the news recently. This one was in a downtown Tokyo. Same makers, I guess. So, have you become a downhill racer by now? Is it expensive? Hmmmm… maybe the Eskimos will get some inspiration from this and create a desert wonderland in Alaska, now, wouldn’t that be dandy? Hey, they finally opened the Mall of Asia! Opening day had all the broadsheets with 4page full color spread adverts. Haven’t been, but will check it out soon and give you a report. Heard they have an Olympic size skating rink! And of course, the first IMAX theater in the country. Will we still be alive when Henry Sy opens an SM on the moon?!? Catch you later.
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BAKASYON GRANDE
Rediscoveringg MAKATI
The Makati skyline at dusk
By Carlito Viriña Photography by Ben Chan
Makati is like an old lover from our adolescence that we just grew tired off when we started discovering and conquering other pastures that seemed greener. When was the last time you went to Makati? Well, a visit is long overdue. Makati is like an old lover from our adolescence that we just outgrew when we started discovering and conquering pastures that seemed greener. Years later, after ignoring the phone calls and emails, you see him, or her, on the street and he, or she, looks so unbelievably smashing that you quiz yourself, “What was I thinking?!” Today the city of Makati, an important city in the Philippines in terms of finance and
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commerce, remains one of the most cosmopolitan in the country.
New sights, sounds and tastes Makati is still where most of the country's tallest skyscrapers are located. Joining them now are some new magnificent buildings that have sprung up like the RCBC Tower and the GT Tower International, located where Ayala meets Buendia (now Sen. Gil Puyat Avenue). The PBCom Tower on the corner of Ayala and Rufino street (formerly Herrera) is now the tallest in the country. Aside from the name changes of some of the streets that could be downright confusing at times, what is quite noticeable when you drive through Ayala today is the absence of people crossing the avenue. Well, they’re crossing alright, but through the underground tunnels. Four of them! And, how thoughtful, all with escalators! Which brings me to suggest that the best way to rediscover Makati today is on foot. Especially if you stick to the CBD (Central Business District) area. But before you start on your little trek, get that tummy filled up at the Ayala Center's
Glorietta. This is where the QUAD, Rustan’s and the old Fastfood used to be. Glorietta has the widest variety of food choices from all corners of the culinary world, at the most reasonable prices. Let me rattle off some names. Gloria Jeans, Cabalen, Teriyaki Boy, Tang City, California Pizza Kitchen, Zen Restaurant, TGI Fridays, Veneto Pizzeria Ristorante, Hard Rock Café, Triple V's, Dad’s, Saisaki and Kamayan, Haagen-Dazs Kwangtong, Modern China, Kitaro, Rai Rai Ken, Chef d’Angelo, Wetzels Pretzels, Iceberg’s, El Cuento, Don Henrico’s, Outback Steakhouse, Tony Roma’s, Superbowl of China, Kaya Restaurant, Bacolod Chicken Inasal, Max’s, Gilligan’s Island, W Grill, Osake, North Park, Dencio’s, Banana Leaf… etc. etc. etc. Now doesn’t that list make your tummy smile? I don’t have to mention here that the shopping is just as delectable. From the Glorietta, on the second level, cut through The Landmark Department Store, which, by the way now looks old and tired, and exit at Makati Avenue. From there you can take the concrete bridgeway that crosses over Makati Avenue and connects you to Greenbelt.
BAKASYON GRANDE
A unique display of lights at the Museum Cafe, Ayala Museum
The familiar gets a facelift Remember the Ayala Museum? Where we enjoyed looking for funny scenes in the dioramas. It used to be along Makati Avenue, and behind it the Greenbelt Park Chapel. It is now a four-storey structure! That would be on your right when you cross Makati Avenue from The Landmark. The new 6,112-square meter museum building, designed by LV Locsin and Partners, is still pretty much in the same place, but now closer to Dela Rosa street. The new Ayala Museum structure consists of a glass tower which houses the Museum Shop, Museum Café, art studios, and museum offices and is connected via a three-level bridgeway to the Exhibition building, a granite-clad four storey concrete structure that houses the permanent as well as the loaned exhibitions. It’s right beside the Gucci, Salvatore Ferragamo and Lacoste shops so you can’t miss it. If you go further west on the bridgeway you’ll reach the heart of Legaspi Village. The bridgeway ends at the corner of Herrera (now Rufino) and Dela Rosa Streets. If you retrace your steps and go the other way you’ll get to the new Greenbelt. Just to give you a clue on how the new
Greenbelt looks now, the new Greenbelt bested over 39 semi-finalists from 14 countries, winning the International Design and Development Award under the category Innovative Design and Construction of a New Project of the prestigious International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC). It was also the only Asian awardee of the Urban Land Institute Award of Excellence, known internationally as the Oscars of real estate development. Wow, right? And they’ve divided the area, too. There are now Greenbelts 1, 2, 3 and 4. Greenbelt 1 is pretty much the same except that there’s a Starbucks at the corner of Paseo de Roxas and Legaspi Street. The National Bookstore is still where it used to be, but Café Rizal has closed down. And Cinderella is now a Rustan’s Supermarket. But Greenbelts 2, 3 and 4 are sights to behold. Greenbelt 2 with its high-rise residential condo above fine dining restaurants and bars at the ground floor. Greenbelt 3, a spacious courtyard teeming with palm trees and a lagoon that comes alive with a colorful, languid light show during the evenings. Always a visual treat for strollers and patrons in the many coffee shops and restaurants that line the area. And
Ayala Central Business District
Greenbelt 4, where the chapel is located, is a lush green paradise of grassy knolls and gardens. I have visited, worked and lived in some of the world’s most cosmopolitan cities, and the Makati I have rediscovered is, without a doubt, up there with the best of them. I think I’m in love again.
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PINOY ABOUT TOWN Stepping out of the proverbial ‘kabayan box’, beyond Pinoy cafeterias and videoke
WHAT’S
HOT By Dawn Almario Photography by Joel Guerrero
In Manila, it's not just the caffeine that drives yuppies crazy. It's a trend, it's a lifestyle. It’s hip to sip mocha. You don't just order and run off. You sit back, chit-chat for two hours during a one-hour lunch break. Dubai has its own cosmo way of sipping latté. Café society, where fashionistas, in their Armani outfits, Prada shades and Chanel bags, sipping macchiato, is a typical sight. Then again, there are the avid Java lovers who come purely for the caffeine kick and heady aromas. Unfortunately, even with our inborn affinity for the rich brown heavenly liquid, you still don’t see a lot of Pinoys enjoying café life. So if you’re well-inclined, check out these piping HOT cafés, serving heart-pumping espressos around town.
Coffee is my cup of tea. Starting the mornings with a steaming Starbucks cafe latté followed by an The new standard that changed the way we drink espresso on the road, a sip of coffee forever. Starbucks doesn't need a review, sweet caramel macchiato while it’s so pop, and in demand, there’s a Starbucks in checking e-mail, one double every corner, from Dubai to Abu Dhabi. It's everybody’s all-time favorite - from yuppies to espresso right after lunch, a celebrities, studes and dudes, from the working brain-freezing ice blended class to the upper-class. Everyone loves a frappuccino for a mid-day Starbucks latté, macchiato, mocha or espresso. So dessert and then a foamy distinct, you would know a Starbucks coffee with cappuccino for a nightcap. Is this a mere whiff. Overall Experience: giving you a buzz? What is it with coffee that we can’t get enough of? During our parents' days, plain coffee, Barako or instant is enough to rev up the day. Now it’s caramel latté with a double shot of espresso with whipped cream and almond, and chocolate chip biscotti on the side. Puhleeeez! Let me have my brewed coffee, for crying out loud! But really, thank God for Starbucks.
- chill out, cool, hip, rich and star-studded
Dome Café
You can tell straight away it's a serious café, serving dark, strong espressos. Australian in origin with a fusion-style menu for brekky, lunch and dinner - pizza, pasta, salad, vegetarian
dishes, sandwiches and desserts to die for! Continental café decor and ambiance, with tables outside for dining alfresco. To top it all, it's not just a place for coffee bliss, but also a good venue for serious business meetings. Overall Experience strong, robust, formal, serious yet friendly
Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf
Coffee, tea or pastry? A café that is known not only for ice-blended coffees but also for a variety of specialty teas - from classic to flavored, fruits and herbal infusions. Try the simplest, chai latté a sweet blend of tea, spices, French deluxe vanilla, steamed non-fat milk and foam. And to complement your spiced-up tea or caramel-flavored espressos, you can have a hearty breakfast, served all day long...hmmnn, nice. Overall Experience hearty, casual chic, relaxed and cozy
T-junction
A café with a menu of specialty teas in the hippest, trendiest ambience, swarming with young, energetic people from the offices of Emirates Towers. This is where tea junkies start their day off with the refreshingly aromatic "Moroccan mint tea", or an invigorating Cha’latté (a ginger and orange infusion topped with foaming milk), or relax with the cappuccino of tea - spiced cha. With their signature drinks, Turbo Teas, Pyramid Tea Bags and New Age Iced Teas, your tea experience will never be the same again. Overall Experience gourmet, vibrant, lite, young and trendy
Segafredo
An Italian coffee shop with a concoction to rival the hottest cafés around town. Enjoy an authentic Italian espresso with a choice of Italian café fare salads, sandwiches and freshly made pastas in specialty sauces. Bellissimo! It's time to mingle with the Dons at Segafredo Zanetti L'Espresso at Wafi Mall. Overall Experience cultured, potent, classic and mature
Café Ceramique
A café blending aromatic espressos with creative expressions, where you can paint while enjoying a cup of mocha. The shelves display white, untreated bisques - from coffee mugs, saucers, serving platters to photo frames and animal shapes, candle holders, vases and figurines (ranging from AED 15 to 150). Just choose which ones you want to paint. Well-trained staff will assist you in creating your own ceramique masterpiece. Here's a café where the whole family can enjoy. Experience the new blend in the Mall of the Emirates, or in Khalidiya area if you're in Abu Dhabi. Overall Experience novelty, original, artistic, warm and friendly So instant, brewed or roasted, whichever way you want your java, there is a café especially for you. Dine, chit chat, enjoy the experience just like our way of life in Manila. We can imagine we’re hanging-out in Greenbelt or Glorietta while sipping a hot cuppa... or create new memories as we soak in the cosmo Dubai scene. I would love to see more Pinoys blending perfectly with our foreign friends like Arabica and Robusta.
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As someone once said, “A cup of coffee shared with a friend is happiness tasted and time well spent”.
MANILA TRIPPING Just a few steps off the Citibank Center in Makati lies this haven of the high rollers, let me rephrase that, the ”chic high rollers”. The ”in” crowd, the hip, the upper crust of the metro’s gimikero herd. Now if you want to have a rollicking good time and wake up wondering where the holy schmoly it was that your entire paycheck flew off to, this bar is perfect! I was sweating beads just thinking of how much I was going to cough up after the drinking binge was over. But that is putting the cart ahead of the a -, I mean donkey. On to the recall booth: We walked up the steps to the place and right off the bat, it felt like I got beamed into something from the Brother’s Grimm. There was a sprinkling of denizens on the stairs, chatting animatedly, drinks in one hand and smokes on the other, and everyone (and I mean EVERYONE) was gorgeous! Skimpy, bareback, spaghetti straps, lace, body fit, everything that would have given your parents a heart attack if you wore them to sleep! I realized that I was uttering ‘statutory and lethal injection’ like a protective, repetitive prayer and summoning all of my willpower, until I finally brought myself under control. Then I tried to take stock of my surroundings. We took one of the tables near the veranda, mainly so we can smoke without leaving the bistro and since I felt like a fish out of water. Capone’s is elegantly designed in conservative tones, in sharp contrast with how cool the party was. The place was grooving, and there was this alien quality to it that I can’t quite put my finger on – it was like, well nothing I had ever seen. I thought, “So this is how the rich party!”. Blows you out of your socks, let me tell you. I was expecting the guy with the clipped accent to pop in, with a camera crew in tow, bellowing - “Welcome to the lifestyles of the rich and famous!” The crowd was something to behold - a lot of celebrities (a good number of our current matinee idols), women who looked yummy enough to be celebrities, expats in their late teens and early twenties, and the occasional, young affluent politician. Suffice it to say it looked like an oasis for the upwardly mobile. Which explains why the place is so pricey. There was a band which played, well... current alternative rock (sorry I didn’t get their name), and they sounded pretty good to my ears. The waiter told us they had a different band each day of the week, and that we can check it out on their website. Looking at the menu the waiter finally brought over, I saw all I could afford were the fries and crispy crablets, which later proved to be scrumptious! Ordered the usual poison too
Capone's Italian Bistro By Mike Martin
Photography by Ben Cha and Mac Antonio
Just a few steps off the Citibank Center in Makati lies this haven of the high rollers, let me rephrase that, the chic high rollers. The in crowd, the hip, the upper crust of the metro’s gimikero herd.
for the crew - Arctic Vodka, Jack Cokes and of course, San Miguel. The service leaves a lot be desired based on my experience, or it may stem from the fact that I looked like someone who can ill afford their booze (Kimi Raikkonen Tag Heuers and Mossimo polo shirts are considered household help wear, I think). We had to repeat our orders since the waiter who took them seemed to have disappeared into a parallel universe. Which made me feel uncomfortable and unwelcome. I’m paranoid most times, but in this case, I
believe it was justified. If you have cash to throw around and enjoy spending (and be the lucky few who can get drunk while shelling out bundles of currency), and if you like checking out and rubbing elbows with the rare tribe of the ”beautiful rich”, you've struck oil, feller! This is the party place for you!
Rating:
(The third star is mainly for the gorgeous women who frequent the place, and have made me so happy that I write reviews. So sue me! )
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PINOY PLANET Places and faces, through the eyes of a Pinoy viajero. It’s a small planet, a Pinoy Planet.
witzerland By Giselle Estrada
On my many trips to the country, I have been really encouraged to see compatriots even in the most unexpected of places. The first time I was in Switzerland, I got lost somewhere in the hub of the Bernese Oberland, alighting at the wrong train station – Interlaken Ost, when I should have gone to Interlaken Sud, a remote mountain retreat known as the place where Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote his famous Sherlock Holmes series. Tired, cold, hungry and grappling with the few French and German words I knew, I was nervous as the last minutes of sunshine ‘tick-tocked” in the unnervingly quiet town. I wandered to a plaza nearby and surprisingly, found two Filipino nannies sitting by the fountain. I thought I was in the twilight zone until one of the friendly faces called to me and said – “O, kabayan, napano ka?” When one talks about Europe, Switzerland definitely comes up as one of the top three on the “must-visit wish list” . Whether it is for business or for pleasure, this country where European cultures converge with Germany in the north, Austria and the Principality of Liechtenstein in the east, Italy in the south and France in the west, is quite a popular destination. The beauty of the Swiss landscape is simply breathtaking. The brochures and postcards cannot do enough justice to portray it. On a
Illustrado 46
3-hour train ride from Zurich to Interlaken, I was so enthralled by the unfolding countryside that I sat with my mouth agape for most of the ride. The ‘big country’ feel, wide expansive spaces carpeted by verdant grass, the sunflower fields, the snow-capped mountains, the wide blue sky and clear azure lakes – it is a true feast for the eyes that fills even your lungs. It’s great to breathe it all in! Life in the quiet towns is also as relaxed and unhurried, as the calm surroundings. A recent trip to Lausanne found me enjoying the simple pleasures of promenade life. A walk down the cobbled centre ville will give one enough amusement – just to watch different personalities walking up and down the steep shopping boulevard. Café and the outdoors are a veritable way of life in Switzerland. On sidewalks, you would see residents sipping red wine or espresso, dining on pizza, pasta and fillet mignon. While in front of the Bucherer shop, thankfully distracting me from the diamond display, I chanced upon a musician playing the harp – there was something quite poetic in that. The soft notes drifted, like a curtain call, whilst the shops started to close at barely seven in the evening, the sunlight softening in its late setting.
Strolling by the lake is one of the most common touristy things one does in Switzerland. However, unless, you’re wearing the right shoes (absolutely no en Pointe stilettos or delicately-soled loafers!), and are prepared to sweat it out, I advise you not to give in when somebody invites you for a ‘leisurely’ stroll. Don’t think that you can get a taxi once you’re tired, because hailing a taxi is just not done in Switzerland – the urbane thing is to book a taxi by phone. The good thing, though, is that motorists always give way politely to pedestrians. Being in such a gourmet country, one definitely has to sample local haute cuisine. After hearing a colleague extol the unique gustatory delights of a local favorite – la pesche du lac (fish from the lake), I had to succumb. La pesche du lac came. Voila! A platter of lonely looking sardine-like fish, on immaculate china with the compulsory sprig of mint leaves at the centre. I wondered, wouldn’t it be great to elevate the status of tuyo to cordon bleu? After all, I like it better than la pesche du lac. Three more days of Italian and French cuisine, pastas, chateau briand, patès, foie gras and copious helpings of cold bread, cold cheese, cold soup, cold cuts (why is everything so cold?), I felt more Filipino than ever. My
system was crying, “rice, kanin, white, boiled, fried, any kind… just give me rice.” From haute cuisine to haute couture, if you are mentally prepared to pay the price, shopping could be good in Switzerland. Apart from world-renowned Swiss watches and chocolates, there are also enticing boutiques like Hermés, Bally, Hugo Boss, Cartier, et al. in city centers, even airports, wooing you to part with those precious Swiss Francs. There are also lots of souvenir items from t-shirts, to accessories, to home display items carrying the iconic Swiss cross, as well as the country’s favorite loveable Swiss cow. Just like most things in Switzerland, hotels are quite expensive too. A night at a standard 4-star hotel can easily set you back by CHF 450 (about US$350), that too in a place with very little service-orientation. So you are well advised to travel light. Don’t expect anybody to offer you help automatically when you land in your hotel with your giant Pinoy-sized luggage in tow. As for dressing, do make sure to check out the local temperature before you fly. As a resident of hot Dubai, it is so easy to get it wrong. Imagine, landing there in your leather overcoat
and woolies, while the locals are wearing lightweight shirts! Or just having a pashmina wrap when it’s freezing cold. Believe me, it happens. Remember that summertime in Switzerland is just like winter here in the UAE, and winter over there is, well, freezing. Be warned. On my many trips to the country, I have been really encouraged to see compatriots even in the most unexpected of places. I have seen French-speaking Pinays at the check-out stands in Migros supermarket in Geneva, nannies in Interlaken Ost, a Pinoy waiter and a Filipina shopkeeper selling art in the sleepy town of Nyon, Pinays at the Geneva airport duty free, and of course, there is charming Norma Zgraggen, a Swiss-married long-time resident (whose last name I cannot pronounce!). She would be pleased to guide you through the intricacies and joys of Swiss chocolate at her shop at gate E53 Zurich Airport. And if you are ever in Geneva, and happen to crave for some good home-style Filipino cooking, I was told that there is even a Filipino restaurant next to the airport train station – which I should have known about before I went for la pesche du lac!
Well, there’s nothing like the smiles, familiarity and warmth of your own ‘kababayans’ making you feel at home, away from home. Especially in beautiful but cold Switzerland.
ALMOST FILIPINO
Ishwar Chugani
DUGONG
BUMBAY UTAK
PINOY By Lalaine Chu-Benitez Photography by Mac Antonio
He was born and bred in the Philippines,
speaks fluent Tagalog and Ilonggo, and has a taste for adobo and lechon. A Business Management graduate of De La Salle University, Manila, and a classmate of former Finance Minister Cesar Purisima and well-known cardiologist Dr. Alex Ayco. He played street basketball with neighbor ex-PBA star Hector Calma in the ‘60’s, was ‘dart-mates’ with Res Cortez and Bembol Roco at the Red Lion Pub in Green Hills in the ‘70’s, and is an avid supporter of the La Salle Green Archers. He is an valuable member of the Philippine Business Council, and a constant supporter of Filipino causes. Ishwar Chugani, a down-to-earth guy with an easy smile, the intrepid businessman driving the amazing success of Giordano is … “almost Filipino”.
A rich history dating from the 1920’s
Ishwar Chugani’s grandfather arrived in the Philippines in 1924, shaping the fate of his extended family, which now has over 300 members in the country. The rest of the family joined in 1937. They first took residence in Manila, then in Jolo, and finally settled in Bacolod, where Ishwar himself was born. With the open government policy allowing foreigners to own businesses in the country, the Chugani’s Indian-entrepreneurial spirit flourished in the Philippines. Ishwar’s parents opened the ‘Indian Emporium’ in Bacolod in 1955, a popular general supplies market, which, to this day, remains a strong commercial establishment in the Ilonggo community.
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Growing up in the Philippines
Growing up in the Philippines with his Indian family was a rich and interestingly mixed culture experience for Ishwar. “We maintained our Indian identity, kept our traditions within our close-knit extended family. My parents always taught us to stand for the family name, and to uphold, respect and build our trust in people.” According to Ishwar, being in Bacolod, which had a distinctly tolerant community spirit, has also given them the freedom to make a name for their family. With their native culture intact, the Chugani’s also enthusiastically imbibed the local flavor. Ishwar fondly remembers his childhood and how his family enjoyed both Hindu and Christian feasts, “That means celebrating both Diwali and Christmas”, he says with a smile. Food was also never an average affair in the Chugani household. Ishwar’s friends from school favored eating at their
home, where Filipino standards like adobo and pancit would be served side-bysidesumptuous Indian dishes. Food from his home was so famous that his classmates would steal his lunch, until the day he planted a lethal chili in his sandwich, inevitably teaching the perpetrators a spicy unpalatable lesson.
Ishwar the intrepid businessman
Ishwar left his boyhood behind in Bacolod to study at De La Salle, Taft Ave. Like many of his entrepreneurial compatriots, Ishwar started early in business, managing his uncle’s amusement arcade in Quad, Makati. He got the attention of ETA (Emirates Trading Agency), another Indian-owned enterprise based in the U.A.E., and was invited to set-up and manage the first indoor family entertainment centre in what was then, far-flung Dubai. It was then that the adventurous 21 year-old decided against
ALMOST FILIPINO working in the family business and instead, flew to the emirate in a pioneering move. ‘I landed in a very provincial Dubai airport in 1979, and had to live in a room with a shared toilet”, he chuckles at the memory. “I opened Sindbad in Al Ghurair center, the region’s first indoor family entertainment center in June 1980 and opened the first Giordano store in 1993. The rest, as they say, is history.” It has been a little over a decade, but with Ishwar’s keen sense of business and aggressive push for growth, there are now 140 Giordano stores in the Middle East, greatly exceeding his goal of 50 stores in 10 years. To top the success, Giordano became the first apparel retailer to collect the Dubai Quality Appreciation Programme (DQAP) Award in 2003, a testament to the company’s renowned level of service, product quality and value for money. Ishwar has just been recently appointed to the Giordano International Management Board, and is the Executive Director of Giordano Middle East, as well as Director of Giordano Fashions India. But it’s not all business and figures that keep him occupied. “By fulfilling one of man’s basic needs - clothing, we are of service to society. As part of the Giordano policy, we always do something for the
community. Apart from our involvement in Filipino community projects – events, charitable causes, we also support other social endeavors. It is our way of giving back to society.” I asked him what keeps him awake at night, and he answered, “We need to keep on growing, so that everybody can grow, so that we can create more opportunities. The more business we can generate, the more people we can help.”
On Being ‘Filipino’
So how does a man with such an eclectic heritage define himself? Careful to point out that he does not want to be limited by traditional definitions based on nationality, Ishwar comments, “I am an Indian, my wife is from Malta, my kids were born and brought up in Dubai. I call the Philippines, India and the UAE ‘home’. I am a person with a more holistic view of the world.” “What I can tell you, however, is that I am ‘dugong Bumbay, utak Pinoy’.” he says with a wide grin. Just like a typical fun-loving Pinoy, Ishwar lives with a simple philosophy, “I like to enjoy life and meet people. I have no prejudice for any race and I have a lot of friends. Because of this, I am able to manage different nationalities well. I am also easy to get along with, no airs or
“My upbringing in the Philippines has kept me the way that I am. I am still myself.”
hang-ups in life, which happens to be the core of the Giordano philosophy – World Without Strangers.” True to form, his approachability has kept the Giordano corporate culture an open and informal one, as casual and friendly as the cool slacks and tops that they market. When asked what he would advise Filipinos, Ishwar Chugani enthuses, “The Philippines is one of the most fortunate countries, with rich natural resources and talented people who are able to successfully diversify into different fields globally.” “Pinoys abroad should unite and talk about improving the country. Let people know who you are, stand by your national identity. Set the right tone and direction. Perhaps, India, which is booming right now, could be a good lesson; with the right direction, a country can grow tremendously.” It is amazing that with the undeniable success of this business wunderkind, who has gone from running his uncle’s game arcade, to heading one of the most aggressively expanding retail chains in the Middle East and the globe, Ishwar remains as easy going, with his feet firmly planted on the ground. “My upbringing in the Philippines has kept me the way that I am. I am still myself.” And as he rightly referred to himself, ‘dugong Bumbay, utak Pinoy’, I could sense that somehow, somewhere inside of Ishwar Chugani, there is also a distinct ‘pusong Pinoy’.
LOVE PINOY STYLE
So, how do you know when your relationship has been shifted to another level? In the Pinoy girl-boy dimension, what are the “lovemarks”?
LOVEMARKS By Antonella Andrada Photography by Mac Antonio
This is absolutely not your proverbial “chikinini” discussion. Every once in a while, the boy-girl connection hits a relationship ‘landmark’ that brings them from mere friendship, to infatuation, to M.U. (mutual understanding), to the state of being utterly, euphorically in-love. Being Filipinos, with our quirks and eccentricities (or weirdness!), our ways of making this warm all-consuming feeling very apparent, could be quite unique. Just like the fact that the Pinoy manliligaw would never think of giving you a printer or food processor for your birthday, or that a Pinay collegiala would give her phone number, but will not be caught dead asking for one. So, how do you know when your relationship has shifted to another level? In the Pinoy girl-boy dimension, what are the ‘lovemarks’?
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LOVE PINOY STYLE Meet the Mother
One basic sign that a Pinoy regards you with loving eyes, and wants to seriously connect is when he introduces you to his all-influential mother - the latter usually the champion of family matters. He would also want you to meet his real buddies, his ex (if he's friendly with her), his old yaya na nagpalaki sa kanya and anybody whose opinion he values.
Male Sacrifices
Pinoys could also be very self-sacrificing (contrary to popular Pinay belief!). A tsong is truly smitten when he skips basketball or his weekly San Mig moment with buddies, just to watch 'Desperate Housewives' with you. He would also travel the length of Sharjah to Dubai or West Avenue to Ayala (at rush hour!), just to pick you up from the office, every day. If you have an important date, he would beg, steal, or borrow a car just to take you out! Of course, he will also spend serious amount of money for cell-phone reloads, even if it hurts, just so you can telebabad. Most self-sacrificing of all, is that he would willingly change part of his persona, perhaps give up his “nasirang rock-star long hair” (euwww!) and his beaten-up ultra-comfortable cargo pants with matching ratty Converse sneakers, if you ask him to. Nicely, that is.
Making Ligaw to the Family Once the Pinoy is comfortable with his feelings, he will somehow attempt to make things a bit more official. You know that it's irrevocable love when he starts wooing your parents. Or when he shows up at your doorstep at 8 o'clock on a Friday morning, with a shopping bag full of fresh fish and produce, ready to cook brunch for you and your folks. Paninilbihan, anyone?
Final Surrender
And finally, a sure sign of Pinoy ‘can’t-shake-it-off ready-to-surrender-my-dear-life’ real love is when he says, “So, should I then intrega my sweldo to you at the end of the month?”
Meet the Entire Gang
Now, to the fairer sex. Just like the Pinoy, the Pinay's need for validation is automatic, though wider-reaching. The love-struck would definitely want you to meet her entire family, from her parents to her little brother, her friends, her mentor (her high school teacher!),
or anybody she cares about. You will know that she's got that soft spot for you, when her girlfriends bear that knowing smile and are uncharacteristically nice, when you meet them.
Little Sweet Thinge
The typical “all out” Pinay, when in love, will most certainly indulge you, her man in little sweet things. She would slave to prepare a proper five course meal (complete with wine) in a picnic basket 'to go', just to celebrate your first month together. She will make himay the alimango, squeeze the fat out of talangka, even cut your toenails (or so I've heard), just to make you feel special.
Putting Up with Testosterone Inspite of being set in her ways, the enraptured Pinay would sacrifice and put up with lots of things. She would endure an evening with your San Mig-swigging, ashtray-filling buddies, playing the gracious sweetheart-hostess. She will miss a monthly payment to the alahera to get you that Lacoste shirt, to change your look from dirty-ratty-grungy, to all-acceptable preppy. She would also willingly negotiate her fashion preferences - perhaps, give up those spaghetti straps she so loves, if it makes you feel uncomfortable that she's too hot when in public. Most surprisingly of all, with her meticulous cleanliness and zero tolerance for anything foul-smelling, she would actually allow you to give her a hot passionate kiss after kare-kare and bagoong!
The Omnipresent Girlfriend She will not be able to live without seeing you. She would be with you all the time, everywhere in your house (that vase/plant/cheesy display figurines with a love message), at your office (on your coffee mug branded 'This man is mine!'), on your phone (half a dozen SMS' per hour, throughout the day), your computer (e-mails twice daily, above MSN Messenger chat time), your car, (that rosary she gave you, which came from the Vatican), and in your wallet, (the Photome couple ID shot, and the 'unmentionable' kept there that reminds you of her), among other places.
Stamping 'Ownership'
And finally, a sure shot that she's so enamored with you, wants to get you and cement the relationship once and for all, is when she says “(Sigh..) Things are going so great, so now let's talk about your sweldo.
Telltale signs that it's NOT love:
She • Has your name tattooed on her buttocks after your first romp. • Lights red candles and chants to your picture every night. • Looks and acts like Glenn Close in 'Fatal Attraction'.
He
• Calls you at 3 am just to breathe heavily on the receiver. • Incessantly sniffs everything you touch and sit on. • Asks for either a lock of hair or a vial of your blood!
He or She
Says “I love you, oh by the way, can I make utang to pay for my credit card?”
Oh well, love is love, even in weird Pinoy-style.
If you see any of these signs, run!!!
FILIPINISMS
You know you're Filipino if -
Filipinisms Mahilig ka ba sa balut? Do you have a giant wooden spoon and fork in your dining room? Pray tell, is your name Bhoy, Jhun or Baby? We've read all the spam e-mail spam and the Internet postings before - so many interesting things have been written about Filipino idiosyncrasies, that they deserve a good review. Filipinisms will feature brief compilations of the best-of-the-best unique Pinoy quirks and eccentricities, ranging from superstitious beliefs, to balut, personal hygiene and our definitive prowess for the English language. Pinoy ka ba? You can be so easily singled-out. Read on, my prend. As with any other nationality, the first thing that one notices is body language. Pinoys are the masters of facial and body contortion - talk about using just your lips and eyebrows to carry on an entire conversation! Illustrado 52
• You smile for no reason. • You love to laugh at yourself and others - mababaw ang kaligayahan • You point with your lips. • You convey 30 messages with your facial expressions. • You greet one another by raising your eyebrows or tossing your head. • You hold your palms together in front of you and say “excuse me” when you pass between people or in front of the TV. • You raise your hand, when you want to speak or get someone's attention - “Maam…” • You ask for the bill at a restaurant by drawing a rectangle in the air. • You cover your mouth when you laugh. • You scratch your head when you don't know the answer. • You tip your head to the side when you might know the answer. • You're a natural-born flirt, and you flirt by having a foolish grin on your face while raising your eyebrows repeatedly. • You're perfectly comfortable in a squatting position “crab position” with your elbows resting on your knees. • You always respond to a "Hoy!" or a "Pssst!" in a crowd. • You call people you’re not even related to ‘Ate’ or ‘Kuya’ as a sign of respect. Scored on all of that? Then, Pinoy ka nga! You have been identified and you can't deny it!
FILIPINISMS
The Annie B.(Batobalani) Chronicles The adventures and misadventures of a “not so average” Pinay The adventures and misadventures of a “not so average” Pinay trying to make it in the cosmopolitan city of Dubai.
“Jet Set” Paging all passengers of Emirates Airlines EK 333 bound for Dubai. The boarding gate will close in ten minutes.” Dizizit! My answers have been prayered! My dreams will about to be true! I will finally ride an airplane – a real one – not like the one in the perya that goes around 360 degrees celcius fahrenheit… So, wearing my furry sweater (from ukay-ukay), my Scottish-inspired skirt, scarf, beret (very French, huh?) and black knee-high socks with black shoes (I wanted boots, but my sister said I look like an Equistinarian without a horse!), I sashayed down to the departure area. I have to look like a real high-class tourist, so the immigration will be convinced, since I only have a Visit Visa – so no silly questions and harassment for me. To look like a fashion model? Nothing new to me. Been there, been that - you know. But as faith would have it, haggardness awaits me at immigration! Here’s how my question and answer portion went like: After seeing my passport, they wanted another ID, so I took out my Globe Gentext card. But it says there that my name is Annie B. – yes, just plain Annie B, becoz that’s how everyone calls me, becoz I love disco-ing and gimmick-ing. You know, like Annie Batungbakal? Nora Aunor? Jolina Magdangal? Hallleeer! Okay, okay, my family name is Batobalani - as in Batobal-ANNIE? Gets mo? Then they questioned the fakeness of my passport. “Sir, my real name is Daffodil Athena Calumpong Batobalani. Athena – as in the Greek goddess of wisdom, and Daffodil - latin name: Narcissus pseudonarcissus – because my mother said I was narcissistic even as an infant.” Haaayyyyy….Eto pa: “And who is this Floricel
Gwendolyn Calumpong that is sponsoring you?” My God, ano ‘to – Family Feud???!!! “My cousin, sir. She is into the transportation industry. I am going to stay with her during my vacation in Dubai.” “Last call for all the passengers of Emirates Airlines EK 333…” Oh noooooo!!! “Sir, I might miss my flight.” Haggardness to the max na ito. “Ok, ok, you may go.” Thank Goooooddddddd!!! At the wink of an eye, I speeded myself to the gate. About to make my grand entrance, I noticed my foundation melted with my sweat! I quickly wiped off the smudges with Gatsby Oil Control Film Strips. Remember, Oilyness is next to ugliness – so, Voila! Ganda na uli ng lola nyo! Gandang Ricky Reyes! I put on my i2i Jackie O sunglasses. “Oooooooo…”kaya nyo ba yan?” Seated next to me were two Pinoys. One looked like April Boy Regino complete with stone washed maong jacket, bull cap and huge, glittering bling-blings, the other like John Regala. They barely spoke but kept on staring at me all the time. Well, masisisi ko ba sila? Then all of a sudden, the rest of the passengers were also staring at me. “Ma’am, the seat belt sign is on, please fasten your seat belt. We’re taking off in a few seconds…..”, the stewardess told me. “What seat belt? I’m afraid my seat has no belt….” I snapped back. “Ma’am, you’re sitting on your seat belt. Please fasten them - now!” Aaaah….so that’s what’s scratching my T-back underwear all this time – the seat belt! Then the plane started to move…Dizizit!!!! What awaits my future in the Middle East? You can never can tell. Well, Dubai – give it a big hand of applause - here comes Annie B!!!
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The view from your regular Juan dela Cruz on the street
Usapang Kanto
What is an
‘International
By Joel Guerrero
Filipino’?
OFWs ready to go anywhere, ready to face challenges in any country. Of course, I am an International Filipino, and I’m proud to be truly Pinoy. In fact, my mobile phone ring tone is the Philippine National Anthem! - Buenaventura Gohing, Maintenance Supervisor, DUBAL
An International Filipino is world-class, adaptable to any environment, hardworking and professional. Yes, I consider myself an International Filipino and I believe that we can compete with other nationalities in any field. - Susan De Leon, Bank Operations, HSBC
Sadly, when you say International Filipino, what comes to mind are the Pinoys who have fled our country’s depression, thinking that life is so easy in the UAE, and are now struggling to make a decent living. - Gerry Patawaran, Quality HSE Officer, Kanoo Group - Vherlyn Patawaran, Admin. Asst., Al Bustan Rotana Hotel
An International Filipino is one who is exposed to different nationalities and culture, and is able to adapt well. Yes, I consider myself an International Filipino. - Rolando Dator, Finance Manager, Rockwell Automation
The International Filipino is flexible and can adapt to society, anywhere in the world. Whether highly educated or not, we can do it! - Tom Rivera, Avionics and Flight Engineer, Aero Gulf Services
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Most Filipinos abroad, we feel, are ‘swerte’ to have the exposure. Most Pinoys have the guts and the ability to face the world. Yes, we are International Filipinos and we would like to stay in the UAE for as long as we can. - Cecille Alonzo, Executive Secretary, Yamaha Motors - Bobeth Alonzo, Accounts, Technosat Trading
A person who is an achiever, who thinks great and works great. Someone you can be proud of. A person who never stops dreaming. - Elma Galiga, Asst. School Supervisor, De La Salle Montessori
ILLUSTRADO FACE OF THE MONTH CELEBRATING PINOY CHARM
RAINE PAMINTUAN YOUTHFUL EXUBERANCE Twenty-two year old Raine Pamintuan reported to his first Illustrado shoot absolutely teeming with energy and enthusiasm – his perfect close-up smile ‘turned on’ as soon as photographer aimed his camera. “I’m really a broody, reserved
person. Doesn’t it show?” He asks. Interestingly enough, Raine describes himself as “cosmopolitan baduy”. He’s got a modern mindset and considers himself a trendy fashionista, but on the flipside prefers what he calls as “fishballing” instead of a proper 5-star hotel meal. “I’m a very down-to-earth kind of a guy, I don’t like pretensions”. Perhaps being a product of a conservative well-grounded family has kept this young man’s feet firmly on solid ground,
despite a brush with the high-flying fashion industry back home. When asked what his aspiration in life is, his grand contribution so to speak, Raine answers, “I’d like to change the perception on Filipinos by being a role model. It’s time the world sees us as smart and accommodating, and yes, stylish too.” Well, that certainly can’t be bad.
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PINOY TRIVIA A collage of Philippine facts bringing you closer to home
COUNTRY
KNOW YOUR
7,107 Islands
At the heart of South East Asia, at the crossroads of the Orient and the developed western world is the Philippines. Stretching more than 1,840 kilometers and composed of 7,107 islands, the Philippines is readily accessible to the different capitals of the world. Its three main islands are Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. The Philippines has 79 provinces and 116 chartered cities.
Eighth Wonder of the World
The Banaue Rice Terraces in Ifugao province has been dubbed as the "Eighth Wonder of the World". The Ifugaos carved the terraces from the rocky mountain of Banaue, about 4,000 feet above the sea level, hundreds of years ago. The total outline of this architectural wonder, otherwise known as the "stairways to the sky" is about 13,500 miles long, or about half the globe's circumference and ten times the length of the Great Wall of China.
World's Smallest Volcano
Taal Volcano, a 406-meter-high crater, is said to be the world's smallest volcano. It is described as "a crater within an island within a lake" because it stands as an island at Taal Lake. The lake was formed after the
Illustrado 56
volcano, which used to be larger, collapsed. The ridges around Tagaytay City, overlooking the lake, are believed to be part of the crater of the old volcano. These ridges now serve as the border of the 18-mile-diameter Taal Lake and stretch 32 kilometers.
World’s Richest Marine Park
The Tubbataha Reefs in Sulu Sea is considered as the world's richest bio-geographic area, covering 33,200 hectares and containing what is believed to be the world's largest grouping of marine life, per unit area – with more than 300 coral species, and at least 40 families and 379 species of fish. Among the species identified were manta rays, sea turtles, sharks, tuna, dolphins and jackfish.
World’s Second Deepest
The world's second deepest spot underwater is in the Philippines. The Philippine Deep, otherwise known as Mindanao trench is 34,440 feet (10,497 meters) below the sea level. The Philippine Deep is in the floor of the Philippine Sea. The German ship Emden first plumbed the trench in 1927. The world's deepest part of the ocean is the Marianas Trench, which is over 11,000 meters below the seal level.
Highest Mountain
Towering at a height of 2,954 meters (9,692 feet), Mount Apo is the highest peak in the country. Located 25 kilometers south of Davao City, the mountain which forms part of the Mount Apo National Park is blessed with hot springs, sulfur pillars, geysers, lakes, rivers and waterfalls. It is home to a number of endemic animals such as the Philippine eagle, falconet and mynah. Its peak can be reached on a four-day hiking trip.
World Heritage Sites The World Heritage Committee of UNESCO has designated 754 cultural and natural sites worldwide to make sure that future generations can inherit the treasures of the past. Four of these sites are in the Philippines – the historic town of Vigan in Ilocos Sur province, which is known for its Spanish colonial houses; the Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park in Palawan province, considered as the world's longest underground river; the Tubbataha Reef National Marine Park also in Palawan, home to over 300 coral species and 400 species of fish; and the rice terraces in Ifugao province, which cover about 20,000 hectares of the Cordillera mountain range.
MODEL SEARCH
ARE
YOU THE NEXT
FACE OF
ILLUSTRADO
MAGAZINE?
Illustrado is looking for models, both males and females of all ages. Are you a photogenic Pinoy with a sparkling personality that shines through? Do you love being in front of the camera? Send your close-up and full body picture, as well as your contact details to illustrado@inbox.com You just might have what it takes to be part of our next issue.
Illustrado 57
BOOKS
CD’s
MANILA’S
HOT RELEASES By Jan La’O 25 Tropical Houses in the Philippines by Elizabeth V. Reyes, Paulo Alcazaren A. Chester Ong (Photographer)
Elizabeth V. Reyes’ collection features 25 stunning, modernist and innovatively-designed tropical houses built by a number of outstanding Filipino architects and designers. Take a peek into the beautifully-landscaped courtyards and gracious pavillions of elite homes in Manila and the elegant vacation homes in Batangas and Mindoro. Through the lens of Chester Ong (Tropical Living: Contemporary Dream Houses in the Philippines and China Modern), find a refreshing and inspiring twist to contemporary living in the Philippines way beyond tradition. 100 Questions Filipino Kids Ask by Adarna House and Oishi
Have you ever seen fish sleep or have you ever bathed a cat? Do you know the numbers to call if you want to be an active volunteer in environmental preservation in the Philippines? All the answers to these and more can be found in the most innovative reference book of the year, 100 Questions Filipino Kids Ask. Creativity and fun makes 100 Questions so much different from your average reference book. Kids will love the art activities that come with easy-to-follow instructions, and the interesting illustrations that will tickle their imagination. 100 Questions Filipino Kids Ask is collaboration between Adarna House, Oishi, and 12 schools nationwide.
The 2 In 1 Series
Sandwich, Sony BMG Pilipinas
With the smashing anthem "Sugod mga kapatid…tayo ay magsama-sama…" of their summer hit 'Sugod', there's no doubt that even in their sixth year, Sandwich continues to chomp their way full in the music industry and thrill everyone with their remarkable energy and eclecticism. They may come from different bands but that seems to be their key ingredient, as they become layers to a more cohesive sound. As one critic would put it...Sandwich: more mental than ever.
Silence
Slapshock, EMI Philippines
"We have traded our screams for melodies," Slapshock's frontman Jamir Garcia shares as they bring out their fifth album. But don't you worry; their global standard rock sound is still loaded as can be! Thirteen awesome tracks, with two songs in Pilipino. According to the band, they have grown professionally. And they no longer consider themselves as a rap metal band. The brilliance of the band shines throughout the album's less-lyrics-more-musical-experiment as it promises something "hard, heavy and sing-able." As they break their silence, Slapshock's new sound is another surefire hit.
Positively No Filipinos Allowed: Building Communities and Discourse
(Asian American History & Culture) by Antonio Tiongson, Ricardo Gutierrez, Edgardo Gutierrez
Perspectives on ethnic studies, history, literary criticism, and legal studies, the original essays in this volume examine the ways in which the colonial history of the Philippines has shaped Filipino American identity, culture, and community. The contributors address the dearth of knowledge in the field, as well as show how an understanding of this complex history provides a foundation for new theoretical frameworks for Filipino American studies.
Pinay Power: Peminist Critical Theory by Melinda L. de Jesus
Pinay Power: Peminist Critical Theory is a collection of peminist (Filipina American feminist) cultural criticism by and about Filipina/Americans. Featuring essays by scholars and writers in the fields of decolonization, globalization, and transnationalism, this volume brings together for the first time critical works by Pinays of different generations and varying political and personal perspectives to chart the history of the Filipina experience. This groundbreaking collection serves as an antidote to the overly patriarchal and cultural nationalist stance of both Filipino American and Asian American scholars and is an important corrective to the invisibility of Filipina American voices. This is an essential collection for scholars and writers concerned with cultural and political activism, particularly in literary, Asian American, and women's studies. Relevance
Gary Valenciano, Universal Records
Mr. Energy's latest album Relevance is his first all-original release in three years. There has been a demand from his fans for a new dose of his music. The sound and the vocals are similar to his work in the 80’s and 90’s and people love it. ‘Wait Forever,’ the new album's carrier single, has more of an alternative sound, which departs from his signature style with ballads and dance hits. Even better is a new arrangement of ‘Wag Mo Na Sanang Isipin’ revamped as a duet with his young daughter, Kiana. Iced Out: The Madd World
Various Artists, EMI Philippines
Ritchie Paul Gutierrez, the youngest child of showbiz couple Eddie Gutierrez and Annabelle Rama, has jumped the celebrity bandwagon. He didn't choose the silver screen though but the microphone instead, Ritchie Paul is into hip-hop. And as a rapper, he wants to be known simply as RP. Richard, along with brother Raymond and friends, has established a company called Iced Out to produce the album and RP's hip-hop posse, also known as Iced Out. Together with RP in the album are DJ-Coy and Janno Gibbs plus a few more collaborations with other respected music artists.
Kabilang Mundo
Siakol, Alpha Music
Kabilang Mundo, their seventh album under Alpha Music contains 12 punk-rock tracks that exploit lyrics about life, love and whatever it is that complicates reality. The group is doubly proud of this album simply because this album brings back the original sound of Siakol. A song entitled ‘Gabay’ was composed by one of the members, Noel, for his child who serves as his inspiration. The group also revived their hit song ‘Lakas Tama’ where they experimented with rap and orchestra music. Notable tracks included in Siakol's latest album are ‘Kabilang Mundo, ‘Plastic,’ ‘Nilalang,’ ‘Basted,’ ‘Kwarto,’ ‘Aanhin,’ ‘Kung Walang Ikaw,’ ‘Teka Lang,’ ‘Bidyoke’ at ‘Inihaw.’
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Books available at Powerbooks, Phils. www.powerbooks.com.ph CDs available at Tower Records Phils. www.tower-records.ph
SHOPPING
By Antonella Andrada Photography by Joel Guerrero
Pinoys love a bargain. Well, who doesn’t anyway? And whoever said you have to pay through your nose to look like a million bucks? For folks who haven’t visited the Philippines for the last couple of years, ukay-ukay is a bargain shopping concept which is alive and kicking, and is being patronized both by the peso-conscious and the well-heeled Louis Vuitton fans. The term ukay-ukay comes from the word hukay-hukay, referring to the act of digging through piles of bargain clothing, whether they are second hand (they call them ‘vintage’ in the West!) or surplus stock sold at throw-away prices. For those in the know, even cosmopolitan Dubai has it’s share of ukay-ukay- places where you can get style without maxing-out your credit card. And thankfully, you don’t need to actually dig through dusty piles of clothes, nor do you have to wait for the city’s annual sales season to get hold of some good finds.
Here are some of the city’s best-kept secrets – Adidas Factory Outlets – Branches at Dubai Airport Road, Lamcy Plaza area and Al Wahda Road, Sharjah “Rubber shoes” haven for Adidas, easily an all-time favorite. The basic 3-stripe sneakers is a classic. Over at the Adidas factory outlet, you will find one of the best selections in sports shoes for both adults and kids, at great prices. They also stock tees and sports wear standards. Good to visit if you’re a fitness buff or just plain sporty. Benetton Factory Outlet – Umm Hurair St., Bur Dubai You don’t need to spend much to look preppy and trendy. Get the colorful Benetton look, the young’s fave line of knits, t-shirts, trendy pants and accessories, at Karama-type prices in their factory outlet located at the foot of Maktoum Bridge. Moms can also get their fill of cute kiddie clothes at this store.
Studio R Factory Outlet – Al Quoz All the good stuff from Studio R – past season
items from Union Bay, Roxy, Reebok, Rockport, Quicksilver, Billabong, In-Wear, Matinique, etc. There’s a lot of casual wearables and sports footwear to choose from in this two-storey shop, just close to the 4X4 Motors showroom in Al Quoz. Make sure you have enough time to spare so you can maximize your visit.
Brands for Less – Branches near Bur Juman Center and next to Lamcy Plaza True to ukay-ukay form, you’ll never know what you’re going to get at Brands for Less. It all depends on what stock they have at that given time. Here are great finds in shoes, clothes, for men and women, from Roxxy, XOXO, Liz Claiborne, Esprit, even Ralph Lauren, if you’re lucky. A good combination of high street casual brands and designer classics, that too, at surprisingly low prices. Century 2000, Umm Hurair St. If you love European designer brands, and don’t want to pay hefty fashionista prices, chances are, there’s something at Century 2000 for you. Tops, suits, jeans, jackets, bags and accessories
from famous Gianfranco Ferre, Romeo Gigli, Escada, Iceberg, Dolce & Gabbana and Gucci, to name just a few, generously line the shop. A funky top or pair of jeans can cost a few hundreds bucks versus the thousands you would have to pay in mainstream designer shops. For extra discounts or sale prices, do ask their friendly shopkeeper Rose. So whether you’re a sports fanatic, casual with street cred, or a full-blooded fashionista, there’s something for you in the city’s obscure but priceless discount shops. The only drawback is if you are a stickler for the latest trends, because the city’s ukay-ukay stock is usually, at the least, one season behind. That’s why it’s always best to buy classic timeless pieces. The joy of ukay-ukay is in finding a really great piece of purchase amidst what might seem as dusty-kitschy-old surplus stock. I should know. I found a chic metallic teal Ralph Lauren ladies’ shirt for fifty bucks and it looks, fabulous! Ukay-ukay, anyone?
Illustrado 59
ENTERTAINMENT
Top Suzara: Solo And Back On 'Top' By Jan La’O
One of OPMs hottest singer/songwriter, Top Suzara is on a smashing rebirth. The former lead vocalist and lead guitarist of Freestyle is now flying solo and is still on “top” of his game! People thought Top quit the music scene after disappearing for a while due to problems with his former band. They were wrong. He was simply on hiatus gearing to be back in the industry with a bang. This pure talent who wrote nearly all of his former band's hits, including ‘Before I Let You Go’,‘So Slow,’
IT’S TOLITS! By Carlito Viriña
He’s an inspiration to us all. In the PUV terminal in Hulo, Malabon, where jeepneys plying the Malabon-Obando route line up to take in the regular commuters, a unique scheme was hatched up by the member drivers. Drawing lots for a small flag that says ‘Laging Ako!’ The winner becomes the VIP of the day (or VIJ – Very Important Jeepney – to be more precise). With the flag hoisted up on his vehicle for the day, the winning driver is given the privilege to be first in line, however long the queue, every time he returns to the terminal after a biyahe. “Ako. Ako. Lagi na lang ako!” This famous line from the popular Tide commercial catapulted the boy ‘Tolits’ to instant fame and was the inspiration behind these jeepney drivers’ ingenious bunutan scheme. So who is ‘Tolits’ in real life? He is Bernard Joecel ‘BJ’ Forbes. Born 27 March 1998, in Morong Rizal, to Bernardo and Analiza Forbes, Bernard is the ‘Tolits’ who made these Tide commercials so memorable. A Star is Born Bernard Joecel ‘BJ’ Forbes auditioned for GMA-7’s Starstruck and was discovered by Avelino ‘Baying’ Decena, of Baying Promotions. Decena, who has been discovering talents for three
‘Til I Found You’, and ‘Once In A Lifetime’ among others, has done it again with his solo album ‘Carry On’, where he composed, produced and arranged all 15 tracks.
friends at a corner joint until we couldn't play anymore. Simple lang naman, no plans, just a good time making good music with some good friends at a good place with other good people around.
His sound may differ from his previous work, but his new style is even better. With a bit more edge, he is one alternative pop-rock phenom that will knock your socks off and get you rolling. Just listen to his carrier single ‘Sabihin Mo Na’, a ballad like no other in the local music scene. It just shows how talented and versatile Top is and that he will surely be around for years to come.
What makes you different from all the other new acts in town? Hmmm. Well, I write what I sing and sing what I write. I am the only one who can do it MY way. Plus, the music is like rock, country, new wave, and folk all rolled into one.
What was your worst gig and your best and why? With Freestyle, the worst was when we were not provided the right equipment, and I was not in my best vocal shape. Pero masaya pa din coz of the people! The best was in Cebu - the first time an audience loudly and completely sang my composition ‘Before I Let You Go’. On my own, the worst gig was my first one ever after Freestyle, only because I was a nervous wreck! Then everything fell into place; the fun, the comfort. Lahat fun gigs na, playing with friends, playing music I was more comfortable with, playing new songs I had written and recorded, and hearing people sing with me once again. What's the most ‘rock-n-roll’ thing you've ever done? Picked up a guitar and started playing with some
decades, saw something in the little boy and signed him. “Baying, you have an eye,” film director Peque Gallaga told him once. Some of the nameless faces he discovered are familiar names now. Names like Carmina Villaroel, Dingdong Dantes, Judy Anne Santos, Gladys Reyes, Herbert Bautista, Isabel Granada and Paolo Contis. Managed by Baying, the then 6-year old BJ Forbes (he’s 7 now) was whisked off to countless casting sessions and auditions. One of these is for a Tide commercial
Top three most played songs in your player right now? ‘City Of Blinding Lights’ (U2), ‘Fire and Ice’ (Poison), ‘Angel Eyes’ (Top Suzara, from the ‘Carry On’ album. I wrote this for my Mom and it's now also for my Dad). Other passions aside from singing? I love writing songs, making music, playing my guitar, playing and watching futbol, watching good movies, going to the beach, snorkeling, riding my bike, running, etc! Motto in life? There's nothing like the Golden Rule: Don't do unto others what you wouldn't want them to do unto you. Dream big, work hard, stay humble, keep your feet grounded, ... and pray! Oh, and when things get rough, give thanks; ‘coz it COULD be worse.
Fortunately, stardom hasn’t gone to the young thespian’s head. At their Taytay home, BJ is just your average 7-year-old boy with regular hobbies like playing basketball and swimming. When he’s not shooting a movie, taping shows or appearing in commercials, BJ may be seen catching up with schoolwork at Angelicum, or playing a game of catch with his pet dachshund ‘Dash’ .
From the hundreds of boys who came for the casting call, four were chosen as “possibles”. Though BJ was one of them he was not the agency’s reco to clients. It was director Erik Mati who insisted and fought for BJ to be cast as Tolits. And the rest, as they say, and pardon the cliché, is history. ‘A young Boyet de Leon’ is how Leo Burnett talent caster Junie San Jose, describes BJ. San Jose recalls how focused a professional BJ was, very rare for such a young talent. His success as ‘Tolits’ brought BJ an invitation to be a mainstay in GMA’s ‘Eat Bulaga’and now ‘Etheria’. He has made guest appearances in many TV shows and he starred in the Vic Sotto comedy-thriller movie ‘Espiritista,’ and in Imus Productions’ ‘Exodus’. As if these weren’t enough, BJ a.k.a. ‘Tolits’ was tapped by the government’s Bright Child Program to be its Junior Ambassador of Goodwill.
“Ako. Ako. Lagi na lang ako!” Illustrado 61
FOOD
Kare-
Kare
Food and Nostalgia At fiesta time or a major celebration, our family was like one big food factory with everyone pitching in the preparations. In the midst of all this was my grandfather, Lolo Apeng, wielding his sandok like a conductor with a baton, barking orders to everyone. One of my earliest food memories was when he sat me down in front of a huge mortar and pestle to pound away dry roasted unsalted peanuts for use in kare-kare. I remembered loving the task, instead of treating it like a chore, and was pounding merrily in one corner. That is, until my aunts discovered that I’ve eaten half of the peanuts! They had to consign me to pounding garlic or toasted rice; otherwise they wouldn’t have had enough for cooking. That’s why I remember well all the elaborate steps to do kare-kare. It starts with bagoong. Bearing in mind that Lolo Apeng was a perfectionist at heart, he would insist on the best ingredients we can source. That would mean salting and fermenting freshly caught alamang for bagoong guisado, and roasting dry roasted peanuts usingblack volcanic sand from the barrio’s beach, by ourselves. A lot of the recipes for kare-kare focus only on the dish itself. But people know that the accompanying bagoong guisado plays a crucial part in it as well. If your bagoong is not good
Illustrado 62
By Cecile Samson-Aquino Photography by Mac Antonio
enough it can mar a well-cooked kare-kare and vice versa. So both have to be good. I was lucky enough to receive a can of bagoong guisado last week from my Nanay’s kitchen in Cavite via my sister in Switzerland. And what else do I do with bagoong if there are no green mangoes around? But of course, I have to cook kare-kare.
Kare-kare
1 – 1.5 kg oxtail – cut into 1-2 inch pieces 500 gm ox tripe (optional) about 8 cups water 3 Tbsp oil 2 Tbsp minced garlic 1 1/2 cups chopped onions 1/3 cup annatto/achuete 1 cup ground dry roasted unsalted peanuts or peanut butter 1/2 cup rice – toasted and ground* 250 gm sitaw (long beans) – cut into 2-inch lengths 1 large talong (aubergine) – sliced into serving pieces 4-5 pieces pechay (pak choy) 1-2 Tbsp patis (or to taste)* 1. Cook the oxtail by boiling it in about 8 cups of water until tender (about 1 1/2 hours). Remove ox tail and strain the broth. Set aside. 2. In another saucepan, tenderize the ox tripe separately from the oxtail by adding in just enough water to cover it. Bring to a boil. If needed, change the water from time to time by draining it and adding boiling water to ensure that the tripe would not smell ‘gamey’.
3. Soak achuete seeds in 1 cup of water for about 15 minutes. Mash them between fingers to release the red colouring. Leave for 20 minutes. Strain the mixture and discard the annatto seeds. 4. In a big pot, sauté the garlic gently in oil until light brown in colour. 5. Add in the onion and cook until translucent. 6. Add the oxtail and ox tripe, achuete-colored water, and patis. Bring to a boil. 7. Add the ground peanuts and ground toasted rice. Stir the sauce is consistent. 8. Add 4-5 cups of the reserved broth. Bring to a boil and then simmer for about 10 minutes, stirring from time to time. 9. Mix in the aubergine and long beans. Simmer for 4 minutes. Then add pechay. Cook for another 2 minutes. 10. Add pepper and other seasonings to taste. 11. Remove from heat, put in a dish and serve with bagoong guisado. *Notes: • To toast the raw rice, put the rice in a frying pan and cook/toast it over medium-low heat, shaking the pan from time to time. • Remember that this dish is served with salty bagoong, do not add too much patis or salt. • To keep the veggies from getting soggy, parboil or steam them separately. Add them just before you remove the pot from the heat, or in the serving platter itself. This is especially recommended when you’re serving the dish in a buffet.
FOOD
Sinigang saMiso I spent part of my childhood in Alabang, wherein we often jokingly told people that we lived in Alabang ‘gillage’ – sa gilid ng village (at the edge of the village; referring to the posh residential subdivisions in the area). I have a lot of fond memories there during the time when it was still very green, with a decidedly rural feel about it; a time when Ayala Alabang was still a huge sprawling lush mango grove. I loved walking home from school in the area we used to call the Stock Farm of the Bureau of Animal Industries. There were lots of huge acacia trees lining the road, where it is common to be walking alongside herds of cattle and carabaos. Alabang also sits by the edge of Laguna de Bay whose banks often run over whenever there’s a typhoon. This usually made the fish pens overflow, which meant that the bangus (milkfish) serving time there finally got a chance to escape! The subsequent glut of bangus in the market would translate to the unfortunate scaly runaways gracing our dining table for days on end. One of the different varieties of bangus dishes my mother used to serve during those times is sinigang sa miso. It was one of her firm favourites judging from the frequency it appears on the table. And I can now see the appeal especially on cold days when you need something hot, comforting, smelling and tasting like home.
The miso lends some salty fermented taste and aroma which blends well with the souring agent and the vegetables, of which white radish and mustard leaves are highly recommended. If you do not have these, use any leafy veggies like kangkong (tung choi) or even spinach. You can also try a different spin to this classic dish by using other fish varieties such as salmon or red snapper.
4. Pour in the rice water and bring to a boil. 5. Add in the fish, white radish and chili. Cook on medium heat for 5 minutes. 6. Add the leafy vegetables and souring agent. Simmer for 2 minutes. 7. Add seasonings to taste. *Tips: Use rice water (water used for preparing plain boiled rice) for a richer tasting soup.
Sinigang sa Miso 500 – 700 gm fish (bangus, salmon or red snapper) – scaled, cleaned, and cut into steaks 1 tbsp oil 1 tsp minced garlic 1 medium onion – sliced 3 - 4 medium tomatoes – sliced 3 tbsp miso paste 1 tsp salt 4 - 5 rice water* or water Souring agent (tamarind, lemon and lime, etc.) 1 white radish – peeled and sliced 1 green or red long chili (siling haba) Bunch of leafy vegetables (kangkong, mustard leaves, spinach, etc.) 1. In a medium-sized pot, heat oil and gently sauté garlic then onion until the latter is translucent. 2. Add in tomatoes; cook for 3 minutes or until soft. Mash the tomatoes slightly. 3. Stir in the miso and salt, sauté for a minute.
Cecile Samson-Aquino is a Filipina living in the U.K., who dreams of cooking for a living. Good-natured Cecile, is an avid Pinoy cuisine lover and shares her passion for cooking with other foodies, through the www, blogging as Celia Kusinera @ English Patis http://desarapen.blogspot.com
Illustrado 63
GAHS 5/2006/5
elping the ilipino lourish lobal ision, ative oul
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