"In the dark times, will there also be singing? Yes, there will be singing about the dark times." - Brecht

Unbeknownst to strangers who heard him sing in videoke, Crooner KR Guda did not have formal training in music, apart from a brief stint as a bass voice singing "Times of Your Life" during high school. Nowadays, he busies himself writing about politics and culture and studying photojournalism. As a journalist covering human rights issues, he is what can aptly be described by that John Berger quote: "Truly we writers are the secretaries of death." (Thanks to newly-sanctioned poet Teo Marasigan for that one)
Mo'nonymous on Michiko (Reluctantly...
Mo'nonymous on Digging up a half-bu...
achieving happiness
adarna's attic
aparador ni lisa
apartment sa dapitan
awake in the interregnum
bathatula
d adventyurs of brown siopao
essays and other lullabies
grinday
jumpcut
ka-blog!
kapirasong kritika
karl's deviantart
lilypad
luisteodoro.com
malu's blog
mongster's nest
na(g)wawala
necessary agitations
newsroom barkada
over smoke and agitation
prop guide
rebyuhan
silip ni bagwis
the cheeky apartments
the e. san juan jr. archive
the works of edel garcellano
this camera is a curse
to be a woman is to live in a time of war
tonyo
yinsu
today
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
today
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
Murder She Wrought / 23 Nov 05
Little Earthquakes at Roxas Boulevard / 13 Nov 05
Politics, Pop Culture and Leonard Cohen / 22 Oct 05
A Seige of Mendiola / 15 Oct 05
On TV Cops and Lawyers (And On Drawing the Naked Blade) / 12 Oct 05
Arrogance of Writers / 28 Sept 05
Rule of (Martial) Law, Anyone? / 21 Sept 05
Joni's Lonely Road to Freedom / 18 Aug 05
Hindi Basta Gudtaym / 18 Aug 05
Shaping Up Before Shipping (Her) Out / 31 Jul 05
I was in the Office Working the Entire Time Neil Gaiman was in the Philippines / 17 Jul 05
Masa and the Yuppie / 9 Jul 05
A Blogger's Mortal Sin: Infrequent Updating / 2 Jul 05
Beyond Da Vinci (Or the Beginning and End of My Days of Piety) / 7 Jun 05
'Laguardia' of Morality and Status Quo / 29 May 05
Rilke Writes Pimples / 12 May 05
Picking a Fight with the 'great' Sheila Coronel? / 12 May 05
Lurking (A Short Story) / 4 May 05
Ang Katutubo at ang Tubong Sampaloc / 27 April 05
Ay, ay Kordilyera! / 20 Apr 05
Cinema at Divisoria / 14 Apr 05
visited *loading* times
Just came back from the exhumation of an unidentified cadaver of a female in Labrador, Pangasinan. It is the same body that Linda Cadapan, mother of missing student activist Sherlyn, suspects may be that of her missing daughter’s. The trip lasted for four hours from Manila to Labrador, a small town north of Lingayen. It is one of those rows of houses you may pass by in Pangasinan on your way to Baguio. The folks were certainly surprised at the sudden attention given to their small town today. As our convoy of vehicles rolled onto their streets, the Labrador people lined up the sidewalks, curiously delighted, as if some sudden good fortune had befallen their sleepy town. Vehicles from two television stations followed, piquing the locals’ interest even further.
Read further:
Reportage etc.
What a way to celebrate Women's Month.
I received a rather indignant email from Karl recently regarding a film premiere in the UP Film Institute in celebration of the Women's Month. On March 8, which is the International Women's Day, and the very day the women under Gabriela march from Welcome Rotonda to Plaza Miranda to denounce fellow-woman President Arroyo's supposed anti-women policies, the UP Film Institute is scheduled to premiere "Seksing Pinay."
The film, which is a montage of deleted / censored film splices of sex scenes from various films, is labeled a "welcome twist" to the Women's Month celebration, says the institute's media release. It says further:
"Narrated by Roy Alvarez, the unique big-screen engagement weaves together deleted footage from films topbilled by bold stars spanning three decades to examine the phenomenon of sex in the movies and the depiction of women in sex-oriented roles. Project director is Armando Reyes with consultant Cesar Aquino and editing supervisor Jeff de Vera. Screening is strictly for mature audiences. "
Karl, who is also a fledging filmmaker and was once at odds with some of the Film Institute's officials over his thesis defense (it had nothing to do with the Institute; the officials were panelists in his thesis defense), likened "Seksing Pinay" to "Sex in Philippine Cinemas", which came out commercially on DVD sometime last year. I saw bits of the latter myself (a copy of it was lying around in a place I was staying around last year) -- "Sex in Philippine Cinemas" is likewise a montage of sex scenes from various films. They were not deleted or sensored scenes; just sex scenes.
Although its title sounds a bit like that of an academic paper (I half-expected a subtitle that reads: "A scholarly look at sex in cinema..." or something), the DVD is obviously made to titillate. Bold flicks during the 70s and the TF (Titillating films) during the 90s did just that, but at least they bothered to lace the sex with corny plots (e.g., a film called "Itlog" had an egg factory as its setting). "Sex in Philippine Cinema", as well as "Seksing Pinay", I presume gets rid of the plots and gets down to the business of titillating.
TFs and bold flicks were said to have thrived during repressive periods -- horny people were less likely to be involved in politics and activism than sexually-mature ones. "Seksing Pinay" seems to be right along that grand old tradition of selling sex in movies. I do not have to say what an insult it is to women that such a film -- if that indeed is what I assume it to be, for there is a slim chance it might really be an academic treatise on sex in cinema after all -- will be shown on Women's Day itself.
Here is our statement of support for Jerrie Abella, current Collegian editor-in-chief and candidate for USC Chairperson in the University of the Philippines-Diliman. Tomorrow is the election.
One Tough Editor
Running the Philippine Collegian is one thankless job. Aside from the nerve-wracking, pressure-packed pressworks that writers and artists deal with on a weekly basis, its editors are burdened with almost impossible, inhuman expectations. The least that they have to be worried about are the rules of grammar (in both languages), which they are assumed to have firm grasp of. They are required by the job to have extraordinary acuity and keenness in analyzing social, political and cultural events. Equally as important, of course, editors have to have a fully developed creative imagination, not to mention, impeccable taste.
It is undeniably one of the most demanding jobs on campus, where mere mortals fear to tread.
It does not surprise us, therefore, that one of Collegian’s editors – current editor-in-chief, no less – has decided to tread the path of campus politics. He is on familiar ground, for sure. He is vying for one job where his wit and intelligence, superior leadership skills, creative imagination and, well, impeccable taste, can be put to best use.
We are talking, of course, about Jerrie Abella.
As an astute observer of campus politics for many years, Jerrie has acquired an encyclopedic knowledge of its ins and outs. Trained as a news reporter, he has interviewed and conversed with university administrators and professors, instructors and employees, residents and students – stakeholders all in the business of running a student council.
Anyone familiar with how a usual Collegian presswork grinds out knows how tough one must be to be able to go through the entire process with his or her sanity intact. From planning the issue to going through the rigorous editing to the painstaking laying out of the pages, Jerrie has successfully led one of the best Collegian pool of editors, writers and artists in years. This feat is due in no small measure to Jerrie’s leadership.
Make no mistake, too: Jerrie is also an impassioned activist. His heart has always been in the right place – the Collegian’s advocacies are testament to that. During the last school year, Jerrie was among the editors who assiduously fought administration intervention in the paper’s fiscal affairs while coming up with creative ways to deliver the news to the students. The Collegian’s past term and the current one were also most valiant in exposing and criticizing the utter underhandedless with which the UP administration passed the tuition hike. Jerrie’s term has also kept vigil of updates on the whereabouts of missing UP students Sherlyn Cadapan and Karen Empeño, as well as other disappeared victims of state fascism.
It goes without saying, too, that the Collegian under his term has been most passionate in bringing to the student fore national issues, from demolition of urban poor communities to the national movement to oust the sitting President.
Jerrie has also been actively involved with the College Editors Guild of the Philippines and Solidaridad, the UP System-wide Alliance of Student Publications and Writers’ Organizations – of which he is the Secretary General – organizing national conventions and meetings for skills training, building and sustaining networks for the promotion of campus press freedom and advocacy journalism.
We have to admit, though: Jerrie is biased. But only because he favors seeing social problems from the point-of-view of the majority of poor and dispossessed Filipinos. He is biased for the students, and makes sure that every ink that he pens will reflect its objective interests and aspirations. He is biased for what is true. Yes, as a journalist, he is obliged to be objective and fair, and the pages of the Collegian in many ways reflect that. But more than being an observer, Jerrie is an activist and a student leader. More than being a mere chronicler of events, he is completely engaged in the conflict of our times.
Fortunately for us, he is on our side.
This coming election, we, former Philippine Collegian editors, urge you to vote JERRIE ABELLA, for chairperson of the University Student Council.
Signed:
Jayson DP Fajarda, Editor in Chief, 2004-2005
Ellaine Rose A. Beronio, Editor in Chief, 2002-2003
Kenneth Roland A. Guda, Features Editor, 2000-2001
Lisa Cariño Ito, Associate Editor, 2000-2002
Margaret P. Yarcia, Features Editor, 2006-2007
Katrina Angela R. Macapagal, Associate Editor, 2006-2007
Joan ME Salvador, Associate Editor, 2002-2003
Kendrick T. Bautista, Graphics Editor, 2004-2005
Divina Nova Joy D. Dela Cruz, News Editor, 2003-2005
Rouelle T. Umali, Graphics Editor, 2006-2007
Jeeu Christopher A. Gonzales, Culture Editor, 2006-2007
Wendell M. Gumban, News Editor, 2004-2005