Friday, June 29, 2007
a very quick and hazy look at Talisay
the mananga bridge
sunset! why do sunsets are always perfect, even in still shots, i wonder. (panghambug jud, 'day!)
the trike. i just noticed, this part of Talisay is not dark yet to think this is just about 72 meters away from the bridge. just a thought.
ang paligid. i dunno whose place is this, natyempohan lang.
my elementary school. at the back of this particular building is where i was taught Mr. is mister while Mrs. is not misters. diri sad ko giaway sa sister sa akong classmate kay ako man gilista iyang younger sis nga nagkiat. you remember anang lista-lista thingy? mao na sya!
there's an ancient house in this picture, if you watch closer. this is a six-storey building built several decades back. i was told, it even has an entire floor for a library, and an attic occupied by ghosts? i had a friend before who is a great grandson of the owners of this place. sayang lagi di na mi friend ron. hahay!
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Junior Kilat vs. 6 Cyclemind
Last night, this Cebu-based bank proved their point at a mini concert event held at Outpost bar (Nivel Hills, Lahug), that even Budoy would just murmur the lyrics of the song or make some adlibs (I’m not really that familiar of their songs so I wouldn’t know if he—who was dressed like an Igorot/Rastafarian last night—was really serious with his business), the musical instruments and whatever mixes their DJ had that night was so powerful, you could not help but dance even in your seat. I mean, whatever Budoy may say on his mike (even if he will only have: “salmo responsorio, ang atong tubag” as his main line), with the creativeness of their group in coming up with quality reggae music, the band always rocks.
And when 6 Cyclemind finally took the stage, I was already too tired to listen to their noise, I mean, music. Well, maybe I was very close to the amplifiers, that was why I could not distinguish music from noise.
But I really did not like it when most of the audience pretended they did not know what to say after “Hoy, Agta!”
“Gaunsa ka diha?” ra biya na! Hello?
Friday, June 22, 2007
before and after
Photo 1 is my old workplace; photo 2 is my new cubicle. We just moved in to our new building last Monday, and, as you see, the're not much papers yet in the desk. I've already turned over all my documents (sagbot, as referred to my workmates) to the person assigned to keep recycleable papers. Anyway, since I love this new place, I think I want to keep it as neat as possible. Or I don't know. Tan-awn lang.
Saturday, June 16, 2007
introducing the trisikad drivers
I am one of these lazy residents, and for 4 years of commuting to and from my place, I have encountered different types of trisikad drivers. Here they are:
The Mahalon type
There are drivers who think all passengers are rich and daft. One time, I was on my way home from barangay Poblacion, hailed a trisikad and told the driver my destination: Dumlog, that’s just next to Poblacion. I normally give P6, which is actually more than the popular fare of P5 (P3 is the minimum, btw), for this ride. But the driver that day wanted P10 for that trip. Huh! Ten pesos is fine, but to let them have their illegal way is just wonderful! Unsa mo siniswerte??
The slow-mo ride
You pay for a ride because you want to get to your destination quickly. But there are trisikad drivers who don’t want to get there just yet, not at your own bidding, that is. Either they are already tired after long hours of pedaling their bikes or they just love hanging around with you. Either way, it’s never fun, it's even embarassing. I have been in this kind of ride twice. The first time, it took me hours to get to my place because the driver was, I think, too weak to drive his sikad and I did not notice that he was already that when I hailed him. The next time, it was the same driver (the joke was on me, really!), and I only learnt that it was he when his sikad was moving at a very leisurely pace that the people we passed by seemed to be laughing at us. And since everyone in the street was feasting on our predicament, I quickly paid the driver and transferred to another sikad. I think he was really sick or something. Good grief!
The drunk/drugged driver
Since I am not a popular figure in our place because I am not a generous passenger, I have no choice but to go for anyone who is willing to drive me to or from my place. One late night, there was already no sikads in the streets except for one driven by an old man. And this old man agreed to take me to Dumlog. At first, I thought he only had a minor hearing impairment as he could not easily catch my direction. For more than one occasion he stopped at someone’s place to drop me off there without my telling him to. It was on his last stop when I finally decided that the ride would never take me to my home. This last stop was in a dark place where he made an abrupt turn to his right, knocking something off on the ground of someone else’s premises, and finally bumping off that someone else’s door. Ghad, it was a disaster! I got off of course.
The hold-your-breath experience
Riding in a sikad whose driver knows no deodorizing substances is a bad way to start a day. Man, you really can’t tell if a driver smells something or not until you are already seated on his trisikad. And it would be rude to run away after smelling something awful in him, right? So when I am already trapped in this situation, which is on a freaking regular basis, I remember this SCUBA diving breathing technique: breathe with your mouth. This is probably why I learned scuba diving so easily.
The talker
There are some drivers who talk a lot. They tell you their life stories, their experiences as drivers, and even current events in the metropolis that they gleaned from media reports. I actually like hearing them talk. There was one driver I met once, and since then I kept on looking for him since he first brought me to my place one night. He was from Mindanao, was hired as a construction worker for a commercial establishment in my city but when the project was suspended he had to drive for a living. Roughly P150 earning in a day, not much to feed his family that he brought along with him here. Too sad, but pretty interesting story, really. I told him our local government, even if he is not from here, gives financial assistance to anyone who wishes to go back to his own province. I don’t know if he heeded my advice to go to our city hall to avail of this program because I haven’t seen him after that encounter. He was also very nice. There are very few of his kind, I'm still on the lookout.
The good, the bad, the smelly, and the drunk drivers. They are everywhere in my city. If they could blog, too, I wonder to which category they would put me. The chick, the thrift, the crazy, the sick, the lazy, or the smelly. Nyaaa...
Friday, June 15, 2007
Forbe's Top 100 power players
The Celebrity 100:
1. Oprah Winfrey
2. Tiger Woods
3. Madonna
4. Rolling Stones
5. Brad Pitt
6. Johnny Depp
click to view complete list.
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Monday, June 11, 2007
Thursday, June 07, 2007
what goes up, must come down?
For violating her probation, Paris Hilton is now detained in a 12x8 foot cell in LA's Century Regional Detention Facility. And after three days of isolation, reports said she is "in tears all day" and has refused to eat. She's been seeing a shrink, too. Twenty days more to go (if she behaves real well), and everyone is wondering what will happen to this 26-year-old socialite after that.
I don't know if these two cases connect, but we'll see...
After serving a two-year jail term in the US for tax evasion and illegal campaign contributions to former US Pres. Clinton, Mark Jimenez went back to the country in Dec 2005. The former congressman sure did not have a walk in the park while spending those two years in jail despite his vast wealth and influence as once he stepped on the Philippine soil, he has already been reported on a number of occasions to have shown signs of mental problems. Just very recently he locked up his estranged wife in a family-owned mental rehab.
Hum hum!
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
tour de dump
A portion of the nine-hectare facility. I say, kaluoy sa bukid.
Acting imbestigadors. (Dodong Guden of DYRF (L), VLM of Superbalita (Center), Garry Cabotaje of Sunstar (at my right) and Vatski of TF (in cowboy hat).
Testing the air. Hmmm...Pwe! heheh
Chasing the lil scavenger. Alex Badayos (Sunstar) trying to get a good shot of this kid.
Gotcha! I did not have to chase you, baby, 'coz I'm just so tapulan. nyahaha!
Heap hops!
That's clayed dump. That equipment down there, it's doing the job.
Shanty. Where they sleep of course.
See the leaks? Ain't look good. And sure smells no good.
Don't talk of futures here. She should be in school or in a call center, I don't care, just not here.
This one too. Wa kunoy madatu sa pag-eskela. Ahak ni'ng mga bataa!
More pics here.