Thursday, October 15, 2015

The highs and lows of OPM

The highs and lows of OPM


Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

COVER VERSIONS -- songs made famous by one singer that are remade by another -- are the trend in the music scene here and abroad. So it comes as no surprise that yet another album of covers has come out. This time though, the album offers more than the usual rehash.

Tunog Natin! Songs from Home, which was launched on Oct. 13, offers new twists, new tempos, and new rhythms by new artists on classic, original Pilipino music (OPM) like Francis M.’s “Kaleidoscope World,” Eraserheads’ “With a Smile,” and Regine Velasquez’ “Tuwing Umuulan,” among others.

Actor and singer Markki Stroem, for instance, made “Kaleidoscope World” jazzier, slower, and sexier. The other singers on the album of remakes are Princess Velasco, Thor Dulay, and Moira Dela Torre.

Jonathan Ong, who has written and arranged original songs for Maja Salvador, Gloc 9, and Abra, arranged the tracks in the album.

“OPM is reinventing,” he told BusinessWorld. “We are calibrating. Everyone is learning how to publish and distribute. We are more open and more diversified.”

He has nothing against covers, which is one facet in OPM reinvention -- he said he likes them. “But I also encourage artists to come up with original songs, unless we want to recycle forever and ever,” he said.

ROLES AND CHALLENGES
The new album is all about living.

“It is the soundtrack of your life phases: first kiss, longing, working abroad, friendship, family, etc. Dapat it evokes a feeling of personal experience,” said the album’s creative consultant and music icon Jim Paredes. Together with the Bloomfields band, he did the cover of “Tuloy Pa Rin Ako,” originally by Side A.

“I think the role of OPM is to induce an experience from somebody in Aparri and somebody in Jolo,” he said. “When you hear a certain song, [it’s like] yes!”

The question is, how viable is it to produce an album today considering the steep competition from online music sites like Spotify and iTunes? Mr. Ong said it is actually not viable to produce an album at all. Which is why he said they are thankful to Avida Land, which produced the album in line with its mission of promoting Filipino heritage.

Physical albums are competing against the invisible and invincible. “Now there’s mp3, replication, and piracy. As artists, we can feel that impact. Every time you want a song, you can torrent it. But what about respect to the artist and the songwriter?” said Mr. Ong.

In the day of digital replication, the physical CD is almost gone, he said. “Nakikita mo ’yung record bars natin unti-unting nawawala. One day mawawala na lahat ’yan. One day isang click na lang. (You can see that the record bars are slowly disappearing. One day they will all be gone. One day, all it will take is a click.) What does that mean in supporting our national identity? Where will it go? This is a reminder that we should celebrate tunog Pinoy (the Filipino sound),” he said.

OPM EVOLUTION
This is why OPM should heed the signs of the times and keep on reinventing the wheel. But to be truly successful in the long run, “we have to come in as Filipinos, before anything else,” Mr. Paredes said

“I mean that’s how the Koreans and the Brazilians and everybody else have done it. The more we write Filipino songs for Filipinos, the more we hit the international market. Nobody paid attention to K-pop until they were selling 500,000 copies in South Korea. We cannot come in sounding like LA or anything like that. We have to come in as we are. Music is a come-as-you-are party. No dress code,” he said.

“Look at the choir competitions -- there is where OPM succeeds. You hear a Czechoslovakian choir singing ‘Bituing Walang Ningning,’ a Korean choir singing ‘Bayan Ko.’ How did they know that? Because Philippine choirs competed against them and we won. [That’s why] we should come in as ourselves,” he said.

The Philippines is not short on talent, said Mr. Paredes, but on appreciation and pride.

“The more people realize the success formula -- which is to be yourself -- the more we’ll succeed. We have a lot of great singers like Leah Salonga… but they don’t sing OPM to the world,” said Mr. Paredes, who is a writer, a producer, and a photographer, but is best known as a member of APO, the successful OPM band that popularized multitude of songs like “Panalangin,” “Batang Batang Ka Pa,” “Awit ng Barkada,” and “Pumapatak Na Naman ang Ulan,” among others.

He said there are two elements to music: the hardware, which is the voice, the singer, the recording; and the software, the content. “Dapat, content provider tayo (We should be content providers). Right now, hardware tayo, we have good singers. What we need is to give total support to OPM,” he said. 

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Watches that read the weather and tell you where you are

Watches that read the weather and tell you where you are



Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

THE JAPANESE value time. They come at least 10 minutes early to a date or a meeting. Their high-speed bullet trains arrive and leave on the dot. Always ahead when it comes to technology and innovation, the Japanese can easily check the time on their smartphones -- but nothing beats an old-school analog or digital watch, especially when it is both stylish and functional.

CASIO’S G-Shock Mud Master
Casio watches are often top of the mind whenever people think of a Japanese watch brand. It is unsurprising, after all the brand is the most popular and most used watch in the Land of the Rising Sun (the first Casio electronic wristwatch was launched in 1974). From kids and teens to young professionals and the retired, Casio watches cater to all ages and aesthetics.

Despite the notorious Filipino time, the Philippines also has a thing for Casio watches. The G-Shock series is among the best-sellers in the country, its popularity leading to widespread imitations which, though cheaper, might not last as long as the real thing.

Still, thanks to its popularity locally, the Philippines was chosen as the location for Casio’s second G-Factory Premium store outside of Japan -- the first opened in Singapore two years ago -- with the shop opening on Sept. 29 at Greenbelt 5.

The shop carries the Mr-G series, an upgraded take on Casio designs, known to be classic and austere. Its design was meant for men -- according to General Manager Atsushi Yamaoka, it was inspired by the traditional Japanese helmet -- but women are welcome to wear it. 

Thanks to its full metal casing, the watch is shock-resistant. Mr-G also has global positioning system (GPS) technology for accurate time reading -- the time automatically resets when one changes time zones.

A limited edition series, only two pieces from the Mr-G series will be sold in the Philippines.

Then there is the Gulfmaster series, also under the G-Shock collection. Its design is more rugged and rougher than the classic Mr-G, and it can predict weather changes thanks to its triple sensors for measuring direction, altitude, temperature, and atmospheric pressure -- useful considering the Philippines’ changeable weather.

Also included among the lines sold at the Greenbelt 5 store is the Mudmaster, which, as the name implies, is mud and sand resistant. 

“Each timepiece is designed to represent the pinnacle of the popular G-Shock series, combining advanced technology with excellent craftsmanship and attention to detail to produce watches that are as tough as they are eye-catching,” said Mr. Yamaoka, who noticed the timepiece this writer was wearing: a vintage gold watch. You’ve guessed it -- it’s from Casio.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

PR: Truth or Spin?

PR: Truth or spin?

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
While the perpetual crusade of the marketing industry is “truth in advertising,” a key criticism of marketers, advertisers, and public relations (PR) practitioners is that they are propagandists and panderers. “Spin doctors,” they are often called.
Take this classic example. A commercial photo of a hamburger looks appetizing on the menu. But when the waiter brings it to your table — alas — on the plate is a flat, sad, and bland burger. Whatever happened to the pretty picture?
“Let me call it ‘creative license.’ Food should always be appetizing. When a customer goes to a restaurant, and the photo does not match what is on the table, you have every right to get disappointed. So what do you do?” asked ABS-CBN head for corporate communications Ramon “Bong” Osorio, who is also the president of the Public Relations Society of the Philippines (PRSP).
The PRSP, a non-profit organization of the leading PR practitioners in the country founded in 1957, held its 22nd National Public Relations Congress on Sept. 24. The theme of the convention went back to what should be the basic and core practice of public relations: authenticity.
“A lot of people will resent [falsehood] knowing that a lot of us in the industry follow the truth in doing. Maybe there are some deviations, but at the end of the day, in the long run, if you’re telling a lie you are not going anywhere,” said Mr. Osorio.
“Authenticity could only be proven over time,” he added.
Before going further, it is important to explain the differences between public relations (PR), marketing, and advertising. Marketing is the big umbrella, the process through which goods and services move from concept to the customer and includes the identification, selection and development of a product; the determination of its price; the selection of a distribution channel, and the development and implementation of a promotional strategy. Part of the promotional strategy is advertising which is defined as the activity of producing information for promoting the sale of commercial products or services. PR focuses on creating and maintaining goodwill of an organization’s various publics (customers, employees, investors, suppliers, etc.), usually through publicity and other nonpaid forms of communication. (Definitions fromwww.businessdictionary.com.) All three — marketing, advertising, and pubic relations — are supposed to have the same goal: to communicate a credible and truthful image to the public.
WHAT IS AUTHENTIC?
These days, when technology and social media seem to rule the world, competition in advertising has become tougher. Successfully selling something — and sometimes just surviving — is increasingly difficult. With this, marketers and public relations practitioners (PRs) resort to a multitude of communication strategies to convey their message, and with this comes the danger of false and shallow marketing.
“More than PR posturing or kowtowing to political correctness,” Mr. Osorio said truth in advertising engages, and almost promises, long-term success for a company.
According to the CustomerThink web site, 90% of customers who are satisfied with a brand are more likely to share their good experience with friends and online. Meanwhile, Mark de Joya of McCann Worldgroup Philippines, said 81% of customers will share their bad experiences online and with friends.
“[Successful PR/advertising communication] starts with a commitment with the truth,” said Mr. de Joya at the conference. McCann is the creative company behind a number of popular commercials that tug at one’s heart strings including Coca-Cola’s #ShareACoke campaign, where Pinoy names are printed on softdrink bottles; Biogesic’s “Ingat” commercial with actor John Lloyd; and Jollibee’s Jollitown, which teaches kids values and education.
“People rewarded clever work, but it has changed over the last 20 years. Gone are the days of a 30-second commercial and an expected brand recall,” he said, “A survey among youth consumers asked them what brands they want. Most of the answers was Google, because it’s the purveyor of truth — and that’s what the PRs want to embrace.”
He said there is seemingly no absolute formula for achieving timeless brand recall, but promoting authenticity is a key ingredient.
“It’s not a question about creating a balance between marketing and sincerity. The question is how embedded is sincerity in marketing? They should be as one,” he said.
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THE PR AND THE PUBLIC
This is where the PR practitioners come into the picture, because they stand between a company and the public.
There are two kinds of PRs in an agency: those in media relations who, obviously, deal with the media, and the account executives who deal with the clients. Different agencies vie for a contract/deal with companies which seek PR agencies to both groom their image with the public and inform consumers — via the media — of their products, corporate profiles, or social responsibility pursuits, explained one PR-media relations practitioner.
A contract with an agency like Ogilvy, Havas, Agatep, Green Bulb, Bridges, Stratworks, Virtusio, and Geisermaclang, among others, can range from a few thousand to several million pesos, depending on how big the client is and how long is the contract is for.
A contract can include the release of exclusive features in newspapers, and holding press conferences, media launches, and roundtable discussions, among others. For instance, if a company wants to promote a new product, it may budget, say, P5 million in a year for publicity and grooming. Successful branding and imaging then depends on the PR agencies.
There are basic principles when creating a successful content, said Kankan Ramos-Lim of Havas Media Ortega, a PR agency. She said campaigns should be compelling, consistent, relevant, inspiring, de-cluttered, and target market-oriented.
“A successful media content should facilitate exchange of stories among a community,” she said at the convention.
Content should foster discourse among the target audience. In a way, PR practitioners are both mediators and narrators.
“Like journalists, PR practitioners are also storytellers,” said Leah Huang, the managing director of the PR department of Ogilvy Philippines, who has been in the industry for 28 years. Ogilvy handles various companies including The Medical City, Microsoft Philippines, Zalora, and L’Oreal.
“While we are contracted by our clients to send an awareness of their public image and perception, we have a responsibility both to our clients and to the public. The message that we tell should always be truthful,” she said.
Grace Antonio, the media relations supervisor of Grupo Agatep agency agrees. “As a PR practitioner, we value our client and, of course, the greater public. It should be beneficial to both. To quote my boss, PR guru sir Charlie Agatep, ‘PR is essentially storytelling.’ We need print, radio, TV, and digital media platforms to convey the clients’ stories to fast-moving target publics,” she said.
Agatep handles the PR needs of companies like Warner Bros., Emirates airline, Grab Taxi, and Grab Car, among others.
“Good PR work is not about sugar coating the truth. It is about diplomacy and finding the most persuasive way to get what you need. I always feel like a general negotiating for terms of surrender,” said Dessa Joyce Virtusio, vice-president for account management of Virtusio PR Inc. “[I] am never faced with the best choices, I always just strive for the scenarios with the least casualties. It is a very important skill that most PR professionals must learn.” She handles Manulife, Globe, and Wattpad, among others.
PEOPLE’S CHOICE
Credit must be given to the consumers. Mr. Osorio said critical consumers look for authenticity and social consciousness among a bombardment of brands pleading to be patronized.
“I always believe you [give] credit back to the consumer, because you [the consumer] have the power to discontinue any trust, commitment, or support. You have a choice,” he said. He likens it to watching television shows. “You have the power of the remote. Go to another station that will give you the joy you’re looking [for].”
Mr. Osorio answered his own question on what the public should do if a marketing message is misleading.
“The only thing you can do there, aside from not believing what is shown to you, is to walk away and not return. I think that’s the best punishment for untruthfulness.”

Are You Healthy? Get a Free Checkup This Weekend

Are You Healthy? Get a free checkup this weekend

Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
MYTH 1: THERE’S A PILL FOR EVERY ILL.
There’s no cure for every disease, said former Department of Health former Secretary Alfredo R.A. Bengzon in a forum on Oct. 1 at The Medical City (TMC), “but preventive health care is still the way to go.” Alas, it is common practice in the Philippines for the majority of doctors prescribe a drug during consultations, when it shouldn’t be so. The 1991 Ramon Magsaysay awardee for governance, who is also TMC’s president and chief executive officer, said that they’re trying to change that way of doing things. What is more important is to establish a good relationship between a patient and a doctor so the patient feels at ease when it comes to sharing information about his or her health conditions. The doctor does not necessarily have to prescribe drugs at every check up.
According to TMC director Dr. Eugenio Jose F. Ramos, sometimes husbands get angry with their wives who divulge their partner’s health problems when it’s necessary for the doctors to hear the full story.
He said it’s important to have a transparent, tell-all relationship between doctors and patients.
MYTH 2: WITH OLD AGE COMES MANY KINDS OF SICKNESS.
It is not necessarily true that with old age comes ill health, the doctors said.
Just because one is old does not mean he or she is bound to be sickly and frail. “Health should be an investment,” said Dr. Bengzon. Anyone can be healthy even in old age, he added.
Common mistake: Filipinos are guilty of skipping regular checkups unless a glaring symptom is present.
Dr. Ramos noted that the majority of the Filipinos consider the annual checkups companies conduct for their employees a nuisance. “We are [bothered by] forced checkups. A lot of us never bother to go to a doctor without any symptoms,” he said.
“Health is central to human life. We need to dramatize it if we want to debunk myths and to change outcomes, which result to behavior change,” said Dr. Bengzon.
With the goal of empowering Filipinos to be more proactive when it comes to their health, TMC is launching its Be Healthy Always campaign, which will offer free checkups and consultations on Oct. 10 and 11 at the Activity Center of the TriNoma mall in Quezon City.
There will be 10 to 12 doctors in six hubs: cardiology, ophthalmology, pediatrics, wellness, gynecology, and obstetrics.
“Prevention should be integrated into all aspects of our lives. The overarching goal of this movement is to increase the number of Filipinos who are healthy at every stage of their life,” said Dr. Bengzon.
While the kick-off campaign initially targets Metro Manila (according to Dr. Ramos, more than 50% of doctors in the Philippines practive within the megalopolis), it is planned that the Be Healthy Always campaign be a continuous process, with the two doctors saying they are calling more partners in order for it to go nationwide and have a long run. 

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Heneral Luna: A Cinematic Revolution

HENERAL LUNA: a cinematic revolution

By Zsarlene Chua, Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman, Joseph Garcia 
UNLIKE THE BLOODY assassination scene where katipuneros shoot and stab the lead character to death, Heneral Luna — the film — fought back and triumphed. The bio-pic was on the verge of being pulled from theaters before making a successful comeback, thanks to social media.
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Produced by Artikulo Uno Productions, Inc., the film opened on Sept. 9 in 100 cinemas nationwide, dropping to 70 in the days that followed. Clearly, it wasn’t getting enough attention. The major theater companies in the country had to pull out the movie after the first few days to give way for more lucrative foreign films like The Maze Runner: Scorch Trials.
When the number of cinemas dwindled to 40, Heneral Luna’s cast, crew and production staff turned to social media to plead: please keep film in the theaters. The effort worked. By its third week, it was again being screened in 100 cinemas, and the film — made for P80 million — has grossed over P163 million (as of Sept. 30).
Heneral Luna has also been chosen to represent the country in the Best Foreign Film category at the Oscars in 2016.
‘A CULTURAL PHENOMENON’
It was in 1998 when Philippine cinema last saw a successful film based on a National Hero. Jose Rizal, directed by Marilou Diaz-Abaya, was an entry in the Metro Manila Film Festival. The P80-million film starring Cesar Montano was the most expensive historical film at that time. It grossed P90 million.
It turns out that 1998 was a good year for heroes — that was also the year Eduardo Alfredo “E.A.” Perez Rocha, along with Henry Hunt Francia, wrote a script telling the story of a contemporary of Rizal, Antonio Luna — a revolutionary general considered one of the most brilliant Filipino military officers during the Filipino-American war (1899-1902). It chronicles the events leading up to Luna’s assassination.
The script, written in English, languished unmade for 17 years before young director Jerrold Tarog (Senior Year, Cinemalaya’s Sana Dati) came into the picture. Tarog went on to revise the script and translate it into colloquial Tagalog — he wanted Heneral Luna to speak to as many audience members as possible — and two years later the film was made.
Tarog’s script avoids the use of “high” Filipino and offers the occasional comic relief — e.g. when Heneral Luna, (played by actor John Arcilla) trying to tell a British train conductor that he was comandeering his train, gives up and tells his men, “Puñeta! Hulihin niyo na ’yan; nauubusan ako ng Ingles” (Arrest that fellow already; I have run out of English).
Luna, as portrayed in this film, is as flawed as the quintessential Shakespearean tragic hero — for all his being a good general, he also had a foul mouth and a hair-trigger temper which didn’t make him popular among his contemporaries.
These flaws humanized Luna and made him a character worthy of sympathy, said Mr. Rocha in a phone interview with BusinessWorld.
Mr. Rocha, who has producer and screenwriter credit in the film, talked about the public’s reaction to Heneral Luna — “It’s a cultural phenomenon. I’ve never seen anything like it… I get very emotional. The commitment the people are giving the movie. I don’t think it’s precedented — it’s unprecedented.”
HENERAL
ORTIGAS TO THE RESCUE
Much of the challenge in producing Heneral Luna was not in the casting or the script, but, not surprisingly, in obtaining the funds needed to fuel the production. Everything fell into place when Filipino-Spanish businessman Fernando “Nando” Ortigas came to the rescue, said Mr. Rocha. He agreed to finance the movie and shelled out P70 million (the original budget, according to Mr. Rocha, was P40 million, including marketing and post-production, but additional scenes and weather-related problems pushed up the price).
“Forget the money, in these trying times, our country needs awakening,” he said on Facebook.
(Mr. Ortigas makes a cameo appearance in the film, in a dinner party that Emilio Aguinaldo — played by Mon Confiado — throws for the upper crust.)
“I knew Mr. Ortigas well but I didn’t know he was going into film,” said Mr. Rocha, “What Mr. Ortigas said is that he wanted [his first venture into film] to be perfect… let’s get it right. We wanted a product we want to be proud of.”
The film had an advanced screening in New York on Aug. 30 partly to generate buzz as it paved the way for US screenings in October in New York, New Jersey, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco.
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CALCULATED MOVE
Heneral Luna stirred a revolution on social media. According to reports, SM cinemas in Lanang and Davao, among many others, have started screening the movie again, thanks to the clamor of the moviegoers on their social media accounts.
But inasmuch as the social media marketing may seem unintentional, viral and surprising, it was part of a carefully calculated move by the movie’s team.
“It was low-key but was an effective campaign,” said Mr. Rocha, before adding that while much of the social media buzz surrounding the film when it was first released was “deliberate,” “if the film was bad, it wouldn’t have worked.”
“The social media [and digital marketing] campaign is not at all informal. I have a whole team who has been working on that for months beforehand,” associate producer and marketing coordinator Ria Limjap said during a phone interview.
Mr. Rocha pointed out that the production company, Artikulo Uno (named after the article in the revolutionary constitution Luna invokes that threatens death for disobedience) spent eight months preparing for the “low-key but effective” campaign.
The Heneral Luna social media accounts show the effects of the campaign with 189,385 likes on Facebook, 6,392 fans on Instagram, 3,243 followers on Instagram, and 15,704 hash tags on #HeneralLuna, and the numbers are still growing.
“The film is powerful, and people responded… and that one, we could never have predicted, but we were prepared to market on all the platforms,” said Ms. Limjap.
Of course, the film also relied on the traditional marketing methods — billboards and ad spots on TV “a few days before the film was going to show.”
“We chose the timing very carefully, and we chose the programs carefully [because] we didn’t have a huge budget for that. So we had to be really judicious,” she said. “This [was] all in the first week. We wanted enough noise for the first week for the people, the influencers, those who were ahead of the curve, to go and watch it on the first week, and start talking about it.”
More than the billboards and the commercials, word-of-the-mouth helped the movie rally in the cinemas, where moneymaking films like the Hollywood productions are prioritized over indies.
“Market forces will dictate: for the cinemas, it’s money,” said Ms. Limjap, “so when the cinemas saw the demand, they naturally had to bring [the film] back.”
“We always knew that word-of-mouth would be the selling point of the film. We created a campaign that would generate word-of-mouth,” she pointed out.
SCHOOL TOURS AND FORUMS
It started with school tours. The team showed a 10-minute preview of the film to students and teachers.
“Then, we followed it up with a forum about history and heroism,” said Ms. Limjap. “We also showed the film to a lot of teachers, because we wanted educators to know that it was coming out.”
The production team then turned to books.  The biography The Rise and Fall of Antonio Luna by Dr. Vivencio Jose, on which the film is based, was used by the team for marketing, albeit in a different, more palatable format. It had been long been out of print, so, “Instead of reprinting that book, we interviewed [Dr. Jose] at the National Museum, in front of the Spoliarium, and we basically did a short book that’s easy to read for students,” said Ms. Limjap
(The 1884 painting — created by General Luna’s brother Jose Luna — makes a “cameo” in the film. The end of the scene of the assassination of Heneral Luna and his right hand, Colonel Franciso “Paco” Roman [Joem Bascon] is practically a tableau of the Spoliarium, which depicted the bloody carnage of gladiator matches in Rome.)
This Internet-based campaign, however, was not created out of a desire to be fresh or young, but born of necessity. Asked if Heneral Luna’s campaigning methods are the new way to go, and if mainstream movies should take a leaf from their book, Ms. Limjap responded, “We did what we did because we’re not mainstream media. I mean, if you’re a Star Cinema movie and you have the backing of your network… and you get three guesting spots and you get free ad time, why would they have to do what we did?”
“Their methods work very well, obviously,” she said, citing films by actors Vice Ganda and Piolo Pascual.
“They make a lot of money… so mainstream media is still the way to go — if you can afford it; if you have access to it. But if you don’t, then you have to be creative and out-of-the-box.”
The success of the film, all thanks to its marketing campaign, is something that Ms. Limjap is proud of.
“It’s very nice and gratifying to see a film unify the Filipino audience. There’s a lot of good Filipino cinema that goes unnoticed because they don’t have the proper venue to show it.”
THE TARGET: STUDENTS
More than anyone, Heneral Luna targets the youth.
“We knew from the beginning that our target market would be the student,” said Ms. Limjap. “We knew that when we got the R-13 rating from Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB),” she said.
To encourage students to watch the film, ticket prices were offered at 50% off for students. It was Mr. Ortigas’ idea.
“He said, ‘let’s make it easy for them, and give them 50% off’,” Ms. Limjap said, “I think it’s unprecedented. I don’t think any Filipino film has given such a discount to students.”
The 50% discount ended earlier this week.
While the movie has already grossed P163 million, this is still short of its P200 million break-even mark — but then again, it’s not about the money, said the producers.
“Of course we want to break even. A period film is expensive,” said Ms. Limjap, but on the other hand, “it’s not so much to make a profit. I think it speaks of our executive producer’s desire to show the film to the right market.”
Mr. Rocha said while Mr. Ortigas does want to get his money back, “he’s not in a hurry.”
Depending on which cinemas students were going to, the tickets costs only P93, which enticed students to go back two or three times, added Ms. Limjap.
And thanks to the film, they may start brushing up on their history — something they need to do based on some of the questions asked on social media. Some students turned to social media to ask why Apolinario Mabini was always seated. “Was he tired?,” was one clueless question. (Actor Epy Quizon, who portrayed the polio-stricken paraplegic first Prime Minister of the Philippines, never stood up in the film.) Others asked whether the death of Antonio Luna was the inspiration for the Spoliarium — the painting was done in 1884 and General Luna died in 1899.
Artikulo Uno plans to do school tours and screen the film in “remote areas that don’t have theaters near them” immediately after their theatrical run to ensure the longevity of the film, said Mr. Rocha.
“We’re trying to find the soul of our nation again. Since we’re all fragmented as a people, this movie did something that’s different, in one brief shining moment, in the darkness of cinema, Filipinos found nationhood,” said Mr. Rocha before adding that the timing couldn’t be better as in a year’s time Filipinos will again be given a chance to choose their leaders, and the lessons from the film are worth keeping in mind when thinking about the future of the country.
Looking forward, Mr. Tarog wants to pursue a film trilogy about Filipino heroes, to “paint a rounder portrait of [Emilio] Aguinaldo. No villains, just humans.”
“I believe we have no villains in our movie. We wrote it very carefully. They [the heroes] had their own motivations, they all had their reasons,” Mr. Rocha added as the film seems to put Aguinaldo in a bad light.
Transportation Secretary Joseph Emilio Aguinaldo Abaya, the great-grandson of President Emilio Aguinaldo, did agree with how the film portrays his ancestor, according to an article published on ABS-CBN’s news website.
He said he didn’t think Luna was assassinated. Nonetheless, Mr. Abaya said in the interview that he is encouraging his children to watch the film.
But then again, according to Mr. Tarog, movies are medium of omission. “In the realm of pop entertainment especially, you take away as much as necessary for the sake of conciseness.”
Like many superhero films, Heneral Luna has a scene tacked on at the end that suggests a sequel, this one featuring the hero of Tirad Pass, the boy general Gregorio del Pilar (played by Paulo Avelino).
“It’s interesting to see the awakening of patriotism in a boy, but he did die a hero,” said Mr. Rocha of Del Pilar. After Del Pilar, a film on President Manuel L. Quezon will follow, and “who knows, we may even have a Mabini one.”
Aside from the trilogy, Mr. Rocha said that they are planning to create a film adaptation of the graphic novel Mythology Class by Arnold Arre and a film called Bliss.
Hopefully, these projects will also get the support of moviegoers.
“I think what we have to work on is developing an audience. How can you develop an audience if you keep feeding them junk?,” said Ms. Limjap. “You really have to offer something of quality because you respect the audience, and that you know the audience is not stupid, and that they will watch it, because it appeals to them on other levels.”

Walang Sayang! The art of turning trash into sustainable treasures

Walang sayang!: The art of turning trash into sustainable treasures

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
A BUSH fire in California ignited Pedro “Pete” Delantar’s passion to save what is left of Mother Earth one twig, branch, and root at a time.
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PRODUCTS from the Nature’s Legacy are made from scraps leaves, twigs and seeds.
He was traveling in the US when he witnessed how everything we have is fleeting. When he returned to his hometown in Compostela, Cebu, he saved, preserved, and recycled the twigs and branches he collected and turned them into environment-friendly furniture that last for 10 to 15 years.
“There’s so much natural scrap around us, which is vulnerable to a rapid fire that may be caused by a cigar or camping. We anticipated [it might happen here] so we cleaned our surroundings. We came up with mounds of scraps. We researched how we could recycle them,” he said.
This was how Naturescast was born. With the help of his wife, Cathy, who assisted him in his research, they learned that scrap twigs and branches, among others, could be compressed and molded into something chic and classy.
One of his creations brought him a international recognition. He represented the Philippines and won the top prize at the recently concluded 43rd International Exhibition of Inventions in Geneva, Switzerland. There he bested other 800 top innovators with a piece made from scrap twigs, leaves and seeds. The output material can be transformed into a vase, chair, wall art, or acoustic tile.
He said his winning green innovation epitomized the country. “My entry represented the Philippines. It highlights our tropical country and our artistic skills in turning trash into treasure. The judges saw its simplicity. It is practical and eco-friendly,” he said.
Before flying to Switzerland and bagging the prize, he had already won the Outstanding Invention award at the Department of Science and Technology’s National Invention Contest and Exhibit last year. There he bested 831 local entries whichled to the invitation by the World Intellectual Property Organization to compete in Switzerland.
“I get inspiration from nature — in any thing around us that have forms, shapes, colors, and textures, which inspires me to make products,” he said.
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PRODUCTS from the Nature’s Legacy are made from scraps leaves, twigs and seeds.
THE GREENOVATOR
Mr. Delantar has always been into conserving natural materials. Back in 1996, he founded Nature Legacy, a company that recycled and up-cycled rattan into chairs. But competition was steep — Indonesia, Thailand, and other Asian neighbors are into the same business. He decided to turn to woodcarving — and then he saw the bush fire in America. This inspired him to create the labels Naturescast (items made from recycled twigs, seeds, branches, leaves), Stonecast (from recycled limestone from quarrying), and Nucast (from recycled paper).
Working on Nucast, he and his wife discovered their latest innovation, which they call G-Skin. It is made from recycled paper that is molded to resemble bamboo, leather, crocodile skin, or cement.
Prudently, Mr. Delantar has patented all his labels here, in Europe, and in the US to detter copycats. He said there is widespread counterfeiting among his contemporaries in Cebu. He said it is okay to copy 20% of a design, as long as you change the remaining 80%. Some, however, blatantly copy the entire design. “They (competitors) don’t have time to research [for new designs, so they copy]. They may be cheaper but they won’t last,” he said.
The Nature’s Legacy showroom in Makati is a treasure trove of innovative and sustainable home decor and furniture. There is an intricate braid of recycled paper that has been turn into a vase; ground scrap limestone has been made into jars of all sizes and shapes; and then there is a banca-shaped table décor which was given to non-winning participants in the 2011 Oscars.
In 2012, together with his son Carlo, they dabbled in fashion accessories under the brand Floreia.
Now exported to 28 countries, the label highlights modern necklaces and bangles made from botanical wastes and paper scrap. Among their local clients are newscasters Karen Davila and Ces Drilon.
Nature’s Legacy reaches far and wide, exporting items to Japan, Greece, Portugal, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, and the US, among others. It supplies items to Pottery Barn and Crate and Barrel in the US. It also ships to Itokin, one of Japan’s biggest department store chains. In the Philippines, Zalora, Rustan’s, and SM’s Kultura, are among its clients. The local market however makes up only 10% of the business. “It depends on the purchasing power of the Filipinos,” said Mr. Delantar. Also, he added, the furniture sizes are big and US standard — not compatible with a typical Filipino home. But he said the company is doubling its efforts to market its goods locally.
The prices range from P200 for a candleholder to P35,000 for a chair made from mango seeds which made an appearance in the celebrity lounge of the 2011 Grammy Awards.
He is open to working with other scrap materials like plastic cups and straw, he said.
“My invention is simple yet practical. I wish every Filipino would be encouraged to invent something even out of nothing… from the things we take for granted or considered as scrap, castaway, or of no value. We must keep looking. Keep experimenting,” he said.

Tapa chips, liquored brownies, and many balls debut at food fair (By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman)

Tapa chips, liquored brownies, and many balls debut at food fair


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Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman 


YESTERDAY IT was cronuts and chicken pizza, today, the spotlight is on matcha(green tea) cookies, Cerveza Negra brownies, and other novel and surprising food combinations.

  
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TASTY TREATS: Frozen Weekend balls come in cheese, crab and corn, and oatmeal flavors; Brownie Bar offers brownies infused with rum, beer, and whiskey; Three Hungry Tummies’ crackling chorizo, tapa, bangus, and corned beef chips. -- NICKKY FAUSTINE P. DE GUZMAN
Championing brave souls with monstrous cooking skills, the “Best Food Forward” food exhibit/bazaar is among the launching pads for newbie food creators. For its fifth year, the expo highlights 80 booths of sweet and savory treats from Oct. 10 to 11 at the Rockwell Tent at Makati’s Powerplant Mall.

The folks who present their wares at the fair aren’t your regular foodies, they must have something that sets them apart from the rest -- after all, they had to pass muster first, their goods scrutinized and savored by local chefs like Sau Del Rosario, Sandy Daza, Bruce Lim, and Nancy Reyes, among others.

Here are three of the presenters who will participate in this year’s “Best Food Forward”:

• It Got Balls. She would wake up every midnight, craving for a snack, which led to Mina Co’s Frozen Weekend concoctions -- homemade meatballs that “you can toss and cook whenever you’re hungry,” she told BusinessWorld. Her balls range from cheesy chicken curry and creamy crab and corn to steamed Italian meatballs and savory organic oatmeal balls, which she fondly calls “ris-oat-o.” They’re easy to cook, perfect for a midnight snack, house parties, or a Sunday night movie marathon.

• Booze and Brownies. Joby Provido is a self-proclaimed chocoholic. His friend, Jomel Salas, likes booze and baking. One rather ordinary day, they thought of marrying their first loves. The result is the one-year-old Brownie Bar business, which highlights, what else, liquor and brownies. It currently offers three brownie flavors: beer, whiskey, and rum. A bite or a block of brownies won’t get you tipsy, but if you want stronger liquor flavors, the Brownie Bar has droppers of Cerveza Negra, scotch whiskey, or Don Papa rum flavors, which one can add to the brownies depending on the intensity level one likes. The brownies come in a classic box packaging, which is a perfect gift idea for men, ehem, since Christmas is almost around the corner. “It’s also for women who love their men -- and their liquored brownies,” the two said while laughing. 

• Crackling Chips. Grilled hotdogs and pancit (noodles) are the usual food items a family brings for a short vacation. At one beach outing, Hannah Ayuyao brought homemade crunchy bacon and tapa (dried meat) chips for her family. Her three kids loved them so much that it led to the one-year-old startup food business aptly called the Three Hungry Tummies. Starting with bacon and tapa chips, she went on to add crunchy bangus(milkfish) skin, corned beef strips (like beef jerky), and chorizo chips to the menu. Rafael Ayuyao, one of the “three hungry tummies,” said he likes the crunchy treats paired with rice, Nutella chocolate, with vinegar, or eaten as is.

Since 2010, the food bazaar has provided opportunities for new players in the food biz. Among its renowned babies is Manang’s Chicken, dubbed as the “bagong chicken ng Pinoy” (the new chicken for Filipinos). It joined the bazaar two years ago, and since then has exploded into a restaurant with 13 branches, reaching as far as Cavite and Davao. 

Not only a stepping stone for business, “Best Food Forward” pays it forward. To end the two-day food celebration, the food fair holds an annual feeding program for its chosen beneficiaries including the Bahay ni Maria orphanage, My Father’s House, which shelters street children, and Unang Hakbang Foundation, which is also caters to street kids and urban poor communities.