Sunday, September 24, 2006

Coincidence

I’ve been receiving year-old emails on my handheld, no thanks to a technical problem at Smart.

I received a copy of one story I filed in early April last year. It was about the promotion of over 20 generals. I mentioned Brigadier General Danilo Lim in the last paragraph, since he was promoted to one-star rank, I mentioned the higher-ranked ones last.

Now, Lim is on trial for allegedly leading the February coup and the other officers in the article haven’t been in the news since their promotion last year. (I am posting a picture of Lim’s alleged cohort, Marine Colonel Ariel Querubin, taken during a pre-trial hearing last August 14.)

I also received an article dated April 21, 2005. My slug read: “Arroyo claims breakthrough in MILF talks.” Seventeen months after I wrote that, the talks have bogged down and the MILF said it is ready to go to war.

Who would have thought?

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Batibot

Like most 80s kids, I grew up watching Batibot -- Pong Pagong, Kiko Matsing, Kapitan Basa, Irma Daldal, Manang Bola. The Americans took them away from us. The puppets were lent to local producers by the Children's Television Workshop, the same people behind Sesame Street. Karma will catch up with them.

I will never see Pong Pagong, or anyone from Batibot for that matter. The closest I got was seeing locally-made Koko Kwik-Kwak shoot a post-Pong and Co. episode in front of the Post Office in UP Diliman during my freshman year.

I've seen Kuya Bodjie the story-teller twice at the Araneta Center. But my mental image of him was changed forever when I saw "Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros," where he shot dead the lead character's father in a dark alley.

The first casette tape I bought was a collection of Batibot songs: "Alaga naming si Puti," "Tinapang Bangus" and a song by Manilyn Reynes about saying "po" and "opo."

In honor of Batibot, I am naming my blog after Pong Pagong.