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Cooperate, coordinate, collaborate

“Cooperate, coordinate, and collaborate” — this is the call of President Duterte to small nations to implement to attain prosperity for all, during the opening ceremony of the recently held Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2018.
Also referred to as the 3Cs of togetherness, we tend to use these terms interchangeably to mean working together effectively to achieve a common purpose. When all are used and combined in writing and speech, it creates a feel-good, mushy ambiance but does not deliver the message clearly. Used individually, each work conveys certain strengths as well as limitations.
In my lectures and talks about soft skills, I ask the audience on the meanings of and differences among the 3Cs, only to engender descriptors such as “working together” and “common purpose.” They have all reason to confuse one to the other. Even dictionaries define the 3Cs differently.
Dictionary.com and Merriam-Webster give these definitions:
• Cooperation: 1. the process of working together to the same end; 2. a situation in which people work together to do something
• Coordination: 1. the organization of the different elements of a complex body or activity so as to enable them to work together effectively; 2. the process of organizing people or groups so that they work together properly and well
• Collaboration: 1. to work jointly with others or together especially in an intellectual endeavour; 2. to work, one with another; cooperate, as on a literary work
To better understand the meaning of each, let’s understand its etymology and historical significance.
According to Etymonline.com, the word cooperation originated from Middle French and Late Latin in the 1620s which meant “the act of working together to one end.” This period in the 16th century witnessed the birth. It was during the 1600s that Galileo and Newton founded modern science; that Descartes began modern philosophy; that Hugo Grotius initiated international law; and that Thomas Hobbes and John Locke started modern political theory. European states also entered into worldwide international competition for wealth and power through colonization of America and Asia.
These developments likewise necessitated the “need to work together” instead of competing. Cooperation is the antithesis of competition, but the need to compete with others in the areas of politics, science, and trade became the impetus for individuals to organize into a group and cooperate with each other to form a stronger competitive force.
The term coordination likewise surfaced during the 17th century from Medieval Latin coordinate “to set in order, arrange”. It gained popular use in military warfare and later on in business during the late 19th century. Management forefather, Henry Fayol, posited business principles which included “meetings of heads of departments and heads of divisions to ensure coordination”.
Lastly, collaboration originated in 1830s From French and Latin collaborare “work with.” This period witnessed US and European countries consolidating, requiring them to “work with” others to maintain peace. The period also saw the emergence of the Industrial Revolution, led by James Watt’s improvements to the steam engine, and his “collaboration” with industrialist Matthew Boulton on the creation of the rotative engine which was crucial for industrial production.
Nowadays, collaboration is often used in corporate and business settings. Especially led by Google’s Sundar Pichai who believes it is important to build an organization where people want to work together and set up collaborative cultures.
There’s no doubt that the 3Cs are needed in modern organizations, especially in this day and age of warp-speed technological advances, that put a premium on human skills — those that cannot be replace by robots. But we need to be cognizant of the distinct definition of each term, which is dependent on the vision and relationships, number of shared tasks, resources and methods between the agents. A great distinction of characteristics of each term was authored by Blank et. Al. in their 2001 work, Collaboration: What Makes It Work.
“Basis for cooperation is usually between individuals but may be mandated; organizational mission and goals are not considered; interaction is on an as needed basis; relationships are informal and each organization functions separately; and no joint planning is required. Information is conveyed as needed.”
On the other hand, coordination is where “individual relationships are supported by their organizations; mission and goals of the organizations are reviewed for compatibility; interaction is usually around one specific project or task; organizations assume needed roles but still functions separately; some project specific planning is required; and communication roles are established and channels for interaction are created.”
Lastly, collaboration is where “commitment of the organization is fully behind the individual; common, new mission and goals are created; one or more projects are undertaken for longer term results; new structure and/or formal division of labor are created; comprehensive planning is required including measures of success; and many levels of communication and channels for interaction are created.”
Obviously, collaboration is the biggest word in terms of meaning and scope. People use it loosely as a catch-all terminology. But people also just need to either coordinate or cooperate. The distinctions are important.
Reynaldo C. Lugtu, Jr. is President & CEO of Hungry Workshorse, a digital and culture transformation firm. He is the Chairman of the ICT Committee of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX). He teaches strategic management in the MBA Program of De La Salle University. He is also an Adjunct Faculty of the Asian Institute of Management
reylugtu@gmail.com.

PXP Energy trims Q1 net loss

PXP Energy Corp. trimmed its losses to P3.7 million in the first quarter, the company said on Thursday, in part because of higher petroleum revenues resulting from an improvement in the price of crude oil during the period.
In the same period last year, the company posted a net loss attributable to equity holders of the parent firm of P8.4 million, or more than twice that of the first three months of 2018.
PXP Energy told the stock exchange that its consolidated petroleum revenues rose 18% to P30.7 million, as a 3.4% decline in crude production was offset by a 24% improvement in crude oil prices.
Consolidated cost and expenses went up by 12% to P41.5 million because of the “higher depletion cost offset by continuous containment of group overhead,” the company said.
Among the developments during the quarter is the new partner of a Peruvian unit of a company controlled by PXP Energy in an offshore exploration project in Peru.
PXP Energy, citing a disclosure by Karoon Gas Australia Ltd., announced on Jan. 10 the farm out of a 35% interest in offshore exploration Block Z-38, Tumbes Basin Peru to Tullow Peru Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of Tullow Oil Plc.
Pitkin Petroleum Peru Z-38 SRL, a wholly owned subsidiary of Pitkin Petroleum Ltd. (PPL), holds a 25% participating interest in Peru Block Z-38. PXP Energy holds a 53.43% interest in PPL.
Under the farm-out agreement, Tullow will acquire a 35% interest in the block by funding 43.75% of the cost of the first exploration well, capped at $27.5 million at 100%, beyond which Tullow will pay its 35% share.
Tullow is also to pay Karoon $2 million upon completion of the well, with a further $7 million payable upon declaration of commercial discovery and submission of a development plan to Perupetro, Peru’s state-run company. — Victor V. Saulon

Mother’s Day Events (05/11/18)

Shangri-La Plaza

ON MOTHER’S DAY, OPM icon Celeste Legaspi takes to the stage together with the ABS-CBN Philharmonic Orchestra, which will perform under the baton of Ryan Cayabyab. The show will be held on May 13, 7 p.m., at the mall’s East Atrium. Meanwhile, treat Mom to her favorite snacks and dishes during the Special Day for Moms Fair at the Food Forum until May 13. Find unique gifts for her at the Spectrum Fair happening at the Grand Atrium until May 13.

Eastwood City

BUY MOM a unique gift from the Mother’s Day Fair which is ongoing until May 13. On May 13, Mother’s Day itself, there will be Mom Speaks, talks that will tackle hacks on work-life balance, and beauty, among other things. Topics include: Work from Home Option for the Hands-on-Mom by Kalai Medenilla, Essential Oils for a Stress-free and Healthy Family Life by Tina De Guzman, and Makeup Demo, Tips and Hacks by Charice Renee Jose. Mothers also get to have their photos taken at the Instac Dedication photo booth on that same day, and get a free souvenir photo from Fuji Film for every P500 single receipt purchase.

Lucky Chinatown

THERE are a number of fun-filled events ongoing until May 13 at the mall’s Atrium. There are items for babies on sale for up to 70% off from Ollie and Co. until May 11. VP TMA Group gets fashionable mothers and their kids on the runway during the Make Momma Proud Fashion Proud show on May 12. A Globe AR Experience photoshoot activity will also make moms and kids bonding more fun. On May 13, mothers get to have a Crafty Play Date experience with their kids through workshops conducted by Craft MNL Workshops. Moms also get exclusive surprise promos from selected stores on same day. As an added treat, moms get one free photo at Mirror Booth for every P1,000 purchase.

Venice Grand Canal

THE MALL offers makeovers, DIY crafts, fitness activities, and sweet serenades for Mother’s Day. From May 11 to 13 at Ponte de Amore Lobby, mothers get to learn how to do calligraphy, art sushi maki, jewelry-, soap-, oil-, and fragrances-making, no bake ideas, decorating eco-bag and fans, and more from Gawang Kamay. Pretty Fit Momma fitness sessions will also be offered at Venice Piazza beginning 8 a.m. Cap of the day with sweet serenades courtesy of Neocolours. In addition, mothers get to unlock exclusive in-store promos by scanning the QR codes across the mall.

Forbes Town

SCATTERED around the mall are garden-inspired setups: mothers can visit each station for treats and activities. There will be a spread of festive flavors and sparkling wine in the Graze-ful Mom area. Indulge in afternoon tea at Tea-rrific Mom by Twinings, and pampering at the Spa-cial Mom booth. Mothers can paint their nails with hues of summer at the Spruced-Up Mom area, and beat stress at the Mom-aste area. There will also be a strength-training workout and Polaroid booth. Bouquet are available at the flower area.

Uptown Bonifacio

TREAT MOM to a fun and stress-free week filled with promos and activities for Mother’s Day. There is the DIY Momma Marketrom May 11 to 15. Moms also get to score exclusive deals from participating retail partners from May 11 to 13. On May 12, mothers and other mall guests get a chance to meet Andi Manzano and other hosts of The Mother Show Live, a radio program of Magic 89.9. On Mother’s Day at 4 p.m., the Atrium is going to be filled with activities such as arts and crafts, Bento Mama workshops, Mommy hacks, talks, and more surprises. The event will be capped off with a Momderful Serenade. Present a single purchase receipt worth P1,000 from any Uptown Bonifacio establishments to join the activities.

Twin Lakes

CREATE SPECIAL moments with mother with a relaxing view of Taal Lake. From May 11 to 13, select and buy unique gifts at the Mother’s Day Fair and enjoy browsing through exclusive dining offers. Mothers who will be at Twin Lakes on Mother’s Day will be serenaded starting 4 p.m. They also get to have their photo taken at the swing photo booth installation.

Araneta Center

MAKE mom feel good, attractive, and stylish this Mother’s Day through Araneta Center’s “Moms on Fleek.” Every P600 single purchase receipt from any Araneta Center establishment on May 13 entitles mothers to avail the following services for free: skin analysis by Diana Stalder, eyebrow shaping and grooming by J.Cat Beauty, eyebrow threading by Nails Glow, and make-up tutorial by Natural Looks at the Gateway Mall; express diamond peel by Vanity First, eyebrow shaping and grooming by Detail Makeover, and make-up tutorial by blogger Mhaan Arambulo-Delos Santos at Farmers Plaza; and free express diamond peel by Nisce, skin and make-up tutorial also by Arambulo-Delos Santos at Ali Mall. Participating mothers will also receive gift packs containing beauty and skin care products from Natural Looks, Detail Makeover, Diana Stalder, and Dove. Meanwhile, the J. Amado Araneta Foundation (the CSR arm of the Araneta Group) is giving five lucky moms from Gawad Kalinga Tanay a makeover with free hair styling by Tony & Jackey and facial service by Vanity First. Each one will also be treated to a dinner with one child at the Four Seasons Buffet and Hotpot in Manhattan Parkview. For more information on the Mother’s Day treats, visit www.aranetacenter.net.

Robinsons malls

IN HONOR of all mommies, Robinsons Malls will be offering a wide array of activities to celebrate their special day. Instead of a bouquet of flowers, moms can have photographs as gifts that will last a lifetime when you take a photo at Robinsons Malls’ special photo wall display. Just head over to Forum Robinsons, Robinsons Starmills, Robinsons Place Dasmariñas, Robinsons Sta. Rosa Market, Robinsons Tagaytay and Robinsons Place General Trias. At Robinsons Galleria, get a chance to take home a photo souvenir and soap/travel kit by presenting a receipt worth P1,000. Finally, at Robinsons Place Manila, Robinsons Otis, and Robinsons Place Naga, not only can you create memories at their photo corners but can also win prizes by liking their page, uploading your photos and tagging Robinsons Malls on your Facebook account. Robinsons Malls has also prepared a set of cooking shows and contests for Mother’s Day. At Robinsons Place Santiago, instructors from TESDA-SICAT will discuss food processing, while at Robinsons Place Palawan, chef Boy Logro gives a cooking demonstration. He will conduct another cooking demo at Robinsons Place Imus. At Robinsons Novaliches, 40 mothers will have a chance to show off their cooking skills when they join the “Ready, Set. Cook” cooking challenge. Likewise, a Livelihood Cooking Program await all mothers at Robinsons Place Santiago. Robinsons Malls will be holding a series of workshops, from succulent plants and nail art workshops to cupcake and coffee decorating workshops at Robinsons Town Mall Malabon, Robinsons Place Malolos, and Robinsons Place Lipa. At Robinsons Place Antipolo, aside from different there will be Live Acoustic Performances and more from May 11-13. A Mother & Child Singing Duo contests will be held at Robinsons Angeles (children should be aged five to 13 years old). At Robinsons Place Las Piñas, there will be a Women’s Health and Wellness Caravan on May 12 then on May 13, music and entertainment awaits them. On May 13, Robinsons Metro East will have a performance by singer-actor Gino Padilla, while Hajji Alejandro will sing at Robinsons Magnolia.

What to see this week

8 films to see on the week of May 11-18, 2018
Truth or Dare

Truth or Dare (a.k.a. Blumhouse’s Truth or Dare)

A SUPERNATURAL thriller focuses on a game of Truth or Dare among a group of friends that turns deadly. The players are to either tell the truth or accept the dare, otherwise, they are punished. Directed by Jeff Wadlow, it stars Lucy Hale, Tyler Posey, and Violette Beane. The film has a paltry score of 15% on review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes. “As a scary movie, Truth or Dare is about as frightening as a slip on a banana peel,” writes Mara Reinstein of Us Weekly.
MTRCB Rating: R-13
Tully

Tully

MARLO, a mother of three, has difficulty in watching over her children. That is, until her brother introduces a night nanny with whom she eventually forms a special bond. Directed by Jason Reitman from a script by Diablo Cody, it stars Charlize Theron, Mark Duplass, and Mackenzie Davis. The film has a high Tomatometer score of 88% from review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes. Katie Walsh of the Tribune News Service writes: “An emotionally deep yet concise rumination on the nature of modern motherhood, on the inherently false premise of doing it all, of having it all and making it look good.”
MTRCB Rating: PG
My 2 Mommies

My 2 Mommies

MAMU, a gay man takes the role of a parent when he finds out that he has a seven-year-old son from a previous accidental affair. Directed by Eric Quizon, it stars Paolo Ballesteros, Solenn Heussaff, Maricel Soriano, Joem Bascon, Dianne Medina, and Marcus Cabias.
MTRCB Rating: PG
Squad Goals

Squad Goals

FIVE BOYS experience a series of mishaps at school that could potentially get them expelled. They’re friendship grows as they deal with school, love, and family problems. Directed by Mark Meily, it stars Julian Trono, Vitto Marquez, Andrew Muhlach, Dan Huschka, and Jack Reid.
MTRCB Rating: PG
Bad Samaritan

Bad Samaritan

A VALET burglarizes the houses of his rich customers — but ends up robbing the wrong one. He finds a woman held captive in the house he is robbing but leaves her behind, calling the police instead — but they find no one. The kidnapper then goes after the valet who is trying to rescue the woman he left behind. Directed by Dean Devlin, it stars David Tennant, Robert Sheehan, Carlito Olivero, Kerry Condon, Jacqueline Byers, and Lisa Brenner. The film has garnered mixed reviews — and a scant 56% score on film aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes. On the one hand, Rex Reed of the New York says: “Bad Samaritan is a well-directed thriller with knuckle-chewing suspense,” on the other, Peter Travers of Rolling Stone writes, “The former Doctor Who star David Tennant enlivens this stock thriller about scam artists and serial torturers — but it’s still a mess. Tennant deserves better. So do audiences.”
MTRCB Rating: R-13
Higher Power

Higher Power

JOSEPH STEADMAN becomes the unwilling test subject of a maniacal scientist in a battle that can either save or destroy the world. Directed by Matthew Santoro, it stars Ron Eldard, Jade Tailor, Austin Stowell, Jordan Hinson, and Colm Feore.
MTRCB Rating: R-13
Black Butterfly

Black Butterfly

PAUL IS a struggling writer working on what he hopes is a career-saving screenplay. He offers Jack, a drifter he met at a diner, a place to stay — but then Jack demands to mess with Paul’s work. Directed by Brian Goodman, the movie stars Antonio Banderas, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Piper Perabo, Abel Ferrara, Nathalie Rapti Gomez, and Katie McGovern. Vikram Murthi of RogerEbert.com called the film: “A charmless, nonsensical thriller that doubles as a hack screenwriter’s wet dream, filled to the brim with faux-insights that wouldn’t impress even the most inattentive college freshmen.”
MTRCB Rating: R-13
Curse of the Nun

Curse of the Nun

JUST WHEN a damaged young woman is about to move into a new home, a spirit of a crazy nun keeps her from leaving. Directed by Aaron Mirtes, Lacy Hartselle, Jonathan Everett, Rae Hunt, Kate Kilcoyne, and Aaron Mirtes.
MTRCB Rating: R-13

Who’s the boss?

By Noel Vera
Video Review
Amo
Directed by Brillante Mendoza
Netflix


WHEN streaming giant Netflix announced that it would be showing pro-Duterte filmmaker Brillante Mendoza mini-series shot and set in the Philippines (it was produced by TV5 but never aired), the intention was clear from the get-go: to present “the other side of the coin” (as Mendoza states in an interview) of the drug war: “Yes, it (the drug war) is necessary for the Philippines — not only for the Philippines but also other countries afflicted with the drug problem.”
When interviewed by The Telegraph, Mendoza’s response (after the initial outcry) was more measured: “This series will show the two sides of the coin,” he said (italics mine). “The message is that we should all understand that there is a (drugs) situation in the Philippines… and now the government has really got very tough about it.” He adds, “I’m not saying that it should be addressed in the way that this government is dealing with it. But people tend to criticize and to give their opinions without even going deeper into the issue.”
At least one human rights group has already voiced its opinion: The International Network of People who Use Drugs (INPUD) on hearing Netflix’s declaration that the series is a “bold and suspenseful show that has the potential of capturing thrill-seeking audiences worldwide” has replied in an open letter: “This is a humanitarian crisis, not entertainment fodder.”
As for the series itself? Well, let me tell you.
The season is divided into 13 episodes — sounds expansive till you realize each episode is barely a half-hour long. The first story arc focuses on Joseph (Vince Rillon), a street-level dealer who appears on a list of suspects, and his uncle Camilo (Allen Dizon), a policeman who deals with Joseph’s problem. The second has Joseph recruited by his brother-in-law Bino (Felix Roco) as courier dealing higher-end drugs — mixed-cocktail pills of “green amore” (ecstasy, shabu [crystal meth], and Cialis [a milder form of Viagra]). Third has Uncle Camilo partnering with fellow officer Rod (Derek Ramsey) to observe the activities of suspected drug lord Takeo (Yoshihiko Hara).
The series has been compared to Netflix’s other drug-suffused series Narcos though I see major differences: Narcos focused on the rise and fall of outsized real-life drug lord Pablo Escobar; Amo takes newspaper accounts and anecdotes from real life and presents them in a lightly fictionalized setting. Narcos relies heavily on voice-over narration to add context and link otherwise disparate storylines together; Amo does not (there are advantages and disadvantages to this). Narcos employs the cliched “handheld footage cut to a frenetic rhythm” style but also on occasion settles down for portentous shots of dark figures discussing deep matters in shadowy rooms; Amo is characteristic of Mendoza’s earlier work: shaky-cam, nervous cutting, night scenes shot mostly under the amber glow of sodium street lamps.
One major difference I’d like to point out: Narcos outlines events that happened decades ago, from the 1970s up to the ’90s; Amo presents events of the past year, roughly since Duterte took power.
Narcos, however imperfectly and clumsily (the endless voice-overs), dramatizes a narrative that has already been pored over and evaluated by historians and by those involved. Amo sips of events happening now and by appropriating what is whispered and speculated rather than what has been recorded and confirmed, it — whether intentionally or not — adds its own interpretation to those events. The series shapes what may be into what it believes is, and because this is Netflix — the single most popular online streaming platform in the world, not just the Philippines or the United States — the series does so with a voice all out of proportion to any other voices that may be raised in contradiction.
In other words, Mendoza, who has said time and time again that he is for Duterte’s war on drugs, has found a loudspeaker far louder and more powerful than anything he has used before. And Netflix has a potential hit on its hands made out of material with questionable authenticity, not to mention sincerity.
Take for example the first story arc. Joseph’s activities are, for the most part, what we know or hear about street-level pushers: he leads the life of an ordinary student, sneaks out to sell packets of meth to neighbors and friends. Later Joseph (skip the next two paragraphs if you plan to watch the series) witnesses an EJK — an extrajudicial killing as these murders have come to be known — performed by the police and it’s significant that Mendoza frames it thusly: the victim is a known dealer (we have seen him working with Joseph) and a group of rappers immediately after sing the following words: “I will take the law into my own hands / Don’t give a damn about the consequences… No man a comrade but a judge / No more time to let you stay longer / I’ll get you first before you finish us all… The diseased tree must be cut down.”
The killing itself is done offscreen, with a van nearby and a gun going off in the shadows; Mendoza is enough of an artist (but we know this from his previous work) to imply rather than directly show the police doing this. Instead he leaves it to his rapper-chorus to tell us what to think or feel about the whole thing — in effect apologizing for and justifying the officers’ terrible but necessary actions.
Later, Joseph identifies a fellow gang member as an informer, partly responsible for the killing; the gang decides to retaliate and how they retaliate is significant (again, skip the rest of the paragraph if): they stab the informer to death, hang him up against a wall, hang a cardboard sign on his body (“Huwag tularan, adik ako (Don’t imitate, I’m an addict)!”). One of the Duterte regime’s most common explanations for the EJKs is that they were killings performed by gang members against one another, and this sequence reinforces that narrative, with one jarring detail: EJKs are performed using guns, the police’s preferred method of execution. Granted a low-level street gang probably could not afford a firearm, why then would they even attempt to pin this death on the police? Especially as no one would believe them?
The second story arc doesn’t add much one way or another except to say that there’s more to the story than street-level drugs, and that the cocktail drug scene is sexier and more glamorous, with considerably more money involved. Joseph goes to bed with a number of folks including a wealthy male buyer (Implying what exactly — that homosexuality is a rich man’s decadent indulgence? Not sure I like that). The cops (again skip the rest of this paragraph if) descend on all wrongdoers involved with breathtaking alacrity, reducing this arc to a Public Service Announcement, only with an insidious implication: the police (and mainstream media) only care about drugs when the pretty daughter of a rich man dies, and her passing is pasted in large headlines. The poor? Fuck them.
The third story arc features the return of Joseph’s rather shady uncle Camilo. Camilo had been instrumental in getting Joseph cleared of his drug testing, implying that, yes, the series is aware of corruption among officers’ ranks. Here Camilo, with newcomer Rod, conspire to kidnap Takeo and, again, a jarring detail (skip the next three paragraphs if): if their intent was to raise money for themselves why conduct the kidnapping as if it was a police raid? When interrogated the maids and family later testify that the men shouted “Police!” when entering the house — which, when I reviewed the scene, the men don’t actually do (it’s a confusing scene though, and possible Mendoza is suggesting the witnesses misremembered); later the men intimidate Takeo into opening his safe, and finding several bags of what looks like cocaine — they immediately declare that he’s “under arrest” and quote the specific laws he has violated.
In the middle of a kidnapping? Really?
Again, justice descends on the wrongdoers with breathtaking speed, leaving one with the thought that “If the Philippine police worked this fast in real life then we wouldn’t have a drug problem. Or crime problem. Or any problems in the country whatsoever.” Camilo’s boss blusters and bluffs and at one point you wonder if he’ll perform his own act of vigilante justice… but no, he ultimately sticks to the law, giving up a much chastened Camilo to the authorities and the waiting press.
I don’t think we should be focusing on what Amo says — it’s fairly well done considering the budget and overlooking a few gigantic inconsistencies — as we should on what the series doesn’t say. It refuses to suggest that anything Duterte has said and done (aside from a few speeches droning faintly in the background) has anything to do with what’s happening here. It refuses to suggest that the press has an alternative interpretation involving an unspoken government policy of killing low-level low-income citizens involved in drugs, or that perhaps this “war” isn’t working out all that well (each arc ends with either a successful arrest, or a pointedly armed perpetrator falling in a hail of gunfire); if anything, the press is depicted as an annoyance, shoving microphones in the face and asking inane questions, always a step behind actual events. And it refuses to consider the resistance growing among Filipinos, folks who have either been directly affected — their friends and loved ones cut down — or have seen what’s going on, and are increasingly speaking out against this so-called “war on drugs.”
Amo is a particularly sharp disappointment considering what Mendoza himself has done before in terms of street-level eyewitnessing. Ma Rosa is, to my mind, a far more honest take on the drug scene, showing us not just the corrupt police practice of “swap heads” (under president Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino’s regime — though still apparently being practiced today) but the drug dealers’ desperation in trying to extricate themselves from under the officers’ clutches.
If I had to pick an exemplary dramatized treatment of the subject I’d point to The Wire — David Simon’s classic series on the Baltimore drug scene that starts with, yes, street-level drug dealing and, yes, features shaky-cam footage and jangling editing. But the series eventually takes on so much more, examining each social institution — labor unions, political institutions, the school system, the press — exposing the flaws in each and pointing out the heroes that keep the whole going despite all the flaws. The Wire is ultimately Dickensian in its scope and ambition, suggesting in its hour-long episodes (as compared to Amo’s brief half-hour squibs) the screwed-up labyrinthine workings of our established social institutions, but also the need to work within their parameters, work within the law when doing our jobs. Where The Wire is an epic mural filled with breathtakingly executed marginalia, Amo in comparison feels like one of those quickie thumbprints on a questionable website, fuzzy and lacking in detail. I was hoping for better from the first-ever Filipino series presented by Netflix, and from a filmmaker whose previous works I admire.

The anti-romcom musical returns to the stage

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
Reporter
Theater
Changing Partners: The Stage Musical
Presented by PETA Theater and REDMUNKEY
May 11, 12, 13, 19, and 20
PETA Theater Center,
No. 5 Eymard Drive, New Manila, Quezon City

CHANGING PARTNERS is billed as an “anti-romcom” musical because it negates the typical boy-meets-girl storyline and a happy-ever-after ending.
Ang ganda kasing sabihing ‘anti romcom’ (It’s just so nuce to say ‘anti-romcom’). Yes it’s funny — there are lots of funny moments — but a relationship ending is not necessarily a bad thing. I mean, it’s just one chapter, and then you move on,” Vince de Jesus, the musical’s composer and writer, told BusinessWorld on May 3, a few days before the start of the play’s short two-weekend rerun, on why Changing Partners subverts the usual romantic-comedy storylines.
The award-winning musical, which transitioned from stage in 2016 to film in 2017, and now returns to the PETA Theater stage.
If it is not a romantic-comedy, is it pro-hugot then, which, at essence, makes use of sappy, quotable lines that aim to tug at the heartstrings?
“The context of hugot, in the ’80s and ’90s, is that it is your well of experience, like, ‘Saan ka huhugot ng pain?’ [Where should you draw pain?] Then it has changed to its meaning today, which has become a punch line, like, ‘Buti pa ang kalendaryo, may date, ikaw wala.’ [The calendar is more fortunate because it has dates, you have none]. But in Changing Partners, the lines are drawn from real life experiences. You say the lines because they mean something and not just as a punch line,” said Mr. De Jesus.
“There is something fake and manufactured when you say hugot line eh,” added director Rem Zamora. “This one, there’s no intention about it. We joke about it to market it, but there is no conscious effort to make it a hugot play. It’s just an honest to goodness play,” he said.
Changing Partners tells the love and life stories of two romantic pairs who literally change partners (i.e. boy-girl, gay, and lesbian couples) to illustrate the journey of hetero and homo relationships, and how they are different and, at the same time, alike.
At the core of the story, of course, is love in all its faces, phases, and permutations.
While love is love no matter the gender of the lovers, still, there are nuances in gay/lesbian and straight couples.
“Some differences are subtle, while some are obvious, like their power struggles. The dynamics change. Let’s say it is with an older woman and a straight younger man. Immediately, people would say, ‘Ano ba ’yan humanap ka ng ka-edad mo, ang tanda tanda mo na’ [‘What? Find someone your age’], but it changes when it is an older guy and a much younger female, because people would often say, ‘Uy ang swerte mo naman.’ [‘You are so lucky.’] Again, society looks at relationships differently, depending on the gender and social class. Sometimes, people adjust to what society wants. And in this case, you’ll see the different permutations of love,” said Mr. De Jesus.
Changing Partners started at a one-night-only stage reading at the Virgin Labfest in 2016. Later that year, Mr. De Jesus and Mr. Zamora expanded and produced it as a musical at PETA starring Agot Isidro, Jojit Lorenzo, Anna Luna, and Sandino Martin. In 2017, Changing Partners was made into a full feature film under movie director Dan Villegas, with the same cast. At the Cinema One Originals Film Festival, the musical won eight awards: best director, best actress (Ms. Isidro), best actor (Mr. Lorenzo), best ensemble, best editing, best music, the audience choice award, and best film, which encouraged Star Records to give it a nationwide commercial release last January.
The actors are reprising their roles once more for this limited run. Will there be changes in their approach?
“Emotions-wise, the story is the same, but we’ve discovered the different layers, the nuances of the lines. Malalaro pa namin (we can play with it) to become richer,” said Ms. Isidro.
For Mr. Lorenzo, he said the opportunity to have watched Changing Partners on screen has helped him improve his performance for the live onstage play.
Mr. Zamora said the play’s new set is bigger now thanks to production designer Ben Padero (PETA’s ’Night Mother), and there is also live music during the performances — piano by Mr. De Jesus and cello by Poch Gutierrez.
For tickets, visit Ticketworld (www.ticketworld.com.ph) or message the PETA Theater Center Facebook page.

Know your BP numbers

One in four Filipinos aged 21 years and older has high blood pressure. It is called a “silent killer” for a reason: hypertension often has no symptoms, and most people are not aware that their blood pressure is elevated. Worldwide, high blood pressure causes around half the fatalities attributed to stroke and heart disease, which are two of the leading causes of death in the country.
May is Hypertension Awareness Month, and May 17 is World Hypertension Day with the theme, “Know Your Numbers.” Knowing your blood pressure (BP) numbers, especially as you get older, leads to early diagnosis of hypertension and its prompt treatment. This is important because optimal treatment of hypertension can cut the risk of stroke by 40% and heart attack by 15%.
For adults, normal BP is defined as a systolic blood pressure of 120 mmHg and a diastolic blood pressure of 80 mmHg. A person has hypertension if his or her systolic blood pressure is equal to or above 140 mmHg and/or the diastolic blood pressure is equal to or above 90 mmHg. The proportion of people with hypertension increases with age: one in 10 people in their 20s to 30s and five in 10 people in their 50s develop high blood pressure.
A healthy lifestyle is the most effective way to prevent or control high blood pressure. Eat a low-salt, low-fat diet rich in fruits and vegetables. Engage in physical activity/exercise for at least 30 minutes a day, five days a week. Drink alcohol moderately, and, if you smoke, the advice is to quit. Maintain a healthy weight and manage stress — regular exercise can help you do both.
A low-salt diet is particularly important in controlling high blood pressure. Avoid or limit your intake of foods high in salt such as processed meat products and salty condiments, among others.
If you have been diagnosed with hypertension, your doctor will prescribe an oral anti-hypertensive medication or a combination of two or more maintenance hypertension medications.
According to the Pharmaceutical Research Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), research companies are developing 200 medicines for cardiovascular diseases in efforts to help patients better manage their condition. The medicines in development for cardiovascular disease include 42 for heart failure, 23 for stroke, 20 for peripheral vascular diseases, 13 for thrombosis, 25 for lipid disorders, and 14 for hypertension. If left unmanaged, high blood pressure can cause damage to the circulatory system, contributing significantly to heart attack and stroke.
Although high blood pressure is mainly an adult problem, a sedentary lifestyle fixated on fast food and electronic gadgets is sowing the seeds of hypertension and other chronic diseases among Filipino children. The 2013 National Nutrition Survey of the Food and Nutrition and Research Institute shows that the number of obese Filipinos rose from 14.5% in 1993 to 31.1% in 2013. Keep in mind that excess weight is a risk factor for hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, and stroke, among others.
To prevent or manage high blood pressure, know your BP numbers and adopt a healthy and active lifestyle. Check your blood pressure regularly, whether at home, at a clinic or hospital, or at a pharmacy. Indeed, knowledge empowers us to make the right decisions in caring for our health.
Teodoro B. Padilla is the executive director of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Association of the Philippines (PHAP). Medicine Cabinet is a weekly PHAP column that aims to promote awareness on public health and health care-related issues. PHAP and its member companies represent the research-based pharmaceutical and health care industry.
medicinecabinet@phap.org.ph.

7 basic rules for boss-subordinate relations

I’m a newly promoted supervisor tasked to manage 11 workers who used to be my co-workers in our department for the past five years. My appointment started two weeks ago, and during that brief period of time, I’ve already experienced certain issues which if not corrected could make work life miserable. Can you give me some basic guidelines that I can use in starting my journey to a successful relationship with people? — New Road.
You’re not alone. Many new people managers who are situated just like must be feeling like blood-thirsty mosquitoes at a nudist camp. You’re excited and when you look around, you know it’s wonderful to be in the company of totally nude people all over, except that as a mosquito, you don’t know when and where to start biting.
As a supervisor, you need to gradually feel and understand the whole situation. It should be easy as you’ve known your co-workers for some time. You need only a little adjustment to ensure a smooth transition from being one of the gang to someone a “little above” the rest.
An adjustment is needed to achieve a healthy balance between managing people and achieving department goals at the same time. It’s not easy. There will be a constant struggle to satisfy both ends. And to avoid those “certain issues,” you need to learn and understand some broad rules to ensure sound working relationship with people.
With that in mind, the following should help:
1) Understand the strengths and weaknesses of people. This can help you determine what to assign the workers on the basis of their interests, capability, past performance, and career goals, among others. It doesn’t mean, however, that you should only give assignments to those capable of doing it, but to give opportunities to others who are willing to be trained.
2) Treat everyone equally with dignity and full respect. As a supervisor, there will be time when you’re tempted to play favorites, especially with hardworking and non-complaining people. Whatever happens, avoid any situation when you would be perceived as someone giving the slightest hint of favoritism.
Instead, give everyone every opportunity to shine and prove their worth.
3) Show concern for your subordinates. Be proactive. Try to understand those issues from the perspective of everyone, and not only from your interest or certain individual. There’s no harm in asking people how you can be of help to make their work easy. Know what company resources would be available for use, but without burdening the organization with additional expenses.
4) Promote co-ownership in achieving department goals. This includes defining the target, the manner by which to achieve it, choosing responsible persons to manage it, identifying resources to use, and the timeline to be followed. If you do, it would be easy for everyone to contribute doing his or her share knowing that they’re part of it all from the beginning. Otherwise, it would be difficult to seek cooperation.
5) Have a regular feedback session with everyone. This includes having a frank and honest discussion with people about their work performance. Whatever happens, criticize with utmost care. Remain positive and impersonal. This means having a private meeting with those concerned if it involves poor performance and giving praise in public when they deserve it.
6) Be a friendly mentor, not a toxic, dictatorial boss. Do this while maintaining a certain degree of distance so you won’t be perceived as either too soft or too hard on people. You can show leadership by helping people on the best way to do a job, defending them against unjust criticism from other departments, and lending a little of your personal money under certain emergency cases, if warranted.
7) Celebrate small wins with the team. Take a break whenever possible and practical. Even if the company doesn’t have a budget, create an atmosphere where you recognize individual or team effort for achieving something. It doesn’t have to be expensive. Among us Filipinos, an inexpensive pizza or noodle meal, even if it comes from the company cafeteria, will surely be a delight.
You really can’t become an overnight management sensation for doing all of these. Sometimes, despite observing these basic rules, you may still experience a recurrence of those little issues that leave you disappointed. If that happens, make adjustments according to the demands of the situation.
It’s easy to moan about losing your grip on the situation. Whatever happens, don’t blame the workers or even your boss. It’s an exercise in futility. Instead, take stock of your situation. Do whatever is necessary. Sometimes, your situation may need an adjustment of the layout of your work area to create an open and positive work environment.
Don’t be a perfectionist. At least not yet. When your workload is excessive, you can end up focusing on your own assignments and tend to miss out on your relationships with people. You have to achieve some balance in your work life by making time for leisure activities, whether it’s bowling or just relaxing with your co-workers in your favorite restaurant.
If you believe that hard work alone will do the trick, then you’re wrong. It’s not enough.
ELBONOMICS: Ordinary workers working together are better than superstars working individually as superstars.

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Rey Elbo is facilitating a one-day workshop on “Lean Office: Creating Value in Offices and Services” on July 11, 2018 at Dusit Thani Hotel. For details, contact Ricky Mendoza at (02) 846-8951 or 0915-406-3039 or e-mail operations@kairos.com.ph
elbonomics@gmail.com

How PSEi member stocks performed — May 10, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Thursday, May 10, 2018.

Gross domestic product quarterly performance

THE Philippine economy grew in the first quarter on the back of double-digit growth in government spending, but could have performed better if it were not for the nagging inflation that tempered household spending, the government reported yesterday. Read the full story.

TRAIN needed to fund infrastructure, free tuition, salary hikes — Dominguez

MOVES TO suspend the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law amid claims it worsens inflation will compromise other key economic programs introduced this year, the government’s economic managers said.
“Suspension of the Tax Reform program will certainly tend to slow down the Build Build Build program, and possibly negatively affect the government’s ability to fund the free tuition fee program as well as increase in salaries of the police and the military,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told reporters in a mobile phone message yesterday.
Senator Paolo Benigno A. Aquino IV on Thursday filed Senate Bill 1798 seeking the suspension of the excise tax increases under the TRAIN law, or Republic Act No. 10963, when inflation exceeds the government’s target band for three months, noting that about 10 million Filipino families will “struggle” to purchase basic needs.
Headline inflation rose 4.1% in the first four months after coming in at 4.5% in April, breaching the central bank’s 2-4% target.
TRAIN is expected to generate about P82.3 billion this year.
According to the Development Budget Coordination Committee’s 2018 fiscal program, the government hopes to spend about P699.3 billion this year on infrastructure — which will be 70% funded by TRAIN revenue.
About P50 billion is needed for free tuition at state universities and colleges for the next school year, as provided by Republic Act No. 10931, or the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act, a measure originally authored by Mr. Aquino.
About P39.6 billion will go to the military and police pay increase, which became effective in January.
Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, meanwhile, said separately during a press briefing yesterday that the legislators are “showing their concern especially for the poor. So that’s a normal expectation,” while noting that the 2019 mid-term polls are coming up.
Aside from Mr. Aquino, Senators Joseph Victor G. Ejercito and Sherwin T. Gatchalian are also seeking to freeze the tax increases provided by the TRAIN law.
The law took effect on Jan. 1, reducing personal income, estate and donors tax rates, but removed some value-added tax exemptions; raised excise tax rates for automobiles, minerals, tobacco and fuel; as well as imposed new excise levies on sugar-sweetened beverages and cosmetic procedures.
Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno has said that suspending TRAIN will “do more harm than good,” especially for the government’s fiscal position. He noted that the country’s tax bureaus have been beating their collection targets.
Mr. Pernia said that the government is fast-tracking the disbursements of the P200 per month unconditional cash transfers for the poor affected by higher prices. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

NEDA sees food logistics as possible counter for inflation

A POLICY RATE hike may not address rising inflation, the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) said, with the authorities looking at “more robust” solutions on the supply side such as building food terminals to serve highly urbanized areas.
“Actually, a lot of inflation we’re seeing is due to supply constraints, supply issues. So the strategy to address this has to do with supply, not demand, which cannot be addressed via an increase in interest rates,” NEDA Undersecretary for Policy and Planning Rosemarie G. Edillon said during a briefing yesterday on the economy’s performance for the first quarter.
Headline inflation averaged 4.1% in the first four months of the year after peaking at 4.5% last month, breaching the central bank’s 2-4% target band. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia called the rise in prices a “spoiler,” adding that gross domestic product growth would have been within the government’s 7-8% target after a 6.8% expansion in the first quarter if it weren’t for the uptick in inflation.
Nine of 11 economists polled by BusinessWorld said that they expect the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to tighten its policy stance at its May 10 meeting.
Apart from alcoholic beverages and tobacco Ms. Edillon noted that the “problem in inflation” was due to higher prices of food, particularly the “rice, fish, meat, and vegetable subsector.”
“Therefore you are looking at inefficiencies post-harvest. Inefficiencies in the processing, in transport, logistics, and trade even,” she said.
Ms. Edillon said economic managers are looking at the possibility of setting up food terminals outside metropolitan areas to streamline the movement of goods.
“So I think in the immediate term, what we need to do is to study the feasibility of putting up food terminals in the outskirts of highly urbanized cities because the problem is really this problem of trucking, the truck ban, the traffic,” she said.
“If we have food terminals where food cargo from large container trucks can be transferred to smaller vans and they can be distributed across the city 24/7 not constrained by the truck ban, that would make for more efficient logistics,” she added.
Ms. Edillon said possible locations outside Manila, Cebu, Davao, and Baguio are being considered.
The NEDA Board approved last month a P1.09-billion agri-industrial food complex in Davao to improve value chain development. But Ms. Edillon said NEDA is considering similar, but relatively “scaled-down” projects, to hasten the implementation process.
“If they’re very small projects, in fact even LGUs (local government units) could do it. Even the DTI (Department of Trade and Industry) and the DA (Department of Agriculture) have funds for shared service facilities,” Ms. Edillon said.
She said food terminals would complement efforts to move rice to a tariff system, allowing the private sector to import the staple grain.
Amendments to Republic Act (RA) No. 8178, or the Agricultural Tariffication Act are currently at committee level in the Senate and will go before the plenary in the House. This measure is expected to lower retail prices of rice by about P4-7 per kilo.
Ms. Edillon also said one more approach could be to resolve legal hurdles to land ownership, to make idle land productive.
“If you go around the country, and even here, in the vicinity of Metro Manila, you see a lot of idle land in subdivisions. The problem is there’s so many regulatory constraints with respect to the use of the land,” she said.
“So these ones will have to be addressed so they can be brought to cultivation… The surest way to address food inflation is to have more food. But the problem is available land. That means looking at the regulatory framework,” Ms. Edillon added — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

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