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3 K-pop fan meets kick off 2018

MANILA-BASED K-pop fans have much to look forward to as 2018 starts with fan meets with a so-called “idol group miracle,” and two popular actors.

Boy group JBJ will be holding its first ever fan meeting in Manila on Jan. 14.

JBJ was dubbed an “idol group miracle” in Korea, because its members Taehyun, Kenta, Sanggyun, Longguo, Donghan, and Hyunbin separately participated in the second season of the talent search PRODUCE 101 and gathered huge support from fans, who decided to create their own “dream group,” purchasing billboard ads at the Samseong Subway Station in Seoul, and posting their wish that the members officially debut.

The group went on to release its first mini album, which garnered 3 million hits within the first week, and holding a series of oversea fan meetings starting November.

At the Manila event, JBJ fans will have the opportunity to attend hi-touch with the group, take group photos and artist polaroid selfies, get autographed CDs and signed posters. All attendees will receive a free poster.

The JBJ 1st Fan Meeting In Manila “Come True” will be held on Jan. 14 at the KIA Theater in Cubao, Quezon City. Tickets — which range in price from P1,500 to P7,500 — are available through Ticket Net Online and all Ticket Net outlets nationwide.

Meanwhile, Korean actor Do Ji Han will be in Manila on Jan. 20 for his first fan meeting in the Philippines in the Philippines — dubbed “Bloom in Love with Do Ji Han” — which will be held at the Kia Theater.

The 26-year-old is best known for his supporting roles in the 2012 film The Tower, and his work in KBS2’s television series Hwarang: The Poet Warrior Youth.

Tickets to this fan meet range in price from P3,500 to P8,500. All buyers are entitled to a high touch with the Korean star. Patrons will also have the chance to have a dinner date with Ji Han or go on stage with him during the event. Tickets are available at Ticketnet outlets and online through www.ticketnet.com.ph.

Finally, Ji Soo fans will have a chance to see him up close and personal for the first time for the “Ji Soo, My One and Only,” fan meeting on Feb. 10, 7 p.m., at SM North EDSA Skydome in Quezon City.

There will be interviews, games, and special activities.

Tickets range in price from P2,000 to P5,500, with different priced tickets entitling holders to high touches to group photos.

Ji Soo has starred in K-dramas including Fantastic (2016), Doctor Crush (2016), Page Turner (2016), Scarlet Heart (2016), and more recently in Strong Woman (2017), and the upcoming drama, Bad Guys 2 (City of Evil). He also starred in the movies, One Way Trip (2016) and Seoul Mate (2014).

Tickets are available at all SM Ticket outlets and online at www.smtickets.com.

Feminists and Weinstein accuser lash Deneuve for attack on #MeToo

PARIS — Feminists and one of the women who accused fallen Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein of rape turned on French actress Catherine Deneuve Wednesday after she signed an open letter attacking the #MeToo movement for leading a witch-hunt against men.

France’s legendary star Deneuve and some 100 other women put their names to a declaration condemning the avalanche of “denunciations” that has followed claims that the Hollywood producer sexually assaulted women over decades.

But Italian actress Asia Argento, who was among the first to accuse Weinstein, led a backlash, tweeting: “Deneuve and other French women tell the world how their interiorized misogyny has lobotomized them to the point of no return.”

A group of leading French feminists also excoriated Deneuve in a counterblast letter to French radio, branding her and the other signatories as “apologists for rape.”

To say that #MeToo was puritanical and driven by a “hatred of men” was “contemptuous” of the victims of abuse and harassment, the feminists insisted, accusing the signatories of trying to “slam back the lid” blown off by the Weinstein scandal.

They claimed most of the women who signed the letter to Le Monde daily were “recidivists in defending child abusers,” a reference to film director Roman Polanski, who Deneuve has supported in his long fight against extradition to the US on rape charges.

Reaction on social media was equally vociferous, with Deneuve’s take on #MeToo becoming a trending topic on Twitter in France, Britain and across much of Europe. — AFP

Meralco customers’ power usage growth slows to about 4.9%

MANILA ELECTRIC Co. (Meralco) said power usage within its franchise areas rose about 4.9% by volume in 2017, lower than the growth posted in 2016, its president said.

“We might end 2017 [with growth of about] 4.9% against a high base [in 2016],” Oscar S. Reyes, Meralco president and chief executive officer, told reporters.

He said the expected increase in volumes last year came off a growth rate of 8.1% in 2016. Meralco will release its power supply and demand figures by next month.

“All the sectors have been showing hefty growth. Surprisingly industrial has shown significant growth, so with commercial.

“All of them on average are at around 4.5%,” Mr. Reyes said.

The listed electricity distribution utility serves four main sectors: residential, commercial, industrial and streetlights. It sources electricity mainly from eight power suppliers, including the wholesale electricity spot market.

Power usage is closely correlated with economic activity.

For the dry season, Mr. Reyes said Meralco is expecting growth of between 3.5% to 4%, or lower than the growth during the same period last year. He said all sectors served by the power distribution utility are expected to increase their usage.

“We have the installed capacity to meet summer demand, it’s just a question of there being no confluence of scheduled or forced outages or Malampaya shutdown,” Mr. Reyes said.

As of the third quarter of 2017, Meralco’s sales volume grew by 4% to 31,401 gigawatt-hours, with all its customer classes recording an increase in consumption.

Meralco’s franchise area in Luzon covers 36 cities and 75 municipalities, including Metro Manila and adjacent provinces.

Residential energy sales in the nine months to September increased by 4%. Commercial and industrial posted growth rates of 5% and 4%, respectively.

The company’s 65%-owned subsidiary Clark Electric Distribution Corp. also recorded sales volume growth of 3%, which was largely fueled by the industrial segment, which grew 6%. The growth in the segment offset a 1% decline in commercial sales volume.

In nine months to September, core net income grew 3% to P15.4 billion while reported income increased by 2% to P15.9 billion. Consolidated revenue hit P214.39 billion, up 10% from a year earlier.

Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT, Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. —Victor V. Saulon

Butler shines as Wolves topple Thunder

LOS ANGELES — Jimmy Butler finished with 26 points and eight assists on Wednesday as the Minnesota Timberwolves defeated struggling Oklahoma City, 104-88, handing the Thunder their third consecutive loss.

Center Karl-Anthony Towns tallied 18 points and 12 assists for the Timberwolves who are playing some of their best basketball of the season and have three straight resounding home wins in a row.

“When we start to compete on the defensive end like that we are tough to beat,” said Butler.

Butler, who is in his first season with Minnesota after coming over from the Chicago Bulls, said he is trying to be one of the veteran leaders on a young team.

“Last year this team didn’t understand how important every possession is,” he said.

Andrew Wiggins finished with 19 points in 42 minutes of playing time for the Timberwolves.

Thunder star Russell Westbrook had a game-high 38 points and 10 rebounds but he didn’t get much help from his supporting cast. Carmelo Anthony continues to struggle with his new team as he finished with 15 points and one rebound.

Paul George was the only other Thunder player in double figures with 13 points as Oklahoma City has lost five of their last seven games.

The loss drops the Thunder to 22-20 on the season and into seventh place as they sunk below Portland and Denver in the Western Conference standings.

Minnesota is on the rise having beaten New Orleans, Cleveland and Oklahoma City in recent home games thanks to their improving defense and consistently solid offense.

Minnesota had won seven of eight games before a disappointing East Coast road trip featured losses at Brooklyn and Boston.

Then the Wolves beat New Orleans at home and led by as many as 34 points, a season-high mark to that point.

Hosting LeBron James and Cleveland on Monday, Minnesota dominated play, led by as many as 41 points on its way to a 127-99 victory. — AFP

Pirate attacks doubled in PHL — watchdog

PIRATE ATTACKS worldwide fell to their lowest level in over two decades last year, the International Maritime Bureau said, but more than doubled in the Philippines while African trouble spots remained dangerous. Twenty-two incidents were recorded in the Philippines, a jump from 10 in 2016, with most of them low-level attacks on vessels anchored at Manila and Batangas, south of the capital, the country’s two busiest ports. There were also kidnappings of crew in the southern Philippines, the bureau said. Islamic militants have been increasingly targeting seafarers in the strife-torn region, abducting them and demanding ransoms for their release. — AFP

Mexico will leave NAFTA talks in Trump’s wake

MEXICO CITY — Mexico will leave the NAFTA negotiating table if US President Donald J. Trump decides to trigger a 6-month process to withdraw from the trade pact, three Mexican sources with knowledge of the talks told Reuters on Wednesday.

Reuters reported earlier in the day that Canada was increasingly convinced that Mr. Trump would soon announce the United States intends to pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), sending the Canadian and Mexican currencies lower and hurting stocks across the continent.

“I think it’s indisputable that if Trump announces a US withdrawal from NAFTA, well at that moment the negotiations stop,” said Raul Urteaga, head of international trade for Mexico’s agriculture ministry.

The two other sources, who are involved in the trade talks and asked not to be named, said that Mexico remains firm on its position to get up and leave from the negotiating table if Mr. Trump goes through with the move.

While a NAFTA termination letter would start the six-month exit clock ticking, the United States would not be legally bound to quit NAFTA once it expires. Washington could use the move as the ultimate sleight of hand as it seeks to gain leverage over Canada and Mexico in talks to update the 24-year-old trade pact.

Mr. Trump has long called the 1994 treaty a bad deal that hurts American workers. His negotiating team has set proposals that have alarmed their Canadian and Mexican counterparts.

Among the most divisive are plans to establish rules of origin for NAFTA goods that would set minimum levels of US content for autos, a sunset clause that would terminate the trade deal if it is not renegotiated every five years, and ending the so-called Chapter 19 dispute mechanism.

Though observers in Canada and Mexico have become increasingly gloomy about the upcoming Jan. 23-28 Montreal round in recent weeks, some took heart from a recent speech made by Mr. Trump to farmers this week in which he held back from provocative comments about the trade deal.

Mr. Urteaga, who was a member of Mexico’s original NAFTA negotiating team in the 1990s, said that Mr. Trump’s speech was an “interesting signal.” “No news, means good news sometimes.” — Reuters

Uproar in Hollywood over Williams-Wahlberg pay gap

LOS ANGELES — Hollywood is voicing its outrage over reports that Mark Wahlberg was paid 1,500 times more than Michelle Williams to reshoot scenes for kidnap drama All the Money in the World.

Ridley Scott partially re-shot his latest movie after Kevin Spacey was fired due to sexual misconduct allegations, with both Wahlberg and Williams called back to act opposite Spacey’s replacement, Christopher Plummer.

But Williams, according to USA Today, earned a daily allowance of $80 for her work — amounting to under $1,000 in total and less than 0.07% of the $1.5 million that Wahlberg earned.

“Please go see Michelle’s performance in All the Money in the World. She’s a brilliant Oscar-nominated Golden Globe-winning actress,” raged an indignant Jessica Chastain on Twitter.

“She has been in the industry for 20 years. She deserves more than one percent of her male co-star’s salary.”

Actress and activist Amber Tamblyn described the reported pay gap as “totally unacceptable” while veteran producer Judd Apatow said it was “so messed up that it is almost hard to believe.”

Golden Globe-winning actress Mia Farrow said the disparity was “outrageously unfair,” adding that she was “never, ever paid even a quarter of what the male lead received.”

Williams previously told USA Today she appreciated efforts to reshoot the film, which recounts the kidnapping of oil tycoon J. Paul Getty’s grandson, adding that “they could have my salary.”

Scott said the actors, including Williams and Wahlberg, turned up “for nothing” for the 10-day November re-shoot but USA Today reported that Wahlberg’s agency later renegotiated his “hefty fee.”

At Sunday’s Golden Globes — where All the Money in the World came home empty-handed despite three nominations — male and female actors wore black to highlight sexual misconduct and also to promote gender parity.

The protest was organized in part by the newly launched Time’s Up campaign led by female stars including Williams to address gender discrimination in Hollywood and other industries.

As her date, Williams brought civil rights activist Tarana Burke, the creator in 2006 of the “Me Too” movement to raise awareness of the ubiquity of sexual abuse. The phrase was co-opted by actress Alyssa Milano last year for the #MeToo social media campaign against sexual misconduct in Hollywood.

Representatives for Wahlberg and Williams did not immediately respond to requests for comment. — AFP

Conspiracy 2018

A plot is afoot to stop the holding of the 2019 midterm elections.

But that already base scheme doesn’t stop there.

Once constitutional amendments are approved, or a new constitution is in place, during the transition period to a federal form of government the masterminds also want the terms of the elected government officials who are currently in office, particularly congressmen, senators, and the president, extended for as long as 10 years.

If the plotters had their way, not only would there be no elections in 2019; there won’t be any in 2022 either, when the six-year term of office of President Rodrigo Duterte is supposed to end. Forget their made-to-order assurances that they won’t stay beyond 2022. Between this year and 2028, or even beyond, the country would very likely still have the same self-aggrandizing sycophants that infest the present Congress as ersatz, or pretend, lawmakers. Mr. Duterte won’t have to abolish that body. Legislative power would in reality be in his hands.

These so-called lawmakers would continue to constitute his rubber-stamp legislature, since he would still have the numbers he has today.

That would hardly be any different from the present situation in which whatever Mr. Duterte wants, he gets from Congress, thanks to the PDP-Laban Party’s “supermajority” in both houses.

However, Mr. Duterte and his fellow plotters, in addition to being in command over this country and its people for ten years or even longer, would also have no opposition and no checks to their power, because they would be exercising it during the transition to the shift from the present unitary form of government to a federal one.

During that period, Mr. Duterte would assume both executive and legislative powers, and, depending on the transitional provisions of the new Constitution his cronies are rushing to put together for rapid citizen approval through a plebiscite within this year, would also have the prerogative to abolish any government office and to fire any official he and his cohorts don’t like, to create new agencies including commissions, and appoint judges and other fired officials’ replacements. He can also suspend the writ of habeas corpus, arrest whomever he likes, and curtail free expression and press freedom. What would be in place in fact if not in name is the very same “revolutionary government” Mr. Duterte has been so obsessed with he can’t stop talking about its intoxicating promise of absolute power.

This isn’t just another conspiracy theory that’s unlikely to be in process and to have any chance of realization.

Mr. Duterte’s flunkies in both houses of Congress have floated and defended the idea of cancelling elections in 2019 and assuring themselves term extensions of as long as 10 years. Mr. Duterte himself has openly declared a number of times that he would abolish existing government agencies, particularly such Constitutional bodies as the Commission on Audit and the Commission on Human Rights, create new ones, and hire and fire whomever he wants should he have the power to do so.

His Congressional band of (power) brokers is more than willing to give him what he’s been wishing for by amending or even doing away with the 1987 People Power Constitution to effect the shift to a federal form of government.

Federalism is an option for which even the leaders of the Revolution of 1896 expressed their preference as a form of government.

During his dictatorship, Ferdinand Marcos, Sr. put in place some of its more innocuous aspects by creating a ministry of this and a ministry of that, and naming a prime minister, while he continued to wield absolute power as president-for-life.

After the 1986 EDSA civilian-military mutiny, some academics and politicians tried to convince the public of the merits of federalism and of the need to amend the 1987 Constitution to effect the shift to it. Those efforts foundered on citizen resistance to Constitutional amendments, but were nevertheless kept alive in Congress through a number of resolutions.

Then Davao City mayor Rodrigo Duterte expressed support for federalism in 2014, and promised to hold a plebiscite on the shift to a federal form of government within two years as part of his campaign platform in 2016.

As President, Mr. Duterte signed in December 2016 Executive Order Number 10, which created a consultative committee to review the 1987 People Power Constitution.

Effecting the shift is one of the Duterte campaign promises that seems to be following his timeline, unlike his pledge to end the illegal drug problem within six months. No one can blame the more skeptical for suspecting that that’s because everyone in the regime stands to benefit from what its own people would decide should go into the amendments or even into a new constitution, since the plan, as announced by Mr. Duterte’s henchmen in Congress, is to convene that body as a constituent assembly rather than to call a constitutional convention to which delegates would be elected at large. The expense of the latter has been invoked to justify the former. What’s closer to the truth is that the regime is not going to risk the election of non-regime friendly delegates to a convention.

The primary argument for a federal form of government is that it would free from central government interference the “states” that would be created by merging various provinces. It would also enable such regions as the Cordillera and Muslim Mindanao to craft their own paths to development.

While these considerations are formidable arguments for federalism, the downside would be the strengthening of locally based dynasties and warlord families, the weakening of the capacity of the central government to check corruption and the abuse of power at the local level, and the dynasts’ use of it for their personal, familial and class enrichment, and to suppress dissent and protest.

It can of course be argued that all that is happening even now. But it only proves that it is neither the form of government nor the system that’s crucial in the making of effective and honest governance, but the extent to which those in power share the political culture and the interests of their constituents. That reality is an argument for the democratization of political power by enabling those sectors that have been denied the right to govern themselves to break the dynasties’ stranglehold on Philippine governance.

These are the more critical issues in the campaign for a federal form of government. But both the advantages and the downside of that option are being overshadowed by the quite obvious attempt to use the move to federalism as the primary means of savaging what little remains of democratic and citizen rights in this country, restore authoritarian rule, and assure the continuing dominance of the handful of families that for decades have monopolized political power in this country to the exclusion of the majority.

It’s turning into just another conspiracy by this country’s political overlords to prevent the democratization of political power and the realization of those social and economic reforms that have eluded the long-suffering people of these benighted isles.

Frustrating the plot to establish another tinhorn tyranny that would abuse the Filipino people’s hard-won rights is crucial to the lives and future of the 100 million souls in this archipelago, and therefore takes precedence over everything else. The shift to a federal form of government as a citizen option will have to wait for better, less critical and less dangerous times. The reign of Mr. Duterte and his henchmen in Congress is the exact opposite — and far from being one of those rare moments in this nation’s troubled history.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility.

www.luisteodoro.com

Thiem pulls out of Kooyong over virus

MELBOURNE — Dominic Thiem withdrew from a scheduled match at the Kooyong Classic on Thursday as he recovers from a virus, disrupting the world number five’s buildup to the Australian Open.

The Austrian played at the Grand Slam tune-up event on Wednesday, losing in straight sets to Novak Djokovic.

He had arrived late in Melbourne from Doha after pulling out prior to last weekend’s Qatar Open semi-final with Gael Monfils after contracting a virus.

Thiem was bed-ridden before flying to Australia, but said after facing Djokovic that he felt fine and was over his illness.

“I’m free of fever and healthy again,” he insisted then.

He has been replaced at Kooyong by Russian rising star Andrey Rublev, the losing finalist in Doha to Monfils. — AFP

Osmeña stands on freeze of building permits

DESPITE CRITICISMS, Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña said he will push through with his plan of freezing the permits of medium and high-rise buildings in the city, pending the establishment of safety standards. This, after City Councilor Raymond Alvin Garcia criticized him that withholding of permits of buildings is “anti-development and anti-business.” — The Freeman

See full story on https://goo.gl/g3nJoN

Thoughts in a DB III

Not really. I don’t have an Aston Martin. Wish I did though. The title is from a chapter in an Ian Fleming book, which sees James Bond dashing through Europe in the chase for Auric Goldfinger.

“Bond settled back into second and let the car idle. He reached for the wide gunmetal case of Morland cigarettes on the neighboring bucket seat, fumbled for one and lit it from the dashboard.”

“The car was from the pool. Bond had been offered the Aston Martin or a Jaguar 3.4. He had taken the D.B.III. Either of the cars would have suited his cover — a well-to-do, rather adventurous young man with a taste for the good, the fast things of life. But the D.B.III had the advantage of an up-to-date triptyque, an inconspicuous color — battleship gray — and certain extras which might or might not come in handy. These included switches to alter the type and color of Bond’s front and rear lights if he was following or being followed at night, reinforced steel bumpers, fore and aft, in case he needed to ram, a long-barrelled Colt .45 in a trick compartment under the driver’s seat, a radio pickup tuned to receive an apparatus called the Homer, and plenty of concealed space that would fox most Customs men.”

Those are passages one could read over and over again. Reminds me of this bit from Damon Runyon’s “The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown”:

“Now one Sunday evening The Sky is walking along Broadway, and at the corner of Forty-ninth Street he comes upon a little bunch of mission workers who are holding a religious meeting, such as mission workers love to do of a Sunday evening, the idea being that they may round up a few sinners here and there, although personally I always claim the mission workers come out too early to catch any sinners on this part of Broadway. At such an hour the sinners are still in bed resting up from their sinning of the night before, so they will be in good shape for more sinning a little later on.”

Images from that filled my college days (and nights). Of course, for some, the quote may read familiar as it was used in the CD sleeve of Workshy’s “The Golden Mile”.

Perhaps a life’s regret (there are a possible few; but then again too few to mention) is that I never got to do the Golden Mile. There’s supposed to be one in Singapore and another in Belfast. The World’s End is about 12 pubs, starting with The Old Familiar and ends — naturally — with The World’s End.

Frankly, I’m not even sure it’s a place.

The point is to spend the evening going to a string of pubs until one gets blindly “pissed” (i.e., drunk). The moment has passed. There are certain things one can do at 27 that’s just idiotic at 47.

Like Paris.

Amidst the mayhem in The Day of the Jackal, even Frederick Forsyth was moved to write:

Bond

“The brilliant afternoon that had warmed the friendly pavements of Paris throughout the day faded to golden dusk, and at nine the street lights came on. Along the banks of the Seine the couples strolled as always on summer nights, hand in hand, slowly as if drinking in the wine of dusk and love and youth that will never, however hard they try, be quite the same again. The open-fronted cafés along the water’s edge were alive with chatter and clink of glasses, greetings and mock protests, raillerie and compliments, apologies and passes, that make up the conversation of the French and the magic of the river Seine on an August evening.”

I wonder if Manila, not Metro Manila but Manila itself, could recover or acquire such character.

For now, the best thing really is to spend much time out of the city. And look upwards, pondering Eliot: “Let us go then, you and I, when the evening is spread out against the sky.”

And on and on until “Let us go, through certain half-deserted streets, the muttering retreats, of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels, and sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells.”

Then finally to “the room the women come and go, talking of Michelangelo.”

The drive sighs and melds into its final turns, the roads covered by fallen leaves. Verlaine:

“The long sobs of autumn’s violins, wound my heart with a monotonous languor.”

Which is perhaps apt as these lines signaled the start of Operation Overlord — that part regarding the violins meant that the Normandy invasion would happen in two weeks; the one regarding languor meant that D-Day starts in 48 hours. In which case, the French Resistance should start sabotaging stuff.

Speaking of the resistance, when asked what was he rebelling against, a young Marlon Brando gruffly replied (mumbling, of course): “What do you got?”

But the drive is done and the reverie has faded. Back to work.

 

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

jemygatdula@yahoo.com

www.jemygatdula.blogspot.com

facebook.com/jemy.gatdula

Twitter @jemygatdula

Eustaquio in rematch with ex-champ Akhmetov

ONE Championship unfurls its first Manila offering for 2018 on Jan. 26 with Filipino fighter Geje “The Gravity” Eustaquio taking on former world flyweight champion Kairat Ahkmetov of Kazakhstan at “ONE: Global Superheroes” in a rematch of their tightly fought encounter last year.

Fighting for the interim ONE Flyweight World Championship, Mr. Eustaquio (9-6), training under Team Lakay in Baguio City, looks to avenge his split decision loss to Kazakh Akhmetov last September and at the same time solidify his standing anew in the division currently ruled by Brazilian Adriano Moraes.

In their last fight in Indonesia, Mr. Akhmetov (21-1), fresh from his loss to Mr. Moraes the previous month that saw him lose his title in the process, showcased his overwhelming Greco Roman wrestling skills to consistently bring Mr. Eustaquio to the canvas, controlling the action on the ground.

Mr. Eustaquio would have his moments, landing with crisp and clean combinations but they proved to be not enough to earn him the win as the former champ emerged the victor on two of the three judges’ scorecards to earn him the split decision.

Global Superheroes will be the first of a scheduled four-fight offering in Manila for ONE Championship in 2018, and the organization is angling to use to it to set things to a good start.

“This is the first in four blockbuster events in Manila in 2018, and ONE Championship is looking to kick things off with a spectacular show. Fans of martial arts in the Philippines are among the most passionate in the world, and it is our honor to present the best in local and global martial arts talent,” Chatri Sityodtong, chairman and CEO of ONE, said as he drummed up support for the Manila event.

Apart from Mr. Eustaquio, other Filipino fighters seeing action at Global Superheroes are strawweight Joshua “The Passion” Pacio, featherweight Eric “The Natural” Kelly, and his featherweight brother Edward.

ONE: Global Superheroes happens at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo