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Lisa Macuja plays the choreographer in Snow White

Ballet
Snow White
Presented by Ballet Manila
Nov. 25 and 26, Dec. 2 and 3
Aliw Theater, CCP Complex, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City

By Nickky F.P. De Guzman,
Reporter

LISA MACUJA’S choreography work for last year’s Cinderella was just a warm up. Now, the prima ballerina, CEO, and artistic director of Ballet Manila heats it up a little bit more with her version of Snow White, which will run at the Aliw Theater on Nov. 25, 26 and Dec. 2 and 3.

This is the classic Brothers Grimm version rather than Disney’s, a conscious decision she made in order to highlight the power of storytelling. After all, ballerinas are “storytellers on toes,” she said.

Always a prima ballerina at heart, Ms. Macuja has been slowly losing her insecurities as a choreographer. “I now understand when choreographers say that they get inspiration from the dancers they work with. That was the case with Cinderella, and now, with Snow White,” she said.

Thanks to the helping hands (and feet) of Ballet Manila’s dancers and their comments — in addition with the help of Ballet Master Osias Barroso — and the company’s mastery of the Vaganova technique (a Russian ballet training system), Snow White promises to be a magical show for everyone.

The show’s set is by actor turned designer Mio Infante, who has “talked about making mushrooms the main feature in the forest. There will be so many dynamic elements on stage like a moving mirror, as well as animal figures. Popular nursery rhymes will also be used in the music,” Ms. Macuja said of her upcoming show.

The music will be arranged by Von De Guzman while Ballet Manila’s longtime costume designer, Michael Miguel, is again on board.

Asked about her fascination with fairy tales as ballet, Ms. Macuja said:

“My calling has always been to become a classical ballerina — nothing else. First, I believe in sticking to what you know, and I know my classical ballets very well. I have a wealth of classical ballet steps in my dancer’s vocabulary. If you think about it, the classical ballets are all fairy tales, or at least stories, that have come to life in dance form.”

With Snow White, Ms. Macuja guarantees that each member of the audience will get his or her fill of pure magic, romance, and fantasy. The audience can only expect the highest quality of dancing as well from the country’s youngest ballet company.

For details, visit www.balletmanila.com.ph.

PFF kicks off Football Coaches Conference to be held Dec. 1-3

THE Philippine Football Federation (PFF), the governing body of local football, and MVP Sports Foundation, the CSR-arm for sports of the MVP Group of Companies, present the country’s first Football Coaches Conference. The trailblazing event will be held from Dec. 1-3 at the Li Sing Giap Auditorium of the University of Asia and the Pacific (UA & P) in Ortigas Center, Pasig City.

The conference aims to bring together Filipino football educators and enthusiasts in a positive environment to share experiences, learn from global experts, discuss issues, and come up with ways to further develop football in the Philippines. Special attention is going to be given to national teams and youth teams. The PFF has invited resource persons from here and abroad to share their expertise.

International speakers include Tuan Hoang Anh who led the U-19 team of Vietnam to qualify for this year’s U-20 World Cup Championship, Football Federation Australia Technical Director Eric Abrams, Japan Football Association Coach Education Director Kawamata Noriyuki, Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Deputy Technical Director Wim Koevermans and Japan Football Association Academy Coach Sakao Miho.

Azkals’ coach Thomas Dooley, Philippine Women’s National Team coaches Letecia Bautista and Marnelli Dimzon, PFF Grassroots Director Aquilino Pastoral III, PFF Technical Director Marlon Maro and PFF Coach Education Head Jose Ariston Caslib are each going to give updates about the respective groups that they mentor.

The conference also features a forum on youth players with coaches Emelio “Chieffy” Caligdong, Jose Maria Aberasturi, Bongbong “Roxy” Dorlas, Marielle Benitez and Joyce Landagan comprising the panelists.

The organizers encourage all football coaches, football managers and stakeholders to register and join the conference. The conference fee (P2,000 regular rate) excludes meals, transportation and accommodation.

What can we learn from hindsight?

Nassim Nicholas Taleb in his 2012 book, Antifragile: Things that gain from Disorder dismisses the notion of planning for the future based on analyzing the past. Such an approach is what he calls “postdiction.” Clearly, he is biased for its opposite: prediction.

Life is not linear and what happened before will not necessarily happen again even in some modified form.

In a discontinuous world, even “worst case” scenarios based on past disasters do not prepare us for actual risks ahead. Taleb after all previously wrote about the famous “black swan” effect, for the truly unforeseen and catastrophic risks.

Hindsight, or looking back at the hind (posterior) legs, say of a rabbit, may be considered merely academic, as opposed to foresight — looking ahead, with front legs. Still, doesn’t a good driver need both windshield and rear view mirror to maneuver well and able to check who’s gaining on him? Let’s not forget the side mirror for those overtaking motorcycles.

In the murder mystery, the story opens with the discovery of a corpse. From here, our trusty detective looks back and reconstructs the victim’s life and how he died. This leads him to the tangle of motives, activities, and possible suspects. Other insights are gleaned from forensic findings in the autopsy, the crime scene investigation, CCTV footages, and interview of witnesses.

The post-mortem (or “after death”) is a beloved approach in the mystery genre. The autopsy provides many details of how death occurred (trajectory of the knife, choke marks on the neck, dinner residue in the stomach) and even how it might have taken place.

Looking back at what already happened is meant to see how matters can be improved the next time around.

Basketball coaches watch videos of defeats to analyze what went wrong. A blowout in the first quarter leaving a team behind by 15 points can be an occasion to take to task the players responsible for turnovers, weak defensive plays allowing easy points, or poor shooting by the starters. (Why do you keep hoisting the low-percentage perimeter shots?) The adjustments in player rotation and game plan are results of studying failure. And sometimes the lessons are learned, and they work in the next game.

In the MBA case-method approach, the hindsight method is also dominant. The post mortem of the corporate corpse (or near-corpse) provides the points for discussion. A real company and its woes are presented for analysis as a way to understand the dynamics of decision making and priority-setting in a crisis.

Management theories are applied with wild abandon on the facts of the case. The corporate situation however is sanitized to exclude extraneous forces like family affiliations, favoritism, political machinations, and the envy of peers. Such details are considered irrelevant in the academic exercise… but not in real life.

In any planning session, the starting point seems to be hindsight.

The facilitator steps back and plays detective with what happened in the past, perhaps also looking for suspects. The resulting “situation analysis” starts the ball rolling in determining future moves. Then it is a matter of tweaking the game plan to have a better result in the next review period.

Good leaders understand the game and how it should be played. A setback, or a series of them, is seen as a learning experience.

Still, looking back at mistakes may just result in repeating them all over again, with even more dire consequences. The luxury of reviewing in hindsight is that the picture is static. The crisis is over and the decisions have already been made.

In the discontinuous future, the parts are all moving fast. The sense of urgency is routine. Can you enjoy the landscape from a small boat when being chased by an alligator?

An organization’s stakeholders are not really limited to those who have a stake in the company’s success. They can refer also to those who are tied to the stake as they burn for their missed shots. Their roles are too clear in looking back at the past. But can these “stakeholders” play a bigger role in future successes?

An undue obsession on hindsight and what went wrong can overlook what really needs to be done and what to prepare for in the future… especially when the rules of the game have changed.

 

A. R. Samson is chair and CEO of Touch DDB.

ar.samson@yahoo.com

Gay coming-of-age film Call Me by Your Name tops Spirit Awards nominations

LOS ANGELES — Coming-of-age tale Call Me by Your Name led the pack of independent films tipped for Oscars glory as the Film Independent Spirit Awards nominations were announced on Tuesday.

Set in 1980s Italy and starring Timothee Chalamet and Armie Hammer, it tells the story of 17-year-old Elio as he begins a relationship with his father’s American research assistant, Oliver.

The film was nominated in six categories, including best feature, best director for Luca Guadagnino and best lead and supporting male for Chalamet and Hammer, respectively.

Breakout horror satire Get Out, written and directed by debutant filmmaker Jordan Peele and starring Daniel Kaluuya and Allison Williams, secured five nominations, including best screenplay and directing for Peele and male lead for Kaluuya.

Josh and Benny Safdie’s heist thriller Good Time tied in second place with nods for directing, editing and three actors, including for its star Robert Pattinson.

Twilight actor Pattinson, 31, earned the best reviews of his career for his portrayal of a New York bank robber, shedding his heartthrob looks in favor of a shaggy bleach-blond mane and a torso full of tattoos.

Greta Gerwig’s comedy Lady Bird and Chloe Zhao’s The Rider, which picked up the Art Cinema Award at Cannes, each earned four nods.

The nominations were announced on Tuesday morning by actresses Lily Collins, and Tessa Thompson, and Film Independent chief Josh Welsh at the plush Jeremy Hotel in West Hollywood.

“There’s an excitement particularly because Film Independent acknowledges people that are just starting out for their first features,” Thompson, who won acclaim for her recent performance in Thor: Ragnarok and for 2015’s Creed, told AFP.

“There’s a hopefulness, there’s something sort of — and I mean this in the best sense of the word — renegade about it, surprising about it.”

The Spirit Awards are seen as an strong indicator of independent movies that could be winners on Oscars night.

Five of the last six best feature winners have gone on to best picture glory at the Academy Awards, including Moonlight, Spotlight, and Birdman.

“We’re looking at lower budgeted films but it’s also films that have original, provocative subject matter and uniqueness of vision,” Welsh told AFP.

He described this year’s nominees as “incredibly strong,” singling out Get Out, The Rider, and The Florida Project.

The winners will be announced on March 3, 2018 — a day before the Academy Awards. — AFP

Durant return to OKC

Prior to the Warriors’ visit to the Chesapeake Energy Arena yesterday, eight-time All-Star Kevin Durant was asked if he would be able to suit up. He had sprained his left ankle in a match over the weekend, and wound up missing the next outing. “I don’t know,” he said. “We’ll see how it feels in the morning, but, right now, it feels good.” Which, to avid fans of the National Basketball Association, simply meant he would play; short of the coming of the End of Days, nothing was going to make him miss his date with his former squad.

Indeed, Durant prepped to burn rubber, his competitiveness compelling him to face the chorus of boos certain to rain on him from opening tip to final buzzer. In turn, he resolved to make the Thunder faithful remember why they were bitter in the first place, just as he did early this year when he put up 34 (on 12-of-21 shooting), nine, and three in a brutally efficient 34 minutes. And if there was any doubt of his presence, he promptly erased it by heading to the court a full three-quarters of an hour before any other Warrior yesterday; he wanted to put in the work he needed to ensure that he was at his best.

As things turned out, Durant came up with a respectable showing. Nonetheless, it was nowhere near enough to help the Warriors in the face of a determined effort by the hosts. Beleaguered through the first month of the 2017-2018 campaign, the Thunder rode to victory on the strength of top dog Russell Westbrook’s inspired play and fellow marquee names Paul George and Carmelo Anthony’s complementary efforts.

The setback notwithstanding, Durant looked at peace with himself in the aftermath. His second return to Oklahoma City was not as emotionally charged as the first. “It’s just a regular game for me now,” he noted. Well, maybe not; as evidenced by the series of tweets critical of the Thunder that he meant to post anonymously two months ago, there are still wounds to tend to. Then again, there can be no denying his intent to move on. And, in any case, he has a championship and a Finals Most Valuable Player award to tide him over.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is the Senior Vice-President and General Manager of Basic Energy Corp.

Mid-December approval seen for renewable, green-energy rules

THE Department of Energy (DoE) advisory body on renewable energy issues expects the agency to issue on Dec. 15 two regulations that the power sector has been awaiting for months now — Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) and Green Energy Options.

“We have formally endorsed the RPS on grid and the green energy option rules. The DoE is currently reviewing, and we are hoping they will be issued by not later than Dec. 15, 2017,” said Jose M. Layug, Jr., chairman of the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB).

He said he had submitted to the DoE on Nov. 1 the final draft of the two proposed regulations. He called the submission a formality as NREB had been discussing the proposals with the DoE for months.

“We’re hoping. We’re very very positive about it. We’ve talked to all the stakeholders, we received all inputs and we’re hoping that by Dec. 15, 2017 the rules will be issued, effective 2018,” he said.

RPS is a market-based policy that requires electricity suppliers to source an agreed portion of their energy supply from eligible renewable energy (RE) resources. It is called for under Republic Act (RA) No. 9513, the law that promotes the development, utilization and commercialization of RE resources.

NREB, which was also created by the same law, is required to set the minimum percentage of generation from eligible RE resources and determine to which sector RPS shall be imposed on a per grid basis. RPS was supposed to be implemented a year after RA 9513 took effect in 2008.

RA 9513 requires the DoE, in consultation with NREB, to promulgate the appropriate implementing rules and regulations “which are necessary, incidental or convenient to achieve the objectives set forth” in the law.

“The [DoE] Secretary [Alfonso G. Cusi] has said that while he is technology-neutral we have certain mandates under the Renewable Energy Law, under the EPIRA (Electricity Power Industry Reform Act) [of 2001], even under the law that created the DoE, that the preference and bias should be towards clean energy, indigenous energy resources,” he said.

“We’re hoping that the RPS will finally be issued. This is long overdue and more distribution utilities and cooperatives will sign up power supply agreements for renewables,” he added.

The Green Energy Option program lays out the renewable energy choices for end-users to select for their power requirements.

The renewable energy options listed by the DoE are biomass, solar, wind, geothermal, ocean energy and hydropower that conform with internationally accepted norms and standards on dams, and other emerging renewable energy technologies.

The purpose of the program is to empower electricity users to choose renewable energy in meeting their electricity requirements.  Victor V. Saulon

WB urges educational overhaul to teach ‘soft skills’

THE World Bank (WB) said Philippine employers are reporting difficulties in recruiting workers with the appropriate “soft skills” above and beyond the desired technical qualifications.

In a report, “Developing Socioemotional Skills for the Philippines’ Labor Market,” the bank said “about one-third of employers report being unable to fill vacancies due a lack of applicants with the requisite skills. Most of these “missing skills” are not academic knowledge or technical know-how, but rather socioemotional skills, also known as ‘non-cognitive skills,’ ‘soft skills’ or ‘behavioral skills.’”

The report also claimed a correlation between greater socioemotional skills and higher earnings.

“[M]ost socioemotional skills are related to labor earnings in a comparable way to that of traditional educational attainment,” the report said.

The Skills Toward Employability and Productivity (STEP) survey cited by World Bank in the report showed that “one additional year of education was associated with a 3% increase in wages, whereas one standard deviation in socioemotional skills was associated with a 5.6% to 9% increase in wages, or a difference of approximately $2 per day. Extraversion and openness to new experiences were the socioemotional skills most strongly correlated with increased earning.”

Socioemotional skills are most strongly linked to higher wages among women and younger workers. Women are more likely to engage in activities that require interpersonal skills.

Among male workers, extraversion is the only socioemotional skill that significantly correlates with increased earnings. However, female workers who are more open to new experiences, are extraverted, exhibit strong decision making power, and possess higher levels of grit and conscientiousness are better rewarded in the labor market. The same is true for younger workers, who drive most of the overall correlation between socioemotional skills and wages.

The World Bank recommended that policy makers integrate socioemotional skills into the curriculum for its newly compulsory kindergarten-through-grade-12 educational system.

“Schools are the ideal setting in which to teach these skills because, of any public institution, the school environment has greatest influence over children and teenagers. The Philippine government can strengthen both its educational and labor force policies to encourage the development of socioemotional skills,” the World Bank said.

Mainstreaming socioemotional skills includes setting aside greater time for subjects such as music, arts, physical education, health, and values education and training teachers in pedagogical techniques that embed the teaching of socioeconomic skills in traditional academic subjects such as reading and math.

In a World Bank press release, Mara K. Warwick, World Bank Country Director for Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, said: “Numeracy, literacy, technical skills, and school enrollment are benchmarks of a productive, modern nation.”

“But the jobs of the future also require skills that promote individual behavior, personality, attitude and mind-set. Integrating behavioral skills in schools and vocational training will help the Philippines to be more competitive globally,” Ms. Warwick added. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Q&A with La Luna Roja’s Sorceress

Tami Monsod

TEACHING and theater seem to go together for Tami Monsod. Before playing the role of the witch in La Luna Roja, the veteran theater actress was a lonely, loveless, and dying professor in Wit. Like that character (at least the professor part), Ms. Monsod is also a teacher in real life. She has a masters in theater and currently teaches theater to high school students at the International School Manila.

Teaching seems to run in the Monsod family. Her mother Solita “Winnie” Monsod is a noted UP professor, television host, and economist.

While she took theater classes in college, Ms. Monsod was a Spanish and Economics major. But she realizes that theater has always been calling her, so she gives in to the order and has acted with groups like Dulaang UP, Actor’s Actors, Inc., and New Voice Company.

She received the 2014 Philstage Gawad Buhay award for playing one of the daughters of the Weston family who had to face her own demons in Repertory Philippines’ August: Osage Country. In 2014, she directed Last 10 Minutes, a Virgin Labfest show.

Ms. Monsod talked with BusinessWorld about sorcery, flamenco, short hair, and meeting one’s duende.

Did you cut your hair as part of your role as a sorceress?
I shaved my head last April for my role in Wit, and have kept it short ever since. While women in flamenco normally have long hair, I feel short hair on the sorceress would highlight her aggressiveness and non-conformity.

Can you tell us more about your role and how you are preparing for it?
My preparation for the role has been challenging. Emma, our teacher and creator of the piece, cast me as Sorceress because I am an actor and she felt this was central to the role. However, because the piece is a flamenco ballet, she has also had to work on my dance technique. After discussion about character, Emma let me improvise on the Sorceress’ movement and then she refined it so it incorporated flamenco form.   

One of the biggest challenges in teaching flamenco is bringing out the duende (passion) in students, how did you deal with your own duende?
I see duende as a moment of spiritual, emotional, and physical brilliance in performance. We all hope for it. Even with excellent technique and skill, though, duende can be elusive. Emma is right when she says it is her biggest challenge.

How was your process of becoming a “fearless” flamenco dancer?
What makes you think I am fearless? As a performer I am almost always beset with fear. After decades of experience, it has never left me. I think I have reached the equivalent of duende as an actor only once in my career, where I became lost in a moment and “came to” afterwards.

La Luna Roja has a niche market, and it’s not the young adults/millennials. Why should the youth watch it and other flamenco dances?
The first time I saw a flamenco performance in Sevilla, I cried. The passion was startling and resonated with my life experiences. With more exposure to flamenco, young adults and millennials here in the Philippines will fall in love with it, too.

What are the differences and similarities between theater and flamenco?
I think the differences are apparent. I’d like to address the similarities: Both require years of technical study, mindful repetition, and an understanding of text, subtext, and interior monologue. Both require stamina. Both require courage. — NFPDG

McDonald’s Philippines ramps up hiring

MCDONALD’S Philippines is ramping up the hiring of manager trainees this year to complement its expansion program in the country.

In a statement issued Thursday, the local operator of the international fastfood giant said it has already hired more than 1,000 manager trainees in 2017, with 100 more set to be hired before the year ends.

McDonald’s Philippines said it focused the additional hiring in “high demand areas” like Cebu, Davao, Aklan, Camarines Sur, and 16 cities in the National Capital Region, including Muntinlupa, Pateros, and Navotas.

“This year, alongside hiring a big number of trainees, we also want to ensure continued high standards in our training programs both in the classroom and on floor. We aim to provide a fun and empowered working environment, and to be a company that you will feel proud to be working for,” McDonald’s Philippines President and Chief Executive Officer Kenneth S. Yang said in a statement.

McDonald’s Philippines said college graduates, preferably with degrees in management, are encouraged to apply for the trainee program.

To date, the company has 550 stores around the country with nearly 60,000 regular full-time and part-time employees. McDonald’s Philippines is operated by Golden Arches Development Corp., the quick service restaurant business of tycoon Andrew L. Tan. — Arra B. Francia

Putin wins backing from Iran, Turkey for new Syria peace push

SOCHI, RUSSIA/RIYADH — Russia’s Vladimir Putin won the backing of Turkey and Iran on Wednesday to host a Syrian peace congress, taking the central role in a major diplomatic push to finally end a civil war all but won by Moscow’s ally, President Bashar al-Assad.

Syrian opposition groups, meeting in Saudi Arabia to seek a unified position ahead of peace talks, decided to stick to their demand that Mr. Assad leave power, Al Arabiya television reported, following speculation they might soften their stance after their hardline leader quit.

Two days after being visited by Mr. Assad in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, President Putin hosted his counterparts Tayyip Erdogan and Hassan Rouhani there.

In a joint statement, the three leaders called on the Syrian government and moderate opposition to “participate constructively” in the planned congress, to be held in the same city on a date they did not specify.

“The congress will look at the key questions on Syria’s national agenda,” Mr. Putin told reporters at the summit, sitting alongside Messrs. Rouhani and Erdogan. “First of all that is the drawing-up of a framework for the future structure of the state, the adoption of a new constitution, and, on the basis of that, the holding of elections under United Nations supervision.”

There was no word from the leaders on who would be invited. The list of invitees has been a sticking point, with Turkey objecting to some Syrian Kurdish groups attending.

Syria’s civil war, in its seventh year, has killed hundreds of thousands of people and created the world’s worst refugee crisis, driving more than 11 million people from their homes.

All previous efforts to achieve a diplomatic solution have swiftly collapsed, with the opposition demanding Mr. Assad leave power, the government insisting he stay on, and neither side able to force the issue by achieving a military victory.

But since Russia joined the war on behalf of Mr. Assad in 2015, the balance of power has turned decisively in his government’s favor. A year ago, the army forced rebels out of their last urban stronghold, the eastern half of Aleppo.

In recent weeks, the self-proclaimed caliphate of jihadist group Islamic State has collapsed. Government forces now effectively control all of Syria apart from a few shrinking rebel pockets and a swathe in the north held by mainly Kurdish forces backed by the United States.

STILL SEEKING ASSAD EXIT
Opposition groups held their meeting on Wednesday at a luxury hotel in Riyadh, two days after the leader of the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) that has represented them at previous peace talks quit abruptly.

HNC chief Riyad Hijab had been known as an uncompromising defender of the position that Mr. Assad must have no role in any political transition for Syria, and his resignation had led to speculation the opposition could soften its stance.

However, a draft of the meeting’s final statement still included the demand Mr. Assad leave office at the start of any transition, Saudi-owned Al Arabiya television reported.

Having helped Mr. Assad’s government reach the cusp of victory, Mr. Putin now appears to be playing the leading role in international efforts to end the war on Mr. Assad’s terms.

In addition to hosting Messrs. Assad, Rouhani and Erdogan, the Russian leader has also phoned US President Donald J. Trump and Saudi King Salman in the past 24 hours.

Iran has long supported Mr. Assad.

Saudi Arabia, Iran’s arch rival in the Middle East and long a backer of rebel groups in Syria and advocate of the position that Mr. Assad must leave, has been the main supporter of the HNC. But after King Salman made a historic visit to Moscow a few months ago, Riyadh appears to have come around to Russia’s dominant role in Syria.

Similarly Turkey, traditionally one of the Syrian leader’s implacable foes, has increasingly shown willingness to work with Russia to resolve the crisis.

“This summit is aimed at results. I believe critical decisions will be reached,” Turkey’s Mr. Erdogan said in Sochi before his meeting with Messrs. Putin and Iran’s Rouhani.

The Syrian government welcomed the final statement from the three-way Iran summit, Syrian state media said on Wednesday, quoting an official source in the Foreign Ministry. It described it as the culmination of Mr. Assad’s summit with Mr. Putin.

The other major power with troops in Syria, the United States, has so far kept its distance. Washington has been arming, training and sending special forces to assist a Kurdish group fighting against Islamic State, angering Turkey which is fighting its own Kurdish insurgency.

Still, any final settlement that keeps Mr. Assad in power will probably require the participation of some kind of opposition delegation willing to negotiate over the demand that he go.

UN peace talks mediator Staffan de Mistura, host of the formal peace process in Geneva, told the opposition groups at the Riyadh meeting they needed to have the “hard discussions” necessary to reach a “common line.” — Reuters

Cannes film fest to end decades of tradition

PARIS — The Cannes film festival is to end decades of tradition next year by awarding its top Palme d’Or prize on a Saturday rather than a Sunday, its organizers said Wednesday.

“The festival is beginning a new period in its history,” its president Pierre Lescure said of the shake-up, which he hoped would “rebalance and bring new energy” to the two-week jamboree on the French Riviera.

The 71st edition of the world’s biggest and most prestigious film festival will now start on May 8, 2018 — a Tuesday — rather than the traditional Wednesday.

The festival organizers said holding the awards ceremony on Saturday night would also “give the closing film better exposure” and allow them to squeeze in an extra red-carpet gala.

Many exhausted critics and entertainment business movers and shakers return home after the Cannes market, where the big deals are made, closes on the Friday, often missing the final films in competition for the Palme d’Or and other prizes. — AFP

DAR orders provincial committees to report illegal land conversions

THE HEADS of the Provincial Agrarian Reform Coordinating Committees (PARCCOMs) have been ordered to be vigilant and report cases of illegal land conversions. “Report illegal land conversions in your areas,” Secretary Rosalina L. Bistoyong, officer-in-charge of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) told the PARCCOM chairpersons during the three-day 2017 national assessment held in Cebu City. Ms. Bistoyong, who chairs the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council Executive Committee (PARC Excom), said the illegal conversion of agricultural lands to commercial and others use has affected the country’s food production. “Because of massive illegal conversion, we are now having problems on food security. Agricultural lands are decreasing so fewer lands are farmed for food production and livestock raising,” she said. Ms. Bistoyong also stressed the need for government agencies — including DAR, Department of Agriculture, Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), and the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board — along with local government units to streamline procedures on the reclassification of lands for “meaningful development.”