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ATRAM Trust launches new fund

ATRAM TRUST Corp. has launched a new multi-asset fund that capitalizes on Asia’s growth potential by investing in companies from the region, it said in a statement on Monday.

The ATRAM Asian Multi-Asset Income Feeder Fund invests in Asian businesses that have proven track records of generating sustainable cash flows, which ATRAM Trust said ensures a reliable income stream for investors.

“The group continues to break down industry barriers to build investment portfolios aligned with investors’ goals. Such is the case with the launch of ATRAM’s newest multi-asset fund that invests in Asian equities and aims to provide unit-income on a quarterly basis,” ATRAM Trust said.

The multi-asset investment fund is now available for ATRAM Prime app investors.

The fund targets the Schroder Asian Asset Income Fund, servicing the Philippine peso with no minimum holding period and trust fees of 1% per annum. Its risk and investor profile is considered moderately aggressive.

Schroders Investment Director Chloe Shea said the fund is designed to capture income and growth opportunities in Asia while actively managing potential risks and market volatility.

“It’s important to recognize that the world that we’re currently in is actually very different from before, and therefore we need to find very nimble and niche opportunities within the region,” Ms. Shea said.

The fund’s multi-asset investment strategy will allow investors to benefit from a diversified portfolio, ATRAM Trust said.

The Asian Multi-Asset Income Fund also invests in Asian real estate investment trusts (REITs), Asian equities, and Asian bonds to optimize yield potential.

It targets to distribute dividend income payouts every quarter. The target fund pays income from interest earnings from bonds and dividends from equities and REITs.

Yields from Asian assets have, on average, been above 4% on the back of the strong growth of the region, ATRAM Trust said.

The fund’s approach to investing also aims to deliver more consistent returns during all phases of the economic cycle.

“ATRAM has positioned itself as a significant player in the fund management arena in the Philippines… Over the years, ATRAM has continued to pave the way for Filipino investors to gain access to global strategies and opportunities,” it said.

ATRAM Trust has about P150 billion in assets under management as of June 2022. — K.B. Ta-asan

Alternergy’s Dupinga Mini Hydro secures power supply deal

DUPINGA Mini Hydro Corp. (DMHC) recently signed a deal to supply renewable power to an electric cooperative in Nueva Ecija.

DMHC, a co-developer of the 4.6-megawatt (MW) Dupinga mini hydropower project in Gabaldon, Nueva Ecija, will be working with Nueva Ecija Electric Cooperative II – Area 2 (NEECO II Area 2) under a power supply agreement (PSA), renewable energy company Alternergy Holdings Corp. announced on Monday.

DMHC will source the renewable power from the Dupinga project.

The company is a partnership between Alternergy, led by former Energy secretary Vicente S. Pérez, Jr., and Markham Resources Corp., a renewable energy company led by Francisco Tiu Laurel of the Frabelle group of companies.

“The signing of the PSA and its subsequent submission to the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) for approval is one of last milestones successfully achieved to date in the development of the Dupinga Project,” said DMHC Vice-President Annette M. Rafael in an e-mailed statement.

DMHC and NEECO II Area 2 are set to submit a joint application to the ERC for the approval of the PSA.

In July, Alternergy secured a P600-million funding from Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) for the Dupinga project.

Ms. Rafael said that the PSA and the DBP funding will help the company reach its target to supply renewable power to NEECO II Area 2 by 2024.

“As a lifetime commitment to our member-consumer-owners, we need to stay consistent in providing efficient, reliable, and affordable electric services,” said Ramon de Vera, general manager of NEECO II Area 2.

The Dupinga project is expected to generate savings for the customers of NEECO II Area 2 by avoided transmission fees and no valued-added tax on the purchased power.

“As a renewable power supply with no fuel charges, power from the Dupinga project is competitively-priced against other power suppliers of NEECO II Area 2 which are mostly from coal power plants and are exposed to fuel price increases,” Alternergy said.

The electric cooperative provides energy to about 120,000 customers in eleven towns in Nueva Ecija.

Alternergy said that the Dupinga project will help the company reach its target of building 1,245 megawatts of renewable energy capacity in the next five years. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Entertainment News (09/06/22)


NCCA, FDCP to screen Himala

THE SECOND leg of Mga Hiyas ng Sineng Filipino, a program by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and the Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP) that aims to bring back the most important restored films of Philippine Cinema to the big screen, will kick off on Sept. 25. The first leg of the program last February featured the films Dalagang Ilocana by Olive La Torre, Pagdating sa Dulo by Ishmael Bernal, and Sana Maulit Muli by Olivia M. Lamasan. On Sept. 25, the Bernal classic Himala, starring National Artist for Film and Broadcast Arts Nora Aunor and written by National Artist for Film and Broadcast Arts Ricky Lee, will be screened at the Metropolitan Theater in Manila. This will be followed by a discussion with Ms. Aunor and Mr. Lee. The exact schedules for the screening and talkback will be announced later on the NCCA Facebook page (www.facebook.com/NCCAOfficial).


GMA Regional TV rebrands newscast, expands area

AS GMA Network’s regional arm, Regional TV, continues to strengthen its news hubs across the Philippines, the producers of the local newscast GMA Regional TV Balitang Amianan rebranded the program as GMA Regional TV One North Central Luzon beginning Sept. 5. GMA Regional TV One North Central Luzon now services a wider coverage area — which includes the provinces of Pangasinan, Benguet, La Union, Nueva Ecija, Tarlac, Pampanga, Isabela, Cagayan, Quezon Province, and Zambales — via the channels GMA TV 10 Dagupan, GMA TV 13 Aparri, GMA TV 7 Tuguegarao, GMA TV 5 Mt. Amuyao, GMA TV 7 Santiago, GMA TV 5 Baler, and GMA TV 10 Olongapo. Viewers in Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, Abra, and Batanes see the newscast on GMA TV 5 Ilocos Norte, GMA TV 48 Ilocos Sur, GMA TV 7 Abra, and GMA TV 7 Batanes. GMA Regional TV One North Central Luzon airs on weekdays at 5 p.m. via GMA Regional TV channels on free TV and on GMA Affordabox and GMA Now.


Sarah Brightman coming to PHL in December

ENGLISH soprano and Grammy Award-nominated artist Sarah Brightman takes her A Christmas Symphony Tour around the world for the first time. The tour will be coming to the Philippines on Dec. 7. To be held at the Smart Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City. Presented by Wilbros Live, the show will feature Ms. Brightman’s renditions of classics from the Christmas canon, along with personal holiday favorites and many of her greatest hits while accompanied by an orchestra and a choir. Known as the world’s best-selling soprano and a UNESCO Artist for Peace Ambassador, Ms. Brightman originated the role of Christine Daaé in The Phantom of the Opera on both West End and Broadway stages and has performed at such events including the Concert for Diana, The Kennedy Center Honors and the Barcelona and Beijing Olympic Games. Her most recent full-length studio album, HYMN, was released in 2018 and debuted at No. 1 on the Classical and Classical Crossover Billboard charts. Tickets to Sarah Brightman: A Christmas Symphony in Manila will go on sale on Sept. 10, 10 a.m., via TicketNet.com.ph and TicketNet outlets nationwide. For more information, call 8911-5555.


Running Man Philippines goes to Korea

THE REALITY game show Running Man Philippines premiered on GMA-7 on Sept. 3. It is the first co-production of GMA Network and SBS (Seoul Broadcasting System), one of South Korea’s largest networks. Glaiza de Castro, Ruru Madrid, Kokoy de Santos, Lexi Gonzales, Angel Guardian, Buboy Villar, and Mikael Daez are the runners. In the pilot episode, they fly to Seoul and arrive at the Suwon Hwaseong Fortress. The runners need to find characters in the Korean alphabet hidden around the location and must spell out their names in order to earn their name tags. Later, they fire arrows at the Suwon Hwaseong National Archery Field to find out who gets to lead the two teams in the second mission, the Catch the Tail Race. The South Korean reality game show Running Man is known for its outrageous missions — wacky games and races held in different locations with runners competing to gain advantages for the final mission. Running Man Philippines airs on GMA Weekend Primetime on Saturdays at 7:15 p.m. and on Sundays at 7:50 p.m. on GMA-7.


Globe celebrates GDay

THIS year, Globe is back with a 917 GDay celebration with the G Music Fest on Sept. 17. The G Music Fest is a hybrid event that will feature some of the best talents in music, entertainment, culture, and art. The live experience will be at the Globe Circuit Event Grounds, Ayala Malls Circuit, Makati, and will also be streamed online through Globe VH Metaverse. Seventeen local and international acts are slated to participate, including Thai indie-pop singer-songwriter Phum Viphurit and Kpop act BugABoo, a six-member South Korean girl group, in their first live Philippines performance. Other confirmed musical acts are homegrown talents The Juans, Kaia, Matthaios, Unique, I Belong to the Zoo, JOEM, Lola Amour, Arthur Miguel, and Paul Pablo, and some surprise guests. Globe has also invited contemporary artist-designer Leeroy New to showcase his larger-than-life art installations and the event. Festival goers will also have the chance to own their first Non-Fungible Token (NFT) through Globe’s partnership with MetaverseGo. The two brands have joined forces to create Gudi, a unique NFT in celebration of 917 #ExtraGDay which can be redeemed using Globe Rewards points. Digital natives can also try out activity booths and win vouchers from apps like TikTok, Tinder, foodpanda, and Kumu. The G Music Fest Festival Pass pre-selling period is ongoing until Sept. 9 and the regular sale period will be from Sept. 10 to 17. Festival Passes may be redeemed for 15 Globe Rewards Points via the Globe One app or for P917 via Tickelo during the pre-selling period, and 30 Globe Rewards Points via the Globe One app or P1,500 via Tickelo during the regular sale period. For the complete list of performers and activities, check the New Globe One app or visit http://glbe.co/GDay.


SB19 releases new single, to hold concert

JUST before embarking on a concert tour, P-pop group SB19 has released a new single, “WYAT [Where You At],” produced by SB19 member Pablo and his brother Josue. The new track is accompanied by a music video that is built around the themes of time travel and connection. SB19 will kick off the WYAT [Where You At] Tour on Sept. 17 at the Smart Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, to be followed by a series of shows in Clark, Cebu, and Davao. The tour will go global in the coming months, with performances in the United States, the United Arab Emirates, and Singapore. For details on the shows, visit the group’s social media accounts. “WYAT” is available on all digital music platforms worldwide.


Cine México film fest returns to Shangri-La Plaza

AFTER THREE years, the Embassy of Mexico in the Philippines brings back the Cine México film festival on Sept. 7 to 11 at the Shangri-la Plaza’s Red Carpet. Cine México will screen six films from various genres that offer a glimpse of modern Mexican culture. It opens with La Promesa (The Promise), a 2018 production by Oscar Blancarte that was selected as the Outstanding Feature Film at the 15th Annual Sacramento Film Awards. Set in a small rural Mexican town, the film is about the bond that forms between an intelligent rebellious boy and his teacher who fell into depression after his wife left him. The other films are: the 2015 comedy Ella es Ramona (She is Ramona), directed by Hugo Rodriguez, about a woman who struggled all her life with her weight then finds magical beetles that may finally change her luck;  90 Dias para el 2 de Julio (90 Days to Election Day), a 2021 film by Rafael Martinez Garcia about a young man who hides throughout the presidential elections after his boyfriend, who is the presidential candidate of a very conservative party, asks him to; Fuego Adentro (Fire Within) is a 2020 movie by Jesús Mario Lozano about a lonely and repentant man who hides in a remote mountain village until his younger brother finds him with news, change their lives forever;  El Mar entre las Casas (The Sea between the Houses), a 2020 film directed by Juan Pablo García Gordillo, revolves around a biologist who returns home after the death of his mother to settle her affairs, then meets and falls in love with his neighbor; and the award-winning Después de Lucia (After Lucia), a 2012 Michel Franco film about Alejandra who struggled to start anew in a new city with her father after the death of her mother, Lucia. All films will be screened in Spanish, with English subtitles. Entrance is free on a first-come, first-served basis.   


Restored classic Kakabakaba Ka Ba? streamed

A CLASSIC Filipino musical-comedy — the digitally restored version of LVN Pictures’ 1980 film Kakabakaba Ka Ba? — is now streaming on KTX in its Sagip Pelikula Spotlight. Directed by Mike de Leon and co-written with Clodualdo “Doy” del Mundo and veteran actress Raquel Villavicencio, the musical classic tells an uncanny story of two couples embroiled in a conflict between Japanese and Chinese drug syndicates. Johnny (Christopher de Leon) and his flame, the stewardess Melanie (Charo Santos), and Johnny’s friend Nonong (Jay Ilagan) and his sweetheart Nancy (Sandy Andolong) then uncover a vital malicious plot that would baffle them all. First digitally restored and remastered in 2015 by ABS-CBN Film Restoration in cooperation with L’Immagine Ritrovata, the award-winning hit from LVN streams anew alongside remastered works by Raquel Villavicencio as an homage to her various cinematic contributions. There is a pre-show interview with Film Restoration head Leo Katigbak and Ms. Villavicencio. Kakabakaba Ka Ba? and the exclusive pre-show interview are now on KTX, priced atP150 per pass and available at https://bit.ly/KKBKBonKTX. Also featured on the latest installment of Sagip Pelikula Spotlight for Villavicencio are Himala, Saan Ka Man Naroroon, Hihintayin Kita Sa Langit, Ikaw Pa Lang Ang Minahal, Separada, and Sukob. For more details on its upcoming film showings, follow ABS-CBN Film Restoration on Facebook (facebook.com/filmrestorationabscbn), Twitter (@ABS_Restoration), and Instagram (@abscbnfilmrestoration).

Wellness rating scheme for buildings to be unveiled

PHILIPPINE Green Building Council is set to launch the Health and Well-being for Buildings rating scheme.

THE Philippine Green Building Council (PHILGBC) is developing a ratings program that will measure a building’s performance based on how its features impact the health and wellness of users.

In a statement, the council said it will launch the first version of the PHILGBC Health and Well-being for Buildings (H+W) rating scheme on the first episode of the Building Green Conference 2022 on Sept. 8.

PHILGBC said the H+W program is designed as “a tool to measure, monitor, and certify the performance of projects based on social, economic, and environmental priorities that affect the health and well-being of users.”

The rating scheme will focus on health, comfort, lifestyle, social and environment.

“Health focuses on maintaining a physically and mentally healthy environment throughout the building life cycle. It emphasizes the need to address physical and mental health, and the safety of the building users and employees,” PHILGBC said.

Projects are also assessed in terms of the comfort level for users, as well as social and environmental sustainability.

There will be an online H+W Professionals Training Course, a formal accreditation program for professionals and project proponents on the PHILGBC Health and Well-being for Buildings rating scheme. Individuals that pass the qualifying examination for the course will be recognized as H+W Accredited Professionals.

PHILGBC is holding the digital edition of the Building Green Conference 2022 this month. The conference, which runs from Sept. 8-30, focuses on the theme “Experience Circularity and Pursue Regeneration — Today.”

“With circularity, we close the resource loop. We ensure nothing is wasted. We ensure that precious resources are conserved. It is important that our cities, along with the private sector, work together in completing the green shift. We owe it to the next generation,” PHILGBC Chief Executive Officer Christopher C. de la Cruz said in a statement.

PHILGBC advocates for healthier buildings, communities and cities, by introducing green and innovative design and construction solutions. It is a coalition of public and private sector leaders representing more than 300 organizations.

September is known as World Green Building Month, while Sept. 8 is National Green Building Day in the Philippines.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. will deliver the keynote address at the conference. 

The conference will also feature speeches from officials of the Department of Energy and Department of Environment and Natural Resources, World Green Building Council (WGBC) Chair Ilari Aho, WGBC Chief Executive Officer Cristina Gamboa and WGBC Asia-Pacific Network Chair Cary Chan.

Those interested may register for the different episodes of the Building Green 2022 conference by sending an e-mail to PHILGBC National Secretariat at BG2022@philgbc.org.

Visa names new country manager for PHL, Guam

VISA has appointed a new head for the Philippines and Guam, it said in a statement on Monday.

Jeffrey V. Navarro is now Visa’s country manager for Philippines and Guam, replacing Dan Wolbert, who has taken on a new role in Visa’s North American operations.

“It is a great pleasure for me to join Visa, a global leader in payments and money movement, areas which are near and dear to my heart. I am excited and honored to have the opportunity to lead a team of seasoned professionals, who share the drive and passion to further widen financial inclusion for all Filipinos,” Mr. Navarro said.

“I look forward to working closely with our clients, fintechs, the regulator, and all stakeholders to grow digital payments in the country, and enable individuals, businesses, and economies to thrive,” he added.

Mr. Navarro was previously regional vice-president for the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Indochina at Western Union. He was also president and chairman of the board at Western Union Processing Services, Inc.

He also worked at Smart Communications, Inc. and Shell, where he was responsible for sales, brand, and business development roles. He started his career as a consultant at Accenture, Visa said.

Mr. Navarro obtained his bachelor’s degree in management economics at the Ateneo de Manila University.

“I am delighted to have Jeff lead our team in the Philippines and Guam as the Country Manager,” Visa’s Group Country Manager for Regional Southeast Asia Tareq Muhmood said and welcomed Mr. Navarro to the company’s leadership team.

“Jeff’s regional experience and in-depth knowledge of the financial services industry will be an asset for Visa and will serve him well in leading our team. Jeff and the team will drive our business agenda with clients, consumers, and regulators in the Philippines and Guam, in line with our purpose to uplift everyone, everywhere by being the best way to pay and be paid,” Mr. Muhmood said. — Keisha B. Ta-asan

Banks battle back-to-office fatigue with ping pong, snacks, indoor gardens

REUTERS

LONDON/NEW YORK — Finance bosses are offering more incentives, including free meals, ping pong and “contemplative spaces” as they battle to get staff back to the office, while concerns about the cost and value of commuting to work weigh on attendance worldwide.

Hybrid working policies were introduced across the industry during the COVID-19 pandemic, but data seen by Reuters and interviews with finance sector executives showed attendances falling short of expectations globally.

And with expenses like fuel and food rising rapidly, workers accustomed to pocketing commuting costs have further reason to want to stay away, handing employers a challenge to increase the appeal of office working.

“Employers have done a fair amount to make the office more attractive and purposeful,” Kathryn Wylde, chief executive officer of the Partnership for New York City, told Reuters, citing a range of perks from free meals to improving social space with ping pong tables.

But a global survey of nearly 80,000 workers conducted by consultancy Advanced Workplace Associates (AWA) showed employees are not complying with hybrid working policies.

Where organizations have policies requiring two, two or three, or three days in the office, attendance is respectively 1.1 days, 1.6 days and 2.1 days, AWA found.

“When we came out of lockdown and regulations were relaxed, people tried coming into the office … and when they got there, they found all they were doing was being on Zoom calls” said Andrew Mawson, managing director of AWA.

“The reason people are not going into offices is because they got used to a lifestyle and cost structure that suits them,” he said.

Senior managers can be among the most adamant about staying home, said Kelly Beaver, CEO for UK and Ireland of polling firm Ipsos, which is abandoning its two days-a-week hybrid policy in favor of a more flexible approach.

“We find some of them are less tolerant of tiny office frustrations, or they feel travelling to an office is an unnecessary burden … but they are missing out on networking,” she said.

OFFICE AS HOTEL
While younger finance industry staff are mindful how remote working might impact career progress, jobseekers often cite remote working as a preference.

Since the start of August, 80% of people searching for finance jobs on Flexa, a global online platform which lets users search roles based on flexible working preferences, specified a preference for “remote” or “remote-first” roles, a 33% increase since March, a Flexa spokesperson said.

Employees still hold a great deal of sway, said Peter Hogg, cities director at property consultant Arcadis in London.

“It is a high-risk strategy for firms to be too directive in terms of telling people what they have to do,” Mr. Hogg said.

The consultancy is busier now helping companies “retrofit” their offices — making changes like adding more “contemplative space” such as indoor gardens, libraries or informal areas with soft furnishings — than any previous time since the pandemic, he said.

One British-based trading firm has begun providing showers, areas to nap in and laundry facilities for bleary-eyed staff working late on deals, said Leeson Medhurst, director of strategy at Peldon Rose, which designs offices for businesses.

“Our client said ‘we’re going to view our office as a hotel,’ they are catering for the needs of the employee not necessarily the financial needs of the company,” he said.

The City of London Corp. — which runs the financial district — said in August that it had hired a “Destination City” program curator to roll out events including theater, games and live performances.

Steven Cooper, the chief executive of British bank Aldermore told Reuters his bank was encouraging staff back to the office while not reverting to pre-pandemic norms.

The bank is considering hiring a concierge to help staff manage daily errands like dry cleaning at the office that they would otherwise have more flexibility to do at home, he said.

Those most resistant to returning to the office are people who have relocated to the suburbs and have long commutes, the Partnership for New York City’s Ms. Wylde said, while younger staff are most likely to turn up.

“Young people are recognizing their career advancement is going to depend on relationships in the office,” Ms. Wylde said.

‘LONELY HOME SILOS’
Wall Street’s biggest financial firms have been among the most proactive in bringing employees back to the office.

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. called its employees back to the office full time in June last year, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan are mostly back, while Citi has a hybrid arrangement.

Jefferies Financial Group said on Thursday it wants staff back in its offices rather than in “lonely home silos,” even though it is also working on a hybrid basis.

Goldman and Morgan Stanley have also said they will lift some pandemic-era protocols in early September, including mask-wearing and coronavirus testing at their offices, memos reviewed by Reuters showed.

In March, JPMorgan made masks in its corporate office buildings voluntary and ended mandatory testing for unvaccinated employees. The largest US bank has also rolled back its policy of hiring only vaccinated individuals.

Chris Gardner, co-CEO at London-based property lender Atelier, said Britain’s weakening economy and rising energy costs will likely drive those worried about layoffs to the office faster than free snacks or other inducements.

“If as expected things tighten up later this year, then presenteeism and being visible in the office will become more important,” he said. — Reuters

Torturous births in House of the Dragon dramatize the question of whether women deserve to be more than just a womb

‘THIS discomfort is how we serve the realm. The childbed is our battlefield,’ says Aemma (right, played by Sian Brooke ) to Rhaenyra (left, played by Milly Alcock ) in House of the Dragon.

THE PREMIERE episode of Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon, “The Heirs of the Dragon,” establishes its central themes of gender and power in a bloody fashion. Its shocking depiction of a fatal cesarean birth is notable for its brutality — but also for how it reflects on histories of pregnant representation and reproductive politics.

The series dramatizes a civil war in which factions of the Targaryen family fight for the Iron Throne of Westeros. As we start, young Princess Rhaenyra (Emma D’Arcy) has been overlooked by her father, King Viserys (Paddy Consedine). He desires a male heir, even as queen consort Aemma (Sian Brooke) suffers through stillbirths and miscarriages.

We quickly see how women are at the mercy of men’s decisions. “Here you are surrounded by attendants all focused on the babe — someone must attend to you,” says Rhaenyra to her heavily pregnant mother. “This discomfort is how we serve the realm,” Aemma replies; “The childbed is our battlefield.”

The king calls a tournament to celebrate the impending birth of what he hopes will be a male heir. Violent, rhythmic scenes showing knights jousting and bludgeoning each other to a bloody pulp are crosscut with upsetting images of Aemma’s labor.

Showrunner Miguel Sapochnik, speaking with the Los Angeles Times, notes that as with Game of Thrones’ battles, each birth on this show will explore a theme. This theme was “torture.”

The baby is breech, and the labor difficult. A male doctor tells the king that fathers must make impossible choices. Viserys quietly approves a plan to cut the baby out, in the hope that it is a boy.

It is a terrible betrayal: he holds Aemma’s hand while she is restrained and sliced open. She bleeds to death — and her newborn son only lives a short while. It is a shocking depiction of the world’s priorities.

Beyond its brutality, the scene illustrates vividly changes to the visibility of pregnancy in visual culture.

Throughout most of the 20th century, pregnancy and birth were largely invisible in visual media. Pregnancy was deemed private and domestic, even vulgar. Notably, scenes of childbirth were banned and pregnancy deemed taboo in Hollywood films from 1927-1968, thanks to various censorship regimes. Later, pregnant actors in television series would be written out, or have their bodies hidden through costuming or editing.

Now, images of pregnancy and childbirth are significantly more visible and varied. A watershed moment came in 1991 when Annie Leibovitz’s impactful (and controversial) portrait of Demi Moore — naked, beatific, and seven months pregnant — graced the front cover of Vanity Fair. It challenged the notion that pregnant bodies should be hidden.

More recently, British series such as historical drama Call the Midwife and the docu-drama One Born Every Minute, and American film Tully, have foregrounded female-led emotional and realistic representations of pregnancy and birth.

Pregnancies are more likely to be written in, not out, of television series. We have also seen the slow rise of sexy maternity fashion that shows off one’s “baby bump,” recently exemplified by singer and entrepreneur Rihanna’s boundary-pushing outfits. The overt images of Aemma’s pregnant body sit within this cultural shift.

But this scene’s graphic nature is unusual in mainstream media. Instead, it resonates with the long history of monstrous births in science fiction and horror.

These genres offer a subversive language with which to explore reproductive anxieties openly. The paranoia and gaslighting in Rosemary’s Baby (1968), the chest-bursting scene in Alien (1979), the gruesome forced caesarean in A’ l’Interieur (2007), and the maternal dread in Mother! (2017) all illustrate fears about embodiment, maternity, and personhood.

The content and tone of this scene, and its place as an inciting incident within the series’ narrative, also reflects contemporary issues regarding women’s bodily autonomy. These speak to widespread cultural tensions about the competing rights of the adult and the unborn.

This is an issue everywhere, but currently has particular political resonance in the United States in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v Wade. This has quickly opened the doors to oppressive bans on abortion in some US states, even in cases where a pregnancy endangers the life of the mother.

At its most conservative and adversarial, this positions female reproductive bodies as little more than vessels. This misogynistic position suggests that an unborn person has more of a right to life than an adult subject, and that a woman does not have the right to make choices about her own life and body. It is dehumanizing.

House of the Dragon dramatizes this dynamic in the context of a deeply patriarchal system that is in ways not that far removed from our own. A war of succession is prompted because a society can’t countenance the idea of a woman taking the throne.

In a show that is interested in exploring the dynamics of gender and power through the lens of medieval fantasy, the conflict is not just that of ambitious uncle against powerful niece, but whether a woman has a right to be more than a womb. — The Conversation via Reuters Connect

 

Erin Harrington is a Senior Lecturer in English and Cultural Studies at the University of Catnerbury

Thailand inflation may peak in Q3; more hikes necessary, BoT chief says

REUTERS
BANK of Thailand Governor Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput told a seminar that more rate hikes would be needed to keep inflation in check. — REUTERS

BANGKOK — Thailand’s inflation is set to peak in the third quarter and is likely to be more than 6% this year, but the central bank will act to prevent the inflation engine from starting, its chief said on Monday.

Inflation was mainly supply driven, long-term expectations were still within the central bank’s target range and there was a low chance of a wage-price spiral, Bank of Thailand (BoT) Governor Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput told a seminar.

Thailand’s headline consumer price index rose 7.86% in August from a year earlier, the fastest pace in 14 years and roughly in line with forecasts, and the commerce ministry said on Monday it may have peaked.

Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy was recovering gradually and should grow about 3% this year and 4% next year, with downside risks lower than other countries, Mr. Sethaput said, adding the crucial tourism sector was picking up with more than 8 million foreign arrivals expected for 2022.

The BoT, among Asia’s less hawkish central banks, last month raised its key interest rate for the first time in nearly four years to counter inflation. Economists expect a further gradual hike again at the next meeting on Sept. 28.

Mr. Sethaput said more rate hikes would be necessary to ensure continued recovery and keep inflation in check, but aggressive increases were unsuitable for the Thai economy in its current state.

Thailand was not behind the curve in its measures and any subsequent hikes would be appropriate to the current situation, he added. — Reuters

SC affirms RPN 9’s reduced fine against private TV firm

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE Supreme Court (SC) has affirmed a Court of Appeals (CA) ruling that ordered Radio Philippines Network, Inc. (RPN 9) to pay Team Image Entertainment, Inc. (TIE)  in temperate damages worth P100,000 after the network was found liable for breach of contract with the private television firm.

In a 12-page resolution on July 6 and made public on Sept. 2, the High Court’s first division upheld with modification the reduced damages and added a 6% interest to the total amount.

“We sustain the CA’s reduction of the amount since exemplary damages are imposed not to enrich one party or impoverish another, but to serve as a  deterrent against or as a  negative incentive to curb socially deleterious actions,” it said.

A Makati City regional trial court had ordered RPN 9 to pay the private television firm P117,000,000 in damages after a memorandum of agreement between the two firms was terminated.

The appellate court had set deleted a Makati regional trial court’s award of actual damages in favor of TIE, as it said there was no evidence that supported the original claim of damages.

The contract between the two firms was terminated after RPN 9 underwent new management.

The private television firm was instead awarded temperate damages in the amount of P100,000.

The High Court noted that TIE failed to prove that the newly appointed executives of RPN 9 practiced gross negligence in terminating the agreement.

The legal concept of gross negligence is the reckless disregard of a legal duty and of the consequences to another party.

The petitioner is a private corporation engaged in supplying foreign programs such as telenovelas, movies, tv series, and other shows to local television networks.

In 1997, TIE was guaranteed by RPN 9 specific airtime for its clients’ programs with a rate of P500,000 per title.

The case stemmed after RPN terminated its barter agreement with TIE, which the petitioner said affected its contracts with clients.

RPN 9 argued that the agreement was to be rescinded due to a series of violations committed by TIE such as failing to provide program titles in advance and failing to generate profit for the television network.

“Basic is the rule that a  corporation is vested by law with a personality separate and distinct from that of each person composing or representing it,” the tribunal said. “As such, only the corporation, and not its officers, may be held liable for its wrongful acts,” said the High Court. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Philippines’ Q1 export performance lags in East and Southeast Asia

The Philippines’ export performance was one of the laggards in the region after its index score slipped to 0.51 in the first quarter of the year from 0.56 in the previous quarter, the latest Global Trade Report from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development showed. Export performance is a composite indicator which include growth rates, performance vs. peers, and competitiveness in major and dynamic markets. A higher score means better export performance. Meanwhile, the country’s export volatility, which tracks export performance within the last six months to identify volatility patterns, improved to 0.06 in the first quarter from 0.08 in the preceding quarter. A higher score implies greater export vulnerability.

Philippines’ Q1 export performance lags in east and southeast asia

How PSEi member stocks performed — September 5, 2022

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, September 5, 2022.


Marcos told to boost Indonesia ties to repel China

PRESIDENT BONGBONG MARCOS FACEBOOK PAGE

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

THE PHILIPPINES should cooperate with Indonesia on the South China Sea dispute and boost economic activities in areas being claimed by China, political analysts said on Monday.

Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. should look at Indonesia’s plan to set up a special economic zone in its key territory in the South China Sea that China claims, they added.

“The Philippines should follow the example of Indonesia in coming up with a strategic response to the growing tension in the West Philippine Sea by establishing a special economic zone,” said Arjan P. Aguirre, a political science professor at the Ateneo De Manila University. He was referring to parts of the South China Sea within the country’s exclusive economic zone.

China’s posturing prompted Indonesia to ensure “legitimate presence of state military facilities” that would let it gain further control of economic activities in the area, he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

Indonesia is seeking to convert the Natuna Islands, also known as the Natuna Regency, into a special economic zone to boost maritime security while attracting investments there. Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone off the coast of Natuna slightly overlaps with China’s widely disputed South China Sea claim.

Indonesia wants to introduce incentives to boost tourism, fishing, energy and security sectors in the region. The plan came after Indonesian President Joko Widodo signed a decree dividing the Natuna Islands into different regulated zones including exploration, defense and fishing.

It seeks to counter China’s island-building activities at sea.

“Given the current security landscape and emergence of various security threats, President Marcos should closely look into these defense and security-related initiatives that are implemented by Indonesia and see if they fit the strategic plans and current position of the country’s defense establishment,” said Victor Andres C. Manhit, president of Stratbase ADR Institute for Strategic and International Studies.

“President Marcos should strategically engage with Indonesia and discuss steps to further promote a rules-based international order,” he said in a Messenger chat. “This would allow both countries to contribute in minimizing risks and maintaining peace and stability in the region.”

Mr. Marcos, who is on his first state visit to Indonesia, said he and Mr. Widodo “spoke at length” about the role that the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) should play “at this very volatile time in geopolitics, not only in our region, but also in the rest of the world.”

“We agreed that ASEAN is going to be the lead agent in the changes that we would like to see in continuing to bring peace to our countries,” he added.

Mr. Aguirre said the Philippines could boost bilateral ties not just with Indonesia but also with other neighbors in the region.

“This a way to counter the growing aggressiveness of China without resorting to military response,” he said. “The Philippines should treat Indonesia as one of its most favored partners.”

Robin Michael U. Garcia, who teaches political economy at the University of Asia and the Pacific, said Indonesia is an important ally “because of the size of its economy, level of economic development and its population.” “It has also been very vocal toward China.”

The South China Sea, a key global shipping route, is subject to overlapping territorial claims involving the Philippines, Indonesia, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan, Vietnam and China.

“Indonesia has been one of the proponents of a joint ASEAN response toward China,” Mr. Garcia said in a Messenger chat. “It believes that conflict of interest can be overcome.”

Rodrigo R. Duterte, Mr. Marcos’ predecessor, led a foreign policy pivot to China when he took office in 2016. He has been accused of gambling Philippine territories to appease China, which pledged P1.2 trillion in investments and loans to fund big-ticket infrastructure projects.

Critics said few have materialized.

Mr. Aguirre said Mr. Duterte had failed to boost ties with Indonesia, adding that his engagements were limited to ASEAN concerns.

Mr. Marcos, 64, took office in June amid tensions in the disputed waterway and naval competition for influence among Southeast Asian countries.

In his first address to Congress on July 25, he promised to protect Philippine territories though he did not name China as an aggressor. He neither sided with China nor the United States, saying the Philippines “shall continue to be a friend to all and an enemy to none.”

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