Home Blog Page 6432

Titlist Ateneo, UP brace for the final duel of ‘Battle of Katipunan’

UP Fighting Maroons engage in a final duel for the UAAP men’s basketball. — THE UAAP

DYNASTY against destiny will be the name of the game as three-time reigning champion Ateneo and University of the Philippines (UP) engage in a final duel for the prestigious title of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) Season 84 men’s basketball at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City on Friday.

The mighty Blue Eagles and a strong challenger in the Fighting Maroons traded blows in the first two games of the best-of-three series, setting the stage for one last showdown at 6 p.m. with equally high stakes on the line for both squads.

A win by Ateneo, the three-time defending titlist, would extend its reign in the league for a fourth straight season while UP’s triumph would deliver it to the “Promised Land” — at last after 36 long years.

Facing elimination for only the first time in four years after a tough 81-74 overtime loss in Game One, Ateneo showed steady resolve despite another near meltdown by escaping with a narrow 69-66 Game 2 to force a winner-take-all.

This time, coach Tab Baldwin sees no difference as he braces for another down-the-wire combat in the last installment of the fabled “Battle of Katipunan’’ for all the marbles of the unique UAAP tourney under a bubble setting amid the pandemic.

“You can’t really separate these two teams very much from one another so I think Game Three is going to be potentially an epic game. We’re excited that we’re there,” he said as Ateneo and UP sport a 2-2 overall slate this season.

Ateneo scored a 90-81 win in the first round of the eliminations while UP got back with a stinging 84-83 win in the second round that also denied the former a 14-0 sweep and ticket straight trip to the finals.

“Nothing is easy in this series. It’s tough and if ever there’s a flip of a coin, Game Three could be that,” added Mr. Baldwin, crediting the wonders of debuting collegiate coach Goldwin Monteverde for UP.

UP, which also ended Ateneo’s 39-game, three-year winning streak, expects the same airtight duel with the working formula so far to topple its good rival’s dynasty.

“The formula in basketball has to be consistent in playing as a team offensively and defensively. We had a slow start last game and our defense was not that tight, but we’re gonna work on it,” said Mr. Monteverde, the former author of National University dynasty in the Philippine high school scene.

“For one thing, the team takes pride. We never give up…” he added as the Fighting Maroons aim to set a date with UAAP destiny for the first time since 1986. — John Bryan Ulanday

Across the universe

Movie Review
Doctor Strange in the
Multiverse of Madness
Directed by Sam Raimi

Oh! Look! A Dr. Strange sequel! (Don’t remember the first one.)

A new Benedict Cumberbatch! (He was better in The Power of the Dog.)

A new Marvel superproduction! (As if that was a recommendation.)

A new Sam Raimi!

Well—

And so it came to pass that I found myself sitting down to my first Marvel movie in years — okay, since last year’s The Eternals (actually liked that one). This picture starts off running, literally, with one Dr. Stephen Strange (Cumberbatch) sprinting across the gap between universes with one America Chavez (Xochitl Gomez) till they reach the Book of Vishanti — only they don’t; a multitentacled demon is in hot pursuit, and the demon manages to finish off Strange and is about to do the same to Chavez when a star-shaped hole in reality pops open and Chavez and corpse fall through into the city of Manhattan, where Stephen Strange is attending the wedding of former girlfriend Christine Palmer (Rachel McAdam), and around one corner a giant one-eyed octopus is on the rampage —

And so on and so forth. At this point I’m blanking out on details — Book of Vishanti? Darkhold? Westview? I don’t have Disney+ and haven’t bothered to see Wandavision or Spiderman: No Way Home so maybe half the narrative’s zoomed past my head; the movie’s a beat too fast to follow (why is Manhattan full of flowers?) so I’m leaning back hoping to just enjoy the ride.

Might as well note while sitting that the movie has an old-fashioned regard for books: one seems to be the source of dark power, the other a symbol of hope; pages are flipped or singed, and whole volumes burnt to crisp; nothing wrong in my book with the assertion that the printed word is an important source of knowledge and inspiration and should be respected as such; fully expect to crack open Joyce’s Finnegans Wake, speak the word “bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkonnbronntonnerronntuonnthunntrovarrhounawnskawntoohoohoordenenthurnuk!” and find myself running for my life inside someone’s dream.

Meanwhile grooving to this movie is more fun than one might expect, and I blame Raimi: he hasn’t made a picture in nine years and you miss his gonzo often low-tech sensibility — the way his camera suddenly zooms in for emphasis, say, or the way eyeballs pop out of sockets, or the way twisted half-decomposed bodies refuse to stay quiet. Folks get me wrong about superhero movies; my problem isn’t that they’re too comically lightweight or too darkly grim; my real problem is that there’s nothing to look at. Hiring malleable directors to manage traffic flow in your franchise may help churn out stable predictable product, but if you want to capture lightning in a bottle, first you have to have lightning.

Raimi is lightning, or at least used to be; in cult films like the Evil Dead movies and Darkman he’s proved to be inventive and imaginative with little to nonexistent production budgets. Maybe the trouble with this picture is that it has too much money (a lot of the effects look too polished); worse, maybe he’s running low on imagination and is simply drawing from his old if capacious bag of tricks; those of us who remember the earlier filmmaker are perhaps only grooving to what we remember of his trademark mov—Oh! Is that Bruce Campbell squirting mustard all over his face?

Maybe not. Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda a.k.a. The Scarlet Witch provides the electric charge that jolts this patchwork mess to life. Her quest to seek her lost children is a struggle any parent, or anyone who’s lost a loved one can understand. That furtive thought lurking at the back of one’s grieving mind: “Maybe if I bring them back” — the results may never be good, but we’re not being honest if we say we never entertained such thoughts.

And Raimi plays it up; wraps Olsen in shadows as she strides forth with red LED eyes, splatters her face with drying blood (Brian de Palma’s Carrie much?). As far as gore goes, this is Parental Guidance Raimi, barely worth mentioning, but one look at Olsen’s wild despairing face and you know where the true horror lies: this is love without hope seeking a way to keep itself alive, knowing what it’s doing is wrong wrong wrong, lying to itself constantly that maybe somehow somewhere there’s a way. I saw the movie with some people, and one of them remarked: “I kept rooting for the evil witch.” I can relate to that and suspect Raimi can too —  at one point we see Wanda’s imagined children watching TV, and on the small screen was Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. I remember Woody Allen in Annie Hall saying “I immediately fell for the Wicked Queen.”

Multiverse of Madness is pretty good, perhaps the best Marvel since Raimi’s own Spider-Man movies and, really, it’s hard to fault the picture for anything save for flaws that don’t really matter (rigorous plotting, realism, characterization of everyone not played by Olsen). Oh! And timing —  over a month ago A24 released Everything Everywhere All at Once and what Dr. Strange achieved for $200 million the Daniels did for only $25 million; the universes are wilder (Paint Universe and Dispersing-Cubes Universe vs. Hotdog Fingers Universe and Just Rocks Universe), the MacGuffin even more bizarre (Book of Vishanti, meet The Everything Bagel). Perversely, the fight sequences in Everything are superior because: 1.) very little if any of it involves CGI, and 2.) it’s performed mostly by Ke Huy Quan and Michelle Yeoh — talk about low-tech, they are perfectly capable of and do the action for real. Yes, Olsen was affecting but Michelle Yeoh, I submit, has the richer role, playing Loser Evelyn, Movie-Star Evelyn, Sausage Fingers Evelyn, and so on. And none of this is arbitrary; turns out almost every Evelyn is a result of a choice her character makes or fails to make (the rest were created by the choices of people who have affected Evelyn, or basically everyone else), suggesting the branching, bewildering complexity of even such an ostensibly low-profile life. In effect The Daniels now are what Raimi was when he first started, directing his own scripts with almost no resources —  and this I see is where I first came in; pardon me while I let myself out the side door.

JG Summit incurs P689-M net loss on oil volatility

LISTED conglomerate JG Summit Holdings, Inc. reported a core net loss of P689 million for the first quarter of the year, compared to a core net income of P232 million in the same period in 2021.

“While the reopening of the economy fueled significant improvements in topline…, unprecedented volatility in oil and input prices weighed on the group’s margins, particularly in JG Summit Olefins Corp.,” the company said in a statement.

“Coupled with peso depreciation and mark-to-market losses, [JG Summit] ended the quarter with a net loss of P2.8 billion,” it added.

Except for Robinsons Land Corp., the company observed revenue growth across all of its subsidiaries. It said that its revenues improved by 7% year on year and 6% quarter on quarter due to relaxed mobility restrictions.

JG Summit’s gearing and net debt-to-equity ratios stood at 0.70 and 0.53, respectively, as of March 2022.

“At the parent level, cash amounted to P23.7 billion while net debt stood at P74.3 billion as of end-March 2022, which shall be further reduced as [the company] expects to receive cash dividends of P11 billion from its investments in the second quarter of 2022,” JG Summit said.

On per-business performance, Universal Robina Corp.’s revenues increased by 22% year on year to P35.8 billion, JG Summit noted.

Meanwhile, Robinsons Land’s revenues and net income decreased by 61% and 51% to P6.4 billion and P1.4 billion, respectively, primarily because of “high base boosted by the lumpy contribution from Chengdu Phase 1 last year.”

JG Summit Olefins saw its first-quarter revenues grow by 37% to P12.4 billion. This was driven by “increased polymer sales value as well as fresh contributions from Aromatics and Butadiene sales, as well as LPG trading,” JG Summit said.

At the same time, Robinsons Bank Corp. saw its revenues improve 5% year on year to P2.4 billion, mainly due to “higher interest income, partially offset by lower trading gains.”

JG Summit likewise saw its equity earnings from Manila Electric Co. rise in the first quarter by 30% to P1.6 billion. This was “driven by strong topline growth given the uptick in energy sales and an increase in pass-through charges of fuel,” it said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Saclag, Araos lead six Pinoys vying for gold in kickboxing

PHILIPPINE kickboxing team on the way to Bac Ninh Gymnasium in Hanoi. — VNA PHOTO/TUAN ĐUC

BAC NINH, Vietnam – Six Filipinos led by Jean Claude Saclag and Gina Iniong Araos vie for gold medals in the finals of the 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games kickboxing tourney on Friday at the Bac Ninh Gymnasium in Hanoi.

Mr. Saclag, the reigning champion in the men’s low kick 63.5kg class, battles Chaleamlap Santidongsakun of Thailand while Ms. Araos, also the defending champion, faces another Thai, Waraporn Jaiteang, in the women’s low kick minus 60kg class.

Also fighting for the gold are Renalyn Dacquel who is up against hometown bet Thi Hang Nga Nguyen in the women’s minus 48kg full contact category; Gretel De Paz who will battle Indonesian Pieter Ariesta in the women’s full contact minus 56kg division; Zeph Ngaya who takes on Vietnamese Huynh Thi Kim Vang in the women’s minus 65kg full contact finale; and Claudine Veloso who clashes with Amanda Loupatty of Indonesia in the women’s minus 52kg low kick division.

Samahang Kickboxing ng Pilipinas (SKP) Secretary-General Atty. Wharton Chan believes the country can surpass the 2019 SEA Games haul of three gold medals, two silvers, and a bronze in this year’s regional showpiece.

“Our athletes have done a tremendous performance and exceptional job despite fighting in a hostile terrain after beating several Vietnamese athletes,” Mr. Chan said. “I predict we can be at 80% or 5-of-6 or maybe 4-of-6 in winning golds in tomorrow’s finals. We can surpass the three golds last time.”

Whatever happens in the finals, the Philippines is assured of bringing home eight medals, counting the bronze medals won by Honorio Banario and Emmanuel Cantores, who suffered 0-3 defeats in the semis.

Mr. Banario lost to Cambodia’s Lvay Chhoeung in the men’s semifinals of the minus 71kg low kick event while Mr. Cantores bowed to Nguyen Quang Huy of host Vietnam in the men’s semifinals of the minus 60kg low kick event.

Former CCP president Bal Endriga, 82

HTTPS://WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/BALTAZAR.ENDRIGA.9
HTTPS://WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/BALTAZAR.ENDRIGA.9

FORMER Cultural Center of the Philippines president Baltazar “Bal” Nacion Endriga passed away on May 10. He was 82 years old.

Mr. Endriga was also an active member and past President of the Philippine Computer Society (PCS) and a former partner of SyCip Gorres Velayo & Company (SGV).

As an educator, Mr. Endriga was one of the founders of Meridian International (MINT) College for business, arts, and technology, where he served as president.

He also actively supported the Artists Welfare Project, Inc. from its inception in 2007.

He is survived by his wife Tessie Endriga, children, and grandchildren.

Filmmaker Dennis Marasigan, with whom Mr. Endriga worked on various projects in the arts in the country and abroad, wrote on Facebook: “We celebrate your life and pledge to continue working for your dreams, even while we extend our sincerest condolences to all those who knew and loved him.”

The wake is being held at the Heritage Memorial Park in Taguig from May 11 to 14. The funeral Mall and interment are on May 15, 9 a.m. — MAPS

Ty-led GT Capital names Sebastian as board chairman

GT CAPITAL Holdings, Inc. has named Francisco C. Sebastian as its new chairman, taking over the post held by Arthur V. Ty in the holding firm of the Ty family’s diversified business interests.

In a press release on Thursday, Mr. Ty said the change in the firm’s chairmanship signals the group’s “initiative and commitment to further professionalize its leadership moving forward.”

“With Mr. Sebastian at the helm, we are confident that GT Capital will continue to prosper and contribute to nation building,” he added.

Since May 2016, Mr. Sebastian has been co-vice-chairman of GT Capital while also a member of its executive committee. He has served the group for the past 25 years, starting out in 1997 as president of First Metro Investment Corp., the investment banking arm of Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. (Metrobank).

For 14 years, he held the same post in First Metro until he became chairman in 2011. He concurrently serves as vice-chairman of Metrobank. He is also concurrent director of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. and Federal Land, Inc.

Before joining the Metrobank group in 1997, Mr. Sebastian worked in Hong Kong for 20 years from 1977.

Mr. Ty will continue to be a director of GT Capital and the chairman of Metrobank, while concurrently holding various board positions in other companies of the Ty group.

Meanwhile, Alfred V. Ty will remain the vice-chairman of GT Capital and chairman of Toyota Motor Philippines Corp. and Federal Land.

In the media release, GT Capital said it is beginning a new decade “in the good hands of a dedicated, qualified and professional” chairman after having grown and completed its consolidation phase on the 10th year after its initial public offering.

GT Capital earlier reported a 48% increase in core net income for 2021 to P11 billion, while consolidated income grew an even higher 68%, driven by the growth in its banking and automotive businesses.

At the stock exchange, shares in the company dropped by 1.76% or P9.00, finishing at P503 each.

Gymnastic group sees 5-6 gold medals in sport

GYMNAST CALOY YULO — PAOLO DEL ROSARIO/ONE SPORTS
MEN’S artistic gymnastic starts on Friday at Quan Ngua Sports Palace. — ONESPORTS/PAOLO DEL ROSARIO

TWO-TIME world champion Carlos “Caloy” Yulo opens his quest for a multiple gold medal haul as action in the men’s artistic gymnastics (MAG) of the 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games unfurls on Friday at the Quan Ngua Sports Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam.

The 22-year-old Mr. Yulo, the world titlist in floor exercise in 2019 in Stuttgart, Germany and vault in Kitakyushu, Japan last year, is gunning to improve on his two-gold, five-silver medal haul in the last edition three years ago in Manila.

Gymnastics Association of the Philippines president Cynthia Carrion said he expects the 28-strong gymnastics team to deliver eight to nine mints in the sport — including four in MAG where Mr. Yulo is seeing action.

“I expect four golds for MAG,” said Ms. Carrion.

Mr. Yulo, accompanied by Japanese coach Munehiro Kugiyama, was part of the big bulk of the Philippine delegation that arrived in the capital on Tuesday that gave him a couple of days to acclimatized to the venue conditions in time for his events set to start at 11 a.m. (Philippine time).

Ms. Carrion also believes they can deliver one or two mints in the women’s artistic gymnastics, one in rhythmic gymnastics and two in aerobic gymnastics.

If the team delivers on its promise, it would surpass the three-gold, five-silver and four-bronze haul in 2019.

Daniela dela Pisa, who stuck gold in hoop in rhythmic gymnastics in 2019, is part of the team that included SEA Games bronze medalists Charmine Dolar (aerobic) and the team of Divina Sembrano, AJ Melgar, Katrina Loretizo and Andrea Mae Emparado (rhythmic). — Joey Villar

A Minute With: The Conversations with Friends cast on

HULU.COM

NEW YORK — A highly-anticipated adaptation of Irish author Sally Rooney’s debut novel Conversation with Friends premieres this weekend, following in the footsteps of her book-turned-television hit Normal People.

Alison Oliver and Sasha Lane star as ex-girlfriends and now best friends Frances and Bobbi, who meet older married couple Melissa and Nick, played by Jemima Kirke and Joe Alwyn, during a Dublin poetry night. The story follows their different relationships as their lives become intertwined.

Reuters spoke to the actors about the series, which premieres on the BBC and Hulu on May 15, and pleasing fans of the book.

Below are excerpts edited for length and clarity.

Q: What’s the central conversation of the series?

Oliver: What I took from the book was that you can’t really control (things)… so much for Frances is control and she realizes you can’t control who you love or how many people you love. You just love them and hope for the best. I think that’s a really interesting message and a journey that they all go on.

Q: Did you feel pressure to please fans of the book?

Alwyn: It’s nice to be a part of something… that people love so much, of course… there’s nerves in that you want to do justice to the book and characters that people care a lot about. But alongside that is an excitement and a privilege to be asked to be a part of (it) and that means a lot. You have to put those nerves aside, at least when making it.

Lane: It’s a show and it’s based on the book… they are two different things. You had real people acting these out, taking emotions that are written down or not even fully… it’s through Frances’ perspective and you’re writing in that way and then you put it into a show where you’re actually including these characters. It’s just a whole different thing.

Q: Were there any unexpected challenges during filming?

Kirke: The challenge of being a mother and being an actor is one that’s not talked about very often, especially as a single mother. It’s actually not a thing. It’s not possible to be good at both. One thing is always lacking on one side… (the) most time I’ve spent away from my kids is probably six or seven weeks and the only other mothers I know who I know of that do that are army moms. — Reuters

DoubleDragon Corp. profit rises 87%

LISTED DoubleDragon Corp. posted an 87.2% increase in its consolidated net income for 2021 to P11.3 billion on the back of higher consolidated revenues.

The company said in a stock exchange disclosure on Thursday that its consolidated revenues last year surged 11.7% to P15.9 billion while its consolidated earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) went up 13.9% to P12.9 billion.

Further, DoubleDragon said its total assets increased 17.2% to P141.7 billion while its total equity grew 41.3% to P69.3 billion.

Edgar J. Sia II, DoubleDragon chairman, said the company ended 2021 by surpassing its goal for this year of 1.2 million square meters of gross floor area (GFA) of completed recurring income portfolio.

“We are pleased to have ended 2021, with DoubleDragon surpassing its 2022 goal of 1.2 million square meters GFA of completed recurring income portfolio,” Mr. Sia said.

“We see these 1.2 million completed square meters to like having 1.2 million of real estate seeds planted in prime strategic areas spread out across the country. These string of prime hard assets should mature and generate recurring revenues at different times, but we expect all of them to reach optimal recurring revenue generation before 2025, and to endlessly contribute sizeable recurring revenue cashflow to DoubleDragon,” he added.

Meanwhile, DoubleDragon Chief Investment Officer Hannah Yulo-Luccini said that the company is at a stronger position after surviving the pandemic.

“DoubleDragon has a low net debt to equity ratio of 0.62x, consolidated cash balance at P11.27 billion and will have no key long-term debt maturities until 2024. On top of that, in the last few years, we have seen the NAV (net asset value) of DoubleDragon further solidifying, its book value alone is already at P13.09 per common shareholder with total equity now standing at P69.3 billion,” she said.

As of Dec. 31, 2021, total equity was at P69.3 billion, up 41.3% from the earlier year, as a result of the DDMP REIT, Inc. listing and new equity infusion of the Jollibee group into DoubleDragon’s industrial leasing subsidiary CentralHub,  the company said.

On Thursday, DoubleDragon shares at the local bourse dropped P0.17 or 2.18% to end at P7.63 apiece. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

No rest for pole vaulter Obiena

HANOI — After a long travel process that took almost 24 hours from Formia, Italy to this bustling Vietnamese capital, Asia’s top pole vaulter and Philippine pride Ernest John “EJ” Obiena’s first order of business the minute he stepped into his hotel on Wednesday wasn’t to rest — but to train.

He immediately hit the gym at the Daewoo Hotel to do some light training in the weight room.

“It was a long journey, but okay overall,” said Mr. Obiena, who also plans to train on Friday at the My Dinh National Stadium after his flag-bearing duty on Thursday.

“I hope I get clearance to feel the venue,” said Mr. Obiena, who expressed excitement for his appointment as flag bearer of the 626-strong Team Philippines.

The 26-year-old Mr. Obiena, the world’s sixth best pole vaulter but Asia’s best with a World Athletics score of 1374, is expected to obliterate his own SEA Games’ record of 5.45 meters he set when the Philippines hosted the biennial in 2019.

He currently holds the Philippine record of 5.91 meters, achieved during the Meeting de Paris at the Stade Charlety, Paris on Aug. 28 last year.

Grace and Frankie is the longest running series on Netflix — and a show for women who don’t see themselves on TV

JANE Fonda and Lily Tomlin in a scene from Grace and Frankie.

WHEN the final 12 episodes of Grace and Frankie were released, the show became the longest running television series on Netflix.

Over 94 episodes, this unlikely hit went where no other series had taken viewers: into the lives of older women forced to restart their lives, both socially and sexually, after their marriages of 40 years had ended.

Their husbands’ revelation that they had been lovers for 20 years — and now planned to marry each other — threw the central characters fractiously together in an admittedly idyllic San Diego beach house.

The show broke new ground when it launched in 2015, not only for its frank and fearless portrayal of ageing, but because its central characters were ageing women.

Older women are one of the least visible demographics on television, and to see them front and center is still unusual.

The Golden Girls (1985-92) is the only real precedent for Grace and Frankie, although the ages of its characters are surprising in retrospect.

In the first season of The Golden Girls, Rose is 55, Dorothy is 53, Blanche is 47, and Sophia is 79. In the reboot of Sex and the City, And Just Like That…, Miranda and Charlotte are 54, while Carrie is 55 — and they are certainly not portrayed as old.

But at the start of this series, Grace (Jane Fonda), Frankie (Lily Tomlin) and their former partners Robert (Martin Sheen) and Sol (Sam Waterson), are in their 70s.

The show covers many of the issues of ageing from the perspective of the aged. These include a broad range of health problems — arthritis, immobility, a knee reconstruction and mini-strokes — as well as negotiating the competing claims of children, grandchildren, lovers and friends.

In season four, following multiple health issues and falling victim to a major scam, Grace and Frankie are tricked by their children into moving into aged care.

When they find that they are not allowed to run a business there — among other lost freedoms — they launch an escape bid, stealing a golf cart and heading back to the beach house which has been sold from under them.

The issue of children making choices for their ageing parents against their will is fraught. Older parents often require assistance from their children but at the same time don’t want to lose their autonomy. Children can jump in to resolve issues without taking their parents’ agency into account.

Here, this tension is mostly a source of humor at the expense of the aged care home. But Grace and Frankie also gives a glimpse into how vulnerable people can become when they have health issues.

One of the most striking elements of the show is its forthright approach to sex. Part of this is the frank acknowledgement that with age comes certain sexual challenges.

Typically, popular culture has run from the idea that older women could be sexual, especially as they do not conform to dominant ideas of beauty.

The issue of what is often obliquely referred to as “feminine dryness” is tackled directly when Frankie concocts a lube from yams.

Together, both Grace and Frankie also develop a vibrator that not only takes account of arthritic hands but also of limited mobility.

Though it provides the opportunity for numerous missteps, their company Vybrant is ultimately a success, with women of all ages giving the product rapturous endorsement.

Giving women the power to take control of their own sexual needs is something the show is emphatic about.

Bringing the challenges of coming out in your 70s for Robert and Sol into mainstream programming is also ground-breaking. Older gay men are another group who rarely see themselves on television.

Aspects of gay life — equal marriage, polyamory, promiscuity, and leather men, together with gay musical theater and obsessive dog ownership — are all depicted as part of the new world Robert and Sol enter into.

Coming out, and living the lives they have longed for, has its ongoing challenges for both characters. It is this willingness to look at every issue with both honesty and humor that has marked the approach by directors and writers Marta Kauffman and Howard J. Morris and made the show such a success.

The key focus of Grace and Frankie, despite its many diversions into the lives of ex-husbands, new lovers, friends and children, is always the friendship of Grace and Frankie.

Their friendship is hard won, severely tested, and often seems completely over — but it is the central love of both women’s lives, enabling them to go into old age with confidence, support and times of joy.

 

Mandy Treagus is an Associate Professor in the Department of English, Creative Writing, and Film at the University of Adelaide.

Tulfo to prioritize labor issues if elected to Senate

WIKIPEDIA

TELEVISION journalist Rafael T. Tulfo, a top vote getter in the unofficial Senate tally, said he plans to file legislation against wage theft, among other labor-centric priorities he intends to pursue when he is officially elected.

In an interview with Rappler on Thursday, he said his first bill will seek to impose stiffer penalties, including imprisonment, for wage theft, noting that the current practice is only to issue warnings to employers that illegally withhold money from their workers.

The workers, he said, “are already poor, yet they’re being made poorer.”

The independent candidate said he supports a path for non-permanent workers to become regular employees, and wants contract-based work arrangements restricted to project-based employees. 

Should ABS-CBN Corp. apply for a new franchise, the broadcast journalist said he would support it, in solidarity with the workers who had been rendered jobless.

“Just imagine how many of them have families to support.”

He also supports the decriminalization of libel.

“(I find) no problem with any media outlet, broadcaster, columnist, or writer finding holes” when the government makes mistakes, he said. “But the error being exposed must be the full truth, not one mixed with lies. No addition, no subtraction.”

Disinformation should be tackled by granting more power to the National Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Information and Communication Technology, Mr. Tulfo said. Training, proper support and materials should be provided to enhance their ability to identify the source of fake news.

As of Thursday afternoon, Mr. Tulfo was credited with 23.2 million votes in the partial, unofficial tally, according to the Commission on Elections’ transparency server, putting him third among the 64 Senate candidates. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT