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10 years later, public asked again to join crowdsourced documentary

CELEBRATED Hollywood directors Ridley Scott and Kevin MacDonald alongside film producer Kai-Lu Hsiung are helming YouTube Original’s Life in a Day 2020, a crowdsourced documentary film and follow up to 2011’s Life in Day about “an ordinary day at an extraordinary time,” according to a release.

On July 25, people from around the world are encouraged to film their lives and tell the story of that one day. Twenty videos will make it into the documentary which will premiere at the Sundance Film Festival and on YouTube in 2021.

“Making the first Life in a Day was one of the most joyful and eye-opening experiences of my life. Contributors were generous enough to share often quite intimate moments from their lives as part of a huge, life-affirming, film-making experiment,” said Mr. Macdonald in a release.

“I am thrilled, 10 years later, that we are making Life in a Day 2020. In that time, how have we changed? How has our relationship to filming ourselves changed? And at this extraordinary turning point in history what are we hoping for in our future?” he added.

The first documentary, released in 2011, was described by Mr. Macdonald as a “time capsule” and a “unique experiment in social filmmaking.”

The 2011 film saw 80,000 submissions and was viewed on YouTube over 16 million times.

Now, the new documentary, set 10 years to the day the first one was created, will see how the world has changed, especially living and surviving in a pandemic.

Those who want to be a part of the documentary must film on and only on July 25 and feature their daily lives. The participants will have until Aug. 2 to upload their content to be considered for the final film.

“We’re thrilled to be collaborating with YouTube again, a decade after Life In A Day premiered and captivated audiences at our festival,” said Tabitha Jackson, director of the Sundance Film Festival in a statement.

“Given the extraordinary current moment, I think it’s the perfect time to premiere this for a new edition of a work that so powerfully demonstrates the power of cinematic storytelling to reveal and celebrate our shared humanity,” she added.

For more information about Life in a Day 2020, visit lifeinaday.youtube. — Z.B. Chua

Senate majority leader wants ABS-CBN franchise reform instead of closure

SENATE Majority Leader Juan Miguel F. Zubiri proposed to reform broadcast franchises as he finds ordering the closure of companies that failed to secure renewal “too unreasonable and excessive.”

His proposal comes as the House committees on legislative franchises and good government and public accountability are expected to vote on the 25-year renewal of the ABS-CBN Corp. franchise.

“I would like to appeal to our colleagues in the House of Representatives to give them a chance to reform with an amended franchise to insure the reforms rather completely close down an institution,” Mr. Zubiri told reporters over phone message, Thursday.

The senator also appealed to members of the House committee to vote with their conscience as he points out that 11,000 workers and their families are on the line, should the chamber decide to shut down the network.

Sa tingin ko kung conscience vote wala po akong kilalang kongresista na willingly papatayin ang institusyon na mawawalan ng trabaho ang 11,000 na kababayan natin,” he said in a briefing. (The way I see it, if they conduct a conscience vote, no congressman will willingly close an institution that will result in the unemployment of 11,000 workers)

Mr. Zubiri recommended, for one, to amend the franchise in such a way that will ensure paid political ads are aired.

“For example, once you’ve paid for a political ad it must be shown at that time slot. So the network should no longer accept payments and reservations once the slots are full as that would be a violation of franchise,” he said.

Mr. Zubiri said he experienced this in his 2013 senatorial bid, during which ABS-CBN failed to air his campaign.

For the same reason, the network was accused by President Rodrigo R. Duterte of swindling for not running his political ads during his 2016 presidential campaign.

ABS-CBN President and Chief Executive Officer Carlo L. Katigbak in a February Senate hearing said of the P65 million local ads placed by Mr. Duterte, P7 million worth of ads was not broadcast.

The network has refunded P4 million, but was delayed in refunding P2.6 million. Mr. Duterte later asked ABS-CBN to just donate the remaining amount. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Nas Daily goes beyond a minute in Spotify’s first Asian podcast original

ISRAELI video blogger Nuseir Yassin, better known as Nas Daily, will be the host of Spotify’s “first ever Asia-led Spotify Podcast Original” called NasTalks where he will talk about anything and everything, but mostly about the inspirations behind the one-minute videos he used to post on Facebook daily that earned him his moniker.

“I make one-minute, two-minute, three-minute videos, that’s it. But for the first time in my life, I’m making 45-minute long podcasts, why? Because I want to go deep into the topics that matter and discuss them openly and honestly,” Mr. Yassin said at the launch video posted on Spotify’s Twitter account on July 8.

Mr. Yassin gained fame online after making 1,000 one-minute videos on Facebook which covered a wide range of topics from mosquitoes to interracial dating to political movements. He also featured the Philippines in 2017 which was followed by an eight-minute video of his eight-day trip in the country in the same year. In 2018, he created another Philippine video, calling it the “most lovable country.”

The 28-year-old is currently based in Singapore where he leads his video production company and is doing one video a week for 100 weeks, a feat that is expected to conclude in 2021.

“In this podcast nothing is off-limits: The Israel and Palestine conflict, growing up as a brown kid, anything that makes me angry. Me and my guests simplify topics that no one cares about, and suddenly everyone relates,” he said on the podcasts’ Spotify page.

The first episode, which was uploaded on July 7, focused on the inspiration behind Nas Daily but will soon also cover topics such as politics and finding fame through social media.

The podcast will feature guests from around the world, highlighting creators, politicians and authors. In the first few weeks of the show, Nas will be joined by Filipino-American vlogger Wil Dasovich and Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari.

“Going into podcasting makes perfect sense for the Nas Daily journey,” he said in a release before adding, “It’s hard to deep-dive into topics in less than three minutes and I’m looking forward to longer discussions with other points of view. It’s my first venture into long-form content and I am thrilled to partner with Spotify to bring this show to life.”

The Nas Talks podcast can be accessed at https://open.spotify.com/show/1GdTMF4b8x5WTJuk66enCq. — ZBC

Cebu Pacific to shrink in size as demand remains low

CEBU Pacific said the new business landscape created by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic requires far less manpower.

Cebu Pacific, operated by Cebu Air, Inc. (CEB), said in a statement on Thursday that its management had decided to cut 800 jobs by August.

“Over the past several weeks, CEB has had to review and redefine its long-term plans around the changing needs of customers, employees and the travel industry as a whole. It was clear after this process that CEB was too big for the operational requirements and expected new norms in the industry,” the budget carrier said.

It said the decision was necessary in order to fulfill the airline company’s long-term commitment to provide “affordable and accessible” air transport services to the public.

Operations of the low-cost airline during the implementation of the enhanced community quarantine to contain a coronavirus disease were limited to cargo and sweeper flights.

Cebu Pacific resumed commercial operations on June 2.

“While operations continue to resume, the current number of flights account for less than 10% of the pre-quarantine network,” it said.

Cebu Pacific Director for Corporate Communications Charo L. Lagamon told BusinessWorld in a phone message on Thursday that the budget carrier continues to carry out various cost-cutting measures to cushion the impact of the pandemic crisis on the company.

She said as the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 worsened, the airline “took immediate steps to manage financial resources.”

“Projects that are not critical to improving operational efficiency or passenger experience were deferred. Pay cuts were implemented on Management to help augment salaries and allowances for other employees. New hires, promotions and salary adjustments were suspended. Across the entire organization, work schedules were reduced,” the airline said.

Cebu Pacific expects travel recovery to happen over a longer period, with the pandemic “negatively impacting” the entire aviation sector.

In March, the company decided to let go of its 150 newly hired flight attendants as reduced flights entail “less opportunity for them to gain in-flight experience.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

A connecting web

By Joseph L. Garcia, Reporter

VIDEO REVIEW
#AnneFrank — Parallel Lives
Directed by Sabina Fedeli, Anna Migotto
Netflix

It was once easy to take one’s freedom for granted, thanks in part to the relative peace we’ve had — thanks to people who fight for it. However, viruses that have been mutating society faster than they mutate themselves, as well as other forces hard at work, are forcing us all to hide.

It is of course unfair to compare the hiding we do to the hiding that Anne Frank had to go through. Recorded in her world famous diary are the two years she spent as a middle-class, teenage Jewish girl hiding from the wrath of the Nazis in the Second World War, before finally having to face them through her arrest, deportation, and death in 1945. A documentary called #AnneFrank — Parallel Stories released earlier this year (and out on Netflix earlier this month) doesn’t seek to align our lives with hers. Rather, the story is presented as a connecting web, to show that Anne was one of millions of others who suffered just like her.

An icon serves to put a face for people who become just a number — in this case, a very large number: six million deaths for the Jewish people alone, but an estimate from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum reflecting other groups persecuted at the time places the death toll as nearing 11 million. Having an icon is a double-edged sword, as an icon becomes an isolate, and then the stories of others become easy to ignore. The documentary interviews women, all near Anne’s age had she been alive, who were placed in situations similar to hers. Anne’s plot is interwoven with those of Arianna Szörényi, Sarah Lichtstejn-Montard (who could even recall seeing Anne from a distance in the concentration camp they were at), Helga Weiss, and sisters Andra and Tatiana Bucci, along with other persecuted women who survived the Holocaust. The documentary also talks to their families, historians, and psychologists.

The women’s testimonies are a disguised warning of what we risk facing if we take our freedoms for granted. I say disguised, because of course age has transformed them already into soft, mellow women. One of my favorite segments were the interviews with Sarah Lichtstejn-Montard, an animated Frenchwoman dressed in a pink cardigan and a creamy pearl necklace. In one part, she lifts the cardigan, a garment associated with politeness and coziness, and shows the number the Nazis stamped on her, faded but very much still there. “Once in my grave, the worms will eat it off me, but for the time being, this is my mark of life, and I’ll keep it.”

Doris Grozdanovičová, who died last year, was a survivor from the ghetto of Terezin who is famous around the world for a photograph of her tending to sheep while incarcerated. She was interviewed during one of her weekly pilgrimages to the site of her suffering. In a voice shaky with age, she says, “I was there for almost three and a half years, and I celebrated four birthdays there… and I was unable to experience what living free meant.”

The documentary is narrated by Dame Helen Mirren, reading from Anne’s diary in a reconstruction of the small room Anne and her family occupied between 1942-1944. Several elements in the documentary make one see the idiom “gilding the lily” in action. For example, a framing device of a teen tracking Anne’s final progress in reverse (beginning from her grave and ending in her home) becomes inane when she posts very brief, pale insights about Anne’s life through an imagined social media account. As for the awesome acting powers of Helen Mirren, channeled through dramatic readings of a 15-year-old’s thoughts, they pale in comparison to the real tragedy of the women’s testimonies, making even one of the greatest actresses of our time unnecessary. I at least had to respect Helen Mirren by not skipping her readings, as opposed to fast-forwarding through the teen’s hashtags of #diary, and the like.

For those who might think that the horrors of the Holocaust are but a distant memory, one that dies with its survivors, one has to listen to the testimonies of the survivors’ families. The Nazis, seeking to systematically eliminate the Jewish population, find an enemy in Ms. Montard, who gets the last laugh. “My children are my revenge against the Nazis,” she says. But the Nazi shadow is a long one. A study by the team of researcher Rachel Yehuda in the 2010s at the Mount Sinai hospital found that epigenetic factors influence even the children of survivors: “The researchers focused on FKBP5, a str’ess gene linked to PTSD, depression, and mood and anxiety disorders. The results suggest that Holocaust exposure had an effect on FKBP5 methylation — a mechanism that controls the gene’s expression — that was observed in parents exposed to the horrors of the concentration camps, as well as their offspring, many of whom showed signs of depression and anxiety,” said an article about the study from the US Department of Veterans Affairs.

The inherited pain doesn’t even have to be genetic. Italian survivor Arianna Szörényi’s daughter bears her mother’s pain still: “A son or a daughter is there on the front row. A baby born from a survivor, and without a specific job aimed at clearing up history, his or her mission is to fill up what can never be filled,” she said in an interview, recalling that her mother entered the concentration camp with her family, only to leave it alone. “There is a part of her that remained in the camps.”

Ethno-psychologist Nathalie Zajde, interviewed in the film, observes an element common in families of Holocaust survivors, even up to the fourth generation. “The dead of Shoah ask for revenge. It is a burden for their descendants. It is a mission. The dead of the Shoah say, ‘Avenge us even though we are dead… destroy what the Nazis did to us.’”

The Bucci sisters make it a point to talk to young people about the Holocaust and their own experiences (they very narrowly escaped being one of Josef Mengele’s medical experiments), to make sure that the memory will always be there to serve as a warning. “But today, this is beginning to feel like a duty… there are too many people who do not accept those who are different and are looking for a better life here, and end up drowning in our seas.”

We’ll let Anne’s words end this review, for an acknowledgement of our uncertainty, but also looking at a glimmer of hope, no matter how faint: “It’s utterly impossible for me to build my life on a foundation of chaos, suffering, and death. I see the world being slowly transformed into a wilderness. I hear the approaching thunder that one day, will destroy us too. I feel the suffering of millions. And yet, when I look up at the sky, I somehow feel that everything will change for the better, that this cruelty too shall end, and peace and tranquility will return once more. In the meantime, I must hold on to my ideals.”

PSE records four new Shari’ah compliant securities

A TOTAL of four new securities trading in the local bourse qualified as compliant with Islamic principles of finance based on the operator’s review for the second quarter.

In a memorandum on its website Thursday, the Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. (PSE) said a total of 53 securities were found Shari’ah compliant for the period ending June 25, 2020.

The number is higher by one against the 52 Shari’ah compliant securities listed for the period ending March, from which list three securities were pulled out.

The four new securities in the updated list are Metro Alliance Holdings & Equities Corp. (Metro Alliance) “A”; Metro Alliance “B”; PXP Energy Corp.; and SPC Power Corp.

The three that were removed from the previous quarter’s list are 2GO Group, Inc.; Italpinas Development Corp.; and Vivant Corp.

As in previous periods, the PSE said it tapped IdealRatings, Inc. to screen the listed companies for their Shari’ah compliance.

The PSE does this review on a quarterly basis to identify which securities follow the Islamic standards of finance, therefore allowing Muslim investors to participate in the local market.

In April, the bourse operator adjusted its screening guidelines to relax some restrictions in line with the amended Shari’ah Rulebook.

To be Shari’ah compliant, a company must not be involved in, or must derive less than 5% of its income from adult entertainment, alcohol, cinema, defense and weapons, financial services, gambling, gold and silver hedging, interest-bearing investments, music, pork and tobacco.

Companies must also pass a financial screening, which requires that a company’s interest-bearing debt and total interest-bearing deposits or investments do not exceed 30% of its 12-month trailing average market capitalization. — Denise A. Valdez

Immortal mercenaries confront reality of forever in Netflix’s The Old Guard

LOS ANGELES — Audiences are used to seeing comic book superheroes come to life on screen but in The Old Guard the heroes only have one power — immortality.

Charlize Theron stars in the action film, arriving on Netflix on Friday, as the leader of a small unit of immortal mercenaries who are trying to help humanity. It is based on the 2017 comic book by Greg Rucka and Leandro Fernandez.

“I just saw a lot of potential to explore something on a sci-fi level scale but somehow stay true to the very insular human emotions that I felt an audience could really appreciate in the sci-fi world,” Theron said.

The diverse cast includes Black actress KiKi Layne as Nile, the first immortal to have been “born” in a few centuries, as well as 12 Years a Slave star Chiwetel Ejiofor, Tunisian-Dutch actor Marwan Kenzari, Italian Luca Marinelli, and Belgian Matthias Schoenaerts.

“I love that there were two females at the head of this which just felt different. And most notably, there’s a young, Black female hero in this which is absolutely a rarity in the genre,” said director Gina Prince-Bythewood.

Ejiofor said the movie tries to delve into “what it would be like for people if they could live as immortal, if they could live forever, and what they’re actually confronted with is a lot of this kind of angst.”

It’s also a project that demonstrates what inclusion should look like in Hollywood, Ejiofor said.

“Everybody is celebrated in this experience and that is, I think, part of what film and television should be aspiring to. That shouldn’t be something radical, that should be a natural evolution of our medium,” he said. — Reuters

Construction of two new segments of C5 Link Expressway starts

CAVITEX Infrastructure Corp. (CIC), operator of the Manila-Cavite Expressway (Cavitex), is set to break ground today, Friday, for the two new segments of the Cavitex C5 Link Expressway.

CIC and its joint venture partner for the P8.8-billion project, the Philippine Reclamation Authority, have signed a contract with A.M. Oreta & Co., Inc. and China Harbour Engineering Co. Ltd. for the construction of Segment 2 and Segment 3A-2 of the Cavitex C5 Link Expressway, the Metro Pacific tollway firm said in a statement e-mailed to reporters on Thursday.

Targeted for completion in 2022, the two new road segments are “expected to reduce travel time to Makati and Taguig cities from Parañaque City, Las Piñas City, and Cavite Province by 30 minutes,” it said.

The 7.70-kilometer Cavitex-C5 Link Expressway is a dual three-lane expressway from R-1 Parañaque Toll Plaza to C-5 Road in Taguig, CIC added.

The 1.9-kilometer Segment 2 will run from R-1 Expressway to Sucat Interchange, while the 1.6-kilometer Segment 3A-2 will run from Merville to RSG Subdivision in Parañaque.

Department of Public Works and Highways Secretary Mark A Villar was quoted as saying in the statement: “These projects will decongest EDSA and Sales Road in Pasay City by about 50,000 vehicles per day, and connect major business districts in Taguig and Makati to Parañaque, Las Piñas, and Cavite.”

He said the continuing infrastructure activities “will help spur economic growth to get us back on track from the effects of the pandemic.”

CIC is under Metro Pacific Tollways Corp., the tollway unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC). MPIC is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., others being PLDT Inc. and Philex Mining Corp.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group. — Arjay L. Balinbin

GT Capital maintains top credit rating for P15.1-billion bonds

GT Capital Holdings, Inc. has been given the highest credit rating for its total outstanding P15.1-billion bonds by a local debt watcher.

In a disclosure to the exchange on Thursday, the Ty-led conglomerate said it was able to maintain its PRS Aaa credit rating for its outstanding bonds as assessed by Philippine Ratings Services Corp. (PhilRatings).

A PRS Aaa rating means the bonds are of highest quality with minimal credit risk. PhilRatings said it means GT Capital has an “extremely strong” capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

The credit rating was also given a stable outlook, which means it is likely to stay the same for the next 12 months.

“The assigned issue ratings take into account GT Capital’s investments portfolio which is composed of companies with solid market positions, the strong strategic direction provided by its shareholders combined with the solid experience of its management, and sound capitalization structure,” PhilRatings said.

“These core credit strengths are seen to counterbalance increased risks due to the ongoing community quarantine and COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic, and serve as a strong base for recovery as the impact of these developments gradually wanes over time,” it added.

GT Capital is composed of various businesses such as Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co. (Metrobank); Toyota Motor Philippines, Philippine AXA Life Insurance Corp.; and a 15.55% stake in Metro Pacific Investments Corp.

The conglomerate’s profits dropped 26% to P2.5 billion in the first quarter due to the pandemic. But PhilRatings said these businesses are either the dominant or one of the strongest players in their respective industries, making GT Capital positioned to rise above the challenges.

“GT Capital’s owners and management have outlined strategies specific to each component company of the group, taking into account the quarantine and contagion’s overall economic and industry impact, and the group’s short-term plans to limit the immediate negative effects of these developments, as well as medium- to long-term strategies for recovery moving forward,” the debt watcher said.

PhilRatings noted it would continue monitoring developments that might affect GT Capital’s businesses, and may change the credit rating at any time if found necessary.

Shares in GT Capital at the stock exchange fell P2 or 0.44% to close at P448 apiece on Thursday. — Denise A. Valdez

Actor Depp attacked wife on plane in drunken rage, UK court hears

LONDON — Hollywood star Johnny Depp kicked and slapped his ex-wife Amber Heard on a private flight in a drunken rage brought on because he believed she was having an affair with her co-star James Franco, London’s High Court heard on Wednesday.

Mr. Depp, giving evidence in his libel trial against Britain’s Sun newspaper over an article describing him as a “wife beater,” denied he had attacked Heard, accusing her of being the aggressor whom he tried to placate.

During the first two days of what is expected to be a three-week case, the court has heard evidence about Mr. Depp’s heavy drinking and drug use and about his relationship with Mr. Heard whom he married in 2015. She filed for divorce 15 months later.

On Wednesday, the Pirates of the Caribbean actor was accused of abusing Ms. Heard on a flight from Boston to Los Angeles following a row over Mr. Franco, who appeared with her in the film The Adderall Diaries.

Mr. Depp told the court that he was surprised she agreed to make the film with Mr. Franco, having previously described him as “creepy” for making aggressive sexual advances towards her.

On the flight, Mr. Depp screamed obscenities at Ms. Heard, said she liked having sex on film sets and called her a “go-getter slut and a whore,” said Sasha Wass, lawyer for the Sun.

In a “blind rage,” he kicked her in the back as she tried to walk away from him and slapped her across the face, Ms. Wass said.

Mr. Depp denied the accusations.

“I am not a violent person, especially with women,” he told the court.

He later added that he might have passed out on the flight.

Ms. Wass said that on the day after the flight, Ms. Depp sent Ms. Heard a text message which said: “I don’t know why or what happened but I will never do it again.”

Asked why he had apologized, Mr. Depp said he had perhaps done so because he had said something “ugly” or to placate her.

Asked if someone who kicked a woman should be called a wife beater, Mr. Depp, 57, said he would call them a savage or an animal.

“It’s one of the most disgusting things someone has ever said about me or accused me of.”

TATTOO TANTRUM
Earlier Mr. Depp said Ms. Heard’s allegations were a hoax built up over years during their relationship as an “insurance policy.”

In an unsent e-mail composed by Heard in June 2013, three years before she publicly accused him of abuse, she said Mr. Depp had hurt her physically and that she did not know if she was dealing with him or “the monster” — his alter ego brought on by anger, jealousy and fuelled by alcohol and drugs.

“It’s like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” the e-mail, read to the court by Ms. Wass, said. It added that friends and assistants had to deal with the actor after he passed out in his own vomit and soiled himself with no recollection later of his actions.

Asked if the e-mail meant Ms. Heard had been plotting the allegations for three years, Mr. Depp said: “By the evidence that I have seen.

“It appears to me that Ms. Heard was building a dossier that appears to be an insurance policy for later.”

The court heard the first alleged incident of violence took place at Ms. Heard’s home in March 2013 when he had “fallen off the wagon” and started drinking again after months of sobriety.

Ms. Wass said Mr. Depp had become angry when Ms. Heard mocked one of his tattoos which he had changed from “Winona forever” — a reference to his former girlfriend Winona Ryder — to “Wino forever” and slapped her three times.

“That’s not the case, that’s untrue. It didn’t happen,” Mr. Depp said. “I don’t recall any argument about any of my tattoos.”

Ms. Wass also said he had struck Mr. Heard, 34, when he tried to remove a painting from her bedroom given to her by her former partner Tasya Van Ree and tried to set it alight, one of 14 episodes of violence of which he is accused in the case.

Ms. Wass asked Mr. Depp if he had held Ms. Heard’s small Yorkshire Terrier Pistol out of the window of a moving car.

“I can say it is a very enduring image but it’s an utter falsity,” he said, while agreeing that there was a running joke with Ms. Heard and her family about putting Pistol in the microwave as he was “ludicrously tiny.” — Reuters

Maynilad resumes building P1-billion Muntinlupa sewage treatment plant

Maynilad Water Services, Inc. has resumed the construction of its P1-billion sewage treatment plant in Muntinlupa City after the government eased lockdown restrictions in Metro Manila, the west zone water concessionaire said.

In a statement on Thursday, Maynilad said the sewage treatment plant in Barangay Cupang is part of its long-term plan to expand sewerage coverage in its concession area and mitigate pollution loading in Manila Bay.

The project, named Cupang Water Reclamation Facility, is expected to be complete by the end of the year, the water provider said, adding that it can serve around 281,000 residents in Muntinlupa City.

“With the easing of the enhanced community quarantine restrictions, we have hit the ground running and resumed construction works on our major capital expenditure projects, including this new facility in Cupang that will enable us to meet our long-term sewerage commitments,” Maynilad President and Chief Executive Officer Ramoncito S. Fernandez said.

Maynilad currently runs 22 wastewater treatment facilities that have a combined treatment capacity of around 662,000 cubic meters of wastewater per day.

The water provider said that P40-billion worth of investments had been poured into Metro Manila’s west zone concession to date.

ABC revives The Wonder Years with Black family at the center

ABC is rebooting The Wonder Years, a beloved coming-of-age sitcom about the US middle class, only this time it will tell the story of a Black family in Alabama.

Empire co-creator Lee Daniels is executive producing the project, alongside Fred Savage, the star of the original series, which debuted in 1988. Neal Marlens, who co-created The Wonder Years, will serve as a consultant.

ABC has only committed to produce a pilot of the show, which means it may never get on the air. But ABC and its owner Walt Disney Co. have made telling more Black stories a priority following the killing of George Floyd, which brought a wave of protests about racial injustice.

Hollywood has long struggled to produce shows that represent the diversity of America. ABC was once the home to both Kenya Barris and Shonda Rhimes, two of the most prominent Black writers in TV, but both have since signed deals with Netflix Inc.

Disney also announced an overall production deal with football player and civil-rights activist Colin Kaepernick earlier this week.

The Wonder Years, which ran until 1993, originally depicted Kevin Arnold, a young boy in what was presented as a typical American family dealing with the tribulations of the late 1960s and early 1970s. — Bloomberg