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A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18, June 2014 4, Vol.2015 10 No. 40 Thursday, Vol. 10 No. 238
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PROPOSED CATASTROPHE POOL TO PROVIDE PRIVATE PROPERTIES MANDATORY INSURANCE COVERAGE IN DISASTER CASES
IC endorses EO on insurance ‘cat-pool’
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INSIDE
HE Insurance Commission (IC) has endorsed a proposal for a mandatory national catastrophe-insurance pool that will protect Filipinos against natural disasters and other causes of property losses, as part of the President’s “legacy” when he leaves office in 2016.
CAMSUR PRINTS Try God
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F we need a refuge, try God. If we need a true answer, try God. If we need a healer, try God. If we need a break through, try God. If we need a real friend, try God. If we need peace and joy, try God. There is nothing He can’t do. Amen. GOD FRUITS.COM AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
REELING: INCREDIBLE, BUT THESE ‘BARBER’S TALES’ ARE TRUE »D2
BusinessMirror
JA TADENA
Thursday, June 4, 2015
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RAYMUND ISAAC
The wonders of CamSur go to print
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KNOW of a photographer who’d rather get marooned on some temptation island with a really basic toy camera than get stuck with Kendall Jenner in the studio for the rest of his life. Me? I want to take Kendall to that magical island and just canoodle there, al fresco, forever and ever amen. In other words, is he out of his frigging mind? But I have come to understand that he’s not a lonely lunatic after all, especially after he revealed that the magical place in question was the collectively known Caramoan Islands, the tip of the iceberg that is the nowgetting-all-the-more-famous Camarines Sur in Bicol. I had been to Caramoan as a tot and I remember pulling at my father’s shorts and telling him that I’d go back and marry Caramoan when I grow up. Fifteen-odd years later, I chanced upon poignant photographs at the pedestal in Bonifacio Global City by lensmen Raymund Isaac and Erik Liongoren of the
JUN DE LEON
maiden and I fell in love a second time. The set of photographs was part of 24/7/7 24/7/7, a seven-part photo exhibit and coffee-table book featuring Camarines Sur that was a brainchild of acclaimed photographer Jun de Leon and Camarines Sur Gov. Miguel “Migz” Villafuerte, dropping seven photographers in seven different locations to compose their visual poetry on the province’s postcard landscape, seascape and peoplescape in 24 hours. “The idea was to showcase Camarines Sur’s people and places through a photography initiative that hasn’t been done,” Villafuerte said. “Luckily, we had Jun de Leon, who had an interesting concept and friends who were willing to take it on.” The roster of seven acclaimed photographers included—besides Isaac, Liongoren and de Leon himself—Wig Tysmans, JA Tadeña, Jake Verzosa and Sara Black, all framing Camarines Sur onto a kind of a now-they-move-now-they-don’t photography, like the view you have from your airplane window of the
boats in the sea momentarily stalling into a picturesque standstill when you ascend 17,000 feet in the air. The photographers were alien to the concept, which, de Leon said, was inspired by the television series 24. “It made use of narration techniques via real-time footage and split screens to show simultaneous events.” Through the eyes of Isaac and Liongoren, the ever bucolic and lonely Caramoan took an amorphous form in the nostalgic images in Sabitang Laya, Langkipaw, Matalhod, Mantalistis and then some nook and cranny populated by the island dwellers. Meanwhile, bringing the poetic feel of Lake Buhi to the fore, Tysmans (“Lesson From Life in Lake Buhi”) captured Lake Buhi, the fisherfolk and a barangay beauty queen the way a poet might in his meandering verses. Black’s (“Call of the Wild”) Mount Isarog trek and a dip in the Asupre Sulfur Spring yielded wallpapermaterial mugshots of nature and rolling mountains.
Meanwhile, Verzosa (“Of Basketball Courts, a Motorbike and One Majestic Mountain”) explored through the same mountain on a motorbike, painting pictures of the barangays of Mount Isarog which, despite its reclusive mountain, are not bereft of basketball courts. Like a romantic bard or a merchant in Venice, cinematographer-slash-photographer Tadeña (“Treasures From the River”) waxed poetic over the Bicol River, obviously feeling a close affinity with it. On the other hand, de Leon’s photography and wakeboarding mettle came together in the Camarines Sur Watersports Complex (CWC), producing pictures that captured the frisson in CWC at different times of the day. “It’s really just about pursuing our passion and, in the process, helping promote Philippine tourism,” de leon said, milling about and letting themselves go wherever all this beauty in the world might take them. The whole point of travel, after all, is to be lost in the way.
ERIK LIONGOREN
Fun adventure, food trip at Sky Ranch THERE was a time when a trip to Tagaytay City meant having a picnic by the ridge as you soak up on the wonderful view of Taal Volcano while having lunch. It was a chance to take advantage of daylong cool weather, and some horseback-riding at a nearby park. At the end of the day, pasalubong shopping included not only buko pie and tarts, but also fresh vegetables and garden plants
from the roadside stalls that line the highway on the way home. Nowadays, a trip to Tagaytay means a trip to Sky Ranch, the 5-hectare amusement park managed by SM Prime Holdings Inc. Beside historic Taal Vista Hotel, this theme park in the sky has become one of the popular attractions families and groups must experience when they hie off to this leisure destination south of Metro Manila. Since it opened in late 2013, Sky Ranch has become a popular destination not only for travelers from Manila, but also from the nearby provinces of Cavite, Batangas and Laguna. The park is quite popular among schools that visit Tagaytay City on field trips, as well as families driving from nearby provinces on an excursion. To date, Sky Ranch boasts a number of attractions. The 63-meter tall Sky Eye is the park’s main landmark, towering over other park rides. Riding one of the gondolas of this mammoth Ferris wheel provides guests with
magnificent views of Tagaytay Ridge and Taal Volcano. Other must-ride park attractions include Sky Viking, an open gondola that swings riders up to a 90-degree angle for an action-packed ride; the Zipline that hurls you across a 300-meter drop by the ridge; the double-decker Carousel; and the Riding Loop horseback riding track. While most of the park rides are geared toward children, six more attractions that are intended for adults are expected to be made available by the end of 2015. One attraction, the Log Cruiser, a logthemed roller coaster, is set to be operational by September. Apart from its attractions, Sky Ranch is fast-becoming a popular foodie destination with its wide selection of dining options, from fast-food and casual dining restaurants to family-style outlets. Whatever the craving, there is a restaurant to satisfy your appetite. Sky Ranch is beside Taal Vista Hotel, Kilometer 60, Aguinaldo Highway, Tagaytay City.
LIFE
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‘BARBER’S TALES’ D2
Show BusinessMirror
Thursday, June 4, 2015
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Incredible, but these ‘Barber’s Tales’ are true ECONOMY of means and gesture is the discipline of Eugene Domingo as the barber who makes the final cut. She is terrific in her restraint in Barber’s Tales.
REELING
TITO GENOVA VALIENTE
titovaliente@yahoo.com
“After all, I believe that legends and myths are largely made of ‘truth,’ and, indeed, present aspects of it that can only be received in this mode; and long ago certain truths and modes of this kind were discovered and must always reappear.” —J.R.R. T
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VILLAGE locked deep in a valley is going to be visited by the dictator. In that place, its lone barber has died in his sleep. Despondent, his wife takes over and becomes the prominent barber in town. Somewhere, a woman is lovely and depressed. Somewhere, a wife is battered and made pregnant by her cruel husband. Tales abound in Jun Lana’s Barber’s Tales. You can tell the tales and retell them, put them in any position and yet the world makes sense. The reason for this is that these stories deserve their validity not through histories but through a composition that shades the border between fantasy and political commentary. In Barber’s Tales, the small tales are true but somewhere in these tales are other tales, unyielding to our common notion of what is factual and what is fictive. In the town, the location of which always comes with the reminder of its isolation, the barber shop is where all people converge. Jose is the barber but he is no raconteur. The tales come from other people and the events these people find themselves part of. Jose is stern with his wife, who serves him like he is the true master of the house. Jose is the master barber to this wife who apprentices also in her husband’s craft. Jose, however, is also the master in this marriage where the wife is servile and scared. There is no love in the husband’s voice when he asks something from the wife. The house reeks of tension. We fear for the safety of this
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Today’s Horoscope
By Eugenia Last
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS IS DA DAY: Bar Refaeli,
30; Russell Brand, 40; Angelina Jolie, 40; Noah Wyle, 44.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: DA You may have to rethink DAY:
your financial strategy and the motives behind your long-range plans. Getting involved with the wrong people or taking part in a joint venture for reasons that are not sound are best avoided. Work independently and put greater emphasis on your strengths. Discipline and hard work will be your tickets to success, not riding someone else’s coattails. Your numbers are 7, 13, 17, 20, 27, 35, 44.
woman in her own home. When Jose dies, we are left to contend with Marilou, a widow who seems to have nowhere to go, until she decides to be the next barber in town. She tries first with the good priest who is satisfied with her style. The other men would not trust a woman with their hair. One day, she is asked to see the mayor who learns about her skills gained from her husband. The mayor is happy with the haircut and soon there are customers in the old barber shop. Interesting that the mayor, all chauvinism and power, will trust a woman to cut his hair. In Barber’s Tales, as in the so-called kuwentong barbero, the term for the gossip shared, as well as ribald jokes, the tales are caught in between the real and the unreal. The stories in barber shops are usually an all-male assault at society and the women who weaken all communities with their femaleness. The narrative of the film saves it from being merely fabular or metaphorical. The film does not dwell on the metaphor of communities fooled by their leaders who hide from them the truth of an ugly government. There are characters who are well aware of the fairy tales spun by a vicious king and an insane queen in the palace. These characters like the young student Edmund, who quits his studies to join the revolution in the mountains.
He is able to gather more men and they talk about truth in the barber shop, the place where lies and life’s exaggerations are constructed. Then one day, Edmund disappears . Then one day, a beloved person in the villlage is killed. The character of Marilou is not at the center of the tales, for there are so many tales. But her barber shop and her conversion from an almost dumb woman to a popular barber are, in themselves, containing the true elements of a barber’s tale. Contentious and charming, the story of Marilou is a wonder to read. As played by Eugene Domingo, the character is almost catatonic in her coping with the loss of a man, the same loss of which produces her presence. But there is a terrifying strength in those resigned postures, in that nonconfrontational stance. We know that this woman will either break down or break out of the village, and break out she does—but not in the grand, sweeping Greek manner but in the firm and ordinary stroke of a barber’s knife. Marilou’s journey from someone who does not believe in the revolution and fighting for social upheaval is one of the staunchest elements of the film’s screenplay. It is a slow, gradual awakening and deaths are the source of life in this woman’s rebirth into a new ideology. Marilou asks Edmund to remain a good son to her
friend, for that is all that she knows. The home, after the school, is the best place for sons, declares this woman timid as a woman for a long time. But the village has a silence that will not last long. As the killings of people continue, Marilou provides refuge for the “rebels.” Marilou meets up with the mayor’s wife who confides to her all her pains. Up there on the cliff, Marilou witnesses the full descent of a woman into hell, a turning point for the barber to tell her own barber’s tales. As the only barber—perhaps the only female barber in the area—vanishes, varied stories are told about her whereabouts. Rashomonesque only up to a point, the disappearance of the barber is soon explained in a tour-de-force scene at the end where religion, society, violence, and politics are almost textbook titles of what a small community has become. A procession is held and the military is on alert to look for a long-haired woman. But the woman are also on full alert to save other women. They all change their hair! The barber, his tale and his craft, becomes a sumptuous polysemic symbol of what women can do when they band together and refuse to be seen in the graven images made after men. Barber’s Tales is a woman’s film only insofar as the wise moves made by the women in this film. This brings us to the actresses who play the lead characters in the film. Shamaine Buencamino is Tess, the aunt who placed all her trust and future in her nephew. Acerbic and territorial, Buencamino bristles with an indignation that is soon realized into knowledge. Once more, Gladys Reyes is proving herself to be the next promising indie actress, if we may have that category. Nearly stealing the scene from Allen Dizon in Magkakabaung Magkakabaung, Reyes here is all at once intense and simple as a battered wife. Economy of means and gesture is the discipline of Domingo as the barber who makes the final cut. She is terrific in her restraint. The theatricality in those pauses and glances is justified by the air emitted by the scenes in sepia and nostalgia: Marilou is memory and Memorare, a prayer and a political move, in the body, hands and eyes of Domingo. The film is directed by Jun Robles Lana. The screenplay is attributed to Lana, Peter Ong Lim, Elmer Gatchalian and Benedict Mique. The carnivalesque and claustrophobia of the film are through the keen cinematography by Carlo Mendoza and the astute production design by Chito Sumera. The film is released through APT Entertainment. n
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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Keep your costs down. Use your intelligence to get the most for your money. A change in a relationship will turn out to be good for you. Keep your emotions under control and bide your time when dealing with family disputes. HH
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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your generosity will be repaid. Offer your services where you feel they will help the most. You will make a lasting impression on someone who can help you get ahead. Strive for perfection and you will outshine any competition you encounter. HHH
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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Refuse to let a work-related matter cause emotional stress. Consider what you can do to improve your situation. Taking care of problems in a professional manner will help you outshine whomever is causing you grief. HH
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Check out new entertainment options. Spend time with friends or make family plans. A day trip will lead to information that will spark your imagination. Romance will bring you closer to someone you think is pretty special. HHHHH GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Homeimprovement projects or moving to larger quarters will allow you greater freedom to take on creative pastimes. Use your charm to convince someone to lend a hand. Call in a favor that will help to enhance what you have to offer. HHH
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Emotional blackmail will lead to uncertainty. Don’t hide your feelings if someone is unfair. Accept inevitable changes and keep moving forward. In the end, you will end up benefiting if you play by the rules and continue to be productive. HHH
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Close deals and finish what you start. A decision you make will not bode well with everyone. Network and you will find compatible partners who share your ideas and beliefs. Take responsibility for your actions and do your own thing. HHHHH
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’ll have to think on your feet. Refuse to let someone’s emotions stifle a plan you have had in the works for some time. The information someone offers will be false. Keep things in perspective, ask questions and protect your assets. HHH
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Money matters will lead to arguments due to poor information or false advertising. Focus on personal projects and you will feel good about your accomplishments at the end of the day. Prioritize what’s important to you. HHHH
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Speak up, share your thoughts and be a part of the planning that goes on regarding your job and your personal life. What you contribute will give you an edge that will help you excel personally and professionally. HHH
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take a look at what someone has to offer you. A chance to change your direction or improve your position is apparent. Don’t dismiss making a move to a new location. A partnership will offer adventure and plenty of experience. HHH
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Get serious about what you want to do next. Investigate what will help you follow through with your plans. Set time aside for personal pampering or get together with someone special. HHHH
BIRTHDAY DAY BABY: You are imaginative and playful. You are a dreamer and a doer. DA
‘movie extras’ BY AGNES BROWN The Universal Crossword/Edited by Timothy E. Parker
ACROSS 1 “A man’s house ___ castle” 6 ___’clock (midmorning) 10 Pampering places 14 Worst possible turnout 15 African antelope 16 Travel by foot 17 1998 film about a ball for teachers? 20 Be humiliated 21 James or Marilyn 22 IRA type 23 Top-of-the-line 24 Bette Midler film about a thorny person? 31 Paddled a canoe 32 Golden Triangle country 33 Deep Space Nine shape-shifter 34 Walk of Fame figure 35 Fresh from the shower 37 Boo-boo 38 Suffix for “acrobat” 39 Hermes’ mother 40 Hotel offering 41 Tom Cruise flick about a bed?
45 Gen. Robert ___ 46 Homemade knife 47 Thing-in-___ 50 Like some bathing suits 54 Hitchcock thriller about a balcony seat? 56 Make airtight 57 Italian pronoun 58 Like Erik the Red 59 Diarist Frank 60 Coup d’___ 61 Slip cover? DOWN 1 Like JFK and LAX 2 Manhattan neighborhood 3 Some gardening tools 4 One who derives by reasoning 5 Type of restaurant 6 “Good comeback!” 7 Colleague of Agatha and Dashiell 8 Big Apple paper’s inits. 9 Pretty ugly, for one 10 Foster’s river of song
11 12 13 18 19 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 35 36 37 39 40 42 43 44 47 48 49
Wife number VI for Henry VIII Sax type Kind of terrier Rum Tum Tugger’s musical Mallards’ domains Honor student’s grades? “I’ll have ___ this one out” Contrive, as a scheme Wipe clean Flash of light “God’s honest truth” Corrects text Boxing-ring features Happy-go-lucky Citrus fruit CBS reality show First name in lip-synching? Grad student’s payment Decrepit Comparable to a pin? He and she “___ Wonderful Life” In those days Penn of movies
50 Olympus Mountains peak 51 Ireland, affectionately 52 “Pool” intro 53 Mother sheep 55 Summer time, but not in Arizona
SHOW Solution to yesterday’s puzzle:
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NOFAIL KALE
HEAL H&FITNESS HEALT HEALTH&FITNESS
Insurance Commissioner Emmanuel F. Dooc said the draft executive order (EO) of the so-called catpool, or catastrophe pool, is already under consideration by Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima for his endorsement to President Aquino. “We have reached that point when the issue is legacy matters. I think the cat-pool is a major achievement the President can bequeath to the Filipino people, because we really need one. I’m confident that the President will study it and push it the same
HEDepartment of Budget and Management (DBM) vowed to accelerate disbursement of funds and implementation of projects in the coming months to make sure the promised improved government spending will be felt in the second semester of the year and prevent another slowdown in the local economy’s growth. At the sidelines of the Economic Journalists Association of the Philippines (Ejap)-ING Bank Economic Forum on Wednesday in Makati City, Budget Secretary Florencio B. Abad admitted that the government’s problematic spend-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 44.6570
THE BASIC NEEDS: FOOD, CLOTHING AND...
way that he’s pushing for the BBL [Bangsamoro basic law],” Dooc said. The cat-pool will make mandatory the insurance cover for private dwellings and of small- and mediumsized enterprises to protect against loss of property brought about by natural disasters and other catastrophic events. Philippine Insurers and Reinsurers Association (Pira) Chairman Michael Rellosa said the cat-pool is required to be mandatory because of C A
Government spending to be felt in H2–Abad
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ABAD: “I think many of the infra projects will accelerate in the second to the third to the last quarter.”
ing scheme has been hampering the growth of the country, and promised better spending in the quarters ahead.
A NEWLY constructed “model” housing unit welcomes prospective buyers at a subdivision development in Antipolo City.
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B J M N. C C N. P Conclusion
O address the country’s housing problem— with the backlog estimated at 5.5 million units, and is seen to swell to 12.5 million units by 2030—the Senate, the House of Representatives and private-sector stakeholders recently launched a national housing summit. The chairman of the House Committee on Housing and Urban Development, Rep. Alfredo B. Benitez of the Third District of Negros Occidental, said the summit aims to tackle different housing issues, such as affordable rental, the housing backlog and informal settlers. “It would be six to eight months of continuous deliberations and discussions, with each meeting to be conducted by the joint congressional committee of the Senate and the House. We will discuss possible solutions for No. 1, addressing the issue of backlog; and, No. 2, addressing the issue of affordable and
ED DAVAD
decent housing,” the lawmaker said. “The summit will work on real-life cases or prototypes within the National Capital Region to ensure that the proposed measures and programs are viable enough to be applied on a national scale,” he said. He added that collaboration between the public and private sectors in addressing the issues of housing is a big help to solve the shelter problem. This, he said, is because the backlog can also be remedied by targeting how many houses can be built in a year, which should be considered the minimum goal. “Our challenges to solve backlogs are that, first, to have a national planning program that would be for a long-term basis; and, second, once and for all, solve the problem or arrest the increasing figure of housing problems,” Benitez said. He also urged the government to create a program that seeks to implement a long-term housing-rental scheme for homeless Filipinos, another necessary ingredient of the efforts to address the country’s housing backlog. C A
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n JAPAN 0.3599 n UK 68.5262 n HK 5.7579 n CHINA 7.2046 n SINGAPORE 33.1161 n AUSTRALIA 34.5696 n EU 49.7881 n SAUDI ARABIA 11.9079 Source: BSP (3 June 2015)