BusinessMirror April 24, 2015

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BusinessMirror

THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012

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KNOWN GRAFT BUSTER SEVILLA RESIGNS DUE TO ‘POLITICAL PATRONAGE’ PRESSURE

Lina back at BOC as Sevilla quits B

INSIDE

CAR OF THE MONTH

CHEVROLET MALIBU LTZ

MOTORING

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TATIANA MASLANY

THE HARDEST WORKING WOMAN IN SHOW BUSINESS Ever, ever, ever

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EAR God, no one will ever, ever, ever love us more than Your Son, Jesus. We know that we have the ability to be caring and compassionate. We know, too, that we have the capacity to love others more than ourselves. With what we can, please give us the capability to understand and the wisdom to make a difference in other people’s lives. In Jesus’s name, amen. JENNIE REYES AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

Life

EASY DINNER RECIPES: THREE GREAT IDEAS FOR CHEESE LOVERS »D3

BusinessMirror

Friday, April 24, 2015

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B N J Star Tribune

ERYL STREEP needs to step up her game. Those three Oscars and two Emmys are little more than impressive paperweights. She can slip into numerous accents, but so could Rich Little. If the so-called Hollywood queen really wants to earn her tiara, she’ll have to take an acting class from Tatiana Maslany, the hardest working woman in show business. In Orphan Black Black, whose third season debuted on BBC America recently, Maslany plays more than a dozen roles, each with a fully developed, distinct personality. Think Orange Is the New Black with a cast of one. The plot line: A protective mother, Sarah, discovers that she’s part of a secret clone experiment and that there are “sisters” scattered across North America and Europe. The group, which is being hunted down by mysterious sources, includes trained assassin Helena, tightly wound soccer mom Alison, transgender Tony and conniving Rachel. In the season finale of Season 2, the series performed its most elaborate trick: a clone dance party in which four Maslanys joyfully bumped and grinded against one another. “There was this idea on a card posted up in the writers’ room that said, ‘clone dance party,’ and I was like, ‘Dude, that’s ridiculous,’” Executive Producer John Fawcett said. “‘How does that fit? That has nothing to do with anything’?” But in the producers’ never-ending quest to torture, er, challenge, its star, they squeezed in the sequence, which ended up being one of the series’ most memorable—and rare joyous—moments. No one enjoyed the living-room rave more than Taslany, who gave each of her characters distinctive moves. “Even though I’m sort of within a rigid structure of technical marks and eye lines, it’s still just play,” Maslany said. “I still try to do my work as if there is an actor opposite me.” What makes the performances even more remarkable is that Maslany never takes the easy way out, which would be to paint in broad strokes. Sure, she’s aided by a costume department that houses more wigs than Cher’s closet, but it’s Maslany’s subtle touches in gesture, stride, speech patterns and posture that really sell the stunt. “I don’t think I had a single blooper during the first season because I felt very stressed and very intense and I couldn’t let my guard down at a moment to sort of have a laugh or whatever,” she said. “Now it’s a little looser.” Still, there are times in this juggling act in which Taslany misses a ball. “I had been playing Tony for a couple of days and we were really excited to be exploring some new dynamics,” she said. “It felt very rich and all-encompassing. Then I had to switch to Sarah halfway through a day and I didn’t know who she was anymore. I felt like a deer in the headlights with all my impulses still resonating with Tony.” It most likely helped that this year the actress has lots of company—from a single actor. Near the end of last season, we learned that menacing Mark Rollins is part of a militant male clone project, which means actor Ari Millen would be following in Taslany’s footsteps. The original plan was to kill off Rollins before the end of Season 2, but producers had always wanted to introduce male clones, and Millen fit the bill. “It was a little bit of an organic process deciding who was going to be the face of this other project and partway through Season 2, we realized we had our answer,” Fawcett said, who serves as the drama’s go-to director. Fortunately, Millen had a great mentor. “I think the greatest tip that Tat gave me was just basically to watch,” Millen said, who first met his costar when they competed against each other in an improv competition for Canadian high-school students. “When I found out about the new direction, it was around the time of the shooting of the clone dance party, which was no small feat. I just saw her ease and her taking time to breathe and just going at it one at a time.” Exactly how this potential attack of the clones will affect the series is top secret. The only hint producers will offer is that viewers, 1.6 million of whom watched the second-season premiere, should expect the unexpected. “The cool thing about the show is that it’s kind of a mash-up,” Fawcett said. “It seems we can go in a horror direction, we can go in a comedic direction, we can go in a very dramatic direction. Because we’re putting all these different genres together, we can make something really unique and, more often than not, make decisions that people aren’t expecting.” The only aspect of the series that we do know is that Maslany deserves more love, even one of those coveted awards. She has inexplicably been snubbed twice by Emmy voters. Perhaps, an A-lister with a crowded mantel can spare one. Hey, Meryl. Did I ever tell you how great you are? ■

TATIANA MASLANY

THE

HARDESTWORKING WOMAN IN SHOW BUSINESS

LIFE

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MAYWEATHER: ‘I’M BETTER THAN ALI!’

B M. S F. A

Special to the BM FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR. believes he has done as much in boxing as the legendary former heavyweight champion ever did. AP

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‘I’M BETTER THAN ALI!’ Floyd buys 100 cars from only one dealer

Floyd Mayweather Jr.: Muhammad Ali calls himself The Greatest and I call myself TBE (The Best Ever). I’m pretty sure I’ll get criticized for what I said, but I could care less. I could care less about the backlash.

B C W USA Today

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OXING champ Floyd Mayweather Jr. lives up to one of his nicknames, “Money,” when it comes to his car collection. Just ask the auto dealership that sold him over 100 cars over 18 years, including 16 Rolls-Royces. “He’ll buy a car before a fight. He’ll buy cars after the fight. He’ll buy cars on holidays,” says Josh “Chop” Towbin of Towbin Motorcars in Las Vegas. Mayweather has the money to throw around. He is one of the world’s most highly paid athletes. His payday for his May fight with Manny Pacquiao is expected to earn him $100 million alone. Towbin Motorcars isn’t about pass up a sale when it comes to Mayweather, its executives tell USA Today Sports. Sometimes he calls and wants to go car shopping at 2 a.m. The dealership is happy to oblige. “We never know when Floyd will get the bug to go car shopping,” Jesika TowbinMansour says. But it’s worth the effort. A RollsRoyce can run north of $400,000. A Bugatti passes $2 million like a speed bump—and Mayweather owns three of them. The champ pays in cash—sometimes duffel bags full of it. There’s so much cash that the auto dealership had to buy a new cash-counting machine just to accommodate Mayweather. Plus, he’s picky about what he buys. “These cars are an extension of his persona. They are the best of the best, as he is,” Towbin-Mansour says.

PEOPLE ride an escalator with a sign advertising the Manny PacquiaoFloyd Mayweather Jr. fight towering over them at the MGM Grand on Wednesday in Las Vegas. AP

5OO TICKETS WILL GO TO PUBLIC B L P

Los Angeles Times ROMOTERS Leonard Ellerbe and Bob Arum said on Wednesday that a verbal agreement has been reached to resolve a disagreement over ticket allocation for the May 2 Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Manny Pacquiao fight at MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Arum, Pacquiao’s promoter, told The Times on Wednesday afternoon that he’s waiting to sign a contract finalizing the deal, and once that’s complete, 500 tickets will be put on public sale.

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The capacity of MGM Grand is 16,800 seats, with the face value of tickets ranging from $1,500 to $10,000. The remainder of the tickets will be split up as agreed upon in the original negotiations that led to a signed fight contract by Mayweather and Pacquiao in February. Under that deal, according to officials not authorized to discuss the arrangement publicly, MGM Grand was to receive 40 percent of the tickets, with Mayweather Promotions and Arum’s Top Rank Inc. equally splitting the remainder. Many of those tickets will be placed on the secondary market, sold at prices that could reach $100,000, although the time

crunch caused by the ticket delay could lessen the value. A new site agreement contract was crafted to stage the bout at MGM Grand, and in the original language that was forwarded to Top Rank, the promoter and Pacquiao would receive 2,000 fewer tickets than they originally agreed upon, according to an official not authorized to talk about details of the dispute. On Tuesday, without providing details of the disagreement, Arum said he was unwilling to sign a site agreement deal unless it exactly reflected the ticket allocation agreement that was previously made. “We will have a fight, even if it’s only

attended by reporters sitting in their seats,” Arum said on Tuesday. On Wednesday Arum said, “Everything is resolved...we orally agreed and are waiting on the actual contract.” Ellerbe of Mayweather Promotions said on Wednesday afternoon he was at MGM Grand finalizing the deal. “The fans are the ones who suffer, and it reflects badly upon boxing in general,” said Michael Koncz, Pacquiao’s business manager. “How’s the public going to look upon boxing if we can’t even put tickets on sale? “We say we want to give the fans what they want and can’t even give them their tickets until now?”

B L S. M

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of the traditional and indigenous local ingredients that make our cuisine distinctly Filipino and mainly produced from smallholder farming,” she added. The DA will be sponsoring regional lunches that will feature the finest dishes from Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao. She said the government agency will be providing all the local ingredients for the local chefs, many of whom are considered the leading lights in the local culinary scene.

ELECOMMU NIC AT IONS giant Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT) has infused $15 million in an entertainment company that aims to launch an Internet-television service in Southeast Asia throughout 2015, surprising the local market with the announcement that dwarfs its competition’s recently launched partnership with a Singaporean videostreaming firm. The amount represents half of the total investment needed by iflix, a partnership between Malaysian entrepreneurs and Hollywood heavyweights seeking to be Southeast Asia’s leading InternetTV service. Aiming to stimulate Internet usage in the Philippines and across the Asean, the Malaysian entertainment company will offer subscribers with unlimited access to thousands of hours of entertainment at a very affordable price. The financing package, which amounts to $30 million from Catcha Group and PLDT, will be used to continue the rollout of the iflix service across the Southeast Asian region, to acquire rights to new content, to produce original programming and to market to potential customers. “We are excited to join forces with such an outstanding regional partner, who shares our vision. The new funds will allow us to execute our plan to deliver thousands of hours of entertainment for a low monthly price to the 600 million consumers in the region,” iflix Chairman Patrick Grove said on Thursday.

S “M F,” A

C  A

PHILIPPINE Charity Sweepstakes Office Acting Chairman and General Manager Jose Ferdinand M. Rojas II delivers his speech during the Eternal Gardens Grand Annual Awards at the Citystate Tower Hotel in Mabini, Manila. Rojas is the event’s guest of honor and keynote speaker. ROY DOMINGO

ETERNAL GARDENS BARES EXPANSION PLANS B D C

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EMORIAL industry leader Eternal Gardens bared plans for further expansion this year during the ceremony honoring the members of its sales force for their record-breaking performance in 2014 on Wednesday.

In the Grand Annual Awards Night held at the Citystate Tower Hotel, corporate officers thanked the sales force of Eternal Gardens for making the company the leader of the industry, which has the responsibility to ease the burdens of Filipinos losing their loved ones. Eternal Gardens Vice Presi-

dent for Sales and Marketing Jose Antonio V. Rivera said 2014 was a record-breaking year for the company, such that, long before the end of the calendar year, the sales of the company already grew by 20 percent over the figures posted in 2013. S “E G,” A

MADRID FUSIÓN TO INTRODUCE PHL FOOD TO GLOBAL MARKET

BusinessMirror

| FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

He replaced John Philip P. Sevilla, who said he has tendered his resignation on Thursday due to pressure to promote people without considering their merit for the jobs. Lina heads the family-owned Lina Group of Companies, which includes the giant logistics firm Air21. Malacañang confirmed on Thursday President Aquino’s acceptance of the abrupt resignation of Sevilla, even as the Palace vows to fully “reform” the graft-tainted bureau before the Aquino administration ends in June 2016. In an advisory, the BOC said a turnover ceremony is scheduled at 2:30 p.m. today (Friday). “I’m feeling the political patronage” pressure, Sevilla said at a briefing

PLDT joins forces with Malaysian firm iflix

C  A

Sports

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USINESSMAN Alberto D. Lina, one of the socalled Hyatt 10 that left their government posts in 2005 to protest the alleged wrongdoings in the Arroyo administration, is back at the helm of the Bureau of Customs (BOC), after a decade of shunning offers to return to public office.

B T D

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The Associated Press

AS VEGAS—Floyd Mayweather Jr. refused on Wednesday to back off earlier comments declaring himself a better fighter than Muhammad Ali. Mayweather said he respects Ali’s great career and the things he did outside the ring. But he said he believes he has done as much in boxing as the legendary former heavyweight champion ever did, without the losses that Ali suffered in his career. “He called himself The Greatest and I call myself TBE [The Best Ever],” Mayweather said. “I’m pretty sure I’ll get criticized for what I said, but I could care less. I could care less about the backlash.” Mayweather had earlier said that he was better than both Ali and Sugar Ray Robinson, pointing to his 47-0 record as proof. He also said he would never have lost to a fighter like Leon Spinks, who beat an aging Ali in 1978 after having just seven pro fights. “I just look at Ali’s career when he fought Leon Spinks and lost to a fighter with seven fights,” Mayweather said. “There were some other fights he lost and he’s still known as The Greatest because that’s what he put out there. It is what it is.” A little more than a week before his megafight with Manny Pacquiao, Mayweather seemed relaxed on a conference call where he talked about his career and the man he will face in the ring on May 2. He refused to say anything bad about Pacquiao, and said he was treating the richest fight ever as just another fight. “I know it’s the biggest fight in boxing history but I can’t approach it like that,” Mayweather said. “I’m never going to put any unnecessary pressure on myself. I like to approach the fight like he’s a fighter who’s extremely talented. But my thing is to just be Floyd Mayweather.” That has worked for Mayweather his entire career, though most boxing historians would disagree with his own view of his place in boxing’s historical hierarchy. That includes the current heavyweight champion, Wladimir Klitschko, who told a group of reporters in New York on Tuesday that maybe Mayweather shouldn’t be so boastful. “I think probably, I heard this comment from Mayweather that he’s better than Ali or greater than Ali,” Klitschko said. “I think people call the king the king, not the king [who says] ‘I’m the king.’ So people make others somebody that he is or that he’s not. So that’s people’s opinions.” While Mayweather’s place in history may be in debate, there’s no debate that he will make the biggest purse ever against Pacquiao. Depending on pay-per-view sales—which

reportedly have been strong for a fight still 10 days away—he could earn as much as $180 million for the welterweight title bout. That prompted a question on Wednesday about whether the freespending Mayweather—who owns a fleet of expensive cars, a private jet and several mansions—worries about losing all his money after he retires. “I’m blessed, I made some good investments,” Mayweather said. “If I wanted to retire today I could.” Mayweather credited what he called a brilliant game plan for reaching his goal of becoming the first fighters to ever make a nine figure paycheck in one night. But he said he has changed in recent years, toning down his act and putting aside the Pretty Boy and Money May personas he used to help him sell previous pay-per-view fights. This fight needs no selling, and Mayweather has been subdued at every public appearance. “It took a game plan for me going out there to win and me speaking out with a very loud voice and having a lot of personality,” he said. “But as you get older you mature. You’ve done trash talking for 17 or 18 years, look at me, what I’ve done. I don’t have to do all of that. I did all that loud talking and everything to get to this point.” That includes speaking badly about Freddie Roach, who has tried to cast Mayweather as the bad guy in this fight promotion. “He’s making it basically a god against devil kind of thing, but he doesn’t have to get in there and fight,” Mayweather said. “He’s entitled to say what he wants to say, but the fighters aren’t speaking like that and it comes down to the two fighters.” As the days count down to the Pacquiao fight, Mayweather won’t lack for controversy either generated by himself or by Pacquiao trainer Roach, who has been outspoken in the extreme about his plans for beating Mayweather. Trying to take the high road, Mayweather said he would try not to respond to Roach because it would be viewed as “picking on a guy who isn’t 100-percent healthy.” Roach suffers from a form of Parkinson’s disease. “He’s trying to make it a god/devil type of thing,” Mayweather said of Roach, “and the best way to handle a situation like that is not to say anything at all if you don’t have anything positive to say. It comes down to nothing but the two fighters.” The perception is that Mayweather put off fighting Pacquiao as long as possible, but while many regard this bout as the biggest challenge to his undefeated status, Mayweather suggested he’s trying to treat it like another fight despite the trappings.

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HE best in Philippine agriculture, as well as premium food and beverage products, will be showcased in the first international gastronomy convention in the country, the Madrid Fusión Manila (MFM), which opens today (Friday). In an interview with the B USINESS M IRROR, Department of Agriculture (DA) Undersecretary for Special Con-

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 44.2130

ROMULO PUYAT said they will introduce the country’s best heritage food and agricultural products to the mainstream market.

cerns Berna Romulo Puyat said they will introduce the country’s best heritage food and agricultural products

to the mainstream market. Many of these products include those grown by small farmers and, in showcasing these to an international audience, could result in possible exports, she said. “We also want to reintroduce ‘slow food’ as an alternative to fast-food dining. The increasing popularity of convenience food has made our traditional cuisine that is deeply rooted in our culture and traditions slowly disappear. As a consequence, we use less and less

■ JAPAN 0.3688 ■ UK 66.5052 ■ HK 5.7052 ■ CHINA 7.1369 ■ SINGAPORE 32.8184 ■ AUSTRALIA 34.3669 ■ EU 47.4229 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 11.7905 Source: BSP (23 April 2015)


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