Thursday, April 25, 2024

INFLUENCES and FAVORITES.

Previously posted on my Facebook Page.


FAVORITES. Gardening. When I was a boy, I assisted my Grandma Luz tend her flower garden of orchids, bougainvilleas, carnations, magnolias, and roses. I also planted/raised vegetables, mostly eggplants and bitter gourd (“ampalaya”), with Grandpa Severino. “Earth romancin’.” Balances my seated time/s writing, reading, and watching dozens of TV series and movies. I love dirt of soil on my hands, and nurturing and nourishing seeds to full-blown life. (Photo: The Spruce.) πŸ“šπŸŽπŸŽΌ




INFLUENCES. Paul Simon, With Simon & Garfunkel or as a solo performer, it is all about his brilliant songs. The Sound of Silence, America, The Boxer, and the enthralling and alluring “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” Songs that he wrote in his early 20s.  The solo albums Goes Rhymin' Simon (1973), Still Crazy After All These Years (1975), and Graceland (1986) were all masterpieces. Mr Simon’s words are not prophesy, sermons, or indictments. Just songs, almost journalistic. πŸ“šπŸŽπŸŽΌ


FAVORITES. Watching TV. Guilty pleasure though I am not guilty at all, LOL! Since I was a little boy, the television set has always been my most favorite house implement. Why? Because reading is a natural obsession, I get to savor the sheer delight of the visual translation of what I read in books, magazines, and newspapers. From the black & white days of “Dracula,” Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee and “Combat!” to these days of streaming TV. Hooked as ever. πŸ“ΊπŸ–₯πŸ“Ί


INFLUENCES. “Lou Grant,” starring Ed Asner in the title role as a city desk editor. The journalism/drama TV series aired from 1977 to 1982. Those were the earlier years of my media life journey, progressing from printing press apprentice to newsroom proofreader to beat reporter to desk ed to managing editor. “Lou Grant” was pretty much the only TV show that I diligently followed. If we want to imbue to the young the true wisdom of journalism work, “Lou Grant” is a good start. πŸŽ₯πŸ“Ί☎️


FAVORITES. Socks. Piece of clothing worn on the feet. Some types of shoes or boots are typically worn over socks. In ancient times, socks were made from leather or matted animal hair. In the late 16th century, machine-knit socks were first produced. Until the 1800s, both hand-made and machine-knit socks were manufactured, with the latter technique becoming more common in the 19th century. My feet are never without socks. Colorful, the better. Outdoors, indoors, in bed. 🧦🧦🧦


INFLUENCES. “Kung Fu,” an adventure martial arts Western drama series starring David Carradine. The series follows the adventures of Kwai Chang Caine, a Shaolin monk who travels through the American Old West, armed only with his spiritual training and his skill in martial arts, as he seeks his half-brother. Many of the aphorisms used in the series are adapted from or derived directly from the Tao Te Ching, a book of ancient Taoist philosophy attributed to the sage Lao-tzu. πŸ‘«πŸŽ₯🏯




FAVORITES. Historical Movies. Or fiction films showing past events or set within a historical period. This extensive genre shares territory with the biopic, costume drama, heritage film, and epic film. Unless it is a documentary film, “historical movies” are adapted from real events and real people. So it helps to know your “basic history” before watching. I am not really affected in case characters or situations are “re-imagined.” A good movie is a good movie. πŸ‘«πŸŽ₯🏯


INFLUENCES. “Abraxas,” the second studio album by Santana, released in 1970. The title of the album originates from a line in Hermann Hesse's 1919 book “Demian,” quoted on the album's back cover: "We stood before it and began to freeze inside from the exertion. We questioned the painting, berated it, made love to it, prayed to it: We called it mother, called it whore and slut, called it our beloved, called it Abraxas.” This LP was on steady rotation in our house when I was a boy. πŸ“šπŸŽπŸŽΌ


FAVORITES. Seafoods. Any form of sea life regarded as food by humans, prominently including fish and shellfish. Shellfish include various species of molluscs e.g. bivalve molluscs such as clams, oysters, and mussels. I am a seafood dude. You name it, I am all for it. Raw, grilled, stewed, baked, however it is cooked or prepared. I am the only seafood glutton in my family of nine children. The only dish that I eat at a Mexican diner: Mojarra a la Diabla. In Asian buffets: Clams and mussels. πŸ“šπŸŽπŸŽΌ


INFLUENCES. “The Great Railway Bazaar: By Train Through Asia,” a travel book by Paul Theroux, published 1975. Recounts Mr Theroux's four-month journey by train in 1973 from London through Europe, the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia, and his return via the Trans-Siberian Railway. The book is widely regarded as a classic in the genre of travel writing. Themes of colonialism, American imperialism, poverty, and ignorance were also explored. πŸ“šπŸŽπŸŽΌ

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

RECOMMENDED: “Bless the Beasts and Children.”

MOVIE. “Bless the Beasts and Children.” A 1971 film adaptation by Stanley Kramer of the novel of the same name written by Glendon Swarthout. I first saw this movie when I was 12 or 13, and immediately inspired or motivated me to form a sort of “secret brotherhood” of high school buddies modeled after the “misfits” in the movie. 



       The central characters in “Bless the Beasts and Children” are six adolescent boys, whose preoccupied parents send them off to the Arizona Box Canyon Boys Camp for the summer. I didn’t read the book. I was simply into what the movie as it was. 

       Those years, when I felt like I was “abnormal” or a freak doing other things. Boys my age would normally savor the easy frolic of childhood abandon. I’d read and read and read, encyclopedias and books of knowledge, magazines and newspapers, experiment on a few scientific theses, zoological shenanigans (!) and quiz my grandpa about the mysteries of existence. 

       The movie was about a bunch of "discards" who are all, to varying degrees, emotionally or psychologically disturbed. Nicknamed "Bedwetters," the boys are constantly demeaned and ridiculed. So they had to bond together to seek their own peace. 

       A highlight of the film was the American buffalo. Almost predictably, the “Bedwetters” set out to free a large herd of the bison after they witnessed their perverted macho camp counselor shot the animals in a rowdy western lottery. The boys' pilgrimage to free the buffalo is also an allegorical search for their own freedom.

       A companion movie that you may want to watch with your youngsters, if they can sit through almost two hours of a feature movie without the iPhone, is 1986’s “Stand by Me.” 🎬🎭🎬

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Compilation of short MORNING THOUGHTS.

Previously posted on my Facebook Page.


Before today’s election, Billie Eilish “…issued urgent message ahead of midterms.” Trudat, pop stars are influencers. But it is flawed to bite their “views” for credibility, of course. Billie is pretty much your 20-year old daughter with messages as well, could be more sensible. Uh huh. I mean, Madonna or Whoopi or the lady comedian got thoughts as well. Cool! Yet I’d rather enjoy “True Blue” again than listen to whatever Madonna Louise Ciccone blahblahs about politics. πŸ€¨πŸ—£πŸ‘₯




News: “Comedian suspended from Twitter after mocking Musk.” Shaming, mocking, insulting. The New Cool? I am old. I commenced my journalism and activism at a dangerous time. Dictatorship years. For sure, I wrote/said what I had to and most of those are burning trajectories versus the regime. We worked around law/rules of objectivity, reprimanded colleagues who didn’t observe common civility—even as we lambasted the status quo. These days? Tell me. πŸ—£πŸ‘₯🀨


Racism? There’s also discrimination. Prejudicial treatment of different categories of people or things on the grounds of race, age, or sex. Or whatever that’d up their “I’m better” quotient. Among Filipinos: Those who were born/raised in the U.S. or who are here longest annoyingly discriminate against “native” kababayans and newbies. They treat you like you are super clueless; correct you even in re history of the Philippines because they learned their stuff at U.C. Berkeley. πŸ€¨πŸ‡΅πŸ‡­πŸ€ͺ


President Biden weighs in on Twitter drama: “How do we expect kids to be able to understand what is at stake?” The issue is Social Media per se. Yet spectacular din ensued when Elon Musk bought the microblogging company. Fact is, before the takeover, Twitter has always been a tool for love vibe and hate pitch. Then Hate got louder. Promoted, pushed, politicized. Same with FB, TikTok etc etcetera. Reread Alvin Toffler’s “Future Shock” c. 1970. But I digress. πŸ—£πŸ‘₯πŸ«‚




After Phillies lost Game 4, two pairs of women fans got so upset that they had to let heat out by fighting in the bathroom. Slapping, hair pulling, wrestling on the floor. Cops weren’t called. No one was hurt as “hurt.” I remember my youth when, after a game, dudes took the ire out in the parking lot. Done. “Better” than unfriending a friend that you knew since grade school just because he/she voted this guy. Why not exhale the disagreement out in the parking lot? Or bathroom? 🀨πŸ₯ŠπŸ€Ό‍♀️


Speak your mind vs. another faith, you are thrown into the fires of hell. Yet you are “cool” if you malign Christianity. The past is dug up to unearth Christians to shame. However, the insults are selective. For example, known devout Catholics/Christians J.R.R. Tolkien, Victor Hugo, Graham Greene, or Virginia Woolf are fine. Yet others, regardless of religion/irreligion yet sure candidates for “cancellation,” are spared. Such as Ernest Hemingway and Pablo Picasso.✝️☮️✝️


News says Arizona GOP Kari Lake mocks Paul Pelosi as he remains in ICU. Etc. Rival politicians on murkthrow is not new. Worse, when their minions slug it out. Few years ago, zealots wished that their “most-hated” man dies of Covid when he got infected. Current journalism is obsessed with flash over info so we get more Left/Right catfight than what News gave us then. And when “news” gets to social media, boom! Insults, shaming, and all kinds of rudeness rule. Sad. πŸ—£πŸ‘₯πŸ«‚