09.18.08
The Crew Brews Again
Take a good look at that picture, it might be a while before we capture anything like it again! Haha.
Alas alas, after a full 5 months, all 5 of us find a common time to meet! It was Friday night and each one of us either came home tired after a full day’s work/play or had something to do way early the next day (or in my case, both, haha,) but we didn’t care. We hadn’t seen in each other in too long of a time and we just couldn’t pass up the opportunity. I know that sounds overly dramatic but we were really all jumping up and down when we saw each other. Haha. Nauubusan ako ng words. Basta masaya! Naiyak si Joe. He’ll deny it but I saw him tearing up. Nyahahaha. :p
Halav the Brew Crew. Everybody’s somewhat different (of course) but when we get together it feels very much the same. In a good way.
In the infamous words of Sir Joon (aka Joe,) “It’s similar but somewhat different.” (I know I got that wrong. Basta! Look atchu! You look good! Pikachu!)
Grabetots. Masaya na nakakalungkot. Hay! :p
08.17.08
Panic at the Disco, Live in Manila, 081408
On January 9, 2008, Panic at the Disco, prior to then known as Panic! at the Disco, officially dropped the exclamation mark in their name – a supposed minor decision, nonchalantly explained by the band in the following quote from an interview by MTV: “It was never part of the name to us. (…) When we started doing new promo stuff for this album, we just told everyone not to use it anymore.”
On August 14, 2008, however, I would find out the real reason why.
Amidst a pack of overly-excited fellow PATD Discoheads waiting to burst in the dark of the Araneta Coliseum, I disappointingly watched lead Brendon Urie walk to the stage in a paisley shirt, a vest, a 60’s-style school boy haircut, a face without make-up, and an acoustic guitar.
I seriously thought I was just looking at another opening act enter the stage at that time, but no. Pretty. Odd.’s intro came into play, followed by one lame-ly done first album song after another. All in real instruments. That was the real, absolute horror – with everything playing out almost like a mockery to their original versions. I mean, holy my Lord, if I wanted to hear those masterfully done songs on plain regular instruments, I would have just turned to YouTube or played them myself.
Now don’t get me wrong – I appreciate re-invention and absolutely applaud any artist willing to delve into such a big change after a strong, original, overly-successful debut. But it was just all over the place – so much so that the songs sounded either odd or common. And that’s just the thing. The first record was so real and different, that I couldn’t understand why they would all of a sudden just willingly jump into the rest of the pool. And no, I don’t buy into that maturity crap. Bring on the immaturity. Everything sounded so much better.
The crowd was pretty into it, actually, and I did dance and sing to all the songs, like I always do – but I was all angry and frustrated the whole time. Indulge me the drama. Please. This was quite literally a band I had been waiting to see live ever since I don’t even remember. Fed more so with rumors of how great of a show the guys give live. I had always been a fan, and way, way, way, before everybody else. I even remember buying the album in Singapore because it wouldn’t arrive for another 2 or so months in Manila when I started to realize how much I liked them.
Bleberts. As a fan, I was really disappointed. Like I felt betrayed, even. I know that’s pretty lame ass, but that’s how I felt. Argh! I really hope this is just a phase.
I mean how do you go from this:
to this?
What happened to the dancing ladies? The theatrics? The drama? The eyeliner, for crying out loud!
What happened to the PANIC!??!?!
I was so frustrated, I think I might have even enjoyed the front act more. Brendon Urie, who has holy my Lord always been ga-gorgeous hot to me (and I don’t even buy into the whole emo look,) was just cute. As in bleh-cute. It’s possible that the only cool thing he did throughout the show was drink SMB in between songs.
Brendon dear, please pick up your eyeliner pencil and go set a meeting with your former hairstylist. For the sake of all true blues everywhere.
I’m not even gonna post pics of me and Mark at the concert anymore. None of my smiles were real, anyway.
*sigh*
08.06.08
Alicia Keys Live in Manila, 080508
I wasn’t really that interested in watching this one – at least not enough to pursue the usual freebie hunt – but I changed my mind when #1: i saw the set-up at MOA when Mark and I took Joko and Ezekiel to a Timezone + chicken and spaghetti trip last weekend, and wondered, “why am i not watching this again?,” and #2: they announced the move from open grounds to the well-roofed (haha) SMEX convention center. I completely forgot about freeloading it up until well into yesterday though, but after thinking and deciding that Alicia’s too big of an artist to just miss, I decided to go the traditional way anyhow and pay. :p I texted a few friends, got a yes i’m available and interested from Mon, finished my work duties and trekked to MOA. Then surprise surprise, while waiting for Mon in Kopiroti (and enjoying my long craved for kopibun and kaya toast :p), I got a text from Ate Bambs asking if I was still interested in extra tickets, which of course, merited an obvious duh. Haha :p (thanks as always, ate bambs.) So away with the cheap bronze ones I went in favor for the free gold ones (weird, no. Haha)
The concert started waaaaay late (past 9:45 pm, according to Mon, for a concert scheduled to begin at 8pm,) but the first hour or so was no less entertaining – as in literally, as we saw celebrities and entertainers scoot to their seats to our left and right. Sort of like the Beyonce concert, actually, where the first few rows were literally decked out in stars. Sarah G, for one, sat right beside us (you’ll probably see a few fan pics with her with us in the background. Haha.) So anyhow. After front acts by South Border singer #2 then #3, a few instrumental background tunes and crowd hoots, the lights dimmed and Alicia took to the stage.
The music was definitely premium, and the set-up did justice to the smooth quality of Alicia’s voice and the blues-y jazzy feel of the songs. Alicia’s surprisingly an entertaining performer, too – she moves well on the stage and does the occasional song-to-song talking bits in a way unique to her (she could do one of those alternative-art poetry reading audio books.) I also loved how the songs were rendered differently live – a salsa-sounding karma and a reggae-vibed you don’t know my name – to name a few. Galing. And she got a double encore, which I’m not sure was real, but I don’t know, I at least haven’t experienced that in a while.
There were very few downsides – the crowd became boring at times, but oh well. Ganun talaga dito. Haha. Also, she wasn’t as gorgeous as we thought she would be. It was probably because of what she wore, though, so we’ll let it pass (a leather corset/vest top that was cut right where her shoulders break into her arms, which did not flatter at all, and a skinny pair of jeans that only showed how big her thighs were.) Haha. Ewan.
So like what I said, although we were seated relatively close to the stage, the pictures we took were horrible, since we weren’t prepared with the right gadgets. Hehe.
To add to that, here’s a really bad video clip of her doing Tender Love (only posting this cause we were surprised at the cover, haha.)
Good concert all in all, and I’m glad I decided not to skip it.
Next, PANIC. EXCITEDNESS!!!!
(Hey Mark might not make it next week so let me know if you’re interested. Disclaimer: will still take Mark if he can go.)
07.23.08
For the meantime :)
I noticed my weekend blog stats went up, which I kapal-faced took as a sign that some of you have been checking and waiting for SG posts… Haha. Just spent almost an hour uploading pics on facebook (ang bagal!!!) so tinatamad pa ako. Anyhow, my mind’s pretty spent from my first day back’s work to come up with any coherent entry. Hehe. So for the meantime…
07.19.08
HELLO, LAH!
Landed way past midnight yesterday so we went straight to bed.
About to kick off a long day so we better get our fill of coffee at the brekfast table
Mark and Nikki saying hi from SINGAPORE; see you back with SG tales soon!
07.18.08
Destination: Singapore :)
I’m finally really leaving! Haha.This week was practically a blur with work-cramming to the max, with it having ended with an event and all (African Sunrise the best! Haha,) so has my mind has pretty much been all over the place… until now. Thank God for my Friday VL or else I’d be leaving tonight with either eyebags making like puffy marshmallows and the energy level of a 3 year old who just spent an entire day at the playground (read: sleepy time.)
It’s amazing what level of connectivity the internet offers these days. The only ones I’ve told about my SG trip in person are my mom, kuya, ate, and a few close friends, but everybody I’ve seen for the past couple of weeks have either asked “How was Singapore?!?” (for the time-disoriented ones – people from Ateneo lalo na, haha) have made bilin (everything from the kakapalan Crumpler gear – what the heck? to Chicken Rice, hehe) or have recommended things to do, buy and eat; and all because of what I’ve posted on the net (ang galing, diba.)
No complaints, though. In fact, the last, most especially, has been super helpful. Mark and I have been researching non-stop, but bloggers, most especially, are super loaded with this kind of information. I’ve been fed little bits via different sites but it’s even better in person – yesterday at the night event I could barely take note. Actually, I wasn’t able to at all, hehe. Laksa, the Singapore version of the London eye, Chilli Crabs, Jurong east, Little India… (deng. I should have been talking to the shopping/fashion bloggers. Ok na din. Our head designer for CBTL, based in SG, gave a few tips when he visited last week. Ok na.) And of course, personal tips from my friends and family who have gone to SG (with me and/or without.) Now all that’s left is the challenge of putting things down on an itinerary. (uh-oh. haha! Honey, you’ll help me out on this one.)
So there! Asking everybody to pray for a safe and happy trip! Will definitely blog about my trip ASAP (I have what will be left of my Tuesday VL to do just that.) Hehe.
Yay!
07.04.08
Fast Food Fiction
I’ve always believed that creativity is too precious and sensitive of a thing to rush. And mainly because it’s always worked for me – knowing there are people who thrive on instantaneous spurts of genius notwithstanding, taking time to go through each aspect and detail of my creative work is just what has always given me the big pay-off in the end. Back in my thesis days I’d labor for hours on end in the same corner of the nearby cafe, eyes burning through the clear plastic of my macbook – just to come up with a page’s worth of new work. But I’d submit at the end of each project to outstanding rewards – ranging from the casual yoohoo mention from the professor, to the rated-A noted, finished, graded and paraded product. (yeah, i’m a geek. so sue me. :p) And though you can probably credit my overdoing it at times to either my overly-OC journ prof in sophomore year or Dr. Sol in my fourth year of college, it’s really the way I’m hard-wired. Even in my younger days I would always find myself as the last to submit in art or writing class.
So anyhow. Fast forward to the future, a.k.a. the present, where various bits of information can be received, and apparently, created, at hyper speeds. Where creativity is acceptably deep-fried, wrapped in a box, put in a plastic bag, and handed ready to-go.
Welcome to the age of fast food fiction.
The concept isn’t new – not even relatively so (reference to the Fast Food Fiction book series acknowledged) – think classroom set-up, kindergarten days, where you were pressured to come up with your summer vacation story from the time you finish saying your morning prayers, to the minute before your recess bell rings. But now it’s being turbo-charged with the onset of the internet, where anyone can not only claim to be an artist or author in a matter of minutes, but a renowned and published one at that.
I know the tone of my writing so far could have led you to think otherwise, but I am in no way against this type of exercise. In fact, I’m mostly just jealous at people who can sit down and gather their thoughts into a comprehensible creative output within a matter of minutes. I’m usually good at doing that when I have to bunch up my thoughts into words to impress, but if it’s something expressed either through words or pictures, it takes me much, much longer. I mean in less than 30 minutes, with absolutely no prep whatsoever involved, how many people in the world can come up with this?:
Ten years from now, when she looks back at this moment, she will smile and say, “That was where it all started.”
When she looks back at this moment, she will remember, like most girls do, the outfit she was wearing as she sipped her vanilla latte and slaved over her History textbook: a white tank top, light blue jeans, and a floral blue bucket hat. She will remember worrying over the haircut she got the day before- it was too short, too trendy- and she needed the stupid hat to cover it up.
Ten years from now, when she looks back on this moment, she will smile and say “That was where I met the love of my life.”
She will remember seeing, from the corner of her eye, a boy about her age, clad in a black shirt and dark jeans, intently poring over a novel, from his quiet corner of the coffee shop. She will remember finding him attractive, being intrigued by his mysterious aura, but hesitating… there he was looking all cool and artsy, while there she was in a stupid floral hat.
Ten years from now, when she looks back on this moment, she will smile and say, “That was where it all started. That was where I met the love of my life.”
But right now, at this moment, she does not know this yet. Still, she waits for him to catch her eye. And she takes the risk and smiles.
He smiles right back.
Written by Marla Miniano of Candy Magazine, when we had our media launch for our What’s your Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf Story?, via a Flash Creativity Workshop last week at The Fort. No, this is not just shameless promotion, I swear (not that this blog is even legit enough to merit any promotion that will matter. Haha.) In fact, I’m even quasi frustrated that I had to work and host at the same time, that I didn’t get to hear what everybody said were fantastic flash creativity lectures that these guys gave out:
I can sort of claim, though, that I had each one give me a private lecture instead, yeah, so I’m good. Haha. If you can call talks over cold, leftover linguine, a photo slideshow exhibit, and a replayed Celtics game playing in the background lectures, that is.
Thanks to Mike Cabardo, Jay Tablante and Dean Alfar for showing us how to create quality works in a flash. Actually, for showing our participants, hindi naman ako kasama. Haha. Nevertheless, I’ll exert an effort to try; I am super left behind on the creative front. I better swallow my old-school slow-roast pride – I literally need to catch up . Or…
baka naman ang role ko lang talaga sa life ay maging talent. Walang output kung walang insipiration, diba? :p Hoot hoot! Panalo talaga si Markku (literally; winning ang entry. Haha!) Dude I guarantee you’ll have all of my personal bookings from hereon. You know what that means. :p








